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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 >> Dix v Townend & Anor [2008] EWHC 90117 (Costs) (30 June 2008) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2008/90117.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 90117 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
Clifford's Inn London EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
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JOHN DIX |
Claimant |
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DECLAN TOWNEND |
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FRIZZELL FINANCIAL SERVICES |
Defendants |
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Mr Benjamin Williams (counsel instructed by Weightmans LLP, Solicitors) for the Second Defendant
The First Defendant did not attend and was not represented
Hearing date : 17 April 2008, Judgment handed down: 30 June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
(I) Is it unlawful at common law (by reason of champerty or maintenance) for a solicitor's fee agreement (in this case a Conditional Fee Agreement or 'CFA') to include a term that the solicitors will indemnify their client against the opponent's charges and disbursements in case he loses?(II) Is such a retainer unenforceable by reason of ss. 23 and 26 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 ("FSMA") as an unauthorised 'contract of insurance' entered into in the course of carrying on business, and if it is, can this court, and should this court, nonetheless permit it to be enforceable by reason of the powers given to the court under that Act?
Background
"Other PointsImmediately before you signed this agreement, we verbally explained to you the effect of this agreement and in particular the following:
(a) the circumstances in which you may be liable to pay our disbursements and charges;
(b) the circumstances in which you may seek assessment of our charges and disbursements and the procedure for doing so;
(c) whether we consider that your risk of becoming liable for any costs in these proceedings is insured under an existing contract of insurance;
(d) other methods of financing those costs, including private funding, Community Legal Service funding, legal expenses insurance, trade union funding;
(e) (i) in all the circumstances, on the information currently available to us, we believe that a contract of insurance is not required.
(ii) In any event, we will indemnify you against your opponent's charges and disbursements in case you lose."
For the Paying Party (2nd Defendant)
"… it was a question of existing public policy directed to protecting the integrity of public justice whether agreements in support of litigation were lawful, and express legal provisions such as the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 provided a powerful indication of the limits of public policy in analogous situations; that section 58 of the 1990 Act, both in its original form and as subsequently amended, applied only to agreements for the provision of litigation or advocacy services concluded by solicitors and others authorised to conduct litigation or those with rights of audience and did not apply to contingent fee agreements, such as those entered into by GT or by expert witnesses, for the provision of services ancillary to the conduct of litigation by authorised persons; that the agreements in question were therefore not "conditional fee agreements" within the meaning of section 58 of the 1990 Act and were not implicitly rendered unenforceable thereby; and that in the absence of applicable express legal provisions the court had to look at the facts of the particular case and consider whether they suggested that the agreement in question might tempt the allegedly champertous maintainer for his personal gain to inflame the damages, suppress evidence, suborn witnesses or otherwise undermine the ends of justice, ie in any individual case the court had to ask whether the particular agreement tended to conflict with existing public policy directed to protecting the due administration of justice with particular regard to the interests of the defendant, bearing in mind the importance which public policy now attached to access to justice."
For the receiving party (Claimant)
"It [maintenance] is directed against wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others in which the [maintainer] has no interest whatever, and where the assistance he renders to one or the other party is without justification or excuse." to which Lord Mustill added (citing the above quotation with approval in Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142 at 161B) thus:
"'This was a description of maintenance. For champerty there must be added the notion of a division of the spoils."
"This decision [Giles v Thompson] abundantly supports the proposition that, in any individual case, it is necessary to look at the agreement under attack in order to see whether it tends to conflict with existing public policy that is directed to protecting the due administration of justice with particular regard to the interests of the defendant."
"Yet I do accept the argument of Sir Sydney Kentridge QC that the maintenance cases show that charitable financial support for impecunious litigants has accorded with public policy and the interests of justice since at least about 1400. Public policy is flexible and responds to the needs of the age. In my judgment with the availability of legal aid being much reduced charitable financial support for the impecunious litigant today is surely in accord with public policy and the interests of justice. I agree with Sir Sydney that the Courts should not discourage such charity."
