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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) >> Chapman & Anor v DWR Cymru Welsh Water [2012] UKUT 89 (LC) (15 March 2012)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/LC/2012/ACQ_309_2009.html
Cite as: [2012] UKUT 89 (LC)

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UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)

 

 

UT Neutral citation number: [2012] UKUT 89 (LC)

UTLC Case Number: ACQ/309/2009

 

TRIBUNALS, COURTS AND ENFORCEMENT ACT 2007

 

 

 

COMPENSATION – costs – conduct of the parties – no order for costs

 

 

IN THE MATTER OF A NOTICE OF REFERENCE

 

 

 

BETWEEN REGINALD CHARLES CHAPMAN

JANE WINIFRED CHAPMAN Claimants

and

 

DWR CYMRU WELSH WATER Compensating

 Authority

 

 

 

Re: Hafod Wen,

Harlech,

Gwynedd,

LL46 2RA

 

 

 

Decision on costs determined on written submissions following agreement on compensation

 

 

© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2012

The following cases are referred to in this decision:

Purfleet Farms Ltd v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions [2002] RVR 368

Bestley v North West Water [1998] 1 EGLR 187

Business Environment Bow Lane Ltd v Deanwater Estates [2008] 3 EGLR 105

 


 

DECISION

Introduction

1.           This is a decision on costs following settlement by agreement between the claimants, Mr & Mrs R C Chapman and the compensating authority, Dwr Cymru Welsh Water (“Welsh Water”) of a claim for compensation that had been made under the provisions of sections 159 and 168 of the Water Industry Act 1991 (“the Act”) and, following a Notice of Reference dated 14 July 2009, had been due to be heard before the Tribunal on 10/11 January 2012.  Detailed submissions on costs together with counter submissions and rebuttals have been received from the solicitors representing the parties: Llanyon Bowdler (formerly LG Solicitors) of Shrewsbury for the claimants and Hughes Griffiths Partnership of Swansea for the compensating authority.

Background

2.           The claimants are the owners of Hafod Wen, Harlech, Gwynedd, a guest house situated in 8 acres of grounds on the mid-Wales coast. On 19 March 2004, Welsh Water served notice to enter upon the land in the exercise of its statutory powers under the Act in connection with the construction of the Harlech to Llanbedr sewage transfer main.  The works commenced in October 2004 and some 297 metres of sewage pipe were installed within the grounds of the property, together with an automatic air valve.  The claimants appointed Carter Jonas, Chartered Surveyors, to act upon their behalf and pursue a claim for compensation. On 10 January 2005, their Ms Gail Bleakley wrote to Welsh Water suggesting that compensation to be assessed in accordance with the provisions of Schedule 12 to the Act should be in the region of £23,000, and that the principles applied in Bestley v North West Water [1998] 1 EGLR 187 supported that approach.   

3.           A more detailed proposal was submitted to Welsh Water on 2 August 2005, adding a number of disturbance issues to the £23,000 for depreciation, and totalling £34,495. A formal letter of claim was then submitted to Welsh Water on 31 May 2006, and comprised:

 

Depreciation as previously assessed £23,000

Loss of guest house profits (closed 1 month Oct 2004) £  5,261

Claimants’ time 145 hours @ £15ph £  2,175

Loss of grazing income on part of land £ 420

Use of unauthorised working area £ 750

Damage to driveway £  1,000

Repairs/re-instatement to sand dune area £ 900

Trespass £ 500

Surface obstruction (valve chamber) £ 250

Grassland re-instatement £  1,400

Total   £35,656

Together with interest and professional costs.

4.           Welsh Water responded by offering £2,409 for the loss of profit element alone, and sought further information relating to other heads of claim. An advance payment of £4,000 was made to the claimants on 27 September 2006. Following this, the claimants produced an amended “draft” statement of claim on 21 May 2008 where the depreciation was reduced to £15,625, the loss of profit claim was reduced to £4,907, the hours claim was changed to £2,012.50 being 80.5 hours @ £25 ph, and the claim for trespass was withdrawn.  The revised total was £26,514.50. The compensating authority again sought further information, and on 17 November 2008 made an offer of £6,150 exclusive of items where further information was awaited. A further revised proposal was submitted by the claimants on 14 May 2009 (which Welsh Water say they did not receive) amending the claim to £25,807.50.

