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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Trunature Ltd v. Scotnet (Note In The Case Of) (1974) Ltd &C [2008] ScotCS CSOH_30 (19 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_30.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_30, [2008] CSOH 30

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 30

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE

 

in the cause

 

TRUNATURE LIMITED

 

Pursuers;

 

against

 

(FIRST) SCOTNET (1974) LIMITED and (SECOND) SCOBIE & JUNOR (ESTD 1919) LIMITED

 

Defenders:

 

 

ннннннннннннннннн________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: Robertson; McClure Naismith

Defenders: Clancy, QC, Higgins; Burness W.S.

 

 

 

Introduction

[1] On 4 February 2008 I repelled the defenders' Note of Objections to the Auditor's Report on the Pursuers' Account of Expenses and orally gave brief reasons for so doing. On 8 February 2008 I acceded, on certain conditions, to the defenders' motion for leave to reclaim against that decision. Accordingly, it is necessary for me to give my reasons for my decision in writing. I was told by Mr Clancy QC, who appeared for the defenders, that he sought to argue only one point on the reclaiming motion, namely that covered by para.6 of the Note of Objections. This Opinion is therefore confined to that point.

[2] The background to this matter is an Intellectual Property action in which, after proof, I found in favour of the pursuers. The defenders' reclaiming motion was unsuccessful. On 1 February 2007 I found the defenders liable to the pursuers for expenses on an "agent and client" basis. Although the interlocutor was silent on the point, I intended that to mean expenses on an "agent and client, client paying" basis; and it is now accepted by the defenders, after clarification of my intention, that the interlocutor should be so read. McPhail, Sheriff Court Practice, at para.19.44, confirms that this is in fact the meaning of an interlocutor which awards expenses on an "agent and client" basis. At the same time, I found the pursuer entitled to charge an additional fee in terms of certain of the heads of Rule of Court 42.14(3). Since that interlocutor has not been reclaimed, it is unnecessary for me to explain my reasons for coming to those decisions.

[3] The pursuers lodged for taxation an account of expenses in which they claimed a total of г221,806.15 plus an additional fee by way of an uplift of 250%. The basic figure of г221,806.15 comprised solicitors' fees of just over г92,000 and outlays (including fees for counsel and experts) of nearly г130,000. The auditor "taxed off" only some г2,447.81 from the solicitors' fees and nothing from the figure claimed for outlays. In addition, having considered all the various heads in Rule of Court 42.14(3), he awarded an additional fee of г133,500.00, which reflects an uplift of about 150% on that part of the account which comprised the solicitors' fee as taxed down. The result of that taxation overall is that the pursuers are entitled to recover, in addition to the sum of г130,000 odd for outlays, an amount of г225,968.81 in respect of solicitors fees.

 

Submissions

[4] Para.6 of the defenders' Note of Objections is in the following terms:

"6. At taxation, the Auditor made provision for payment of a significant additional fee in addition to payment of the expenses on an agent and client basis. As a result, the pursuer will recover an amount vastly in excess of the sum expended by it on legal expenses. In so providing, the Auditor erred."

In developing his submissions on this point, Mr Clancy submitted that the account lodged for taxation reflected the terms of engagement agreed between the pursuers and their solicitors - this was the basis upon which the Auditor had abated the fees element of the account by г2,447.81, the fees claimed in the account for writing letters being in excess of the rate agreed for this task in the terms of engagement. The Auditor's decision on the taxation meant that the pursuers would recover more than they had agreed to pay their solicitors. This was confirmed by the penultimate sentence in the Auditor's Minute in response to the Note of Objections, which was in the following terms: "It is correct that as a consequence of the award of expenses, the receiving party will receive expenses greater than those for which his client is liable." To that extent, Mr Clancy argued, it would be a windfall for the pursuers and would not represent expenses at all. An award of expenses should do no more than indemnify the client against the expenses he has incurred. He reminded me, under reference to Baker Hughes Ltd. v CCG Contracting International Ltd. 2005 SC 65, 69, that the agent/client, client paying basis of an award of expenses was generally thought to provide the receiving party with something approaching a full indemnity. In the present case, because a small amount had been taxed off, there was some (limited) scope for the application of an additional fee, i.e. there could be an additional fee of up to г2,447.81. He submitted that the additional fee should be capped so that the receiving party never recovered more than the amount of fees actually paid by it to its solicitors.

