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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Higgins v Ministry of Defence [2010] EWHC 654 (QB) (30 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/654.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 654 (QB), [2010] 6 Costs LR 867 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE SENIOR COSTS OFFICE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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William Albert Higgins |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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Ministry of Defence |
Defendant Appellant |
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Mr Jeremy Morgan QC (instructed by Field Fisher Waterhouse) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 22 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"My decision is that I am going to rule in the circumstances of the case it was a reasonable and objective decision by Mr Higgins to instruct Field Fisher Waterhouse ["FFW"]. Even if I am wrong on that, having looked at the amount of costs incurred by [FFW] in terms of the economy of time and effort in this case, I would in any event say that the costs of £10,000 or thereabouts would in itself be a reasonable figure to have incurred in a case of this type, even had [he] gone to a local solicitor"
"Decision to allow hourly rates applicable to Central London firm of solicitors – the Costs Officer was wrong to allow as reasonable the instruction of [FFW], when the Claimant could have instructed local solicitors of equal competence who would attract far lower hourly rates under guideline rates".
THE BACKGROUND
CPR 44 AND CASE LAW
"whether the liability of the unsuccessful party ordered to pay costs should be restricted to what a reasonably competent solicitor practising in the area of the court, or in the area where the successful party lived, might have been expected to charge, or whether the successful party should be entitled to recover the sums claimed by the solicitor who was in fact instructed to act on his behalf".
"Judge Coltart fell into error because he said: 'I am not satisfied that it can be regarded as reasonable for Mr. Truscott to have instructed A.T.C. on this matter if their rates are higher than would be found locally'.
So that was the sole reason for concluding that the burden of proof had not been discharged…. Judge Coltart made the same error that was made by the clerk to the justices in the Dudley case. Instead of asking himself whether Mr. Truscott had acted reasonably when he instructed A.T.C. and seeking to answer that question having regard to all relevant considerations the judge answered it by applying one simple and in my judgment inappropriate test, namely a comparison between the rates charged by A.T.C. and the rates charged by firms in the locality of the court and the locality in which Mr. Truscott lived. The following are matters which, as it seems to me, the judge should have regarded as relevant when considering the reasonableness of Mr. Truscott's decision to instruct A.T.C. (1) The importance of the matter to him. It was obviously of great importance. It threatened his home. (2) The legal and factual complexities, in so far as he might reasonably be expected to understand them. Due to the incompetence of M.F.C. the matter had taken on an appearance of some complexity. (3) The location of his home, his place of work and the location of the court in which the relevant proceedings had been commenced. (4) Mr. Truscott's possibly well-founded dissatisfaction with the solicitors he had originally instructed, which may well have resulted in a natural desire to instruct solicitors further afield, who would not be inhibited in representing his interests. (5) The fact that he had sought advice as to whom to consult, and had been recommended to consult A.T.C. (6) The location of A.T.C., including their accessibility to him, and their readiness to attend at the relevant court. (7) What, if anything, he might reasonably be expected to know of the fees likely to be charged by A.T.C. as compared with the fees of other solicitors whom he might reasonably be expected to have considered".
"… in relation to the first question 'Were the costs reasonably incurred?' it is in principle open to the paying party, on a taxation of costs on the standard basis, to contend that the successful party's costs have not been 'reasonably incurred' to the extent that they had been augmented by employment of a solicitor who, by reason of his calibre, normal area of practice, status or location, amounts to an unsuitable or 'luxury' choice, made on grounds other than grounds which would be taken into account by an ordinary reasonable litigant concerned to obtain skilful competent and efficient representation in the type of litigation concerned . . . However, in deciding whether such an objection is sustainable in practice, the focus is primarily upon the reasonable interests of the plaintiff in the litigation so that, in relation to broad categories of costs, such as those generated by the decision of a plaintiff to employ a particular status or type of solicitor or counsel, or one located in a particular area, one looks to see whether, having regard to the extent and importance of the litigation to a reasonably minded plaintiff, a reasonable choice or decision has been made.... In either case, solicitors' hourly rates will be assessed, not on the basis of the solicitor's actual charging rates, but (in a case where the decision to retain was reasonable) on the basis of the broad costs of litigation in the area of the solicitor retained or (in a case where the choice made was not reasonable) of the type or class of solicitor who ought to have been retained."
"… no doubt there were firms of solicitors in Sheffield and Leeds well qualified to do the work… it is the duty of [litigants] in each individual case to keep down the costs of litigation, and that may well mean that if they go to London solicitors who charge London rates for a case which has no obvious connection with London, and which does not require expertise only to be found there, they will, even if successful, recover less than the solicitors have charged".
i) It is common ground that the matter was of high importance to Mr Higgins;
ii) Master Campbell expressed no specific view as to the complexity of the matter, but he mentioned complexity together with an additional factor
"Mr Higgins would have known that the matter was urgent …. Urgency … adds a component to the complexity which tips the balance in Mr Higgins's favour";
iii) Master Campbell concluded that there was
"no factor or combination of factors which would give the matter an exclusively London factor, Kent factor or 'somewhere else' factor";
iv) Master Campbell noted that there had been no previous solicitors, so that factor was neutral;
v) Master Campbell found that Mr Higgins never undertook a search for local solicitors whether by the Citizen's Advice Bureau, or by the Law Society, but he concluded, having weighed that factor in the balance,
"I do not consider Mr Higgins can be criticised for following Mr Malamis's advice … or that his decision to do so was objectively unreasonable … it would not be objectively reasonable to expect an 82 year old man who had just been informed that he was incurably ill, to undertake a trawl of local solicitors, in circumstances where an experienced consultant had given him the name of FFW as solicitors who specialised in this field. Had his health been better and had time been on his side, there may have been more force in [MoD]'s submission [that he should have done that]"
vi) Master Campbell found that FFW were accessible, as was proved by the meeting that the solicitor had with Mr Higgins at his home on 17 December.
vii) Mr Higgins did not enquire into the level of fees charged by FFW, but for the reasons given in (v) it was not reasonable to expect him to do so.
SUBMISSIONS
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION