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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> EXN v East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust & Anor [2022] EWHC 872 (QB) (13 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/872.html Cite as: [2022] Costs LR 787, [2022] 4 WLR 70, [2022] WLR(D) 205, [2022] EWHC 872 (QB) |
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Appeal Ref: M21Q472 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West, Manchester M60 9DJ. |
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B e f o r e :
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EXN |
Claimant / Appellant |
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- and - |
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East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust (1) Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (2) |
Defendants / Respondents |
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Joshua Munro (instructed by Acumension Ltd) for the Defendants / Respondents
Hearing date: 31 March 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
THE BACKGROUND
THE RULES
"Where a party enters into a funding arrangement within the meaning of rule 43.2(1)(k), that party must inform the other parties about this arrangement as soon as possible and in any event either within seven days of entering into the funding arrangement concerned or, where a claimant enters into a funding arrangement before sending a letter before claim, in the letter before claim."
"funding arrangement" means an arrangement where a person has–
(i) entered into a conditional fee agreement…which provides for a success fee…"
"Unless the court orders otherwise, a party may not recover as an additional liability …
(c) any additional liability for any period during which that party failed to provide information about a funding arrangement in accordance with a rule, practice direction or court order …"
TIME OF COMPLIANCE
THE THREE STAGE TEST
"On an application for relief from any sanction imposed for a failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order, the court will consider all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable it to deal justly with the application, including the need –
(a) for litigation to be conducted efficiently and at proportionate cost; and
(b) to enforce compliance with rules, practice directions and orders."
(i) identify and assess the seriousness and significance of the failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order which engages rule 3.9(1);
(ii) consider why the default occurred;
(iii) evaluate all the circumstances of the case, so as to enable the court to deal justly with the application including the factors in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b).
THE FIRST STAGE
"It seems to me that a failure to notify the other party of additional liabilities as soon as possible is indeed significant. I would have come to the decision I came to on significance irrespective any non-trivial duration of delay. The fact that the delay here was six years puts the matter beyond doubt but, for the avoidance of doubt, I would have found this to be a significant breach if the delay was a matter of months let alone six years."
"25. The first stage is to identify and assess the seriousness or significance of the "failure to comply with any rule, practice direction or court order", which engages rule 3.9(1). That is what led the court in the Mitchell case to suggest that, in evaluating the nature of the non-compliance with the relevant rule, practice direction or court order, judges should start by asking whether the breach can properly be regarded as trivial.
26. Triviality is not part of the test described in the rule. It is a useful concept in the context of the first stage because it requires the judge to focus on the question whether a breach is serious or significant. In the Mitchell case itself, the court also used the words "minor" (para 59) and "insignificant" (para 40). It seems that the word "trivial" has given rise to some difficulty. For example, it has given rise to arguments as to whether a substantial delay in complying with the terms of a rule or order which has no effect on the efficient running of the litigation is or is not to be regarded as trivial. Such semantic disputes do not promote the conduct of litigation efficiently and at proportionate cost. In these circumstances, we think it would be preferable if in future the focus of the inquiry at the first stage should not be on whether the breach has been trivial. Rather, it should be on whether the breach has been serious or significant. It was submitted on behalf of the Law Society and Bar Council that the test of triviality should be replaced by the test of immateriality and that an immaterial breach should be defined as one which "neither imperils future hearing dates nor otherwise disrupts the conduct of the litigation". Provided that this is understood as including the effect on litigation generally (and not only on the litigation in which the application is made), there are many circumstances in which materiality in this sense will be the most useful measure of whether a breach has been serious or significant. But it leaves out of account those breaches which are incapable of affecting the efficient progress of the litigation, although they are serious. The most obvious example of such a breach is a failure to pay court fees. We therefore prefer simply to say that, in evaluating a breach, judges should assess its seriousness and significance. We recognise that the concepts of seriousness and significance are not hard-edged and that there are degrees of seriousness and significance, but we hope that, assisted by the guidance given in this decision and its application in individual cases over time, courts will deal with these applications in a consistent manner."