"A solicitor who charges a contingency fee which does not satisfy the requirements of s.58 can hardly be said to be guilty of 'wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others ... where the assistance he renders to one or the other party is without justification or excuse'. The public policy which is in play in the present case is that which weighs against a person who is in a position to influence the outcome of the litigation having an interest in that outcome."and at 87:
"The prospect of receiving 8% of recoveries would have provided a motive for Grant Thornton to inflame the damages, though not to the extent that a larger proportion would have done. As to the likelihood of their yielding to this temptation .... Grant Thornton are reputable members of a respectable profession whose members are subject to regulation."
Second Defendant's reply
MY DECISION AS TO ISSUE (I)
Champerty and the 'stake' in litigation
"If there is a controversy about the scope of a legal rule, or of a head of public policy, a good starting point is to inquire into the historical origin of it. Legal history can help to illuminate the present law. In modern idiom maintenance is the support of litigation by a stranger without just cause. Champerty is an aggravated form of maintenance. The distinguishing feature of champerty is the support of litigation by a stranger in return for a share of the proceeds. The evolution of maintenance is rooted in mediaeval history. In Martell v Consett Iron Ltd [1955] 1 All ER 481, [1955] Ch 363 Danckwerts J stated that the English law of maintenance was the product of particular abuses which arose in the conditions of English mediaeval society. The judgment of Danckwerts J, which has long been regarded as the locus classicus in the field, contains a valuable review of the early reported case law. But it is in an article by Professor Winfield, the great Cambridge legal scholar, that a detailed explanation of the origin of maintenance and champerty is given: see 'The history of maintenance and champerty' (1919) 35 LQR 50. At the risk of oversimplifying the results of Professor Winfield's research, it seems that one of the abuses which afflicted the administration of justice was the practice of assigning doubtful or fraudulent claims to royal officials, nobles or other persons of wealth and influence, who could in those times be expected to receive a very sympathetic hearing in the court proceedings. The agreement often was that the assignee would maintain the action at his own expense, and share the proceeds of a favourable outcome with the assignor. Often these disputes involved a claim to the possession of land, and the subsequent sharing of land if the action was successful. Two factors contributed to the growth of these abuses. First, detachment and disinterestedness was not the hallmark of the mediaeval judiciary. There was in truth no independent judiciary. Secondly, the civil justice system was not yet developed, and it was not capable of exposing abuses of legal procedure and giving effective redress. In these conditions a patchwork of statutes created the offences of maintenance and champerty as well as the torts of maintenance and champerty. And there was apparently a parallel common law development in respect of maintenance and champerty.Gradually the conditions which led to the emergence of maintenance and champerty disappeared. Jeremy Bentham Works (Bowring (ed), 1843) vol 3, pp 19–20 argued:
'A mischief, in those times it seems but too common, though a mischief not to be cured by such laws, was, that a man would buy a weak claim, in hopes that power might convert it into a strong one, and that the sword of a baron, stalking into court with a rabble of retainers at his heels, might strike terror into the eyes of a judge upon the bench. At present, what cares an English judge for the swords of a hundred barons? Neither fearing nor hoping, hating nor loving, the judge of our days is ready with equal phlegm to administer, upon all occasions, that system, whatever it be, of justice or injustice, which the law has put into his hands.'"
'The reason why the common law condemns champerty is because of the abuses to which it may give rise. The common law fears that the champertous maintainer might be tempted, for his own personal gain, to inflame the damages, to suppress evidence, or even to suborn witnesses.'
Solicitors
The reason why contingency fees are in general unlawful is that they are contrary to public policy as we understand it in England. That appears from the judgment of Lord Esher MR in Pittman v Prudential Bank Ltd … 111:
'In order to preserve the honour of the profession it was a rule of law which the court had laid down and would always insist upon that a solicitor could not make an arrangement of any kind with his client during the litigation he was conducting so as to give him any advantage in respect of the result of that litigation.'"
