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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 >> Global Energy Horizons Corporation v The Winros Partnership [2020] EWHC B27 (Costs) (20 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2020/B27.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC B27 (Costs) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice, Strand WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GLOBAL ENERGY HORIZONS CORPORATION |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE WINROS PARTNERSHIP (formerly ROSENBLATT SOLICITORS) |
Defendant |
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Mr Andrew Post QC and Mr Adam Zellick QC (instructed by Rosenblatt Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: (fact-finding/preliminary issues phase):
5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 December 2018, 28 March and 10 May 2019;
further written submissions from the parties on 16 August and 16 September 2019.
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Crown Copyright ©
Master James:
Introduction
Description
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From paragraph | |
Brief introduction | ||
Section 70 proceedings | ||
Part 7/Part 8 | ||
GEHC's motivation | ||
Witness Evidence and Credibility | ||
Scope issue |
GEHC RS Court's decision | |
Other issues decided on evidential points | ||
Notice of Funding/ reduction to success fee | ||
Court's decision | ||
Reduction from 95% to 70% success fee | ||
Oral variation to a written retainer | ||
Conduct including conflict of interests between RS and GEHC | ||
Advice of Reed Pope | ||
Erroneous invoice | ||
Retainer/CFAs |
CFA1 CFA2 CFA3/invoices | |
CLSA and validity of CFAs 1, 2 and 3 | ||
Court's decision | ||
Other issues of fact re: the CFAs | ||
RS advice to GEHC on whether CFA2 had ended/a new CFA was necessary | ||
RS advice to GEHC on whether there had been a win under CFA3 | ||
November 2015 costs estimate - mere device? | ||
August 2015 Agreement | ||
Breach of August 2015 Agreement | ||
Bird & Bird/Termination | ||
Court's decision | ||
Conclusion |
Brief Introduction
The Section 70 Proceedings
i) Whether CFAs 1, 2 and 3 entered into between GEHC and RS were valid or were in breach of Section 58 of the Courts and Legal Services Act and thereby unenforceable?
ii) Whether RS was entitled to terminate the retainer; specifically, whether CFA2 was wrongfully terminated, whether CFA3 was entered into as a result of a misrepresentation that CFA2 had ended, and is therefore tainted, and whether CFA3 was wrongfully terminated?
Part 7 or Part 8
GEHC's motivation in bringing the Section 70 Proceedings
Witness Evidence and Credibility
The interim (statute) Bill/scope issue: GEHC's position
"70. This review of the legislation and the case law leads me to conclude that the burden on the client under section 69(2) to establish that a bill for a gross sum in contentious business will not be a bill "bona fide complying with the Act" is satisfied if the client shows:—i) that there is no sufficient narrative in the bill to identify what it is he is being charged for, and
ii) that he does not have sufficient knowledge from other documents in his possession or from what he has been told reasonably to take advice whether or not to apply for that bill to be taxed.
The sufficiency of the narrative and the sufficiency of his knowledge will vary from case to case, and the more he knows, the less the bill may need to spell it out for him. The interests of justice require that the balance be struck between protection of the client's right to seek taxation and of the solicitor's right to recover not being defeated by opportunistic resort to technicality."
"….the party must know what rights are being negotiated and dispensed with in the sense that the solicitor must make it plain to the client that the purpose of sending the bill at that time is that it is to be treated as a complete self-contained bill of costs to date."
"The success fee percentage set out in the agreement reflects the following:………….(c) our assessment of the risks of failing to recover monetary return and the further postponement of payment of these costs
(d) the fact that if you win, we will not be paid our basic charges until the end of the claim;"
"The claim brought by you against Robert Gray and others…. Any proceedings you take to enforce a Judgment, Order or agreement. Negotiations about and/or a court assessment of the costs of this claim."
RS's Position on Scope:
You achieve a settlement or any other benefit arising out of the Claim, or if you do not achieve a settlement and you go on to issue proceedings, the Court orders in your favour and orders your opponent to pay you costs.
Furthermore, according to the terms of the two CFAs as summarised on page 8 of the Bill of Costs, the success fees were set, inter alia, on the basis of "the fact that if you win we will not be paid our basic charges until the end of the claim". This anticipates that the success fee would not be recoverable until the end of the proceedings as a whole.….It is the Defendant's case that the success fee is not recoverable until the end of the proceedings/claim, which will be when quantum has finally been determined. Accordingly, success fees are not to be determined now
Court's Decision on Scope
Other issues depending upon ABC's recollection
Notice of Funding and consequences for recovery of the success fee:
"If we agree with your opponent that the success fee is to be paid at a lower percentage than is set out in this agreement, then the success fee percentage will be reduced accordingly unless the court is satisfied that the full amount is payable"
Court's decision on Notice
"Yes, there was a conversation around it, yes. I think it came up after it was realised there had to be – I think there was a time lap that had missed or something…"
Later he adds (in response to the suggestion that RS say that Mr Gray was not given Notice was because GEHC told them not to give it,
"No, we didn't say not to do so." {K5/p 80}.