[5] Mr Robertson, for the pursuers, emphasised that this hearing was not a re-opening of my earlier interlocutor (a) awarding expenses on an agent/ client, client paying basis and (b) finding the pursuers entitled to an additional fee. Nor should the court second-guess the auditor's judgment on what was or was not reasonable or merited in terms of the interlocutor remitting the matter to taxation. The assessment of an additional fee was entirely a matter for the auditor's discretion: Gray v Babcock Power Ltd. [1990] SLT 693. The auditor had before him the account of expenses, the terms of engagement, and all the time sheets, vouchers and other relevant materials; and, using his experience, he had reached a decision after full consideration of that material. It was wrong to focus exclusively on the itemised account of expenses lodged for taxation. That account reflected the sum presently billed to the pursuers by their agents. It was not surprising that the itemised account rendered by the solicitors to the pursuers did not contain an amount for an additional fee, since until the diet of taxation it was uncertain how much, if anything, the auditor would allow by way of an additional fee. The account lodged for taxation, however, was accompanied by a claim for an additional fee by way of a percentage uplift. This claim for an additional fee was to be regarded as part of the account of expenses submitted for taxation: Honer v Wilson 2007 SLT 54 at para.[21]. That it was competent to award an additional fee in a case where expenses were to be taxed on an agent/ client basis was not in issue between the parties. The case of Tods Murray v McNamara 2007 SC 435 was an example of an additional fee being awarded in a taxation as between agent and client. In a case where an additional fee was allowed in a taxation on an agent/client, client paying basis, then virtually any uplift given by way of an additional fee was bound to result in an award of expenses in excess of the itemised account of expenses submitted for taxation. But that did not mean that it was in excess of what the pursuers would be liable to pay their solicitors. The capping approach advocated by the defenders was unprincipled. If that capping approach were correct, then an award of expenses on an agent/client, client paying basis, would have the effect of taking away from solicitors the additional fee which the court and the auditor had thought was merited.

 

Discussion

[6] In stating briefly my reasons for repelling the Note of Objections on this point, I indicated that I preferred Mr Robertson's submissions. I explained that I was not persuaded by the submission that the amount awarded by the Auditor by way of an additional fee gave rise to a situation where the pursuers would recover in the award of expenses more than they were liable to pay their solicitors. The factors justifying the award of an additional fee all relate to the work undertaken by the solicitor in a particular case. They are factors which may justify the payment to the solicitor of an additional fee because of, for example, the particular expertise of the solicitor in so far as relevant to the particular case or the greater responsibility undertaken by him. If an additional fee is allowed in a taxation as between parties to the litigation under Rule 42.14, the effect is to require the paying party to pay to the receiving party an additional sum by way of expenses so as to reimburse the receiving party for the additional fee which it will have to pay to its solicitor. It seemed to me that there was no question of the pursuers receiving more by way of the award of expenses than they would have to pay their solicitors. In so far as the receiving party received an amount by way of an additional fee, after a taxation pursuant to an interlocutor under Rule 14.14 finding the pursuers entitled to an additional fee, it would surely be under a duty to account to its solicitors for that part of the expenses which it received, whether by an implied term of the contract of engagement or by the application of the principles of unjust enrichment.

[7] Having been reminded of the arguments and the authorities on the application for leave to reclaim, and faced with the task of putting on paper my reasons for repelling the defenders' argument, it became clear to me that, whilst I adhered to my decision, I should express my reasons rather more fully.