5.           As the parties were no nearer reaching agreement, the notice of reference was submitted on 14 July 2009.  Welsh Water then made a without prejudice offer of £17,460 on 1 September 2009 on the following basis:

Depreciation £  8,500

Loss of profit £  4,200

Claimants’ time £  1,610

Loss of grazing income £ 250

Use of unauthorised working area £ Nil

Damage to driveway £ 750

Sand dune area £ 900

Surface obstruction (valve chamber) £ 250

Grassland re-instatement £ 1,000

£17,460

Together with interest and fees to be agreed.

6.           On 17 September 2009, the claimants produced a statement of case in relation to the reference, claiming £30,902. Discussions between the parties continued and there were various email exchanges in September and October 2009.  It was acknowledged that on the basis of those discussions, the parties appeared to be about £10,000 apart and in a telephone conversation between the respective agents on 7 October 2009, the claimants’ agent suggested a compromise whereby the compensating authority should increase its offer by £5,000 making a total of £22,460.  This was refused, and in an email of 15 October, Welsh Water withdrew all previous offers.  By letters dated 3 and 16 December 2009, Carter Jonas advised Welsh Water that, without prejudice, and save as to costs, the claimants would be prepared to accept £20,500. plus costs.

7.           Welsh Water wrote to the claimants’ agent on 16 December 2009 confirming the withdrawal of all previous offers, “including that of 2 September 2009.” On 12 January 2010, following advice from the expert who had been appointed to act for them in respect of the reference, Welsh Water submitted an open offer of £7,000, less the £4,000 already paid to the claimants and £200 to their accountant, plus interest, valuer’s fee and costs. Following a query as to how that figure was made up, Welsh Water repeated the offer on 11 October 2011 and said that that, although it had been intended to be a global figure, it could be taken as:

Depreciation £  1,000

Loss of profit £  2,750

Claimants’ time £ 500

Loss of grazing income £ 300

Damage to driveway £ 500

Sand dune area £ 600

Surface obstruction £ 100

Grassland re-instatement £ 750

“Rounding up figure” £ 500

Total   £  7,000

8.           On 9 December 2011, the claimants’ solicitors put forward an offer to settle at £10,000 plus costs. On 14 December, Welsh Water responded with a final offer of £8,500 together with valuer’s fees which they agreed at £1,067.50 plus VAT, and a £3,000 contribution to legal costs.  Shortly prior to the hearing, the claimants accepted the £8,500, surveyor’s fees and a further £200 accountant’s costs, but rejected the offer regarding legal fees.

Submissions

9.           It was submitted for the claimants that they should have all their legal costs of £11,951.40 and disbursements of £5,577.50 which were “not disproportionate when considering the value, complexity and importance of the claim.” The agreed compensation of £8,500 exceeds the offer made by the compensating authority on 12 January 2010. The claimants have therefore succeeded in their claim and in accordance with general principles, should have all their costs. When exercising its discretion, the Tribunal should consider all the circumstances including the conduct of the parties. It was submitted that the claimants’ conduct had been entirely reasonable throughout; they have raised and pursued a reasonable claim and have done so in a proportionate and appropriate manner.  As to the earlier without prejudice offer of £17,460, it was submitted that it had only been available for a very short period of time.  It was withdrawn by email on 15 October 2009, before it was in any event rejected by the claimants on 3 December 2009, and was further confirmed by letter as having been withdrawn on 16 December 2009.  As such, that offer should provide no basis for disentitling the claimants to their costs and should be disregarded.

10.        In ten pages of further submissions, filed in response to the compensating authority’s costs submissions (which were exchanged simultaneously), the claimants refuted Welsh Water’s suggestion that the claimants behaviour had been unreasonable, had prolonged the proceedings and had thus forced them to incur unnecessary costs. The applications for further disclosure had, in many respects, been unnecessary and there were a number of occasions when documentation that had already been supplied had been sought.  In any event, the claimants had not taken issue in respect of the compensating authority’s late production of documentation that they had sought, and it was not fair, therefore, for them to complain in the manner that they had.  The criticism of the claimants’ application to amend their statement of case (which was approved by the Tribunal) and that it was made late in the day was unjustified.  The authority had been put on notice that it was intended to update the claimants’ time costs, and none of the amendments that were made changed the substance of the claim.  Indeed, the authority themselves admitted that the amendments were not significant.  Welsh Water had also alleged that the claimants had not made an offer to settle once these proceedings had commenced, but that was incorrect.  The offer to settle at £20,500 was made in December 2009.  Such a criticism was particularly inappropriate as correspondence from Welsh Water during the negotiations had specifically said that they would not enter into “horse-trading.”

