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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Ratcliffe Duce and Gammer v. Binns (t/a Parc Ferme N McDonald) [2008] UKEAT 0100_08_2304 (23 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0100_08_2304.html Cite as: [2008] Lloyd's Rep PN 12, [2008] UKEAT 0100_08_2304, [2008] UKEAT 100_8_2304 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS (PRESIDENT)
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
MR N MCDONALD |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
In a Matter of Costs
For the Appellant | MR C STIRLING (of Counsel) Instructed by: Ratcliffe Duce & Gammer LLP 49-51 London Street READING Berkshire RG1 4PS |
For the First Respondent | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the First Respondent. |
For the Second Respondent | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Second Respondent. |
SUMMARY
Practice and Procedure
Costs
Wasted costs order made against appellant firm of solicitors. Employment Tribunal applied the wrong principles and relied upon the wrong authorities. Had the right principles been adopted, the only possible conclusion was that no such order could be made. Appeal upheld.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS (PRESIDENT)
"The Tribunal have to decide whether, in all the circumstances of the case, the representative conducted the case unreasonably or whether the bringing or conducting of the complaint was misconceived. Unreasonable conduct is a precondition of the power to award costs. There need be no causal link between the costs incurred and the unreasonable behaviour."
She was here applying the principles enunciated by the Court of Appeal in McPherson v BNP Paribas [2004] ICR 1398, to which she expressly referred.
"…Firstly, no heed was taken with regard to the documents provided by the Respondent establishing when the Claimant went on the Respondent's payroll. Secondly, there was a failure by the Claimant's representative to heed the significance of the contract of employment signed by the Claimant stating a commencement date of 19 December 2005. Thirdly, there was a failure to heed the significance of the Claimant's failure to obtain the bank statements he stated proved his case. Fourthly, there was a failure also to appreciate that the Claimant's witness, Mr Rutherford, was not an employee at the same premises as the Claimant so that his evidence on the Claimant's alleged daily attendance was worthless. The Tribunal, therefore, find that the pursuance of the case after June 2007 was unreasonable since the case was obviously misconceived at that date."
Accordingly she concluded that the wasted costs order should be made of the costs incurred from a particular date when she thought that the Appellants ought to have appreciated that the case had no prospect of success.
The grounds of appeal.
"Wasted costs means any costs incurred by a party –
(a) as a result of any improper, unreasonable or negligent act or omission on the part of any representative; or
(b) which, in the light of any such act or omission occurring after they were incurred, the tribunal considers it unreasonable to expect that party to pay."
Could a wasted costs order properly be made?
(1) Has the legal representative of whom complaint is made acted improperly, unreasonably, or negligently?
(2) If so, did such conduct cause the applicant to incur unnecessary costs?
(3) If so, is it in the circumstances just to order the legal representative to compensate the applicant for the whole or any part of the relevant costs?
not be awarded in such circumstances were fully explained by Sir Thomas Bingham MR, as he was, in the Ridehalgh case (page 863) as follows:
"Pursuing a hopeless case
A legal representative is not to be held to have acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently simply because he acts for a party who pursues a claim or a defence which is plainly doomed to fail. As Lord Pearce observed in Rondel v Worsely [1967] 3 All ER 993 at 1029, [1969] 1 AC 191 at 275:
'It is easier, pleasanter and more advantageous professionally for barristers to advise, represent or defend those who are decent and reasonable and likely to succeed in their action or their defence than those who are unpleasant, unreasonable, disreputable, and have an apparently hopeless case. Yet it would be tragic if our legal system came to provide no reputable defenders, or representatives or advisers for the latter.'
As is well known, barristers in independent practice are not permitted to pick and choose their clients. Paragraph 209 of the Code of Conduct of the Bar of England and Wales provides:
'A barrister in independent practice must comply with the "Cab-rank rule" and accordingly except only as otherwise provided in paragraphs 501, 502 and 503 he must in any field in which he professes to practise in relation to work appropriate to his experience and seniority and irrespective of whether his client is paying privately or is legally aided or otherwise publicly funded: (a) accept any brief to appear before a court in which he professes to practise; (b) accept any instructions; (c) act for any person on whose behalf he is briefed or instructed; and do so irrespective of (i) the party on whose behalf he is briefed or instructed (ii) the nature of the case and (iii) any belief or opinion which he may have formed as to the character reputation cause conduct guilt or innocence of that person.'
As is well known, solicitors are not subject to an equivalent cab-rank rule, but many solicitors would and do respect the public policy underlying it by affording representation to the unpopular and the unmeritorious. Legal representatives will, of course, whether barristers or solicitors, advise clients of the perceived weakness of their case and of the risk of failure. But clients are free to reject advice and insist that cases be litigated. It is rarely if ever safe for a court to assume that a hopeless case is being litigated on the advice of the lawyers involved. They are there to present the case; it is (as Samuel Johnson unforgettably pointed out) for the judge and not for the lawyers to judge it.
It is, however, one thing for a legal representative to present, on instructions, a case which he regards as bound to fail; it is quite another to lend his assistance to proceedings which are an abuse of the process of the court. Whether instructed or not, a legal representative is not entitled to use litigious procedures for purposes for which they were not intended, as by issuing or pursuing proceedings for reasons unconnected with success in the litigation or pursuing a case known to be dishonest, nor is he entitled to evade rules intended to safeguard the interests of justice, as by knowingly failing to make full disclosure on ex parte application or knowingly conniving at incomplete disclosure of documents. It is not entirely easy to distinguish by definition between the hopeless case and the case which amounts to an abuse of the process, but in practice it is not hard to say which is which and if there is doubt the legal representative is entitled to the benefit of it."
"…………It is the duty of the advocate to present his client's case even though he may think it is hopeless and even though he may have advised his client that it is (Ridehalgh pages 233-4). It is not enough that the court considers the advocate has been arguing a hopeless case. The litigant is entitled to be heard: to penalise the advocate for presenting his client's case to the court would be contrary to the constitutional principle to which I have referred. The position is different if the court concludes that there has been improper time wasting by the advocate or the advocate has knowingly lent himself to an abuse of process. However, it is relevant to bear in mind that if a party is raising issues or is taking steps which have no reasonable prospect of success or are scandalous or are an abuse of process, both the aggrieved party and the court have powers to remedy the situation by invoking summary remedies – striking out; summary judgment; peremptory orders, etc. The making of a wasted costs order should not be the primary remedy; by definition it only arises once the damage has been done. It is a last resort."
His Lordship also observed that the representative owes no duty to his opponent, and that the jurisdictional was penal and has to be approached with considerable caution.
"In the usual case where a waiver would not benefit their client they will be slow to advise the client to waive his privilege and they may well feel bound to advise that the client should take independent advice before doing so. The client may be unwilling to do so that and may be unwilling to waive if he does so the respondent lawyers may find themselves at a grave disadvantage in defending their conduct of proceedings, unable to reveal what advice and warnings they gave, what instructions they received. … Judges who are invited to make or contemplate making a wasted costs order must make full allowance for the inability of respondent lawyers to tell the whole story. Where there is room for doubt, the respondent lawyers are entitled to the benefit of it. It is again only when, with all allowances made, a lawyer's conduct of proceedings is quite plainly unjustifiable that it can be appropriate to make a wasted costs order".
Disposal