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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 >> Dilenardo, R. v [2023] EWHC 1693 (SCCO) (13 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2023/1693.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1693 (SCCO) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice London, WC2A 2LL |
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DILENARDO |
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Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Leonard
"26.— Fees for confiscation proceedings
(1) This paragraph applies to… proceedings under Part 2 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002…
(2) Where this paragraph applies, the appropriate officer may allow work done in the following classes by a litigator—
(a) preparation, including taking instructions, interviewing witnesses, ascertaining the prosecution case, preparing and perusing documents, dealing with letters and telephone calls, instructing an advocate and expert witnesses, conferences, consultations and work done in connection with advice on appeal;
(b) attending at court where an advocate is instructed, including conferences with the advocate at court;
(c) travelling and waiting; and
(d) writing routine letters and dealing with routine telephone calls.
(3) The appropriate officer must consider the claim, any further particulars, information or documents submitted by the litigator under regulation 5 and any other relevant information and must allow such work as appears to him to have been reasonably done in the proceedings…
(5) The appropriate officer must allow fees in accordance with paragraphs 27 to 29 as appropriate to such of the following grades of fee earner as the appropriate officer considers reasonable—
(a) senior solicitor;
(b) solicitor, legal executive or fee earner of equivalent experience; or
(c) trainee or fee earner of equivalent experience."
"… "senior solicitor" means a solicitor who, in the judgement of the appropriate officer, has the skill, knowledge and experience to deal with the most difficult and complex cases…
"solicitor, legal executive or fee earner of equivalent experience" means a solicitor, Fellow of the Institute of Legal Executives or equivalent senior fee earner who, in the judgement of the appropriate officer, has good knowledge and experience of the conduct of criminal cases;
"trainee solicitor or fee earner of equivalent experience" means a trainee solicitor or other fee earner who is not a Fellow of the Institute of Legal Executives, who, in the judgement of the appropriate officer, carries out the routine work on a case…"
29.— Allowing fees at more than the prescribed rates
(1) Upon a determination the appropriate officer may, subject to the provisions of this paragraph, allow fees at more than the relevant prescribed rate specified in paragraph 27 for preparation, attendance at court where more than one representative is instructed, routine letters written and routine telephone calls...
(2) The appropriate officer may allow fees at more than the prescribed rate where it appears to the appropriate officer, taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, that—
(a) the work was done with exceptional competence, skill or expertise;
(b) the work was done with exceptional despatch; or
(c) the case involved exceptional complexity or other exceptional circumstances…
(4) Where the appropriate officer considers that any item or class of work should be allowed at more than the prescribed rate, the appropriate officer must apply to that item or class of work a percentage enhancement in accordance with the following provisions of this paragraph.
(5) In determining the percentage by which fees should be enhanced above the prescribed rate the appropriate officer must have regard to—
(a) the degree of responsibility accepted by the fee earner;
(b) the care, speed and economy with which the case was prepared; and
(c) the novelty, weight and complexity of the case.
(6) The percentage above the relevant prescribed rate by which fees for work may be enhanced must not exceed 100%.
(7) The appropriate officer may have regard to the generality of proceedings to which these Regulations apply in determining what is exceptional within the meaning of this paragraph."
The Background
Switching and or movement of client funds (overcharging): Counts 1 & 2
Orion: Count 4
Sale of Client Books: Count 6 (Mr Palmer): Count 7 (Mr Ronander)
Restraint Order Breaches
Case S20161025
Case S20190326
Further Breaches
The Trial
The Confiscation Proceedings
Grounds of Appeal: Time Allowed for Consideration of Non-Trial Material from JMW solicitors
Consideration of Non-Trial Material from JMW Solicitors: Written Reasons
"The second point taken is this: whether the determining officer and taxing master could take an overall view and reduce the hours for each individual class of work over the board in the way that they did. The task to be performed in this taxation is preserving the balance between reasonable remuneration of the legal profession for work done on legal aid and protecting the fund against making an open-ended commitment to pay for more hours work than the task reasonably required. The judge dealt with it in this way at page 16:
'… the notice of appeal … essentially challenged the Determining Officer's right to stand back from the individual items in the bill and determine that the aggregate produced from those individual items, although not capable of being impugned as separate items, nonetheless produced a result which established that the time claimed was unreasonable. It seems to me that that must be one of the necessary functions of the Determining Officer, once he has carried out what might be called the audit exercise in relation to the individual items on the bill. The Determining Officer in the first instance, and the Taxing Master on appeal, should exercise great care to ensure that the sum payable on a determination such as the one in question is kept within reasonable bounds, whilst accepting that particular clients may pose particular problems. It is perhaps well to remember the comment of Russell LJ in Re Eastwood (Deceased) [1974] 3 All ER 603 at page 608 where he said that the field of taxation, albeit in that case an inter partes taxation, was one where:
"Justice is in any event rough justice, in the sense of being compounded of much sensible approximation."
I can see nothing to recommend an approach to taxation in this field which merely requires some justification of each item of the claim, followed by an aggregation, without a sensible assessment of the consequence of aggregation in the light of the overall complexities of the case, and above all the experience of the Determining Officer and Taxing Master.'
I agree with the passage entirely. How else can the unreasonable claim be controlled? That is, the judge found, a point of principle but it is not a point of principle as to which there is any dispute… The proper use of the Legal Aid Fund requires that the efficient are rewarded for the economies of time in and out of court which their efficiency produces. It also requires that the inefficient are not over-compensated by being given an open cheque to take as long as they like. Reasonable economy and dispatch must be required while making proper allowance for matters such as a difficult client and the dangers of hindsight in the unpredictable field of litigation."
"When considering whether or not an item in a bill is 'proper' the correct viewpoint to be adopted by a taxing officer is that of a sensible solicitor sitting in his chair and considering what in the light of his then knowledge is reasonable in the interest of his lay client… the lay client… should be deemed a man of means adequate to bear the expense of the litigation out of his own pocket – and by, 'adequate' I mean neither 'barely adequate' nor 'super-abundant'".
"Seeing that there is no one to oppose, it seems to me that, on a legal aid taxation, it is the duty of the taxing officer to bear in mind the public interest. He should himself disallow any item which is unreasonable in amount or which is unreasonably incurred. In short, whenever it is too high, he must tax it down…"
Consideration of Non-Trial Material from JMW Solicitors: Submissions
Consideration of Non-Trial Material from JMW Solicitors: Conclusions
Grounds of Appeal: The Assessment of Angela Terenzini as a Grade C, rather than a Grade B, Fee Earner
Conclusions: The Assessment of Angela Terenzini as a Grade C, rather than a Grade B, Fee Earner
Grounds of Appeal: Work upon which no Enhancement Was Allowed
Conclusions: Work upon which no Enhancement Was Allowed
"The 2001 Funding Order provides that:
Where the appropriate officer considers that any item or class of work should be allowed at more than the prescribed rate, he shall apply to that item or class of work a percentage enhancement … (emphasis added)…
In my judgment it must follow that the Determining Officer may allow enhancement on some items or classes of work but not on others… Generally, it seems to me that enhancement will rarely be justified on work of an administrative nature, routine work or on travelling and waiting."
Grounds of Appeal: Time Spent on Hold, waiting for Santander Bank
Summary Of Conclusions