RS relied upon the answer in bold above, as being close to an admission that RS's case was correct but that has been extracted from a single answer in which Mr de Clare's evidence clearly was that the discussion took place after it was realised that Notice had not been timely served. That is not helpful; there are mountains of evidence in this case and this could have been overlooked.
Reduction to recoverable success fee on Detailed Assessment, from 95% to 70% (Master Leonard)
"If the court carries out an assessment and reduced the success fee because the percentage agreed was unreasonable in view of what we knew or should have known when it was agreed, then the amount reduced ceases to be payable unless the court is satisfied that it should continue to be payable…"
Oral variation to Written Retainer
"(3) The following conditions are applicable to every conditional fee agreement—(a) it must be in writing;"
Conduct including Conflict of Interests between GEHC and RS
(i) the decision not to give notice of CFA1; this is dealt with elsewhere [paragraph 122 onwards, under the heading Court's decision on Notice]
(ii) continuing to carry out work after CFA1 had come to an end; ditto [paragraph 173 onwards, under the heading of CFA1]
(iii) the decision to make CFA2 retrospective; ditto [paragraph 181 onwards, under the heading of CFA2]
(iv) the decision to replace CFA2 with CFA3; ditto [paragraph 200 onwards, under the heading of CFA3]
(v) the decision in October 2015 to retain £1.1 million on client account instead of paying it to GEHC; ditto [paragraph 277 onwards, under the heading The August Agreement]
GEHC's ability to seek advice from Mr Reed of Reed Pope
Erroneous invoice of pre-CFA work
The retainer/CFAs
CFA1
So that CFA1 had come to an end, so I could have hoisted the surrender flag then and just decided to say to GEHC, "Well, I'm sorry, we can't take it any further", but what instead we chose to do was to -- we, as a firm, Rosenblatt, and together with the cooperation of the clients -- chose to actually, no, we won't do that, we'll continue on and see whether we can make this claim work in terms of its funding requirement.
CFA2
CFA3 and the Timing of Invoices
i) it provided for the further Advance Fee of £300,000 already referred to;
ii) it provided for the burden of paying disbursements to shift from RS to GEHC;
iii) it removed the contractual provision that a reduction of the success fee on a party and party basis would require RS to reduce their success fee as between themselves and GEHC accordingly;
iv) it no longer covered enforcement proceedings;
v) it provided that RS could "…end this agreement if it believes the Client no longer has a reasonable prospect of success. If this happens, the Client will only have to pay Rosenblatt's fees and disbursements." [H13 Clause 14.4]. In effect, in GEHC's view, this provision removed the element of risk to RS (that they would not get paid at least their basic charges and disbursements under CFA3); and
vi) despite the provision above, and the fact that CFA3 was meant to cover the quantum phase following success on liability, it included provision for a 95% success fee based on risk, and despite a further £300,000 having been paid as an Advance Fee, a further 5% success fee based on deferment.
The Courts and Legal Services Act/validity of CFA1, CFA2 and CFA3
"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;(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
………..
(4) The following further conditions are applicable to a conditional fee agreement which provides for a success fee—
………..(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"
"…focus on the adverse effect was on the protection afforded to the client, not whether, as a matter of fact, the client had actually suffered any prejudice"
The court when considering a departure from Section 58 went on to say:
"…focus of the scheme was on whether the CFA satisfied the applicable conditions, not on the actual consequences of a breach…"
The words "the amount of the fees which would be payable if it were not a conditional fee agreement" do not invite a factual inquiry as to what bargain the parties would have struck if they had not entered into a CFA. That would be a difficult, if not impossible, task to perform.
Court's Decision on Validity of CFA's
Other issues of fact in relation to the CFAs
Did RS advise GEHC that CFA2 had ended so that a new CFA was necessary?
Did RS advise GEHC that there had been a win under CFA3?
(a) Clear echoes of the position presented to GEHC under CFA2. If a remedy from Vos J was a win, which crystallised liability under CFA2 (cf ABC's email at [J1/175]) it is hardly surprising that RS took the same approach to a remedy from Asplin J under CFA3.
(b) GEHC's initial agreement to RS taking the whole of the sum (£2.523 million) being paid by Mr Gray. GEHC assert they would never have agreed to this absent advice that a win had been achieved under CFA3 as (absent such a win) the money was GEHC's outright.
(c) The August agreement, in which the split in the Gray money was agreed, only makes sense (per GEHC) if it had been advised that further sums were owing to RS.
