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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Hamad M Aldrees & Partners v Rotex Europe Ltd [2019] EWHC 526 (TCC) (14 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2019/526.html Cite as: [2019] Costs LR 607, [2019] EWHC 526 (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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HAMAD M. ALDREES & PARTNERS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROTEX EUROPE LIMITED (COMPANY NUMBER 04307924) |
Defendant |
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Mr Piers Stansfield QC and Mr Nicholas Bacon QC (instructed by DTM Legal LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15th February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
SIR ANTONY EDWARDS-STUART :
The matters covered by this judgment
(1) The 15% uplift;
(2) Interest;
(3) Costs; and
(4) An application by Aldrees for permission to appeal.
The 15% uplift
Interest
"16. Section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981 provides that this court may include in any sum for which judgment is given "simple interest, at such rate as the court thinks fit…on all or any part of the debt or damages in respect of which judgment is given…for all or any part of the period between the date when the cause of action arose and…the date of the judgment".
17. Section 35A thus confers a broad discretion on the court. This discretion has been considered in a number of cases, and the following propositions emerge:
(1) An award of interest is not punitive and the use to which the party paying interest would have put the funds (and the returns that such party may or may not have made) is irrelevant.
(2) There is a convention that at least the starting point for the award of simple interest (at least where the award is in £ sterling) is Bank of England base rate plus 1%. However, where the award is in another currency, like US$, the US$ Prime Rate plus 1% will be used as the starting point.
(3) This conventional rate will, usually, be less than what a claimant would have to pay as a borrower, but more than a claimant could earn as a lender. The appropriate benchmark, however, is not to regard the claimant as the lender of monies (inferentially, to the defendant), but rather as having had to borrow money in order to fund the loss that has been vindicated by the award of damages in the judgment. It is this that informs the court's departure from the conventional starting point: the overall aim is to determine a fair rate to compensate the claimant.
(4) When considering the departure from the conventional starting point, a broad brush approach must be taken. In Fiona Trust, Andrew Smith J put the point as follows:
"A "broad brush" is taken to determine what rate of interest is just and appropriate: it would be neither practical nor proportionate (even in a case involving as large sums as these) to attempt a minute assessment of what will precisely compensate the recipient. In particular, the courts do not have regard to the rate at which a particular recipient of compensation might have borrowed funds. This policy is adopted in order to control the extent of the inquiry to ascertain an appropriate rate…The court will, however, consider the general characteristics of the recipient in order to decide whether to assess interest at a rate that is higher or lower than is conventional."
(5) Specific evidence (eg as to the claimant's borrowing rates) may be adduced to support a particular departure from the conventional rate or as regards the particular circumstances of the claimant."
18. At paragraph 19, he observed that the contentions which had been made to him were, in his view, "substantially inconsistent with the broad-brush approach that the courts adopt when assessing interest". He then went on to say this:
"Using that broad brush, I must seek to determine a "fair rate". I should point out that a "fair rate" is (whatever the rate) going to be very far removed from the commercial rate at which a claimant will borrow. That is because a claimant will borrow at a certain rate compounded, whereas section 35A explicitly only allows an award of simple interest. If a compounded rate is sought by a claimant, then the claim is one of damages which must be pleaded and proved. The exercise under section 35A is very different."
Costs
An overview of the litigation
The authorities
"In this line of cases, where the plaintiff only recovers between 1% and 3% of his original claim (sometimes, but not always, after a late amendment) the court is entitled to ask itself: "Who was essentially the winning party?" It will not be distracted from making a just order as to costs by the absence of a payment into court which the plaintiff obviously would not have accepted . . . or where the defendants did not have a proper opportunity to make a payment into court which obviously would not have been accepted . . . Although all these cases are different, in the present case the substantive lis between the parties on the trial of the preliminary issues related to the big claim on which the plaintiff wholly failed."
"143. It is trite to state but important to bear in mind that the rules prescribe the way in which the court's discretion as to costs should be exercised rather than any decision of this court on the facts of any particular case. The general rule is that the "unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party" (CPR 44.3 (2) (a)). Does this mean successful party on any particular issue or successful party in the litigation? As a matter of construction it must mean the latter. Where the rule refers to part of a case or a particular allegation or issue it says so.
