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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 >> Zuhri v Vardags Ltd [2023] EWHC 3050 (SCCO) (28 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2023/3050.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3050 (SCCO) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
REEM ZUHRI |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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VARDAGS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
The Claimant not attending
Hearing dates: 18 and July 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Leonard:
"(7) Every order for the assessment of a bill shall require the costs officer to assess not only the bill but also the costs of the assessment and to certify what is due to or by the solicitor in respect of the bill and in respect of the costs of the assessment...
(9) Unless—
(a) the order for assessment was made on the application of the solicitor and the party chargeable does not attend the assessment, or(b) the order for assessment or an order under subsection (10) otherwise provides,
the costs of an assessment shall be paid according to the event of the assessment, that is to say, if the amount of the bill is reduced by one fifth, the solicitor shall pay the costs, but otherwise the party chargeable shall pay the costs.
(10) The costs officer may certify to the court any special circumstances relating to a bill or to the assessment of a bill, and the court may make such order as respects the costs of the assessment as it may think fit."
"(1) In Parts 44 to 47, unless the context otherwise requires…
'costs' includes fees, charges, disbursements, expenses, remuneration, reimbursement allowed to a litigant in person under rule 46.5 and any fee or reward charged by a lay representative for acting on behalf of a party in proceedings allocated to the small claims track…
'detailed assessment' means the procedure by which the amount of costs is decided by a costs officer in accordance with Part 47…
'paying party' means a party liable to pay costs…
'receiving party' means a party entitled to be paid costs…
(2) The costs to which Parts 44 to 47 apply include –
(a) the following costs where those costs may be assessed by the court-(i) costs of proceedings before an arbitrator or umpire;(ii) costs of proceedings before a tribunal or other statutory body; and(iii) costs payable by a client to their legal representative; and(b) costs which are payable by one party to another party under the terms of a contract, where the court makes an order for an assessment of those costs…"
"The provisions relating to default costs certificates (rule 47.11) do not apply to cases to which rule 46.10 applies."
"(1) The receiving party is entitled to the costs of the detailed assessment proceedings except where –
(a) the provisions of any Act, any of these Rules or any relevant practice direction provide otherwise; or(b) the court makes some other order in relation to all or part of the costs of the detailed assessment proceedings…
(3) In deciding whether to make some other order, the court must have regard to all the circumstances, including –
(a) the conduct of all the parties;(b) the amount, if any, by which the bill of costs has been reduced; and(c) whether it was reasonable for a party to claim the costs of a particular item or to dispute that item.
(4) The provisions of Part 36 apply to the costs of detailed assessment proceedings with the following modifications –
(a) 'claimant' refers to 'receiving party' and 'defendant' refers to 'paying party';(b) 'trial' refers to 'detailed assessment hearing';(c) a detailed assessment hearing is "in progress" from the time when it starts until the bill of costs has been assessed or agreed;(d) for rule 36.14(7) substitute "If such sum is not paid within 14 days of acceptance of the offer, or such other period as has been agreed, the receiving party may apply for a final costs certificate for the unpaid sum.";(e) a reference to 'judgment being entered' is to the completion of the detailed assessment, and references to a 'judgment' being advantageous or otherwise are to the outcome of the detailed assessment.
(5) The court will usually summarily assess the costs of detailed assessment proceedings at the conclusion of those proceedings.
(6) Unless the court otherwise orders, interest on the costs of detailed assessment proceedings will run from the date of default, interim or final costs certificate, as the case may be.
(7) For the purposes of rule 36.17, detailed assessment proceedings are to be regarded as an independent claim."
"This Part contains a self-contained procedural code about offers to settle made pursuant to the procedure set out in this Part ('Part 36 offers').
"A Part 36 offer may be made in respect of the whole, or part of, or any issue that arises in… a claim, counterclaim or other additional claim…"
"… a Part 36 offer by a defendant to pay a sum of money in settlement of a claim must be an offer to pay a single sum of money."
John Poyser & Co Ltd v Spencer
79. … the master relied upon CPR r 44.1(2) , stating that: "The costs to which Parts 44 to 47 apply include … (iii) costs payable by a client to their legal representative." However, properly interpreted, those words do not mean that each and every provision in each of CPR Pts 44 to 47 inclusive applies to each of the different types of costs enumerated in CPR r 44.1(2)(a)(i) to (iii) and (b). Rather the effect of that provision is to identify the different types of costs to which some or all of the provisions of CPR Pts 44 to 47 might apply. CPR Pts 44 to 47 covers a number of different costs regimes, with differing provisions and rules. It is not, and cannot be, the case that all the provisions in those four parts apply to each and every type of assessment identified in CPR r 44.1(2). It is clear that some provisions of these rules apply only to some of the particular types of assessment (and in particular to party and party assessments).
80. Secondly, the master relied upon the proposition that CPR Pt 47 applies to CPR rr 46.9 and 46.10… CPR rr 46.9 and 46.10 , and in particular, 46PD.6 set out a detailed and comprehensive procedure and rules for a Solicitor/Client Assessment. The sole reference in 46PD.6 to CPR Pt 47 is in paragraph 6.8 of 46PD.6. The master placed reliance upon paragraph 6.8. However it does not follow from the fact that, pursuant to one specific provision of 46PD.6, one particular provision in CPR Pt 47 does not apply to a Solicitor/Client Assessment under CPR r 46.10 , all other provisions of CPR Pt 47 do apply to a CPR r 46.10 assessment.