"Champerty is a species of maintenance: but it is a particularly obnoxious form of it. It exists when the maintainer seeks to make a profit out of another man's action - by taking the proceeds of it, or part of them, for himself. Modern public policy condemns champerty in a lawyer whenever he seeks to recover - not only his proper costs - but also a portion of the damages for himself: or when he conducts a case on the basis that he is to be paid if he wins but not if he loses."
"… I accept the general thesis in the judgment of Millett LJ in the Thai Trading case that modern perception of what kinds of lawyers' fee arrangements are acceptable is changing. But it is a subject upon which there are sharply divergent opinions and where I should hesitate to suppose that my opinion, or that of any individual judge, could readily or convincingly be regarded as representing a consensus sufficient to sustain a public policy. The difficulties and delays surrounding the introduction of conditional fee agreements permitted by statute emphasise the divergence of view. In my judgment, where Parliament has, by what are now (with s.27 of the Access to Justice Act 1999) successive enactments, modified the law by which any arrangement to receive a contingency fee was impermissible, there is no present room for the court, by an application of what is perceived to be public policy, to go beyond that which Parliament has provided."
58. –
(1) A conditional fee agreement which satisfies all of the conditions applicable to it by virtue of this section shall not be unenforceable by reason only of its being a conditional fee agreement; but (subject to subsection (5)) any other conditional fee agreement shall be unenforceable.
(2) For the purposes of this section and section 58A-
(a) a conditional fee agreement is an agreement with a person providing advocacy or litigation services which provides for his fees and expenses, or any part of them, to be payable only in specified circumstances; and
(b) a conditional fee agreement provides for a success fee if it provides for the amount of any fees to which it applies to be increased, in specified circumstances, above the amount which would be payable if it were not payable only in specified circumstances.
(3) The following conditions are applicable to every conditional fee agreement-
(a) it must be in writing;
(b) it must not relate to proceedings which cannot be the subject of an enforceable conditional fee agreement; and
(c) it must comply with such requirements (if any) as may be prescribed by the Lord Chancellor.
(4) The following further conditions are applicable to a conditional fee agreement which provides for a success fee-
(a) it must relate to proceedings of a description specified by order made by the Lord Chancellor;
(b) it must state the percentage by which the amount of the fees which would be payable if it were not a conditional fee agreement is to be increased; and
(c) that percentage must not exceed the percentage specified in relation to the description of proceedings to which the agreement relates by order made by the Lord Chancellor.
(5) If a conditional fee agreement is an agreement to which section 57 of the Solicitors Act 1974 (non-contentious business agreements between solicitor and client) applies, subsection (1) shall not make it unenforceable.
The modern scope of Champerty
"That test [the test referred to by Lord Mustill] is appropriate when considering agreements under which those who, in one way or another, support litigation in which they are not concerned. It is not, however, really in point when considering agreements under which those who are playing a legitimate part in the process of litigation provide their services on a contingency fee basis. A solicitor who charges a contingency fee which does not satisfy the requirements of s.58 can hardly be said to be guilty of 'wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others… where the assistance he renders to the one or other party is without justification or excuse'. The public policy which is in play in the present case is that which weighs against a person who is in a position to influence the outcome of the litigation having an interest in that outcome."
"There is, I think, a clear requirement of public policy that officers of the court should be in inhibited from putting themselves in a position where their own interests may conflict with their duties to the court by agreement, for instance, of so-called 'contingency fees'.
The fact that the quotation refers to contingency fees (which at the time of that decision was an expression in common use generally for fees which were conditional on outcome) simply as an example, to my mind discloses the anticipation that other forms of agreement apart from those for contingent fees might put a solicitor in a position where his or her own interests conflicted with duties to the court.
Maintenance
Does this agreement offend against the public policy 'which weighs against a person who is in a position to influence the outcome of the litigation having an interest in that outcome'?
"... The correct approach is not to ask whether, in accordance with contemporary public policy, the agreement has in fact caused the corruption of public justice. The court must consider the tendency of the agreement. The question is whether the agreement has the tendency to corrupt public justice. And this question requires the closest attention to the nature and surrounding circumstances of a particular agreement."
After citing the above and considering Lord Mustill's speech on further appeal in Giles v Thompson, Lord Phillips affirmed the above at para. 40-41:
"This decision [Giles v Thompson] abundantly supports the proposition that, in any individual case, it is necessary to look at the agreement under attack in order to see whether it tends to conflict with the existing public policy that is directed to protecting the due administration of justice with particular regard to the interests of the defendant."
"It may, however, be worthwhile to indicate briefly the nature of the public policy question. It can, I think, be summarised in two statements. First, in litigation a professional lawyer's role is to advise his client with a clear eye and an unbiased judgment. Secondly, a solicitor retained to conduct litigation is not merely the agent and adviser to his client, but also an officer of the court with a duty to the court to ensure that his client's case, which he must, of course, present and conduct with the utmost care of his client's interests, is also presented and conducted with scrupulous fairness and integrity. A barrister owes similar obligations. A legal adviser who acquires a personal financial interest in the outcome of the litigation may obviously find himself in a situation in which that interest conflicts with those obligations …"
(1) The indemnity provision in this agreement was uncapped (whether by reference to a fixed sum or a percentage of costs). The solicitors faced the potential for liability for the whole of the opponent's costs if the case was lost. Their exposure in the event of failure potentially far exceeded the value to them in the event of success (success would bring normal fees plus a 25% success fee, failure would bring zero fees plus, probably, full liability to pay the opposing party's costs). In a significant case such as this that could have been a large sum to lose, by any standards, if the case was lost at a late stage or after a trial, and that could have placed pressure on solicitors to pursue litigation by improper means to avoid such a loss. Some firms would be put out of business by a loss of the size which one might incur from litigation of this sort, and virtually any firm would regard the potential exposure, if the litigation became prolonged, as significant. The court must concern itself with whether there is a material risk that a solicitor, perhaps late on in the litigation and faced with a duty to disclose a document likely to cause the loss of the case (under an order for standard disclosure creating the duty of disclosure of adverse documents) might be tempted to fail to discharge that duty rather than incur a – by that stage large - liability under the clause.(2) The case was assessed as having a high chance of success (as noted before, 25% success fee connoting an 80% chance of success), which does go to mitigate the pressure which a solicitor would feel at the start. But of course the prospects of success are assessed at the outset and risks change in the course of litigation.
(3) I have been presented with no evidence that the potential loss was either underwritten, or otherwise provided for in advance. A solicitor who has either insured himself with some external policy, or has set aside a fund to risk for a given case or class of cases might be in a considerably less difficult position than a solicitor who risks money without having made advance provision to cover the loss.
(4) On the other hand, a claimant's solicitor having a stake of the sort imposed by the indemnity clause could, up to a point, benefit a defendant and the interests of justice in that a solicitor who is risking his own money may be less likely to fight a bad case from the outset and may be less likely to pursue a case in an extravagant or overblown manner.
(5) A further benefit to the defendant is that in the event of success, the provision of the indemnity by the solicitor is an additional source of funds from which the defendant may ultimately obtain satisfaction of his costs. He is not worse off, and may be better off in respect of recovering his costs in the event of a 'win' than he would be if the claimant had represented himself.
(6) Still further on the positive side, the provision of an indemnity clause could facilitate access to justice in a commercial environment where the availability of insurance cover is not necessarily guaranteed and where 'legal aid' funding is for most purposes now limited to those with very restricted means in specific areas of litigation.
(7) One must not lose sight of the further principle that freedom to contract is, on the whole, a positive freedom which encourages competition and flexible provision of services responsive to customer demand. Inability to enter into this type of agreement would tend to reduce the diversity of 'product' options open to users of legal services.
(8) An inability to enter into agreements of this sort would tend to ensure that all Claimants would, as of course, take out commercial insurance at a cost which would be borne by losing Defendants and their insurers, which may not be beneficial inasmuch as it adds to litigation cost.
(9) Sometimes a solicitor who has made a mistake such as missing a time limit, informs the client that an application can be made to rectify it, and that if the client wishes to attempt that application rather than taking his instructions elsewhere then the solicitor will not charge for the application and will bear the costs if it fails. On the face of it such an arrangement may be desirable in an appropriate case.