144. Mr Berry suggested that in Summit Property Ltd.v Pitmans [2001] EWCA Civ 2020 Chadwick LJ had, as he put it, "redefined who has won". In that case the judge had ordered the successful defendant to pay 65% of the unsuccessful claimant's costs. This court confirmed that under the CPR it was no longer necessary for a party to have acted unreasonably or improperly before he could be required to pay the costs of the other party of a particular issue on which he had failed. In the course of his judgment Chadwick LJ said:
"An issue based approach requires a judge to consider, issue by issue in relation to those issues to which that approach is to be applied, where the costs on each distinct or discrete issue should fall. If, in relation to any issue in the case before it the court considers that it should adopt an issue based approach to costs, the court must ask itself which party has been successful on that issue. Then, if the costs are to follow the event on that issue, the party who has been unsuccessful on that issue must expect to pay the cost of that issue to the party who has succeeded on that issue. That is the effect of applying the general principle on an issue by issue based approach to costs."
Longmore LJ who gave the leading judgment in this case (with which Tuckey LJ agreed) did not put it in this way, but Chadwick LJ's general approach has subsequently been approved by this court in Stena v Irish Ferries Ltd [2003] EWCA Civ 214.
145. We do not read Chadwick LJ's judgment in the way Mr Berry suggests. He does not refer to the terms of CPR 44.3 (2) (a). All he is saying is that if in carrying out the exercise required by CPR 44.3 (4) the court is considering the question of costs on an issue by issue basis and decides that costs should follow the event on a particular issue then "the party who has been unsuccessful on that issue must expect to pay the costs of that issue to the party who has succeeded . . .". This was said in a case where it had been submitted (based on Elgindata principles) that before the judge could make an order which not only deprived the successful party of his costs on an issue, but also required him to pay the costs of the other side, he had to be satisfied that there had been some element of unreasonableness or impropriety.
146. So we do not therefore think that Chadwick LJ said anything to cast doubt on what we think is the plain meaning of CPR 44.3 (2) (a). The owners were undoubtedly the successful party in this case. They had recovered the full amount of their claim plus interest. In A.L. Barnes Ltd. v Time Talk (UK) Ltd. [2003] EWCA Civ 402 Barnes had obtained judgment for a substantial part of their claim but were ordered to pay 50% of the other side's costs because the judge had made a finding that one of its directors was dishonest, an issue which had taken up "the great bulk of court time". This had led the judge to conclude that the defendant was the successful party. In allowing the appeal Longmore LJ (with whom Clarke and Ward LJJ agreed) said:
"It does seem to me that the judge has, with the greatest respect, fallen into an error of principle. In what may generally be called commercial litigation . . . the disputes are ultimately about money. In deciding who was the successful party the most important thing is to identify the party who is to pay money to the other. That is the surest indication of success and failure."
"In my judgment, the deputy judge was wrong in principle to conclude that the respondent was the successful party. The award of £2,000 was insignificant in the context of the claim and the action as a whole, and, although it was technically within the pleaded claim, it was in truth a last minute addition to salvage something (0.25%) from an action which the respondent lost. The whole action was about the cause of the need for the respondent to undergo a leg amputation, and, for all that the first defendants did not admit breach until a late stage, the second defendant's early admission would have carried the entire claim, if the respondent had succeeded on causation. The causation issue was squarely advanced in the original defences."
"Consistent with CPR 44.3 (2) (a), the first stage is to decide who is the successful party. In Procter & Gamble v Svenska Cellolosa Aktiebolaget SCA [2012] EWHC 2839, Hildyard J said, at paragraphs 6-7 that in a money claim a simple mechanical test of identifying which of the parties is compelled at the end of the day to pay money to the other has much to commend it. Nonetheless, as he acknowledged, a more nuanced approach to the process of identifying the successful party has emerged from a series of Court of Appeal authorities, beginning with Roache v News group Newspapers Ltd [1998] EMLR 161 in which, at page 168-9, Sir Thomas Bingham MR said:
"The Judge must look closely at the facts of the particular case before him and ask: who, as a matter of substance and reality, has won? Has the plaintiff won anything of value which he could not have won without fighting the action through to finish? Has the defendant substantially denied the plaintiff of the prize which the plaintiff fought the action to win?"
