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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Various Claimants v Mercedes-Benz Group Ag & Ors [2024] EWHC 695 (KB) (25 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/695.html Cite as: [2024] Costs LR 685, [2024] EWHC 695 (KB) |
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OF ENGLAND AND WALES
KINGS BENCH DIVISION
Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CONSTABLE
____________________
VARIOUS CLAIMANTS | Claimants | |
- and - | ||
MERCEDES-BENZ GROUP AG AND OTHERS | ||
VOLKSWAGEN AG AND OTHERS | ||
DR ING HCF PORSCHE AG AND OTHERS | ||
AND OTHERS | Defendants |
____________________
Hearing dates: 11,12,13,14,15 March 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Cockerill and Constable JJ:
INTRODUCTION
THE CPR 31.22 APPLICATION
Background
The Law
"(2) The court may make an order restricting or prohibiting the use of a document which has been disclosed, even where the document has been read to or by the court, or referred to, at a hearing which has been held in public."
1) The starting point is the principle of open justice, and very good reasons are required to depart from the normal rule of publicity;
2) When considering an application in respect of a particular document, the court should take into account the role that the document has played or will play in the trial, and thus its relevance to the process of public scrutiny of the trial process. The court should start from the assumption that all documents in the case are necessary and relevant for that purpose, and should not accede to general arguments that it would be possible or substantially possible to understand the trial and the judgment without access to a particular document, though in particular cases the centrality of the document to the trial is a factor to be placed in the balance;
3) The court must have in mind any "chilling" effect of an order upon the interests of third parties;
4) The court will require specific reasons why a party would be damaged by the publication of a document. Those reasons will in appropriate cases be weighed in light of the considerations in paragraph 11(2) above. Simple assertions of confidentiality and damage which will be done by publication are insufficient even if supported by both parties.
Discussion
1) The documents contain commercially sensitive material which is not generally available;
2) There is a real risk of harm to the Mercedes Defendants, including the risk of exploitation and loss of confidential status in other jurisdictions (specifically Germany) if collateral use of the documents is permitted;
3) The court cannot at this stage conclude that the principle of open justice requires that the documents be publicly available. The time for that assessment is after trial. An order under r 31.22(2) will not interfere with the running of these proceedings.
Commercially Sensitive Material
The German position on confidentiality
Other arguments
Conclusion
THE FUNDING DISCLOSURE APPLICATION
INTRODUCTION
" (1) The defendant may seek an order against someone other than the claimant, and the court may make an order for security for costs against that person if –
a) It is satisfied, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, that it is just to make such an order; and
b) One or more of the conditions in paragraph (2) applies.
(2) The conditions are that the person-
…
b) Has contributed or agreed to contribute to the claimant's costs in return for a share of any money or property which the claimant may recover in the proceedings; and
Is a person against whom a costs order may be made."
The Law
"19 …Of particular relevance in assessing whether an interlocutory order against a non-party under CPR r 25.14(2)(b) to secure a contingent liability pursuant to section 51 is appropriate and just will be: (1) whether it is sufficiently clear that the non-party is to be treated as having in effect become in all but name a real party motivated to participate by its commercial interest in the litigation…(3) whether there is a sufficient link between the funding and the costs for which recovery is sought to make it just for an order to be made;
20 As to (1) in para 19 above, amongst the important considerations in play is as to the reasons and motivation for the funder's involvement. In particular, the court will seek to ascertain whether the funder has become engaged by way of business with a view to profiting from an action in which it otherwise has no interest, or whether it is what is sometimes called a "pure funder", acting altruistically to enable access to justice and what it perceives to be a worthwhile case to be adjudicated.
21 There will of course be variations within the spectrum".
"… it must now be taken to be in the public interest, and should be recognised as such, for counsel and solicitors to act under a CFA. There are no grounds for treating the party who is or has been represented under a CFA differently from any other party. The same is true of their lawyers…
What we intend to make clear is that lawyers acting under CFAs are at no more risk of paying costs personally than they would be if they were not so acting. In addition, whether or not CFAs are properly the subject of professional privilege, they are not normally required to be disclosed."
"As to the suggestion [that the solicitors] stood to gain a substantial financial benefit from the case (both in terms of profit costs and a success fee), this is undoubtedly true in the sense that any solicitor engaged on a CFA has an interest in the outcome of the case. If the submission [is] that this of itself will render a solicitor liable to a… non-party costs order, it is simply contrary to the public policy that parties, and in particular, impecunious parties, should have access to justice when they do not have the means to fund litigation themselves. There must be additional factors before an order can be appropriate."