Second Defendant's case
"… It must be a contract whereby for some consideration, usually but not necessarily for periodical payments called premiums, you secure to yourself some benefit, usually but not necessarily the payment of a sum of money, upon the happening of some event, which event must have some amount of uncertainty about it, and must be of a character more or less adverse to the interest of the person effecting the insurance."
The court held that the contract was a contract of insurance.
"[18] It is understandable that in some, though not all, dictionary definitions of Insurance, the proportionality of the premium to the risk is included as an element. In a definition, rather than in an elaboration of the topic, the proportionality of the premium may help to distinguish the concept of insurance from other concepts but it is not an indispensable element. […]
[19] The correct position is outlined in Colinvaux's Law of Insurance 6th ed (1990) at 131 where attention having been drawn to the fact that a premium may be a consideration other than a money payment, as for example in mutual insurance, it is stated:
"A premium is in no respect a prerequisite of a contract of insurance: all that is necessary is the undertaking by the insurer for good consideration. The policy may be by deed, in which case no premium or other consideration flowing from the insured is necessary to render the insurer bound. The premium more usually, however, takes the form of a money payment. It has been defined as 'a price paid adequate to the risk', but the adequacy of the premiums is purely the insurer's concern. The amount of the premium may be of assistance, however, in showing the scope of the policy, for it is measured by the insurer's estimate of the risk formed upon an average of his previous experience of similar risks…"
[20] In any event, suppose an insurance company decided, for the purpose of attracting custom … to lower its premiums so that they were less than an actuarial apportionment to the risk would require. It could not sensibly be suggested that the transactions in which lower premiums were charged did not involve undertaking liability by way of insurance, and the reason why it could not be so suggested is that the essence of the relationship between insurer and insured would remain, namely, the relationship of indemnity in the context of contingent loss."
Claimant's case
(i) Effecting or carrying out a contract of insurance as a principal was a 'specified kind of activity' for the purposes of Art. 10 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001 (the Order), and carrying out or effecting a contract of insurance was a 'regulated activity' under Art. 4 of the Order and s.22 of FSMA if it was carried on by way of business.(ii) There was a 'general prohibition' precluding a person from carrying on a regulated activity or purporting to do so unless authorised or exempt (FSMA s.19, Art 4 of the Order).
(iii) An agreement made by a person in the course of carrying on a regulated activity in contravention of the general prohibition was unenforceable against the other party to it (s.26).
(iv) There were no statutory definitions of 'contract of insurance' 'carrying on an activity' or 'by way of business'.
(v) The court had a discretion in any event to permit a contract to be enforced if it was 'just and equitable in the circumstances of the case' and in so considering, the court was required to have regard to whether the person carrying on the regulated activity reasonably believed that he was not contravening the general prohibition by making the agreement (FSMA s.28(3)-(5)).
"[52] The FSMA does not contain an exhaustive description of what constitutes the carrying on of business within the United Kingdom. All that s 418 (set out above) provides is that the requirement is to be satisfied in certain specific cases if it would not otherwise be so satisfied. This case is not within those cases. Accordingly, the court is left with the question whether the activities described above (so far as not disputed), of themselves, constituted the carrying on of business in the United Kingdom. FSMA does not require that the entirety of a business activity be carried on in the United Kingdom. If it did, it would be open to obvious abuse.[53] In my judgment, it is sufficient if the activities in question which took place in this jurisdiction were a significant part of the business activity of running the CIS (if any) constituted by the betting services offered by 147 and TBPS. In this case, the communications with clients and prospective clients, and the maintenance of a bank account and an accommodation address, all of which took place in the United Kingdom, were all business activities. In my judgment they were of sufficient regularity and substance to constitute the carrying on of business here even after Mr Fradley moved his own office to Ireland in April 2003 and gave instructions by post or internet from there. I leave open the question whether the requirement of carrying on business within the jurisdiction can be satisfied in any other case."
