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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 >> MacInnes v Gross [2017] EWHC 127 (QB) (03 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/127.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 127 (QB), [2017] WLR(D) 83, [2017] 4 WLR 49, [2017] 2 Costs LR 243 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Bruce MacInnes |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Hans Thomas Gross |
First Defendant |
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Tom Weisselberg QC (instructed by DWF LLP) for the First Defendant
Hearing date: 27 January 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. INTRODUCTION
2. COSTS
(a) Indemnity costs are appropriate only when the conduct of a paying party is unreasonable "to a high degree. 'Unreasonable' in this context does not mean merely wrong or misguided in hindsight": see Simon Browne LJ (as he then was) in Kiam v MGN Limited [2002] 1 WLR 2810.(b) The court must therefore decide whether there is something in the conduct of the action, or the circumstances of the case in general, which takes it 'out of the norm' in a way which justifies an order for indemnity for costs: see Waller LJ in Excelsior Commercial and Industrial Holdings Limited v Salisbury Hammer Aspden and Johnson [2002] EWCA Civ 869.
(c) The pursuit of a weak claim will not usually, on its own, justify an order for indemnity costs, provided the claim was at least arguable. But the pursuit of a hopeless claim (or a claim which the party pursuing it should have realised was hopeless) may well lead to such an order: see, for example, Wates Construction Limited v HGP Greentree Allchurch Evans Limited [2006] BLR 45.
(a) This was a flawed, speculative, absurd and opportunistic claim;(b) The amount of the claim had been grossly exaggerated, particularly given that the first defendant had offered the claimant £300,000 on two separate occasions, whilst the only offer made by the claimant was for €11 million, not including costs, shortly before trial;
(c) The claimant's evidence was unsatisfactory and his conduct was open to criticism;
(d) The claim had been pursued in an unreasonable manner.
3. INTEREST ON COSTS
3.1 Pre-Judgment Interest
3.2 Post-Judgment Interest
"23 Fifth, in terms of what justice requires, I do not think it just to make an order under which interest begins to run at the rate appropriate for unpaid judgment debts before the paying party could reasonably be expected to pay the debt; and, in a case where the court has ordered a suitable interim payment to be made on account of costs, I do not think it reasonable to expect the party liable for costs to pay the balance of the debt until it knows exactly what sums are being claimed by the party awarded costs and has had a fair opportunity to decide what sums it accepts are properly payable. It is this principle which seems to me to have informed the approach of Roth J in the London Tara Hotel case, when he could see no reason why the judgment rate should apply "before the amount which has to be paid is known". It also reflects the unfairness which Andrew Smith J in the Fiona Trust case recognised as potentially arising where it is predictable that there will be an amount of costs outstanding for a period after the costs order has been made which the party liable for costs cannot reasonably be expected to avoid. I do not, however, see this unfairness as confined to cases where a particularly large amount of costs is likely to be outstanding for a particularly long period, albeit that it is clearly more acute in such cases.
24. Sixth, in translating this principle into practice, I think it desirable to set a date from which Judgments Act interest will run which is based, if possible, on some objective benchmark and does not depend simply on the judge's general feeling of what length of postponement is fair. I agree with Andrew Smith J that certainty and clarity are important in this context. It will do no favours to litigants – particularly as the amount of money at stake, while not negligible, is never likely to be large – if the date from which Judgments Act interest will be ordered to run is unpredictable, thus encouraging argument on the issue in every case. With this in mind, it seems to me that a reasonable objective benchmark to take is the period prescribed by the rules of court for commencing detailed assessment proceedings. Pursuant to CPR 47.7, where an order is made for payment of costs which are to be the subject of a detailed assessment if not agreed, the time by which detailed assessment proceedings must be commenced (unless otherwise agreed or ordered) is three months after the date of the costs order. In order to commence such proceedings, the receiving party must serve on the paying party a bill of costs giving particulars of the costs claimed. It is then for the paying party to decide which items in the bill of costs it wishes to dispute. Postponing the date from which Judgments Act interest begins to run by three months will therefore generally serve to ensure that the party liable for costs has received the information needed to make a realistic assessment of the amount of its liability before it begins to incur interest at the rate applicable to judgment debts for failing to pay that amount."
4. CURRENCY FLUCTUATIONS
"… Moreover, if one accepts, as I do, that in principle the court has power to make an order for damages or costs expressed in a foreign currency, then it seems to me to follow as matter of logic that the court ought to have power, if it decides to make an order in sterling, to compensate for any exchange rate loss. Moreover, it seems to me that there is, as counsel for Elkamet submits, a powerful analogy between an award of interest on costs and an award of exchange rate losses on costs.
12. Turning to the argument of practicality, counsel for Saint-Gobain points out that exchange rates go up as well as down, as indeed the evidence in the present case confirms. Thus, although the exchange rate as at the date of payment of the last invoice was 1.14, yesterday it was 1.17. Counsel further submits that satellite litigation over issues like exchange rates should be discouraged. Furthermore, he points out that the relevant date is not the date of yesterday's exchange rate (which is the most recent information available to me), but the date of payment.
13. It seems to me that these are all arguments that have some force. Nevertheless it seems to me that they do not detract from the basic principle identified by counsel for Elkamet, namely, that the order for costs is designed to compensate the successful party for its expenditure. If it is a foreign company which has had to exchange its local currency into sterling in order to pay costs as the litigation has gone on, then it seems to me in principle the successful party is entitled to be compensated for any additional expenditure it has had to incur as a result of exchange rate losses in the same way as it is entitled to be compensated by way of interest for being kept out of the money.
14. Nevertheless, it seems to me the arguments of practicality identified by counsel for Saint-Gobain do support a cautious approach to the quantification of such matters. One thing that I have to bear firmly in mind is that I do not have a crystal ball, and therefore am not going to be in a position to predict what the exchange rate is going to be at the date of payment."
The judge adopted what he himself described as a "cautious approach" to the figures themselves, and arrived at an uplift of £20,000.
5. INTERIM PAYMENT ON ACCOUNT OF COSTS