The Evidence
"… I confirm in respect of each and every one of the Litigations that:
(i) Pogust Goodhead acts for each of its clients pursuant to a Conditional Fee Agreement ("CFA") within the meaning of section 58 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990; and
(ii) There is no agreement between Pogust Goodhead's clients and any third-party funder, pursuant to which a third-party funder has contributed or agreed to contribute to Pogust Goodhead's clients' costs in return for a share of any money or property which they may recover in the Litigations, or at all.
…
Pogust Goodhead's funding arrangements with third parties
12. … This firm's funding is provided by way of a secured loan in the form of a corporate debt facility of $552.5 million (the "Funding") provided by Gramercy PG (UK) Holdings Ltd ("Gramercy UK") with Gramercy Funds Management LLC ("Gramercy LLC") acting as the investment manager for the debt facility. The Funding operates as a corporate debt facility whereby Pogust Goodhead makes regular drawdowns on an agreed cash flow basis which is subject to change. The funding is provided by Gramercy UK on a business-to-business basis to fund the operating expenditure of Pogust Goodhead. I confirm that the Funding is provided on the basis of a debt facility alone and does not involve equity investment.
13. Pogust Goodhead acts as a solicitor for clients in litigation. The Funding provides working capital which is used for all aspects of Pogust Goodhead's work, including to use across its entire portfolio of cases and also in relation to its operating expenses. While it is of course true that a successful outcome in any of the cases on which Pogust Goodhead is instructed will assist Pogust Goodhead in repaying Gramercy UK, Gramercy UK must be repaid irrespective of the outcome of any of the Litigations relevant to the Applications.
14. Pogust Goodhead's clients are not party to any agreement between Pogust Goodhead and Gramercy UK or Gramercy LLC. No agreement or relationship exists or has ever existed between Gramercy UK or Gramercy LLC (or any previous funder) and Pogust Goodhead's clients. Pogust Goodhead's clients have no obligation to pay Gramercy UK, nor does Gramercy UK have any obligation to pay Pogust Goodhead's clients' costs.
15. As one would expect, Gramercy UK has put in place such security as would be appropriate for funding of the kind and scale provided, such as a charge over the firm's assets. This does not alter the position that Gramercy UK has not entered into any agreement with Pogust Goodhead's clients.'
…
19. Finally, the Vauxhall Defendants have cited in their Application, and the Mercedes Defendants have cited in correspondence, a quotation by me that features in an article published in the Lawyer on 21 February 2024 which those Defendants say is inconsistent with this firm's funding arrangements outlined above. The quotation is as follows: "we [Pogust Goodhead] receive a certain percentage of our costs, and the funder [Gramercy] gets the other percentage." Herbert Smith Freehills LLP on behalf of the Mercedes Defendants assert that this indicates the funding arrangement with Gramercy is tantamount to a damages-based agreement. That is incorrect. The quotation merely describes at high- level, in a way that is intended to be intelligible for lay-persons, the way in which the corporate debt facility with Gramercy is repaid by this firm once it has recovered its costs in the ordinary course pursuant to its CFA with its clients. Again, Gramercy does not have any entitlement to a share of our clients' costs or damages. Rather, it has rights to repayment, via a sweep mechanism, of its advance out of income received by Pogust Goodhead, including income that results from cases successfully litigated under CFAs."
