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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Moduleco v Carillion [2009] EWHC 250 (TCC) (11 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2009/250.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 250 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
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MODULECO |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CARILLION |
Defendant |
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MS.Rachel Ansell (instructed by Barlow Lyde and Gilbert) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE AKENHEAD:
Introduction and history
"As Moduleco are aware, the scheme has been cancelled by the Department of Health. Carillion have submitted a claim to the Department of Health through Corderoys in respect of their abortive costs ("Carillion's claim").
Carillion propose the following way forward in relation to Moduleco's abortive costs on the London South Scheme:
1. Carillion confirms that it has included a claim of £137,232 plus VAT for Moduleco's abortive costs as part of Carillion's claim. Carillion can confirm that Corderoys have been provided with all the information that Moduleco has submitted to Carillion to date and that this has been submitted as part of Carillion's claim. Carillion will provide as much information as possible to Moduleco, having regard to the nature of any confidentiality agreements with the Department of Health to ensure that Moduleco are kept updated as to progress of Moduleco's claim.
2. Carillion is willing and in fact requires the involvement of Moduleco in the claim process to ensure that an appropriate level of compensation is secured for Moduleco. In trying to achieve this, Carillion will use reasonable endeavours to provide Moduleco with the opportunity to discuss, where appropriate and possible, their costs with the appointed representative for the Department of Health.
3. Moduleco acknowledge that Carillion cannot be liable to Moduleco for any claim by Moduleco against Carillion that has arisen out of any failure by Moduleco to submit sufficient details and/or evidence of their claim. Moduleco further confirm that as long as Carillion fully comply with the spirit and letter of this agreement then Moduleco's claim for abortive costs will be capped at £137,232 plus VAT. Carillion will inform Moduleco as soon as reasonably practicable, if the Department of Health or Corderoys request, any further information in respect of Moduleco's claim. Carillion acknowledge that to date all requested information has been provided by Moduleco. Carillion further acknowledge that any settlement Carillion might agree with the DoH will not be binding upon Moduleco.
4. Upon settlement of Carillion's claim for abortive costs being achieved, Carillion will, insofar as is possible, having regard to the nature of any confidentiality agreement between the Department of Health and Carillion, promptly provide Moduleco with as much detail as possible of the settlement in respect of Moduleco's claim. If possible, having regard to the nature of any confidentiality agreement, Carillion will at the same time provide Moduleco with any extracts from the settlement agreement relating to Moduleco's claim. In the event that the settlement with the Department of Health does not identify Moduleco's claim as a separate head of claim, then Carillion will make a claim to Moduleco proportionate to the total value of Carillion's valid claim as against the settlement achieved. .....
7. Moduleco will stay all legal proceedings against Carillion and/or Clinicentre Ltd. in respect of any financial claim they may have against Carillion and/or Clinicentre under the London South contracts until either they have been notified as to the outcome of Moduleco's claim or three months have passed from the date their claim was submitted to the DoH, whichever was the sooner."
"We entered into the agreement of 6th December in good faith and in the expectation that Carillion would use reasonable endeavours to promote our claim and other obligations it had accepted within that agreement. It is not clear that you have done so. We are not satisfied with the outcome of Moduleco's claim and anticipate that we may well have a legal claim against Carillion in regard to breach of the December 6th agreement. In order that we can fully understand what happened and identify at an early stage what has gone wrong, we require copies of the following information."
There were then set out five classes of documents, which broadly form the subject matter of this current application. They were, briefly summarized, Carillion's claim document to the Department of Health, correspondence, emails, minutes and notes in which Moduleco's claim was referred to, the Department's accountant's report on Carillion's claim and the settlement agreement between Carillion and the Department.
"It is unclear from your letter the specific basis of Module Co's alleged claim and therefore exactly what documents are required to be disclosed by Carillion…
Furthermore, the time frame that you have set out is wholly unrealistic. The first reference to an application to the Court has been made in your letter dated 17 December. This does not give us enough time to comply with the deadline you have set down…
We can confirm that it is our intention to provide your client with appropriate documentation within a reasonable time period, if it is our duty to do so."
He also raised the issue of the existence of confidentiality agreements impinging on what could be disclosed.
"... every right to be provided with these documents, indeed, there is an implicit undertaking in the Agreement of December 6th 2007 that you would provide us with a copy of your claim and of the settlement deed, along with the other information we require."
At the end he says:
"We will also pay reasonable copying costs should there be any.
I hope you will now provide these documents and save us all a lot of time and trouble."
The proceedings
"(2) The general rule is that the court will award the person against whom the order is sought his costs -
(a) of the application; and
(b) of complying with any order made on the application.
