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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 >> Riordan & Ors v Moon Beevor Solicitors (a firm) [2018] EWHC 1452 (QB) (25 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/1452.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1452 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JOHN RIORDAN (1) BARRINGTON BURKE (2) PRESTIGE PROPERTY DEVELOPER UK (LTD) (3) EUGENE BURKE (4) |
Claimants |
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- and |
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MOON BEEVOR SOLICITORS (a firm) |
Defendant |
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Roger Mallalieu (instructed by Cubism Law) for the Claimants
Hearing date: 16 May 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT:
"IT IS ORDERED BY CONSENT:
1. The Strike Out Order is set aside.
2. There be a detailed assessment of the Bill, provided that the Claimants do pay the sum of £650,000 in cleared funds without set-off or deduction, on account of the Bill by 4.00pm on 02 February 2018.
3. In the event that the payment provided for in the previous paragraph is not made, this claim shall be dismissed with costs to be subject to detailed assessment if not agreed without further order.
4. In the event that the Claimants comply with the proviso in paragraph 2 the directions in CPR 46.10 shall be modified [in the respects indicated].
6. Save as provided for above, the claim is dismissed.
7. Permission to apply in respect of the date in paragraph 2 above but such application must be on notice to the [Defendant] and served on them and a copy of the application and evidence in support sent by email to [a named partner in the Defendant] by 4pm on 5 January 2018, unless the parties reach agreement in that respect. Such hearing shall not be listed for hearing on or between 5 January and 12 January 2018.
8. The Claimants do pay the Defendant's costs of the Application, agreed in the sum of £2,600."
" on reading the initial protocol letter, the letter raises serious allegations in substantial litigation, not only in relation to the costs but also in relation to the litigation itself.
I am satisfied that, on the evidence, that represents a material change in circumstances. I am also satisfied that I have the case management powers to amend, alter or vary the Consent Order in such manner as I consider appropriate in view of changed circumstances."
"But we say the matters [raised by the application dated 4 January 2018] are all superseded by the fact of the second application which raises the matters you've seen in the professional negligence pre-action letter, drafted with the assistance of counsel and specialist solicitors. Now this retainer ended in April 2015 but from my client's point of view they were before the Supreme Court until December of 2015. Their circumstances have been difficult. Yes, they have had benefit of counsel, but that was counsel on a direct access basis only, on occasional instruction, and only in relation to the cost proceedings. As Mr Riordan has put in his witness statement, it wasn't until September of 2017 that they were able to instruct solicitors to begin looking at professional negligence matters. Those solicitors followed matters in a chronological fashion, looking at the first solicitors who'd been involved in the underlying litigation and, as you may have seen, a substantial pre-action letter, a letter of preliminary notice letter, has been sent to those solicitors at an earlier stage ." (Emphasis added.)
"Ongoing investigations then in relation to the [Defendant] which results in the preliminary notice that's been sent now. That preliminary notice raises very serious and significant issues. My client may or may not be right about those issues, but it's a serious and substantial claim that is being brought."
"We are instructed that our clients consulted you in relation to the proceedings issued by Thavatheva Thevarajah following our clients being debarred from defending the proceedings. Our clients proceeded to issue two applications seeking relief from the sanction being debarred based on your advice that our client's (sic) had good grounds for making such applications. Though it is fair to say that at the hearing before [the Deputy High Court Judge] our clients were granted relief, that decision was reversed by the Court of Appeal. Given the decision of the Court of Appeal it is clear that the advice given was both wrong and negligent."
"When I agreed to the consent order of 19 October 2017, I was simply seeking to be in a position to have the Defendant's costs assessed as I believed these to be vastly excessive. I was however not at all happy with the conduct of the Defendant in its representation of myself and the other Claimants, and in my view they had been negligent in several respects."