The Parties' Submissions
Discussion
Conclusion
APPENDIX 1: REPRESENTATION
Claimant Lead Firms |
Claimant Counsel |
Chambers |
- Pogust Goodhead - Leigh Day - Keller Postman - Milberg London LLP - Hausfeld |
Oliver Campbell KC
|
Henderson |
Daniel Oudkerk KC
|
Essex Court
| |
Thomas de la Mare KC |
Blackstone | |
Adam Kramer KC |
3 Verulam Buildings | |
Ben Williams KC (Costs) |
4 New Square | |
Gareth Shires |
Exchange | |
Rachel Tandy
|
Henderson | |
Joanna Buckley |
Matrix | |
Kate Boakes |
Matrix | |
Simon Teasdale (Costs) |
4 New Square |
Case |
Claimant Other Firms |
Claimant Counsel |
Chambers |
P/C |
Johnson Law Group |
Stephen Nathan KC |
Blackstone |
Vauxhall |
Bond Turner |
Ben Williams KC (Costs)
|
4 New Square |
|
|
Simon Teasdale (Costs) |
4 New Sqaure |
Case |
Defendant firms |
Defendant Counsel |
Chambers |
Mercedes |
HSF |
Malcolm Sheehan KC |
Henderson |
James Purnell |
Henderson | ||
Richard Blakeley |
Brick Court | ||
Lia Moses |
Henderson | ||
Jonathan Scott |
Brick Court | ||
Jamie Carpenter KC (Costs) |
Hailsham | ||
Imran Benson (Costs) |
Hailsham | ||
Ford |
Hogan Lovells |
Neil Moody KC |
2 Temple Gardens |
Sonia Nolten KC |
2 Temple Gardens | ||
George Peretz KC |
Monckton | ||
Benjamin Phelps |
2 Temple Gardens | ||
Nicola Greaney KC (Costs) |
39 Essex | ||
Matthew Waszak (Costs) |
4 New Square | ||
Renault Nissan |
Signature Litigation (Renault) |
Alexander Antelme KC |
Crown Office |
Toby Riley-Smith KC |
Henderson | ||
David Myhill |
Crown Office | ||
Frederick Simpson |
Crown Office | ||
Joshua Munro (Costs) |
Hailsham | ||
Hogan Lovells (Nissan) |
Stephen Auld KC |
One Essex Court | |
Anneli Howard KC |
Monckton | ||
James Williams |
Henderson | ||
Simon Gilson |
One Essex Court | ||
Taylor Wessing (Nissan ADs) |
Rebecca Keating (attending only if required)
|
4 Pump Court
| |
P/C |
Kennedys |
Leigh-Ann Mulcahy KC (Pan NOx issues and ALGLO issue) |
Fountain Court |
Catherine Gibaud KC |
3 Verulam Buildings | ||
Meghann McTague |
2 Temple Gardens | ||
Nicholas Bacon KC (Costs) |
4 New Square | ||
FCA/ Suzuki |
Kennedys (FCA) |
Leigh-Ann Mulcahy KC (Pan NOx issues) |
Fountain Court |
Simon Atrill KC (ALGLO issue) |
Fountain Court | ||
Nicholas Bacon KC (Costs) |
4 New Square | ||
Hogan Lovells (Suzuki) |
Charles Dougherty KC |
2 Temple Gardens | |
Ruth Kennedy |
11KBW | ||
VW2
|
Freshfields (VW)
|
Laurence Rabinowitz KC |
One Essex Court |
Prashant Popat KC
|
Henderson
| ||
Kathleen Donnelly KC |
Henderson
| ||
Thomas Evans |
Henderson | ||
Celia Oldham |
Henderson | ||
Nicholas Bacon KC (Costs) |
4 New Square | ||
Thomas Evans (Costs) |
Henderson | ||
Hogan Lovells (Porsche)
|
Geraint Webb KC
|
Henderson
| |
BMW |
Hogan Lovells (BMW) |
Charles Dougherty KC |
2 Temple Gardens |
Thomas Fairclough |
2 Temple Gardens | ||
Addleshaw Goddard (AD) |
N/A |
N/A | |
Volvo |
DLA Piper (Volvo)
|
Peter De Verneuil Smith KC |
3 Verulam Buildings |
Douglas Paine |
One Essex Court | ||
DWF (Santander Consumer (UK) Plc) |
N/A |
N/A | |
Linklaters (Lex Autolease)
|
Simon Popplewell
|
Gough Square
| |
JLR |
CMS (JLR)
|
Andrew Kinnier KC
|
Henderson
|
Judith Ayling KC
|
39 Essex
| ||
James White
|
Henderson
| ||
Linklaters (Black Horse Ltd, Lex Autolease Ltd) |
Simon Popplewell
|
Gough Square
| |
Vauxhall |
Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton |
Leigh-Ann Mulcahy KC (Pan NOx issues) |
Fountain Court |
Charlotte Tan (Vauxhall only issues) |
Brick Court | ||
Nicholas Bacon KC (Costs) |
4 New Square | ||
Mazda |
Hogan Lovells |
Stephen Auld KC |
One Essex Court |
Noel Dilworth |
Henderson | ||
Toyota |
HSF
|
Neil Kitchener KC |
One Essex Court |
Sophie Weber |
One Essex Court | ||
Hyundai-Kia |
Quinn Emanuel |
Douglas Paine |
One Essex Court |