(3) The court may however make a different order, having regard to all the circumstances including -
(a) the extent to which it was reasonable for the person against whom the order was sought to oppose the application; and
(b) whether the parties to the application have complied with any relevant pre-action protocols"
"17. CPR Rule 48.1 provides that, where a person makes an application for disclosure before proceedings, the general rule is that the court will award the person against whom the order is sought his costs of the application, but that the court may make a different order having regard to all the circumstances, including the extent to which it was reasonable for the person against whom the order was sought to oppose the application. Although a respondent to an application may incur some costs merely in considering what response to make to an application of this kind, in most cases he will only incur substantial costs if he opposes it. By laying down a general rule that the respondent will be awarded his costs, therefore, I think that the Rules implicitly recognise that it will not usually be unreasonable for him to require the applicant to satisfy the court that he ought to be granted the relief which he seeks. The reason for that (if it be necessary to find one) lies, I think, in a recognition that a private person who is not a party to existing litigation which brings with it an obligation of disclosure is entitled to maintain the privacy of his papers unless sufficient grounds can be shown for overriding it and that it is for the person seeking to invade that privacy to justify doing so. At all events, the rule is clear in its terms and provides the point of departure for a judge dealing with the costs of an application of this kind.
22. However, that was not all that there was to it. Reading paragraph 84 of the judgment as a whole, I think it is reasonably clear that the judge did think that UK Coal had behaved unreasonably in the manner of its opposition to the application… He referred to the fact that UK Coal had, as he put it, deliberately confronted SES with a wall of witness statements which looked impressive and intimidating, thereby seeking to fend it off without providing any of the documents that might have allayed its concerns… I detect in that comment more than a hint of a criticism that UK Coal had acted unreasonably in that it had both added to the costs of preparation and prolonged the hearing without putting forward objective evidence in the form of contemporaneous documents that would have given its case real substance.
23. The question then is whether that provided sufficient grounds for ordering UK Coal pay the whole of SES's costs of the application. Mr. Béar reminded us that a judge has a wide discretion in the matter of costs and that an appellate court should not interfere with his exercise of that discretion unless it is satisfied that he has failed to take into account a relevant factor, had taken into account an irrelevant factor, or reached a conclusion that was plainly wrong. He also submitted that the judge may well have taken into account matters which he did not specifically mention but which lent additional support to his decision.
24. I accept Mr. Béar's submission as to the approach the court should take, but in my view the judge did fail to have sufficient regard to an important factor, namely, the general rule that the respondent to an application of this kind is normally entitled to his costs. Although he referred to rule 48.1(2) at the outset of his judgment on costs, he does not appear to have fully appreciated its significance or considered what kind of conduct would justify the court in going so far as to order the respondent to bear the whole of the costs. In that context he does not appear to have taken account of the fact that a not insignificant part of the applicant's costs are likely to have been incurred in preparing and issuing the application and filing evidence in support of it. I think it is dangerous to assume that the judge had in mind matters to which he did not refer unless there are cogent grounds for doing so. The fact is that, short of ordering UK Coal to pay the costs of SES on the indemnity basis, the judge's order was the strongest available to him. If one is starting from the position set out in rule 48.1(2) one would expect an order of this kind to be made only in a case where it was clearly unreasonable for the respondent to oppose the application or where the manner of his opposition was so unreasonable as to make it appropriate to require him to bear the whole of both parties' costs. Although Mr. Moriarty sought to place some reliance on the case of Bermuda International Securities Ltd v KPMG [2001] 1 Lloyd's Rep. PN 392, in which the judge made no order for costs where the respondent had unreasonably resisted the application "root and branch", I do not find that case very helpful. This court only had to be satisfied, as it was, that it was open to the judge to make that order; whether he could justifiably have gone further was a question that did not arise. In any event, each case is different and decisions on costs must reflect the particular facts of the case, taking into account rule 48.1 (2) and the policy behind it.
25. For the reasons I have given I am persuaded that the judge's exercise of discretion in this case was flawed and that this court must exercise its own discretion in the matter. After nearly three days the judge was well placed to assess not only the nature of the evidence filed by UK Coal but also the extent to which its approach to the application had affected the preparation for the hearing and the hearing itself. I see no reason to differ from his assessment and I would therefore approach the question of costs on the basis that the criticisms he made were well-founded. In my view there was ample material to justify a departure from the general rule, but not to the extent of ordering UK Coal to pay the whole of SES's costs. I would set aside his order and substitute no order as to costs."
It is important that, if the court is going to depart from the general rule so far as costs are concerned, it needs to consider the extent to which it was reasonable or unreasonable for Carillion in this case to oppose the application and whether there came a stage when the opposition became unreasonable.