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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 >> Whitaker v Richard Slade & Company Plc [2018] EWHC B17 (Costs) (31 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2018/B17.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC B17 (Costs) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
B e f o r e :
____________________
ROGER WHITAKER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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RICHARD SLADE & COMPANY PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
Mark James instructed by the Defendant
Hearing date: 26 September 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Master Brown:
Background facts and factual issues
Agreement regarding our costs
This letter is to confirm and record what we have agreed about the amount you will pay Richard Slade and Co plc for the services you have received from us up to and including 31 December 2016, and when and how you will pay it.
…
Amount you agree to pay
You have agreed to pay, and we have agreed to accept,£86,000 plus VAT for all legal services we have given you up to and including 31 December 2016.
The £5000 which you paid is when you first instructed us will be carried forward and set against charges incurred after 1 January 2017. For the record you agree that the figure of 86,000 plus VAT was reached after discussion and negotiation between us.
Whether the effect of the Agreement is to curtail or bar the Claimant's claim to the relief that he seeks
-Meaning and effect of the Agreement
"Bills are rendered monthly in arrears. Our bills are detailed bills and are final in respect of the period to which they relate, save that disbursements (costs and expenses which we concur on your behalf) are normally billed separately later than the bill for our fees in respect of the same period."
-Whether the Agreement was a CBA under section 59 of the 1974 Act; and if so whether should it set aside under section 61 of the 1974 Act on the grounds of that it was unfair and/or unreasonable.
(1) Subject to subsection (2), a solicitor may make an agreement in writing with his client as to his remuneration in respect of any contentious business done, or to be done, by him (in this Act referred to as a "contentious business agreement") providing that he shall be remunerated by a gross sum or by reference to an hourly rate, or by a salary, or otherwise, and whether at a higher or lower rate than that at which he would otherwise have been entitled to be remunerated.
"No action shall be brought on any contentious business agreement, but on the application of any person who—
(a) is a party to the agreement or the representative of such a party; or
(b) is or is alleged to be liable to pay, or is or claims to be entitled to be paid, the costs due or alleged to be due in respect of the business to which the agreement relates,
the court may enforce or set aside the agreement and determine every question as to its validity or effect.
(2) On any application under subsection (1), the court—
(a) if it is of the opinion that the agreement is in all respects fair and reasonable, may enforce it;
(b) if it is of the opinion that the agreement is in any respect unfair or unreasonable, may set it aside and order the costs covered by it to be assessed as if it had never been made;
(c) in any case, may make such order as to the costs of the application as it thinks fit.
(3) If the business covered by a contentious business agreement (not being an agreement to which section 62 applies) is business done, or to be done, in any action, a client who is a party to the agreement may make application to a costs officer of the court for the agreement to be examined.
(4) A costs officer before whom an agreement is laid under subsection (3) shall examine it and may either allow it, or, if he is of the opinion that the agreement is unfair or unreasonable, require the opinion of the court to be taken on it, and the court may allow the agreement or reduce the amount payable under it, or set it aside and order the costs covered by it to be assessed as if it had never been made.
- is the Agreement or any part of it a CBA?
"Where there is a special agreement under section 57 the procedure is quite different. The solicitor's right of action is founded on the agreement not the bill; indeed so far as section 57 is concerned there is no need for the solicitor to render a bill at all. Nor is there any room for taxation under section 70 , for this is concerned with bills, not agreements. It is true that section 57 (4) seems to contemplate that a taxation may occur, but this is in my view a procedure initiated by the court pursuant to its own inherent powers to supervise solicitors as officers of the court; it is not a procedure exercised as of right by the client. When an action on a special agreement comes before the court, the matter may be sent to the taxing master so that he can inquire into the facts and report back to the court.