"43. [Pannone LLP v Aardvark Digital Ltd [2011] 1 WLR 2275] is clear authority that CPR r.1.1 (the CPR are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly), r.1.2 (the court must seek to give effect to the overriding objective when it exercises any power given to it by the CPR ), r.1.4 (the court must further the overriding objective by actively managing cases) and r.3.2(a) (the court may extend the time for compliance with any order) conferred on the Judge a real discretion whether or not to extend the time in the Consent Order and not merely a discretion which could only properly be exercised as a matter of settled practice as well as on the facts by refusing an extension.
44. Prior to the CPR, under the former Rules of the Supreme Court ("the RSC"), the court's power to vary a consent order depended on which of two types of consent order was in issue. As Lord Denning MR explained in Siebe Gorman (at p.189), where the consent order gave effect to a real contract between the parties, the court would only interfere on the same grounds as any other contract (such as misrepresentation or mistake); where, on the other hand, the consent order was no more than an order to which the parties did not object, the order could be altered or varied by the court in the same circumstances as any other order made by the court without the consent of the parties.
45 It was Neuberger J in [Ropac Ltd v Inntrepreneur Pub Co (CPC) Ltd [2001] L & TR 93], who first expressed the view that, following the coming into effect of the CPR, the court had a discretion to extend time limits in both types of consent order."
"52. Tomlinson LJ referred to the two types of consent order described by Lord Denning MR in Siebe Gorman at p.189. He said (at [27]) that, although Lord Denning's observations were made in the context of the old RSC, and the distinction between the two types of consent order are no longer relevant so far as concerns jurisdiction to grant relief from the "agreed" consequences of non-compliance with an order, the distinction remains of importance in the context of the court's exercise of its discretionary power. He said there is a world of difference between a case management decision made at the instance of one party to which the other party makes no objection, such as occurred in the Siebe Gorman case, and a genuine settlement of a substantive dispute as to the parties' rights. He said that, where a settlement is embodied in an order of the court, it can rarely be appropriate for the court to intervene further than to the extent to which the contract can, by its own terms or pursuant to general contractual principles, be modified or discharged in the light of changed circumstances.
54. Although Tomlinson LJ agreed with Neuberger J on the issue of jurisdiction, there was an important aspect of the exercise of the discretion on which he qualified what Neuberger LJ said in Ropac. That concerned Neuberger J's statement that the court should be slow, save in unusual circumstances, to depart from what the parties have agreed. Having referred to Ferrotex and certain observations of Tuckey LJ in that case, Tomlinson LJ said as follows (at [32]):
"The presence of "unusual circumstances" is plainly not a prerequisite of the jurisdiction to extend time or to grant relief, which is expressed in the CPR in general terms. In the Ropac case Neuberger J was, if I may respectfully so put it, feeling his way in the light of the newly introduced procedural code, and he was certainly not, I think, intending to formulate a rule as to the circumstances in which an extension of time might be granted in the face of a consent order. I think he meant no more than to emphasise that appropriate weight should be given to the parties' agreement."
55. Tomlinson LJ said (at [33]) that the weight to be given to the consideration that an order is agreed will vary in accordance with the nature of the order and therefore the agreement: where the agreement is the compromise of a substantive dispute or the settlement of proceedings, that factor will have very great and perhaps ordinarily decisive weight, and where the agreement is no more than a procedural accommodation in relation to case management, the weight to be accorded to the fact of the parties' agreement as to the consequences of non-compliance, while still real and substantial, will none the less ordinarily be correspondingly less, and rarely decisive. He continued:
"Everything must depend on the circumstances, and CPR r.3.9(1) prescribes that on an application for relief from a sanction for a failure to comply with a court order the court will consider all the circumstances, including those enumerated in the following sub-paragraphs. Beyond noting that where an order is made by consent, that is one of the circumstances which the court will take into account, it is not I think necessary to impose any further gloss on the Rules, which are already adequately drafted so as to ensure that all proper considerations must be taken into account.""