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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ashfakul Bari v Arnold Rosen (t/a Ra Rosen And Co Solicitors) [2012] EWHC 1782 (QB) (28 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/1782.html Cite as: [2012] 5 Costs LR 851, [2012] EWHC 1782 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
On Appeal from Master Leonard
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting with Master Simons and Mr Greg Cox as assessors)
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Ashfakul Bari |
Claimant (Respondent) |
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- and – |
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Arnold Rosen (T/A RA Rosen and Co Solicitors) |
Defendant (Appellant) |
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Dr Mark Friston (instructed by RA Rosen and Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 25th May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Spencer :
Introduction and issues
Factual background
The relevant legal principles
The retainer letter
"For the High Court matter alone, my fee with you is at the rate of £300 per hour but I shall charge your company only at the rate of £225 plus vat, per hour, pending recovery of any costs from the other party to litigation. My timed hours will be regular enough for you to peruse before payment and you should ask questions about times engaged if you wish. I shall send you a regular statutory final bill, which will not be altered subsequently. You should discuss with your accountants what after tax this case will cost you. My best estimate of costs is that I shall need 30+ hours in all for the foreseeable future. I cannot commit myself as yet. The charge to the company of £225 will be specified by a time sheet. I require payment of the bill by return and will argue about any aspect of the charges subsequently. You have a right to have an assessment of my bills at any time in the High Court. Ask for details from me at any time.
Apart from that, all bills are self-contained. You and I will agree that each such subsequent bill is fair and reasonable when billed. The bills are for acceptance; but I do reserve my rights to charge as and when appropriate. You must pay any disbursements of any kind. I am not prepared to disburse out. All disbursements will be supported by a bill or record of indebtedness. Counsel's fees and copying, if used, are to be paid by you promptly and separately. I will discuss with you the right barrister to advise overall. I can make an inquiry once I send a brief to his clerk. As I say my best estimate of costs is that I shall need 30+ hours in all for the foreseeable future."
First issue: was the defendant contractually entitled to issue interim statute bills?
"49. Accordingly if the bills rendered were to be statute bills one would expect any reference to timing to identify the statutory time limits that apply to the Claimant's right to have them assessed on application, not an indication that such application could be made "at any time". The Claimant's absolute right to assessment of a statute bill, on application under section 70(1) of the 1974 Act, expires one month from the delivery. 12 months after delivery, in accordance with section 70(3), assessment of the Claimant's application will be available only in "special circumstances". 12 months after payment (and payment of each bill by return is a condition of the retainer) there will under section 70(4) be no prospect of assessment on the Claimant's application.
50. It is not easy to reconcile the apparently contradictory provisions of the retainer agreement as to the nature of the bills to be rendered, and in my view it is only possible to do so by acknowledging those provisions are ambiguous and construing them contra proferentem. The retainer agreement cannot at once provide the Claimant with a right of assessment "at any time" and, at the same time, subject him to a statutory regime (to which it does not refer) under which his rights to apply successfully for assessment of the Defendant's charges are diminished by the passage of time, even as costs accrue.
51. It follows that the words "at any time" must be read so as to preserve the Claimant's right to assess the Defendant's costs as a whole as long as the retainer continues. Accordingly the bills rendered to the Claimant by the Defendant between June 2008 and March 2009 were not statute bills. The contract of retainer did not provide for them to be statute bills.
52. To my mind the only arguable alternative construction of the May 2008 retainer agreement would be that it is designed to curtail the Claimant's right to apply for assessment of the Defendant's costs as time progresses, whilst incorporating an entirely misleading and contradictory provision to the effect that it does not. That is not, in my view a viable interpenetration, nor I would suggest one upon which a professional legal adviser could comfortably rely."
"The potential difficulties and expense faced by a client who can only challenge regular bills by instituting multiple assessment proceedings - against the same solicitor who is actively handling a number of current matter for him - are obvious. Further, the choice is between a right which begins to diminish after one month from the first regular bill and a right which does not begin to diminish until a later and, for the client, obviously more practicable time."
"The interests of justice require that the balance be struck between protection of the client's right to seek taxation and of the solicitor's right to recover not being defeated by opportunistic resort to technicality".
"In particular the party must know what rights are being negotiated and dispensed with in the sense that the solicitor must make it plain to the client that the purpose of sending the bill at that time is that it is to treated as a complete self- contained bill of costs to date…"
"There is now no doubt, I venture to think, what the law is. In a case such as the present, a solicitor is entitled to select a point of time which he regards an appropriate point of time which to send in a bill. But before he is entitled to require that bill to be treated as a complete self-contained bill of costs to date, he must make it plain to the client either expressly or by necessary implication that that is his purpose of sending in that bill for that amount at that time. Then of course one looks to see what the client's reaction is. If the client's reaction is to pay the bill in its entirety without demur it is not difficult to infer an agreement that the bill is to be treated as a complete self- contained bill of costs to date."