11.        The authority’s claim for summary legal costs and disbursements of over £35,000 excluding VAT, was, it was submitted, contrary to the claimants’ very reasonable costs, and was wholly disproportionate and unjustified. The time spent by Welsh Water’s solicitors had been excessive, and the expert’s fees are nearly four times those incurred by the claimants.  Many of the costs being claimed were unnecessary and un-recoverable, for instance fees charged by their expert in “dealing with issues outside his expertise”, costs of aerial photographs that were never disclosed or produced, unknown Land Registry fees, obtaining a copy of a structural survey report that had been carried out on the property by the authority  prior to the works being undertaken (no claim having been made for structural damage) and a company search fee that seemed wholly irrelevant.  The fees claim was of such a level, and was so full of anomalies, that if the Tribunal finds in Welsh Water’s favour on costs, any award should not be by summary judgment, but subject to detailed assessment by the Registrar if not agreed.

12.        The compensating authority sought a summary assessment of its costs in the reference pursuant to Rule 10(5)(a) in the sum of £35,495.59 excluding VAT on disbursements, and in doing so, submitted that regard should be had to the initial offer made by Welsh Water in the sum of £17,640 on 2 September 2009, which was rejected by the claimants.  As to that offer, it had been  made in an attempt to settle this long outstanding dispute and in an effort to avoid proceedings, and was substantially above the amount that their valuer had assessed as being appropriate compensation.

13.        The Hughes Griffiths Partnership was only instructed by Welsh Water on 2 October 2009. On 7 October 2009, it was submitted, there was a telephone conversation in which the claimants verbally rejected the offer of 2 September, and advised that they would settle if another £5,000 was offered.  The offer was withdrawn by email on 15 October 2009, the authority having decided, in accordance with its policy, that it was no longer willing to pay an inflated claim. The claimants, having made a revised offer of £20,500 in December 2009, had not revised that figure until shortly before the substantive hearing was due to take place.  They had not responded to Welsh Water’s open offer made in January 2010 other than to ask how it had been made up.  At that date, legal costs were still limited. From that point, it was said, the authority’s costs rose significantly in preparation for the hearing of the reference.  It was only in December 2011 that serious and constructive negotiations took place, the claimants’ then offer of £10,000 being more than 50% below their previous proposal.

14.        In all the circumstances, it was submitted that, with the finally agreed figure being only marginally above the £7,000 offer that remained open until final agreement was reached, Welsh Water should have all of its legal costs. In considering its discretion, the Tribunal should be mindful of the judgment in Business Environment Bow Lane Ltd v Deanwater Estates [2008] 3 EGLR 105 in the context of costs incurred against benefit gained. 

15.        As to why there was such a disparity between Welsh Water’s two offers, it was stated that the authority has to deal with many hundreds of claims and, as a regulated non-profit making entity it has a duty to its customers. Whilst it will endeavour to resolve claims by making enhanced offers in order to avoid the trouble and costs of proceedings, it had to weigh this up against the potential disadvantages and costs of habitually making inflated payments.  If that became the norm, further inflated claims would be encouraged.  It was policy therefore, if enhanced offers are refused, and proceedings therefore become inevitable, that the authority reverts to strictly applying Schedule 12 to the Act.

16.        It was submitted, at considerable length, that problems over disclosure were a significant contributor to the escalation in the authority’s costs. Many attempts had been made to extract relevant documentation from the claimants in support of their contentions, and due to the lack of response, it had been necessary for applications to be made to the Tribunal on two occasions for extensions of time in submitting expert reports – those applications not having been objected to.  It was, of course, a duty of parties to make relevant disclosure, and the lack of co-operation from the claimants had meant that evidence to prove quantum under the various heads had not been forthcoming.  Once the claimants had appointed their own solicitors, exchange of lists did eventually occur in March 2010 but the claimants only produced four documents, one of which was an accountant’s report that had already been produced but did not have the requisite supporting information, and another was a privileged letter. It became necessary to apply to the Tribunal for an Order for disclosure, which was consented to, but again the disclosure that was made on 29 April 2010 proved unsatisfactory in a number of respects, much of the documentation in four ring binders being irrelevant or incomplete.  For example, in respect of the re-instatement of the grassland, the documentation produced was the claimants’ own summary of events, and did not include any invoice for the works.  This was never forthcoming despite further requests.  If it had been, the matter could have been agreed, and the amount of the invoice reimbursed.  Similar criticisms were made in respect of the claimants’ allegations that they lost bookings as a result of purportedly having to close the guest house whilst the works were ongoing.

