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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> French v Carter Lemon Camerons [2011] EWHC 3252 (QB) (18 November 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/3252.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 3252 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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FRENCH | Claimant | |
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CARTER LEMON CAMERONS | Defendant |
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165 Fleet Street, 8th Floor, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7422 6131 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR SMYTH (Partner of Carter Lemon) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
JOHN BOWERS QC:
"Dear Mariel,
There is little I can do when you do not keep me informed, when you ignore information and dismiss correspondence that I have carefully sent to you, or you ignore or refuse to answer straightforward questions that any client deserves clarification of – this is what precipitates such unnecessary correspondence.
Obviously if you have overlooked something then that needs to be rectified, but it is no solution for you to keep bullying me into submission or to continue making false accusations or innuendos against me. That only serves to undermine our solicitor/client relationship – where trust is paramount.
I have avoided saying anything until now but this cannot continue. Please, it would be better service if your responses from here on contained constructive and factual information on the case."
"at a point where I had reached the end of my tether with the unprofessional and questionable behaviour of that particular solicitor who had persistently bullied me, did not appear to want to follow perfectly reasonable instructions, had not been 'up front' with me or kept me informed, and so it became necessary to articulate this in correspondence."
"You did not require any instruction from me in order to reply to the Defendant's facsimile of earlier this week even though I did so. I even suggested that you confirm with the Master the wording of his Order and take it from there, but you have not responded to my emails… We could have sorted all this out this afternoon and there would have been no need for this further correspondence."
"[Miss Monk and I] attended the CMC on 14 May 2010 in order to protect [the respondent's] interests, not to act in [her own interests]…and misled the court."
"You have now confirmed to me that you have specific allegations against this firm. First you allege serious misconduct. Secondly you allege negligence and assert that the negligence has caused you substantial prejudice and gives you an entitlement to compensation. I must recommend that you take independent legal advice on those matters which are outside my remit. I have to report that aspect to the firm while I continue with the internal complaints procedures.
As to continuing to act in the light of these allegations, it is almost inconceivable in my view that a firm can continue to represent a client's best interests – pursuing that client's case against a third party –whilst defending itself against allegations by that same client where the client is claiming damages for negligence of the firm. Where allegations such as this give rise to a conflict of interest, the Solicitors Rules of Conduct require a firm to give reasonable notice that it will cease to act."
"The solicitors resist the application, saying that they have unpaid fees of a little over £200,000. Whether their fees are properly a little over £200,000 or whether it is a sum rather less than that, I have no way of knowing, but it is quite clear that Miss French caused them to incur a number of costs and they are entitled to be paid.
3. The solicitors attempted to reach a compromise on the matter by saying, in effect: 'Yes we will surrender your documents to you if you give us a charge over your property'. Miss French, for reasons best known to herself, has taken the view that the solicitors are so incompetent that they could not be trusted to draw up a charge and that therefore she was not prepared to grant them a charge. That is her right. She is entitled to do that, but that unfortunately brings her back to the situation whereby she faces a perfectly lawful lien by the solicitors in respect of their unpaid fees, and I say it is a perfectly legitimate lien."
So that is his conclusion on the issue which was directly before him, that it was a perfectly legitimate lien. He goes in paragraph 4 to say:
"Of course, it is quite clear to me that by the latest May of this year the solicitors' retainer by Miss French had been brought to an end. It had been specifically brought to an end by Miss French herself in an email of I think it is 14 or 24 May, in which she said she wished to act for herself in future. That clearly was terminating the retainer.
5. In any event, it is perfectly clear that the necessary relationship of trust between the solicitors and Miss French had completely broken down. Miss French says it was their fault, the solicitors say it was not. It is not for me to attempt to decide where the truth lies, but it is for me to decide that it is perfectly clear that the necessary relationship between solicitor and client had broken down and that therefore the solicitors were entitled, notwithstanding Miss French's own expressed determination of a the retainer, the solicitors were entitled to treat the retainer as having terminated…"
He then goes on to the question of costs. Miss French says that it was quite wrong for the Master not to attempt to decide where the truth lies.
"The solicitor's lien upon, or right to retain, his client's papers, until the bill, is paid is of a nature wholly different (from a fund realised in the cause). It applies to all his bills of costs…
The Court's power to order that former solicitors hand over papers relating to a case to new solicitors is not exercised automatically. It is a matter of discretion to be exercised judicially depending upon the circumstances of the case…"
She goes on to cite the fact that
"A contract of retainer is prima facie an entire obligation, that is a non-divisible contract: the solicitor is only entitled to be paid if they perform the entire contract and, conversely, is entitled to be paid nothing if the contract comes to a premature end."
"At common law termination of a retainer requires solicitors to give reasonable notice and to have good cause for refusing to act further for the client: Underwood, Son & Piper v Lewis... There may be contractual terms reflecting or modifying these requirements, although under the Solicitors' Code of Conduct 2007 solicitors "must not cease acting for a client except for good reason and on reasonable notice": rule 2.01(2). The guidance to rule 2 of the code gives as an example of good reason for ending a retainer where there is a breakdown in confidence or the solicitors are unable to obtain proper instructions."