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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Vinayak & Anor (t/a Doctors Chambers) v Lovegrove & Eliot (a firm) [2007] EWHC 90096 (Costs) (10 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2007/90096.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 90096 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
Between :
(1) BIPPON VINAYAK
(2) ANNE KING (T/A DOCTORS CHAMBERS)
- and -
LOVEGROVE & ELIOT (A FIRM)
____________________
(1) BIPPON VINAYAK (2) ANNE KING (T/A DOCTORS CHAMBERS) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LOVEGROVE & ELIOT (A FIRM) |
Defendant |
____________________
Mrs Victoria Butler-Cole (Counsel) (instructed by Mills & Reeve LLP, Solicitors) for the Defendant/Applicant
Hearing date: 28 June 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Master Campbell:
"We, Mills & Reeve, the solicitor on behalf of the defendant, apply for an order … for the claimants to disclose their conditional fee agreement (CFA) with their solicitors, Bolt Burdon Kemp (BBK) and BBK's CFA with counsel or, if once put to their election, BBK choose not to disclose their CFAs that they serve such other evidence as they intend to rely upon."
BACKGROUND
THE DEFENDANT'S APPLICATION
"… the defendant in this case does have further grounds for wishing to see the CFAs and both risk assessments;
10.1 The additional liabilities are very high.
10.2 The statement of reasons served by BBK includes as a reason for the success fee that 'the fact that if you win we will not be paid our basic charges until the end of the claim' and yet the figures at the end of the document attribute no part of the success fee to postponement. The postponement element is of course not recoverable from the paying party.
10.3 There are reasonable doubts about others of the reasons cited for BBK's success fee and so the paying party wishes to examine the definition of 'win' and 'within the CFA'. See Points of Dispute at general point 6 (pages 7 and 8).
10.4 The hourly rate charged for the fee earner who undertook the greatest amount of work on the case, Jodie Newton, jumps very sharply from £175 to £210 per hour on 16 July 2005, when she reached 4 years post-qualification. Given that substantial increase, it is absolutely reasonable for the paying party to be able to compare client care letters and the CFA to ascertain that the increased hourly rate was properly chargeable to the clients."
"So far as matters of procedure are concerned, we consider that it should become normal practice for a CFA to be disclosed for the purpose of costs proceedings in which a success fee is claimed. If the CFA contains confidential information relating to other proceedings, it may be suitably redacted before disclosure takes place. Attendance notes and other correspondence should not ordinarily be disclosed, but the judge conducting the assessment may require the disclosure of material of this kind if a genuine issue (emphasis added) is raised. A genuine issue is one in which there is a real chance that the CFA is unenforceable as a result of failure to satisfy the applicable conditions."
THE CLAIMANT'S SUBMISSIONS
"The court may direct the receiving party to produce any document which in the opinion of the court is necessary to enable it to reach its decision. These documents will in the first instance be produced to the court, but the court may ask the receiving party to elect whether to disclose the particular document to the paying party in order to rely on the contents of the document, or whether to decline disclosure and instead rely on other evidence."
"The essence of the question, therefore, is to identify the stage at which the claimant has to be put to his election, or must be taken to have waived his privilege. I have no doubt that that stage is not reached when the claimant lodges his documents under Order 62 Rule 21 and the Practice Notes [the predecessor to CPR 47 and CPD section 40.12]. At that stage the claimant is simply complying with the requirements of the rule. The fact that the Master goes through the lodged documents does not at that stage raise any problems of natural justice. At the taxation a problem may arise …"
"I expect that it will remain as heretofore, very rare for the full formality of these steps to be gone through. Most respondents appreciate that once they have drawn to the Master's attention the possibility that an item of charge may be unnecessary or may be being overvalued, their interests are best served by allowing the Master to look at the relevant documents and form his own judgment. The respondent will normally achieve little or nothing by asking to see the documents as well."
DECISION
"If the CFA is not disclosed (and the Court of Appeal has indicated that it should be the usual practice for a CFA – redacted where appropriate – to be disclosed for the purpose of costs proceedings in which a success fee is claimed) a statement setting out the following information from the CFA so as to enable the paying party and the court to determine the level of risk undertaken by the solicitor:
(i) the definition of 'win' and (if applicable) 'lose';(ii) details of the receiving party's liability to pay costs if he or she wins or loses; and(iii) details of the receiving party's liability to pay costs if he or she fails to beat a Part 36 offer."
"In our view a combination of the indemnity principle and a significant increase in the paying party's liabilities results in there ordinarily being a sufficient ground in cases involving a CFA (whether or not the CFA contains a success fee) for the paying party to require the receiving party to be put to her election to produce the CFA or rely on other evidence."
FORMAL DECISION