17.        Later in 2010, and in 2011 despite the production of further, mostly irrelevant, documentation, it became clear that no complete disclosure would ever be forthcoming, and the matter would be referred to in the substantive hearing in connection with costs.  In summary, it was submitted that the claimants’ approach to the whole matter had been slapdash, resulting not just in increased legal costs, but extra costs relating to the difficulties that had also been encountered by the expert. 

18.        Despite the authority having disclosed its own list to the claimants on 5 March 2009 (and against which no criticism or complaint had been forthcoming), it was only a few weeks before the substantive hearing was due to take place that the claimants raised the issue of the negotiated settlement that had been agreed in respect of the neighbouring property.  It was notable that neither of the experts had sought to include settlement information in their reports, this being particularly surprising as the same surveyor as was acting for the claimants, acted for the neighbour.  That settlement, which had been agreed in January 2010, was, it was admitted, the result of a certain amount of horse-trading, and it was considered that it was inappropriate for the information sought to be produced. Dealing with this late request for information had incurred additional and unnecessary legal costs.

19.        In its 11 pages of further submissions (with appendices) dated 2 February 2012, the compensating authority’s solicitors refuted many of the statements made in the claimants’ costs submissions, and re-stated their position at considerable length, re-asserting their stance that in all the circumstances, due to the claimants having acted entirely unreasonably, the claim for costs should be allowed, and that a summary costs order be made. As all the costs have been provided to the Tribunal, they said that it has sufficient information to make such an order and it would not be in the interests of the parties to have to incur the further time and costs that would follow in the event of a detailed assessment becoming necessary.

Conclusions

20.        Whilst it is abundantly clear from the chronology of events is that this matter has dragged on for far longer than it need have done and, with the benefit of hindsight, the claimants might have been well advised to accept the offer made by Welsh Water in September 2009, I am mindful of the fact that that offer was well below the amount being claimed at the time and that, not unreasonably in my view, attempts were made by the claimants to “split the difference” (initially suggesting £22,460).  They also compromised further, in December 2009, by suggesting £20,500.  It was only when the compensating authority received advice from its appointed valuation expert that the offer was abruptly withdrawn and subsequently substantially reduced. It could be said that the authority should have obtained that advice much sooner. If it had done so, the offer of £17,460 might never have been made, but the fact remains that it was, and it amounted to a sum which, at the time, Welsh Water obviously thought was justified. The existence of that offer makes any suggestion that the claims made by Mr & Mrs Chapman were exaggerated to an unreasonable or unacceptable degree, significantly less sustainable than if the offer had never been more than the £7,000 proposed later.  I would observe that, in my view, rather than being exaggerated or unreasonable (to the extent that if found to be the case, I should not follow the normal regime on costs), the claim would be better described, in terms of comparison with the initial offer made, as “over optimistic”.   I also accept the claimants’ observations that the initial offer, which was without prejudice, was withdrawn after a relatively short period, although, according to the authority, the offer was rejected verbally almost straight away (that not being confirmed in writing until some time later).  On the basis of the submissions made, if I were to exercise my discretion in favour of Welsh Water, on the basis sought, I would be disinclined to see the date of the £17,460 offer as a trigger point entitling it to its costs (whether assessed summarily or, failing agreement, by the Registrar on a detailed assessment), from then on.

21.        The significant reduction, by over £10,000, in the amount they were prepared to pay, and their apparent unwillingness to negotiate at all until the finally revised offer of £8,500 was made and accepted promptly in January 2012, leads me to the view that it would not be appropriate to conclude that it was solely the actions of the claimants that led to delays and increased legal costs – although I do acknowledge the concerns expressed by Welsh Water regarding the disclosure issue and comment further on that below. In their submissions, the authority criticised the length of time that passed from 12 January 2010, when they made their open offer of £7,000 before a counter-offer was received, and said that significant costs were incurred after that date. However, I note that, in fact, Welsh Water did not respond to the claimants’ prompt request for further information as to the basis of that offer until October 2011.

22.        The compensating authority referred to Business Environment Bow Lane Ltd which was a case where costs were being considered under the provisions of the CPR and related to a purported dilapidations claim approaching half a million pounds.  Costs were awarded against the appellant claimant where the compensation had been determined at only just over £1,000. There were circumstances in that case particularly regarding the integrity of the claim which are wholly different from the circumstances here, and I attach no weight to it.

