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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 >> M&M Savant Ltd v Raja & Ors [2009] EWHC 90149 (Costs) (03 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2009/90149.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 90149 (Costs) |
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(from the Central London County Court)
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
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M&M Savant Ltd |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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Subhash Raja Robin Pauley Michael Brown |
Defendants/ Respondents |
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Mr Avis (instructed by Bindmans LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5 August 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Campbell:
"The claimant is to pay the costs of all three defendants in relation to the County Court proceedings (claim CHY06059) including the costs of the case management hearing on 31 October 2007 (which were reserved in the order made that day as recorded in a written order subsequently signed on 12 November 2007). The quantum of such costs shall be subject to a detailed assessment on the standard basis if not agreed."
"It does seem to me that the arguments which would need to be employed to defeat the dispensation application on the grounds of reasonableness are going to be exactly the same as they would be for the Lands Tribunal appeal……..I am clear here that the work you had to do in respect of the Lands Tribunal appeal was going to be of use in the County Court proceedings and as such under the authorities you are entitled to recover it."
BACKGROUND
THE BILLS AND DETAILED ASSESSMENT
THE SUBMISSIONS FOR THE APPELLANT
"In my judgment, therefore whilst the costs of getting the matter referred are costs incidental to the court proceedings, the costs of the fresh proceedings then taken, that is to say the inquiry…are not incidental to the court proceedings. They are, as indeed the order under appeal itself has stated, incidental to the proceedings before the Secretary of State…."
THE SUBMISSIONS FOR THE RESPONDENTS
ANALYSIS
"The claimant is to pay the costs of all three defendants in relation to the County Court proceedings…"
LAW AND DECISION
"…he [the Costs Judge] takes an item, a single fee on the plaintiff's brief for example, and splits it into two notional fees, the one attributable to the claim, and the other to the counter-claim. This is not apportioning, in which the payment is treated as a single item and the question is to what it is attributable. It is in reality a notional division of what on the face of it is one item." (Viscount Haldane page 102)
"… it gives to both parties their costs of matters in which they have been respectively successful and leaves them liable only for the costs of those in which they have failed, in contrast with what would be the result of the apportionment rule-namely, that of the issues on which the respondents failed, not excepting that of fraudulent conspiracy, they would receive from the appellants a proportion of their costs of defeat while the appellants themselves would have to bear a proportion of their own costs of success" (see speech of Lord Blanesburgh page 110)
"…common costs are non-specific costs [emphasis added] such as travelling expenses which are general to the action in the sense that they do not relate to the handling of any particular issue and would have been incurred whatever issues were involved and specific common costs [emphasis added] (such as the preparation of witness statements, research, attendances on clients, and brief fees) all of which relate to work done on more than one issue in the case, but which are not separated for the purposes of charging out time or as disbursements.
3 The CPR make no special provision for dealing with costs of this type and some of the difficulties in the assessment of these costs arise directly from a common failure by judges to appreciate the complexities which can be created by orders which seek to split the responsibility of the costs between the parties other than by an order for the payment of a simple percentage or proportion of the total costs bill".
"The decision in Medway applied in Cinema Press [see paragraph 34 below] establishes that on a taxation of common costs of the kind the master described as specific common costs, it is appropriate to attribute part of a composite fee to the items of work which the fee was intended to cover. In the present case that exercise can be carried out to isolate a proportion of the brief fees paid on both sides to cover work solely done on the clause 18 claim. The same goes for time spent on preparing parts of witness statements which deal separately and exclusively with that issue. But what the decision in Medway does not do is to authorise the taxing master in a case like the present, to apportion the costs of work all of which is relevant to both claims".
"On this basis the master was, I think, wrong to divide what he identified in paragraph 13 of his ruling as general costs [emphasis added]. The fact that those costs would have been incurred even if only the clause 19 claim had been brought requires them to be treated as costs of the action and not costs referable to the clause 18 issue."
"I have to construe the order for costs which forms part of the learned Judge's order made by consent dated 23 July 1992, and in particular that phrase 'the plaintiff's costs of this action incurred against the second defendant'. In so doing in this review I am only concerned with the items covered by the 19 objections raised on taxation by the plaintiff; and no issue arises in respect of costs which can be attributed exclusively to the claim against one defendant or the other. It is right to distinguish between those items of costs where some genuine apportionment can be made and those where the costs would have been incurred and would have been the same if the plaintiff had been suing solely the second defendant. So far as the latter category is concerned, I do not find the District Judge's reasons for allowing only half of these amounts persuasive. To suggest that a similar order for costs incurred against the first defendant would, in combination with the present order, have led to the plaintiff recovering his costs on these items twice over is unreal, since the plaintiff would have had to give credit against one defendant for what he had received from the other. I also do not find the references to 'fairness' made by the second defendant in argument before me of particular assistance. There is no automatic fairness in the second defendant having to pay only half the fee for the issue of the writ just because of a chance happening that there was another defendant to the action as well. These were items of costs to which the plaintiff was inevitably put in pursuing his claim, ultimately successfully, against the second defendant; and as a matter of principle, the successful party should be able to recover such costs……..I, therefore, accept that in respect of items covered by objections Nos. 3 [the writ fee] and 10 [the fee on setting down], the plaintiff should recover the whole of the amounts claimed, not merely the 50% awarded by he District Judge in this case."
"Therefore it seems to us that the true rule of taxation in these cases is to be found in the Medway Oil and Storage case, which no doubt gives effect to the principles formerly applied by the common law masters. That case decides that, in the absence of special directions such as were given by Clauson J in Willcox v Kettell, where both claim and counter-claims succeed or are dismissed with costs, there is to be no apportionment and it follows from what we have already said that this applies equally to a case where one party is given the costs of the action, except those relating to an issue or issues, or where he is not only deprived of those costs but they are given to the other party. But this is not an end to the matter. While the House held that there was to be no apportionment, they held that there could and ought to be a division of some items which were common to both claim and counter-claim. "The distinction," said Lord Haldane, "between division and apportionment may in certain circumstances be a thin one" but he went on to say that it was fundamental. The distinction will be found stated in Seton, 7th edition, volume 1, page 250 and is in these terms. "When a court gives "part of" the costs of the action, it may do so in two ways; the one will involve an apportionment of the whole of the general charges, the other will extend only to the excess of expense incurred in consequence of the particular matter directed to be accepted". Then it is said that, according to the settled practice of the Chancery Division, the formal direction carries a proportion of the costs of every general proceeding in the action. It is this that the Medway Oil and Storage case prohibits being done in the future, but Lord Haldane points out that there may be items which on their face are single but in reality double, that is, in part relate to the claim and in part relate to the counter-claim; and, will add, in part to one issue and in part to another. In such cases, he says, there must be a division".
"It may well be that the result in this case will be trifling, for, as I have already said, it is possible that there will be no division of the brief fee and instructions for brief…"
CONCLUSION