"The transaction would certainly appear to be within the mischief against which the Money-Lenders Act was intended to provide. Lord Loreburn said in Kirkwood v Gadd: 'The mischief is that this dangerous business may be conducted by persons under false names or a variety of names without the security of an ascertained address, or at places where men may be taken unawares or off their guard'"
Second Defendant's reply
MY DECISION AS TO ISSUE (II)
FSMA s.19 The general prohibition
(1) No person may carry on a regulated activity in the United Kingdom, or purport to do so, unless he is—
(a) an authorised person; or(b) an exempt person.(2) The prohibition is referred to in this Act as the general prohibition.
FSMA s.22 The classes of activity and categories of investment
(1) An activity is a regulated activity for the purposes of this Act if it is an activity of a specified kind which is carried on by way of business and—
(a) relates to an investment of a specified kind; or(b) in the case of an activity of a kind which is also specified for the purposes of this paragraph, is carried on in relation to property of any kind.(2) Schedule 2 makes provision supplementing this section.
(3) Nothing in Schedule 2 limits the powers conferred by subsection (1).
(4) "Investment" includes any asset, right or interest.
(5) "Specified" means specified in an order made by the Treasury.
Art.10 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Regulated Activities) Order 2001 (which sets out kinds of 'specified activity' for the purposes of s.22)
10 Effecting and carrying out contracts of insurance
(1) Effecting a contract of insurance as principal is a specified kind of activity.
(2) Carrying out a contract of insurance as principal is a specified kind of activity.
FSMA s.23 Contravention of the general prohibition
(1) A person who contravenes the general prohibition is guilty of an offence and liable—
(a) on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months or a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum, or both;(b) on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years or a fine, or both.(2) In this Act "an authorisation offence" means an offence under this section.
(3) In proceedings for an authorisation offence it is a defence for the accused to show that he took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence to avoid committing the offence.
FSMA s.26 Agreements made by unauthorised persons
(1) An agreement made by a person in the course of carrying on a regulated activity in contravention of the general prohibition is unenforceable against the other party.
(2) The other party is entitled to recover—
(a) any money or other property paid or transferred by him under the agreement; and(b) compensation for any loss sustained by him as a result of having parted with it.(3) "Agreement" means an agreement—
(a) made after this section comes into force; and(b) the making or performance of which constitutes, or is part of, the regulated activity in question.(4) This section does not apply if the regulated activity is accepting deposits.
FSMA s.28 Agreements made unenforceable by section 26 or 27
(1) This section applies to an agreement which is unenforceable because of section 26 or 27.
(2) The amount of compensation recoverable as a result of that section is—
(a) the amount agreed by the parties; or(b) on the application of either party, the amount determined by the court.(3) If the court is satisfied that it is just and equitable in the circumstances of the case, it may allow—
(a) the agreement to be enforced; or(b) money and property paid or transferred under the agreement to be retained.(4) In considering whether to allow the agreement to be enforced or (as the case may be) the money or property paid or transferred under the agreement to be retained the court must—
(a) if the case arises as a result of section 26, have regard to the issue mentioned in subsection (5); or(b) if the case arises as a result of section 27, have regard to the issue mentioned in subsection (6).(5) The issue is whether the person carrying on the regulated activity concerned reasonably believed that he was not contravening the general prohibition by making the agreement.
(6) The issue is whether the provider knew that the third party was (in carrying on the regulated activity) contravening the general prohibition.
(7) If the person against whom the agreement is unenforceable—
(a) elects not to perform the agreement, or(b) as a result of this section, recovers money paid or other property transferred by him under the agreement,he must repay any money and return any other property received by him under the agreement.
(8) If property transferred under the agreement has passed to a third party, a reference in section 26 or 27 or this section to that property is to be read as a reference to its value at the time of its transfer under the agreement.
(9) The commission of an authorisation offence does not make the agreement concerned illegal or invalid to any greater extent than is provided by section 26 or 27.