(d) Emails between Mr Monych and ABC which led to the August agreement; email 9 August 2015 [J2/647] from Mr Monych to ABC to say that GEHC is in a 'predicament' because £1.1 million in loans (from the investors) are falling due, and wanting if possible to retain that amount from the Gray payment. He clearly believed that it was GEHC which was asking RS for a favour and would hardly have described GEHC as in a predicament if he had in fact been advised that at this time GEHC owed nothing to RS, and that it was in fact RS which was asking for a favour, because GEHC was legally entitled to the whole of the £2.523 million.
(e) Emails sent by Mr Monych to investors after the August agreement [J2/652], again clearly indicate that it is ABC who has done the favour and not (as RS now assert) that GEHC was making a massive voluntary payment to their firm: 'ABC… has agreed to let us keep £1.1 or thereabouts to repay the loans… ABC had to convince their partners, which ABC did today.'
(f) In what GEHC call a deafening silence later in the case, at the point that a dispute arose over RS's right to appropriate the whole of the Gray payment, purportedly because of the future disbursements of £1.1 million, not once does GEHC refer to a recent "voluntary" payment well in excess of that sum and ask RS to be flexible. Had GEHC in fact been advised that the payment was voluntary, that is the most obvious point that it could possibly have made, and it would inevitably have made it.
(g) In the complete absence of any note – still less formal advice – from RS concerning GEHC making it a voluntary payment of over £1.4 million, on the basis (per GEHC) that any solicitor who had in fact advised its client that a payment on this scale was voluntary, would have prepared such a note, to protect their own position if nothing else.
Was the November 2015 costs estimate a mere device?
A solicitor's obligation to provide costs information, contained in rule 15 of the Solicitors' Practice Rules 1990 , was "to give information about costs" in accordance with the applicable Costs Information and Client Care Code; that the code was incorporated by reference into the Rules and was binding and had statutory effect, but a breach of the requirement to make a costs estimate was not of itself sufficient to render the performance of the contract of retainer between the solicitor and his client unlawful and unenforceable.
The August Agreement
Breach of the August 2015 agreement
I was worried the case was about to collapse because we didn't have funding going forward and I didn't think that was in the interests of the client.
Bird & Bird/termination of retainer
Ruling on termination
Conclusion
Dated 20 August 2020
Note 1 In its proposed corrigenda to this Judgment, GEHC stated the following which I append as a footnote, without comment: Use of the Part 8 procedure is in fact mandatory for Solicitors Act proceedings of this nature – CPR 67.3(2): i.e. here it is not an elective procedure for simple cases, but the originating process which must be used. The court records the defendant’s position on the Part 7 proceedings in the Ch D, but not the claimant’s. For completeness, and as the claimant has made clear throughout, the Ch D claim form was issued protectively in order to preserve the claimant’s rights in respect of the 2012 invoices in circumstances where the defendant asserted (contrary to the court’s subsequent finding) that those invoices were outside the scope of s 70, and therefore could not be reviewed in the current proceedings. This was necessary for limitation reasons (e.g. any claim for breach of contract resulting from the 2012 invoices would need to have been made by 2019). The defendant was repeatedly asked to enter a limitation amnesty to avoid the need to issue such protective proceedings during the currency of the SCCO proceedings, but it refused. For this reason only, the claim form was issued in the Ch D in order to stop any limitation defence from accruing. It has never been GEHC’s intent to have parallel proceedings, and of course this court has upheld its position on the scope of the instant proceedings. GEHC’s position is set out more fully in the fifth witness statement of Glenn Robert Newberry at paragraphs 29 to 35 in support of the application that the judgment be handed down in public. [Back] Note 2 See Mr Justice Males in Ahmud and Co Solicitors v MacPherson [2015] EWHC 2440 regarding the approach on a non-statutory assessment [Back] Note 3 In its proposed corrigenda to this Judgment, GEHC stated the following which I append as a footnote, without comment: In the final sentence, the court implies that an adverse inference might have been drawn against GEHC for not waiving privilege in correspondence with Bird & Bird. Recognising it goes beyond identifying a possible typographical error, but in circumstances where no such inference was contended for by the defendant, the court is respectfully reminded that such is the fundamental nature of legal professional privilege that it is forbidden to draw any adverse inference from a party maintaining privilege in its dealings with its legal advisers: Wentworth v Lloyd (1864) 10 HLC 589. [Back] Note 4 In its proposed corrigenda to this Judgment, GEHC stated the following which I append as a footnote, without comment: Please see note to paras 26-31 above. The Part 7 proceedings are simply protective because of the defendant’s (rejected) stance on scope. There are no POC in the Part 7 proceedings, because GEHC applied to stay them pending these proceedings. In the result, that application was not brought on, both parties acquiesced in the SCCO proceedings continuing while the Ch D provisions were left fallow.
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