23.        In this Tribunal, the CPR has no application (and this is also a case were section 4 of the Land Compensation Act 1961 does not apply). In following its own procedures, as set out in its Practice Directions, the Tribunal does nevertheless act in accordance with the overriding objective upon which the CPR is founded.  The principles relating to the Tribunal’s discretion in compensation cases, whereby the costs of assessing the claim are part of the loss that the claimants suffer, so they are entitled to those costs unless they have behaved unreasonably, are stated in Purfleet Farms Ltd v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions [2002] RVR 368. where Potter LJ said at para 40:

”Despite the similarities in procedure, a compensation reference before the Lands Tribunal does not itself constitute ‘ordinary litigation’ and, for the present at least, remains outside the purview of the CPR.”

That was a case relating to compensation for compulsory purchase where section 4 did apply, but the above observation relates equally, in my view, to a case such as the present.  In the Lands Tribunal case, which that appeal upheld, it had been ordered that the respondent, despite having beaten a sealed offer made by the acquiring authority, pay three-quarters, rather than all, of the claimant’s costs after it had been determined that the claim had been made in a sum that “was significantly higher than can be supported by reliable evidence…” (Para 122).

24.        It is clear to me that in the instant case, the claim was initially, as I have said, “over optimistic”, but in all the circumstances and weighing up all aspects of the parties’ conduct of the case over this very long period of time, I have come to the conclusion firstly that it would certainly not be appropriate for the claimants to have to pay any of the the costs of the compensating authority. My views as to those costs, which have been assessed at over £35,000, are set out below. As to the claimants’ costs, it is a fact that they did “beat” the authority’s offer that had remained open from January 2010 at the time a final compromise was reached, but in the light of all the arguments that have been put before me, I do not think it would be right for the claimants’ to have their costs.  In my judgment, the fairest and most equitable solution would be to make no order for costs, each party to bear their own, and I so order. 

25.        Turning now to the authority’s costs, notwithstanding the chain of events, I do agree with the claimants that they seem to be wholly disproportionate, and whilst I am in no doubt that many of Hughes Griffiths’ criticisms of the claimants’ conduct of the matter are justified, it does seem to me that Welsh Water are not beyond reproach. There is no doubt in my mind that, had the relevant and appropriate disclosure been made, with evidence that could support the claimants’ constantly varying claims, considerable costs would have been saved, and the whole matter could probably have been settled by agreement long before now.  Nevertheless, whilst it is clear that, since their appointment, the authority’s solicitors have done everything absolutely “by the book”, it seems to me that the question of proportionality has been totally disregarded. This, it seems to me, is a prime example of where an adequate eye has not been kept on escalating costs and, particularly bearing in mind Welsh Water’s apparent willingness to do a horse-deal both initially in this case and with the owner of the neighbouring property (the details of which have not been disclosed, and in any event are not in my view relevant), I would have thought that there could well have been an opportunity for the dispute to be compromised very much earlier.  As an example of how costs appear to have been allowed to escalate out of all proportion to the amount at stake, the authority’s rebuttal of the claimants’ costs submissions included several further pages of explanation dedicated to the dispute over grazing land re-instatement – amount claimed £1,400 and amount finally offered £750; air-valve (surface obstruction) – amount sought £250, amount offered £100. The differences are, in terms, small, and do not justify, in my view, the amount of additional time and effort that has been expended by Hughes Griffiths in seeking to justify their costs in dealing with the issues.

26.        In their further submissions, Hughes Griffiths said (at paragraph 21), in refuting the assertion made by the claimants that their settlement proposal could not be reviewed because of Welsh Water’s policy of not engaging in horse-trading, said that the authority was well aware of its duty to negotiate, “failing which there are costs consequences”.  However, it would not be prepared to pay a sum that was significantly in excess of its assessed liability.  They then went on to suggest that the claimants’ costs are disproportionate to the amount claimed.  I have to say that I find this assertion truly incredible in the light of the amount being claimed in respect of the authority’s legal costs.

27.        In the light of my views on the costs incurred by Welsh Water, had I been inclined to find that the claimants should be bound to pay them, a summary assessment on the basis sought would most certainly not be have been appropriate, and any such award would have been drastically limited.

28.        This determines the issue before me, and I confirm that there shall be no order as to costs.

DATED 15 March 2012

 

 

 

P R Francis FRICS

 


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