Dr Friston's submission seemed to be that this passage provided some support for his case that the defendant had rendered interim statute bills, because the claimant's reaction had been to pay each bill in its entirety without demur. The difficulty with that argument, of course, is that the claimant was under a contractual obligation to pay each bill by return, on the promise that any argument about any aspect of the charges could take place subsequently.
Second issue: was the Master entitled to treat the bills as a series capable of assessment?
"The bill dated 22 January 2010 was a final bill rendered on the termination of the Defendant's retainer by the Claimant. It follows that all bills delivered by the Defendant to the Claimant must, as in Chamberlain v Boodle and King, be properly treated as a series comprising a single bill, delivered at the date of the last in the series. The Defendant's charges to the Claimant, if they are to be assessed, stand to be assessed as a whole."
"Series of bills. There were no natural break[s] in the proceedings and it is evident that the bills were rendered almost on a monthly basis indicating that the matter was ongoing and that no natural break in the proceedings had occurred. Chamberlain v Boodle and King CA held that [where] a series of bills were rendered in the same matter they should be treated as one bill."
"The Claimant appears to seek an assessment of the Old Bills whilst at the same time saying that they were not statute bills at all. It [is] assumed that this means that the Claimant's primary case is that the Old Bills were not interim statute bills, but that in the alternative, they should be assessed on the basis of some discretionary (but unstated) jurisdiction."
The submission was developed further at paragraph 22:
" The Claimant implies that … if the Old Invoices are [not] interim statute bills, then the court, should in some unspecified way, exercise a discretion to allow them to be assessed. It is established law that the court could not do this pursuant to Part III of the Solicitors Act 1974, so it is assumed that the Claimant will be seeking to rely on some other legal mechanism by which the court can order there be an assessment. In the absence of any explanation of what that mechanism is said to be, the defendant can do little other than to reserve its position."
"The Claimant's case is that the bills delivered were interim bills of costs and therefore the Court has a discretion to order the Defendant to prepare a bill of costs."
"The next point in the case is whether the bills were four separate bills or whether they were one. If they were four separate bills, the client would have to demand taxation of each within a month of receipt. If they were one bill, divided into separate parts, as long as he demands taxation within a month of the final account, then he has a right to taxation. …[It] is a question of fact whether there are natural breaks in the work done by a solicitor so that each portion of it can and should be treated as a separate and distinct part in itself, capable of and rightly being charged separately and taxed separately. Applying that simple test, it seems to me that over this short time – the end of November 1978 to the beginning of May 1979 - this was one continuous dealing and work done by a solicitor, not dividing itself naturally or otherwise into any breaks at all. When the bills were delivered, they were delivered each time as part of the running account - "account rendered" being carried on in each to the next. I agree with the judge… that this should be regarded as one bill in respect of one complete piece of work, although divided into parts. As this is one bill, and the client demanded taxation within the month, he is entitled to have the whole of it taxed."
"The first was dated February 19, 1979. It totalled £2,373.36, less paid on account £1,000, which came to £1,373.36. The second was dated March 20, 1979, which came to a total of £12,041.58. That brought in the balance from the account rendered. The third was dated April 30, 1979, which brought the total up to £17,523.68. I should add that, before the final bill was delivered, all the litigation had been settled - rather to the surprise of the parties. There was no further litigation. That had finished by May 8. Then the final bill was sent on May 11. "Received on account" was now £3,427.35. But the total bill came to £30,099.49."
It is seems from this description of the bills that they were indeed properly to be regarded merely as requests for payment on account.
"The second primary submission is that my conclusion that all the bills rendered to the Claimant can be treated as a series concluding with the final bill of January 2010, is inconsistent with my finding that the pre-22 January 2010 bills are not statute bills. That seems to me to overlook the distinction between individual bills and a series of bills. An individually incomplete bill may form part of a complete series. A series of non-statute bills may be treated a series culminating in one final statute bill: Chamberlain v Boodle and King [1982] 1 WLR 1443."
The third and final issue is whether the Master was entitled to find that there were special circumstances justifying detailed assessment of the final bill, incorporating the whole series of bills, notwithstanding that the application was made outside the one- month time limit. In fact the application was made only two days before the expiry of the absolute time limit of twelve months from payment of the final bill.
" Whether special circumstances exist is essentially a value judgment. It depends on comparing the particular case with the run of the mill case, in order to decide whether a detailed assessment in a particular case is justified despite the restrictions contained in section 70(3). In Re Cheeseman [1891] 2 Ch 289 the Court of Appeal held that it would not interfere with the decision of the first instance judge on whether special circumstances existed except in a strong case. All the more so, in my judgment, where the value judgment has been made by a specialist costs judge."
Not only was the Master entitled to find special circumstances in the present case, he was plainly right to do so.
Conclusion