[8] I start by reminding myself that, as was pointed out in Tods Murray v McNamara at para.[11], the Auditor brings to the taxation process a wealth of experience. He will be well aware of the principle that an award of expenses is compensatory. In other words, the receiving party is compensated in whole or in part (depending on the scale of taxation) for the expenses which he has to pay to his agents, whether agents' fees or disbursements. Were an amount to be awarded in excess of the expenses which the receiving party was required to pay to his agents, that excess could not properly be called "expenses": c.f. Taylor v Marshall's Food Group 1998 SC 841. By the same token, an award of an additional fee under Rule of Court 42.14 is an award of an additional fee to be paid by the receiving party to his agents; otherwise it could not properly be called a "fee". All of this will be second nature to the Auditor. I would therefore be disinclined too readily to assume that in taxing the pursuers' expenses pursuant to the court's interlocutor the auditor has intended to award the pursuers a sum in excess of the amount which they have paid or will be required to pay to their agents. Although the language used by him in the penultimate sentence of his Minute (which I have quoted in para.[4] above) may at first glance suggest that this is what he has done, I am satisfied that properly understood in the context of the taxation it shows no such thing. I come to that conclusion for the following reasons.

[9] The factors set out in Rule 42.14(3)(a)-(g), which are relevant to the allowance of an additional fee in an award of expenses as between the parties to the litigation, also appear in paras.(i)-(vi) of Rule 42.7(6)(c), and are relevant to the taxation of the solicitor's own account with his client under that Rule. The Auditor must take those factors into account in that context in deciding what fee is fair and reasonable. Tods Murray v McNamara concerned a taxation of a solicitor's account with the client in terms of Rule 42.7. At paras.[39]-[42] the Lord Justice-Clerk explains how such a taxation works. The auditor will go through the itemised account, taxing off some items and abating others. He will also consider whether and, if so, how to allow for a "special responsibility" element having regard to the enumerated factors, if relevant, in Rule 42.7(6)(c). He may make such allowance by up-rating the fees for individual tasks. More commonly, perhaps, and certainly less laboriously, in a case where he finds an uplift justified, he will simply apply to the total fees as taxed by him an overall percentage uplift.

[10] Taxation of a solicitor's account with his client is, I suspect, the exception rather than the rule. In most cases the account is agreed and there is no need for a contentious taxation. That appears to have been the case here. The taxation between the parties to the litigation with which I am here concerned was not preceded by a taxation as between solicitor and client in which the uplift for the special responsibility element would have been assessed. Rather, it simply proceeded upon the basis of the itemised account of expenses and a claim for a percentage uplift. It was to that itemised account, as taxed down on an agent/client basis by the sum of г2,447.81, that the auditor applied a percentage uplift of 150%, just as I assume he would have done had he been dealing with a contentious taxation as between solicitor and client under Rule 42.7. He considered that the special responsibility element (by reference to the factors set out in Rule 42.14(3)) justified an uplift of that amount; and I can think of no likely circumstances in which, had he had to assess a fair and reasonable fee in a taxation in this case between solicitor and client under Rule 42.7, he would have come to a different assessment of the percentage uplift to be applied.

[11] There having been no solicitor client taxation of the solicitors' account under Rule 42.7, all the Auditor had before him at the taxation between the parties to the litigation was the itemised account of expenses which would have formed the basis for a solicitor client taxation under that Rule had such a taxation been required. He was not, therefore, in a position to know what amount would have been assessed as fair and reasonable under Rule 42.7 as between the pursuers and their solicitors; but no doubt he would have assumed that the uplift on that account would have been of the same order as the uplift of 150% which he allowed on the taxation as between the parties to the litigation. I am assuming, of course, that the terms of engagement between the pursuers and their solicitors did not preclude any such uplift; the Auditor has not suggested that they did and it would, I suspect, be unusual in this type of case for them to do so.

[12] It follows from the above that the likely result of a taxation as between solicitor and client, had one taken place, would have resulted in an uplift of the same percentage as was awarded in the taxation between the parties to the litigation with which I am concerned. There can be no question, therefore, of the pursuers recovering from the defenders under the taxation an amount in name of expenses in excess of the sum which the pursuers are bound to pay their agents. It seems to me that when the Auditor said that as a consequence of the award of expenses the pursuers will receive expenses greater than those for which they are liable to their agents, he must have meant simply that they would receive an amount by way of expenses in excess of the amount shown in the itemised account lodged for taxation. That is in fact the reality of the situation. As I have said, it seems improbable in the extreme that he should have intended to allow more by way of expenses than the amount for which they were liable.

[13] For those reasons it seems to me that the challenge in para.6 of the Note of Objections must fail.

 


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