"In the Fox case, the Court of Appeal (Ward, Moore-Bick and Jackson LJJ) were faced with an outcome where a claimant for personal injuries in the sum of some £280,000 obtained judgment for a net £31,700 odd, beating a Part 36 offer by the defendant of £23,500 odd. It became common ground during the appeal that the claimant ought to be regarded as the successful party. In giving the leading judgment, Jackson LJ included among the principles which are derived from a lengthy summary of the authorities, the following, at paragraph 48:
"In a personal injury action the fact that the claimant has won on some issues and lost on other issues along the way is not normally a reason for depriving the claimant of part of his costs: see Goodwin v Bennett UK Ltd [2008] EWCA Civ 1658. For example, the claimant may succeed on some of the pleaded particulars of negligence, but not on others."
At paragraph 63 he concluded:
"In the context of personal injury litigation where the claimant has a strong case on liability but quantum is inflated, the defendant's remedy is to make a modest Part 36 offer. If the defendant fails to make a sufficient Part 36 offer at the first opportunity, it cannot expect to secure cost protection. Different considerations may arise in cases where the claimant is proved to have been dishonest, but (on the Judge's findings) that is not this case."
"In my judgment the critical distinction between the Medway and Fox cases is that the former was, but the letter was not, about the question who ought to be regarded in the substance as the successful party. In deciding that question in the Medway case, the Court of Appeal followed the Roache case, as well as the closely analogous decision of the Court of Appeal in Oksuzoglu v Kay [1998] 2 All ER 631."
Briggs J then quoted the passage from the judgment of Brooke LJ that I have set out above.
"There has been a growing and unwelcome tendency by first instance courts and, dare I say it, this court as well to depart from the starting point set out in rule 44.3(2(a) [that the "unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party"] too far and too often. Such an approach may strive for perfect justice in the individual case, but at huge additional cost to the parties and at huge costs to other litigants because of the uncertainty which such an approach generates. This unwelcome trend now manifests itself in (a) numerous first instance hearings in which the issue is costs and (b) a swarm of appeals to the Court of Appeal about costs, of which this case is an example."
"i). In considering orders for costs, the court is of course bound to pursue the overriding objective as set out in CPR rule 1.1, i.e. it must make an order that deals justly with the issue of costs as between the parties. Therefore, when considering whether to make a costs order - and, if so, the order it makes - the court has to make an evaluative judgment as to where justice lies on the facts and circumstances as it has found them to be.
. . .
6. Although, as CPR rule 44.3(2)(b), (4), (5) and (6) demonstrate, there may be all sorts of reasons for departing from the principle, in providing that, if the court decides to make an order for costs, the general rule is that the "the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party", CPR rule 44.2(2)(a) represents the prima facie or starting position . . .
7. . . .
8. It is well-established that the question of who is the "successful party" for CPR purposes requires a fact-specific evaluation by reference to the litigation as a whole . . .
9. In the context of private law claims, in Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA (In Liquidation) v Ali (No 4) (1999) 149 NLJ 1734 ("BCCI"), Lightman J said that:
"For the purposes of the CPR, success is not a technical term but a result in real life, and the question as to who has succeeded is a matter for the exercise of common sense."
"14. There are, however, limits to which the "the payer of the cheque" must be considered the unsuccessful party in the litigation. In Medway Primary Care Trust v Marcus [2011] EWCA Civ 750 the claimant claimed that he had had his left leg amputated as a result of the clinical negligence of the defendant. The defendant admitted breach of duty, but denied causation. On the basis of the claimant's case, quantum was agreed £500,000. However, the defendant succeeded on the causation issue, and the claimant was awarded only £2,000 for pain and suffering. There had been no offer on quantum by the defendant, either in Part 36 form or otherwise. The trial judge ordered the defendant to pay 50% of the claimant's costs. The majority of the Court of Appeal (Sir John Thomas PQBD and Tomlinson LJ) considered that no rational person would have pursued proceedings to recover only £2,000, and the real claim had failed. The defendant was therefore the successful party. Nevertheless, although the absence of a Part 36 offer was not a reason for reducing the costs, it was relevant defendant had not made a Calderbank offer of a small amount, together with costs proportionate to the recovery. In the circumstances, the claimant was ordered to pay 75% of the defendant's costs.