"The more serious or significant the breach the less likely it is that relief will be granted unless there is a good reason for it…"
THE SECOND STAGE
THE THIRD STAGE
(a) PSG, in common with many solicitors at the time, believed that notice of the existence of a CFA with a success fee could, without breaching the requirements of paragraph 9.3, be postponed until they were, in due course, referred to in the letter of claim. Indeed this appeared to have been the view taken by the authors of the White Book. However, in Springer v University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust [2018] 4 WLR 61 the Court of Appeal emphatically rejected this interpretation of the rules and, whilst acknowledging that the notes in the White Book were supportive of this interpretation, observed: "but the view of the learned authors of the White Book cannot affect the objective interpretation of paragraph 9.3, which is the task of the court." Whilst this mistake of law could not be categorised as providing a good reason for the default at Denton stage two; it fell very much towards the lower end of culpability.
(b) The period over which a breach of the rules extends is likely to be significantly more serious where the party in breach knows that he or she is in default and yet does nothing to correct the position. In this case, although the breach endured for a long time, PSG did not realise that they were in breach until the decision in Springer came to their attention.
(c) The letter of 17th April 2012 came very close to complying with paragraph 9.3 falling short only in the sense that no express mention was made of a success fee. For my own part, I consider this to be very significant factor to which I will return when considering the issue of prejudice to the defendants.
PREJUDICE
(a) In my view, the evidence pointed overwhelmingly and inevitably to the conclusion that the defendants well knew that the CFA referred to in the letter of 17th April 2012 would have provided for a success fee. This letter had been sent in response to a request from a claims manger in a letter dated 20th March 2012 asking if the claimant: "is in receipt of Community Legal Services funding or whether this matter is being funded by way of Conditional Fee agreement or on a private basis." The claims manager's letter was not drawn to the District Judge's attention but it was a document which the defendant had in its possession and its contents are indisputable. I exercise my discretion to admit it in evidence on this appeal (although my decision would have remined the same even if I had not). The only possible interest that a claims manager would have had in the existence of a CFA is the potential vulnerability to the payment of a success fee. In 2012, it would have been wholly irrational for a firm of solicitors to take on a case of this nature without the benefit of a success fee. If there had been any doubt whatsoever in the minds of the defendants on this issue one would have expected it to have been raised. The fact that no such enquiry was made or clarification sought leads to the conclusion that there was no such doubt.
(b) In Springer, the defendant was not just ignorant of the existence of a success fee but did not even know for sure that proceedings were going to be brought until the date of the letter before claim and they therefore had no opportunity to consider the matter or make attempts to negotiate a settlement and thus mitigate the substantial additional liabilities for costs in the form of the percentage success fee. In this case there was no such lost opportunity.
(c) The Court of Appeal in Springer recognised, in the circumstances of that case, that: "a statement from an NHS Trust employee saying that they would have acted differently, …would inevitably have been the subject of scepticism from the claimant's advisers as being self-serving." In this case, however, the central issue is a very different one and it is not hypothetical. It is whether or not the defendants were, in fact, ignorant of the existence of the success fee between March 2012 and February 2018. For the reasons I have given, such ignorance would be implausible in the extreme and certainly such as to call for evidence from the defendants to substantiate any such proposition. In the event, the defendants have chosen to remain silent on the point. As the Court observed in Springer at paragraph 77:
"Any respondent to such an application will also need to lodge evidence to support any case that he has suffered particular prejudice as a result of the breach."
It would have been simplicity itself for the defendants to serve evidence, had it in fact been the case, that they had approached the case on the basis that there was no success fee. Their silence on the issue was deafening.
"It seems to me that the longer one does not tell the defendants of the additional liabilities, the further one departs from "as soon as possible", the worse the breach of the rules and the worse the inherent prejudice to the defendants, or at least the significant chance of prejudice occurring."
However, if, as I am entirely satisfied to be the case from the evidence, the defendants were not under any misconception whatsoever in relation to the existence of a success fee then no prejudice, inherent or otherwise, can be attributable to the breach. It was simply not open to them to remain mute on the central issue as to their state of knowledge and then invite the District Judge to treat the lacuna of information, for which they were directly responsible, as relevant to the speculative loss of a chance.
CONCLUSION