3 Interpretation
(1) In this Order—…
"contract of general insurance" means any contract falling within Part I of Schedule 1;
"contract of insurance" means any contract of insurance which is a contract of long-term insurance or a contract of general insurance, and includes—
(a) fidelity bonds, performance bonds, administration bonds, bail bonds, customs bonds or similar contracts of guarantee, where these are—(i) effected or carried out by a person not carrying on a banking business;(ii) not effected merely incidentally to some other business carried on by the person effecting them; and
(iii) effected in return for the payment of one or more premiums;
(b) tontines;
(c) capital redemption contracts or pension fund management contracts, where these are effected or carried out by a person who—
(i) does not carry on a banking business; and(ii) otherwise carries on a regulated activity of the kind specified by article 10(1) or (2);
(d) contracts to pay annuities on human life;
(e) contracts of a kind referred to in article 1(2)(e) of the first life insurance directive (collective insurance etc); and
(f) contracts of a kind referred to in article 1(3) of the first life insurance directive (social insurance);
but does not include a funeral plan contract (or a contract which would be a funeral plan contract but for the exclusion in article 60);
"contract of long-term insurance" means any contract falling within Part II of Schedule 1
"Legal expenses
17 Contracts of insurance against risks of loss to the persons insured attributable to their incurring legal expenses (including costs of litigation)."
"1-6 The question was raised in both the St Christopher Motorists Association case and the Medical Defence Union case whether the event on which the insurer's liability depends must be one outside the control of the insurer. The point was not decided in either case. It is certainly necessary to distinguish an insurance contract from the express or implied undertaking of a contracting party to pay damages, or to perform some other secondary obligation, such as the repair of a defective article, in the event of his own failure to perform a primary obligation. To admit that a person may offer insurance against the possibility that he himself may commit some voluntary act would be to risk confusing this necessary distinction. It is therefore submitted that the event upon which a contract of insurance depends must be an event outside the control of the insurer."
"… The inclusion of indemnity provisions within a contract for the supply of services neither makes the indemnifier an insurer nor justifies describing the contract as wholly or partly one of insurance. When a contract of sale or for services contains elements of insurance it will be regarded as a contract of insurance only if, taking the contract as a whole, it has as its principal object the provision of insurance. So where a 'card protection plan' offered insurance and other facilities to subscribers, it was held to be a contract for the provision of insurance, and so exempt from value added tax, because the dominant objective of the plan was to offer insurance against financial loss and the non-insurance services provided were viewed as minor and ancillary to that aim. The 'principal object' test is not, however appropriate where the contract in question does not have distinct insurance and non-insurance elements, and the question at issue is whether it is properly to be characterised as insurance. In Fuji Finance Inc v Aetna Life Insurance Co.[…] the Court of Appeal held that the correct approach was to characterise the contract as a whole and then see if it came within the definition of life assurance, which it did."
"It seems to me that for the purpose of determining whether that contract comes within the definition [of contract of insurance] we must look at it as a whole, and not split it up into two separate parts." I also remind myself of the definition of insurance given by Channell J in the same case also at p664 quoted at paragraph 74 above in summarising the second Defendant's submissions where reference was made to the requirement for an element of uncertainty and for the event insured against to be more or less adverse to the interests of the insured.
Is a premium required?
What is a 'contract of insurance', is this such a contract, and is it unenforceable under FSMA?
Carrying on an activity by way of business
Discretion
My order
1. It is declared that the Claimant's retainer is unenforceable on the ground that the retainer is contrary to public policy.2. The Second Defendant's objection that the Claimant's retainer is unenforceable as constituting unlawful insurance is dismissed.
3. Time for the parties to apply to this Court for permission to appeal against paragraphs 1 and 2 above is extended until the hearing presently listed for 11th September 2008.
4. It is directed under CPR 52.4(2)(a) that time for filing an appellant's notice be extended to 21 days after the conclusion of the said hearing.
5. All matters consequential upon the judgment delivered today be adjourned to the said hearing.
6. The detailed assessment of the remainder of the Claimant's costs will take place at the said hearing.
7. The said hearing be listed with a time estimate of a day.
DEPUTY MASTER VICTORIA WILLIAMS, COSTS JUDGE
30th June 2008