"It is to be remarked in the first place that this is a purely enabling, and not a disabling, section, and the Court would not, unless forced to do so, construe such a section so as to take away or alter powers already in existence, except indeed by extending them. Let us now consider the state of the law on this subject at the date of the coming into operation of the Act of 1870. At that date agreements between a solicitor and his client as to the terms on which the solicitor's business was to be done were not necessarily unenforceable. They were, however, viewed with great jealousy by the Courts, because they were agreements between a man and his legal adviser as to the terms of the latter's remuneration, and there was so great an opportunity for the exercise of undue influence, that the Courts were very slow to enforce such agreements where they were favourable to the solicitor unless they were satisfied that they were made under circumstances that precluded any suspicion of an improper attempt on the solicitor's part to benefit himself at his client's expense. But when it appeared that the agreement was favourable to the client, the Courts often held the solicitor to his bargain, for there was no ground in equity why they should be suspicious of a bargain of that kind. Sect. 4, therefore, was not required for the purpose of enabling persons to enter into these agreements, nor was it required in order to strengthen the hands of the Courts in their examination of them. Before 1870 the Court had full power to investigate their propriety, and in my opinion the specific provisions of s. 4 did no more than provide and regulate a procedure for the control of such agreements; they did not in substance alter the law affecting them.
I felt for some time a difficulty in understanding the language of s. 4 on the supposition that, as the law stood prior to the Act, verbal agreements were enforceable when they were favourable to the client and might even be enforced when favourable to the solicitor if the Court were satisfied that they were fairly made. I felt that s. 4 was intended to hold the balance equally between the solicitor and the client, and that an agreement by the solicitor to do the work for a less sum than the ordinary remuneration is as much within the words of the section as one that provides for his remuneration at a higher rate. If, therefore, writing is necessary in favour of the solicitor, why is it not necessary in favour of the client? But the difficulty arises solely from concentrating one's attention too much on s. 4, which is only the introductory section of a whole group of sections forming Part I. of the Act. That group concludes with a section of great importance (s. 15), which provides that where an agreement has been made in accordance with s. 4, and has not been set aside, the ordinary provisions as to delivery and taxation of a duly signed bill of costs are no longer to have effect. This gives to a solicitor who comes under this group of sections an advantage not previously given to him. In my opinion s. 4 only prescribes the mode in which the solicitor can obtain for himself (and I think also in which the client can obtain for himself) the benefit of the group of sections from s. 4 to s. 15 . If either the solicitor or client wants the privileges which those sections give him, he must comply with the requirements of s. 4 and must have an agreement in writing, but if he does not want the benefit of those sections, s. 4 imposes no duty upon him.
- Was the Agreement in in all respects fair and reasonable?
"By s.9 the Court may enforce an agreement if it appears that it is in all respects fair and reasonable. With regard to the fairness of such an agreement, it appears to me that this refers to the mode of obtaining the agreement, and that if a solicitor makes an agreement with a client who fully understands and appreciates that agreement that satisfies the requirement as to fairness. But the agreement must also be reasonable, and in determining whether it is so the matters covered by the expression "fair" cannot be re-introduced. As to this part of the requirements of the statute, I am of opinion that the meaning is that when an agreement is challenged the solicitor must not only satisfy the Court that the agreement was absolutely fair with regard to the way in which it was obtained, but must also satisfy the Court that the terms of that agreement are reasonable. If in the opinion of the Court they are not reasonable having regard to the kind of work the solicitor has to do under the agreement, the Court are bound to say that the solicitor, and an officer of the Court, has no right to an unreasonable payment for the work he has done and ought not to have made an agreement for remuneration in such a manner.."
"Fairness relates to principally to the manner in which the agreement came to be made. Reasonableness relates principally to the terms of the agreement".
Fairness
"Any agreement would therefore be confined to arranging what was to be paid in respect of those payments on account and would not be an agreement to finalise what I owed."
Reasonableness
-Should the agreement be set aside?
Of the remaining bills delivered over 12 months before the application to the Court are they statute bills and, if so, have special circumstances pursuant to section 70 been demonstrated?
Should conditions be imposed in respect of the bills served within 12 months of the issue of the application?