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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Tonkin & Anor v UK Insurance (No 2) [2006] EWHC 1185 (TCC) (18 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2006/1185.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1185 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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TONKIN & ANOR |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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UK INSURANCE (NO 2) |
Defendant |
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Sorene Court Reporting & Training Services
73 Alicia Gardens, Kenton, Harrow, Middx HA3 8JD
Telephone No: 020 8907 8249
(Official Tape Transcribers)
MISS ROSEMARY JACKSON and MR JONATHAN SELBY (instructed by TRAVERS SMITH, EC2) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 18.5.06
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER COULSON, Q.C.:
Introduction
Relevant Facts
a) I found for them in an amount which was less than the offer or the payment into Court.
b) I found that they had refused two sensible offers of ADR.
c) I found that they were wrong on almost every issue, particularly those relating to the relevant and appropriate reinstatement scheme. I found that the scheme that they have relied on since September 2003 was not a proper reinstatement scheme and was, in any event, a wholly inadequate basis for assessing the value of their claim. On that basis alone it seemed to me that the Claimants' case was and always remained very weak.
d) I found that the Claimants' conduct was unreasonable and at times reprehensible. I have in mind particularly the decision to secretly tape-record the meeting in August 2003 and the use of the tape-recorded material to make an unsuccessful estoppel claim. A general failure to be open and frank with the Defendant, a persistent attempt to reverse the burden of proof, an unjustified and personal attack on the bona fides of the Defendant's principal expert and a failure to disclose all relevant documents were all findings adverse to the Claimants that I made in relation to their conduct in my Judgment.
e) I also found that, but for the Defendant's efforts in putting forward a completely alternative scheme, which they were not obliged to do, the Claimants would not have recovered anything at all.
The Admissibility of the Offer
The Successful Party
a) Costs prior to the 25th September 2004.
b) Costs of the liability issues.
"Unless it considers it unjust to do so the Court will order the Claimant to pay any costs incurred by the Defendant after the latest date on which the payment or offer could have been accepted without needing the permission of the Court."
c) Costs of the Counterclaim
d) Summary
The Basis of Assessment
(i) Principles
"...I do not believe that unnecessary or unreasonable pursuit of litigation must involve an ulterior purpose in order to trigger the Court's discretion to order indemnity costs. I consider that to maintain a claim that you know or ought to know is doomed to fail on the facts and on the law, is conduct that is so unreasonable as to justify an order for indemnity costs."
The same principle also arose in EQ Projects v Alavi [2006] BLR 130. However, it is important to note that, as a general rule, the mere fact that a weak claim, as opposed to a hopeless claim, was pursued will not, on its own, be sufficient to warrant an order for indemnity costs.
(ii) Conduct
a) The Claimants were not just the unsuccessful parties in these proceedings. The whole of the action was a complete waste of time and money because the Claimants recovered less than they could have had if they had accepted the offer of September 2004, made 5 months before the proceedings even started.
b) The Claimants rejected the proposals as to ADR, a matter referred to in my Judgment at paragraphs 142 and paragraphs 144 to 145. As I made plain, I consider that that was a grave mistake, not because ADR is some sort of universal panacea for the avoidance of troublesome litigation - it most definitely is not - but because in this case, for these disputes of architectural detail, the ADR proposals made very good sense.
c) Having effectively insisted on litigation, the Claimants then lost the vast bulk of the issues encompassed within that litigation. I have already referred to their failure in respect of the proper reinstatement scheme. This was not just because the scheme proposed by the Claimants was not a proper reinstatement scheme, but, just as importantly, because the scheme was wholly inadequate and incapable of generating reliable figures. I also rejected the Claimants' case on estoppel and on delay, two issues which took up a good deal of time at the trial. The Claimants' case on many of these points was, and ought to have been known to the Claimants to be, very weak indeed.
d) The Claimants, particularly Mr Tonkin, conducted himself in an extremely aggressive way from early in 2003 onwards. I have identified that conduct in the Judgment. I am not going to repeat it here. I have summarised some of the points in paragraph 5 above. It seems to me that one of the consequences of that conduct was that the Defendant was put to a vast amount of additional work both before the action started and then afterwards, particularly by reference to the nature and volume of the Claimants' solicitors' correspondence.
e) It is worthwhile simply making this observation in respect of that correspondence, and the way in which the Claimants' case emerged after the action had started. It seems to me that the Claimants' case emerged in a piecemeal and uncertain fashion. Important elements of the claim, and the basis for them, changed repeatedly, both before and during the trial. All of that was then compounded by the barrage of the material from the Claimants and their solicitors. For example, there were four written statements from Mr Tonkin alone. There were also lengthy letters from his solicitors sometimes running to 15 letters a week. I accept the Defendant's submission that the volume and frequency of that correspondence cannot be justified in any sort of litigation, let alone litigation over sums that, on any view, could not have been greater than £750,000.
(iii) Conclusions and the Claimants' case
a) The difference between the standard and indemnity bases.
b) Appropriateness
c) "Commercial" party
"If a (commercial) party embarks upon, or brings upon itself and pursues, large scale litigation which results in a resounding defeat involving the rejection of much of the evidence adduced in support of its case, that provides a proper basis on which to award costs on the indemnity basis. In the particular case the claimant had conducted itself throughout the relevant events on the basis that its commercial interest took precedence over the rights and wrongs of the situation and it was prepared to risk the outcome of the litigation."
Payment on Account