81. In the course of argument, counsel for the Claimant took the court through each of the provisions of CPR rr 47.1 to 47.20 . The vast majority of those provisions can have no possible application to a Solicitor/Client Assessment; for example, CPR r 47.4 as to venue cannot apply because CPR r 67.3 makes express provision for the venue of a Solicitor/Client Assessment; CPR rr 47.5 to 47.10 apply only to costs payable by one party to another or payable to a charity; CPR rr 47.11 to 47.15 also apply only to costs payable by one party to another (and in any event the subject matter of CPR rr 47.13 and 47.14 is covered by CPR r 46.10 and 46PD .6). CPR r 47.20 can have no application to Solicitor/Client Assessment, in the face of the 1/5th rule in section 70(9) of the Solicitors Act. The only provisions which might apply to a Solicitor/Client Assessment are those relating to interim and final certificates in CPR rr 47.16 and 47.17.
82. … I drew to the attention of counsel for the Claimant to the judgment of Asplin LJ in Ainsworth v Stewarts Law LLP [2020] 1 WLR 2664 , a Solicitor/Client Assessment case… Where there is nothing in 46PD.6 or there is a gap, it is permissible to consider CPR Pt 47 , but that is not the same thing as saying that the whole of Part 47 applies to Solicitor/Client Assessment or that the latter constitutes a "detailed assessment" within Part 47 .
84. In these circumstances, it is not possible to say either specifically that a Solicitor/Client Assessment can proceed "in accordance with Part 47 "—(it follows that such an assessment is not a "detailed assessment" within the definition in CPR r 44.1(1)); nor that, more generally, CPR Pt 47 applies to CPR rr 46.9 and 46.10.
The Part 36 Offer
The Defendant's Submissions
Conclusions
"..because s 70 of the Solicitors Act 1974 provides its own checks and balances, and is, in many ways, its own self-contained code; one could easily argue that it would subvert the intention of Parliament, as expressed in s 70, to add an adjective or gloss that either diluted or bolstered the one-fifth rule. In any event, there would be serious practical problems with applying CPR, Part 36: who, for example, would be regarded as the claimant? Would it be the solicitor (who claims the costs) or the client (it claims a reduction in those costs)? If the client were the claimant, then how would the court calculate the 'additional amount'?... "
"There is a lack of clarity in this regard. There is a primary statutory provision dealing with the incidence of costs at the conclusion of a statutory assessment of solicitor-client costs, namely s.70(9) of the Solicitors Act 1974.
This provision cannot be, and has not been, displaced by CPR Pt 36 and continues to apply. However, that provision is subject to s. 70(10), whereby the court can depart from the otherwise mandated outcome if there are "special circumstances"… It seems to be increasingly accepted that the making of effective offers by the parties to the assessment is capable in principle, dependent upon the particular facts, of amounting to a special circumstance, and this would appear to fit with the ethos of both the CPR generally and the Jackson reforms in encouraging the making of offers to compromise disputes at an early and less costly stage.
Accordingly, the making of a Part 36 offer may, on the facts of a case, be capable of amounting to a special circumstance, but the automatic provisions of CPR rr 36… do not appear to apply because they conflict with s. 70(9), which is the primary statutory provision of express application.
Whether a successful Part 36 offer therefore attracts any greater benefit than a Calderbank offer is open to argument. Given that the full rubric of Pt 36 cannot reply, and Pt 36 is intended to be a complete and self-contained code, it seems more likely that a successful Part 36 offer should be treated as an admissible offer under the court's general discretion… assuming that the automatic consequences under s. 70(9) do not apply."
"In my judgment, if parties who are before the court choose to employ machinery prescribed by the court's rules in order to settle their dispute, they must be taken to submit to the consequences. Namely, that if the offer is accepted the court may enforce it. A party who makes a valid Part 36 offer, or one who accepts it, must be taken to be binding himself to submit to those consequences…
As to those consequences, I interpret Part 36 in the light of the overriding objective ( CPR r 1 ): the object is to deal with cases justly which includes saving expense, proportionality, expedition, fairness and saving court time. I therefore hold that it need not be a contract that is being enforced and that the regime of Part 36 , while it may well give rise to a contract under the general law touching offer and acceptance, does not depend upon contract law… Infringement of human rights there is none. Nobody is forcing a party to make or accept a Part 36 offer. The obligation that arises is not primarily contractual. It is sui generis. It is part of the court's inherent jurisdiction, now regulated and clarified in Part 36 , "to fulfil the judicial function of administering justice according to law in a regular, orderly and effective manner". The administration of justice includes addressing the settlement of disputes.
It follows that, subject to the separate point about mistake, rectification or rescission, which is to be decided elsewhere, the claimant and the defendants arrived at an enforceable settlement. The court has power to order the parties to sign a single document incorporating the terms of the settlement."