15. However, as an illustration of how strong the direction of money transfer may be taken to reflect success for these purposes, it is noteworthy that Jackson LJ, in a dissenting judgment in that case, found that the defendant ought to have made a Part 36 offer, and, in its absence, the claimant has succeeded in the action, so that the starting point should be that he was entitled to his costs - albeit with some considerable discount, the award of 50% made by the judge below being (in Jackson LJ's view) "generous"."
"18. Consistently with this, I consider that if a party, though ordered to pay a sum of money, has in reality and in substance won, it should be regarded as the successful party. In my judgment, in the present case it cannot be said, with any degree of plausibility, that Rotam won, or that they were, in the terms used in Oksuloglu v Kay, "essentially the winning party". By contrast it can be said that GAT, substantially and in reality won, and in particular that GAT substantially denied Rotam the prize which Rotam fought the action to win. Rotam recovered an amount of only some 2% of their claim as initially put forward, and some 3% of their subsequently reduced claim. Their recovery was very significantly exceeded by the costs which they occurred in the action, which were over £1.5 million. In reality, Rotam would not have incurred costs of that magnitude had the price which they were seeking to win been the recovery which they ultimately made.
19. Further, the claim in enrichment on which Rotam prevailed was an alternative claim, which only succeeded on the basis that Rotam's primary claim failed. Rotam's evidence and argument in the trial were very largely directed to seeking to establish that a binding collaboration agreement or data transfer agreement had been concluded. To only a minor extent were they directed to establishing a right to restitution on the basis of a failure of consideration, because success on that claim could only arise if Rotam's principal claims in contract failed. As Mr Cuddigan QC for GAT put it, the claim in unjust enrichment was one which Rotam wanted to lose. This emphasises that it was not the prize which Rotam fought the action to win.
20. I do not consider that the absence of a Part 36 or Calderbank offer from GAT alters the conclusion that it was GAT which was the successful party. I consider that the correct date to judge when any offer might reasonably be expected to have been made was at the point that the claim in unjust enrichment was added to the Particulars of Claim in January 2017. While there had been reference to the sum paid to GAT in the original Particulars of Claim, it was not pleaded as a claim in unjust enrichment. By January 2017 significant costs had already been incurred by the parties in dealing with Rotam's originally pleaded causes of action, which, as I have decided, were unfounded. A Part 36 offer would have meant that GAT could not recover those costs. A Calderbank offer made by GAT at or after the time of the amendment to pay the amount of the enrichment plus the costs of that issue, but on the basis that Rotam should pay it the costs incurred in relation to the other causes of action, would undoubtedly have been rejected, and the making of such an offer would have been "mere matter of ritual", as it was put in Medway."
The issues in the case
(1) What Rotex said to Aldrees about the performance of the machines and the extent to which such representations were justified.
(2) Whether or not the contract incorporated Rotex's terms and conditions.
(3) Whether the machines as delivered were capable of achieving the promised throughput.
(4) If not, whether and to what extent the loss caused by any initial breach of contract was successfully mitigated by subsequent modifications to the machines, including the fitting of different bottom meshes, by Rotex.
(5) What level of throughput the machines were capable of achieving once put into commercial production.
(6) Rotex's counterclaim for the balance of the price (due on commissioning).
(7) Whether or not Aldrees suffered a continuing loss of production, and hence loss of profit, because the machines were not capable of achieving in service the promised throughput, or whether the reduction in throughput from 2014 onwards was attributable to factors for which Rotex was not responsible.
(8) The extent to which there was a continuing market for the product for which the machines had been designed.
The application of the authorities to the facts of this case
Permission to appeal