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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Farrar v Candey Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 295 (11 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/295.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 295 |
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Neutral Citation Number:
Case No:
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES, BUSINESS LIST (ChD0
Marcus Smith J
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date:
Before :
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
and
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Muhammad Haque QC of, and Hossein Sharafi instructed by, CANDEY for the Appellant
Jonathan Cohen QC (instructed by North Star Law Ltd) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 3 March 2022
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Approved Judgment
This judgment was handed down remotely at 10.30 on 11 March 2020 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and by release to BAILII and the National Archives.
Lord Justice Arnold:
Introduction
Factual background
The proceedings brought by Mr Farrar against Mr Miller
The proceedings brought by Leongreen and Galleondeal against Mr Farrar
The bankruptcy proceedings
The Assignment, the death of Mr Farrar and the subsequent applications
The Assignment
"(E) [Mr Farrar] does not have sufficient funds with which to continue the Proceedings to their conclusion. [Mr Farrar] has fully investigated alternative funding options and, after doing so, has concluded that it is in his best commercial interest to enter into this Deed.
(F) [Mr Farrar] and [CANDEY] agree that entering into this Deed provides each with the best opportunity to recover any monies from [Mr Miller].
(G) [Mr Farrar] has been advised to take independent legal advice in relation to entering into this Deed.
(H) [Mr Farrar] has agreed to assign all of the benefits in the Proceedings (but not any burdens to include any historic adverse costs liability) to [CANDEY] on the terms set out in this Deed.
(I) [Mr Farrar] will receive a distribution from any Recoveries as set out below."
"Assigned Claims: all claims and entitlements arising within and out of the facts of the Proceedings (whether against [Mr Miller] or anyone else) including all claims for damages and/or relief and/or interest and/or costs.
Recoveries: any damages, profits, money and/or other benefits derived as a result of the Proceedings in respect of the Assigned Claims."
"2.1 Subject to the terms of this Deed, [Mr Farrar] hereby assigns unconditionally, irrevocably and absolutely to [CANDEY] all of [Mr Farrar's] title, interest and benefits in and to the Assigned Claims with effect from the Assignment Date.
2.2 [CANDEY] agrees that it shall accept the assignment referred to in clause 2.1 and distribute any sums in accordance with the Distribution of Recoveries within 28 days of receipt of the Recoveries."
(a)
(b)
"(i) double the amount of all legal costs [CANDEY] has incurred (including, for the avoidance of doubt, all of the Incurred Hourly Rate Costs) and double all future costs incurred pursuant to [CANDEY's] hourly rates as set out in its standard terms of retainer, in connection with the Proceedings (including any appeals and costs proceedings) plus (ii) the Other Litigation Hourly Rate Costs. The amount distributable under this clause is subject to a maximum of 50% of the Recoveries after first deducting the insurance premium referred to in (a) above and the sum of £125,000. If [CANDEY] obtains an order or reaches an agreement that its hourly rate costs and/or expenses are to be paid by [Mr Miller], all such monies recovered will be paid directly to [CANDEY] and, if applicable, will reduce the amount payable to [CANDEY] under this clause."
(c)
The common law
Assignments of bare causes of action
"... in English law an assignee who can show that he has a genuine commercial interest in the enforcement of the claim of another and to that extent takes an assignment is entitled to enforce that assignment unless by the terms of that assignment he falls foul of our law of champerty ... if the assignee had a genuine commercial interest in taking the assignment and enforcing it for his own benefit, I see no reason why the assignment should be struck down as an assignment of a bare cause of action or as savouring of maintenance."
In that case, however, the assignment was held to be void, even though the assignee had a genuine commercial interest in enforcing the claim, because the assignment was champertous.
Assignments of causes of action by clients to their solicitors
"... no attorney can be permitted to buy in things in a course of litigation, of which litigation he has the management. This the policy of justice will not endure."
"... it is laid down as clear Law, that no attorney can take any thing for his own benefit from his client pending the suit, save his demand; and I add that, as a guardian cannot take any thing from his ward pending the guardianship, or at the close of it, or at any period until his influence has ceased to exist, the obligation upon an attorney to refrain from taking an extraordinary benefit is at least as strong.
The case of Wells v Middleton ... is an extremely strong case of this kind. It was admitted, that the transaction was liable to no objection as between man and man; but it was overturned upon this great principle the danger from the influence of Attorneys or Counsel over clients, whilst having the care of their property; and, whatever mischief may arise in particular cases, the Law, with the view of preventing public mischief, says, they shall take no benefit, derived under such circumstances. It is not denied in any case that, if the relation has completely ceased, if the influence can be rationally supposed also to cease, a client may be generous to his Attorney or Counsel, as to any other person; but it must go so far."
" ... it has been held in several cases, that no attorney can be permitted to purchase any thing in litigation, of which litigation he has the management (Hall v Hallet (1 Cox 134), Wood v Downes (18 Ves 120) and the authorities therein cited), and considering the relation in which the attorney and client stand to each other, it would seem, as was said in Hall v Hallet (1 Cox 134), to be against the policy of the law to permit such a dealing by an attorney, whilst the case is still undetermined by judgment, ... whatever might have been the case had the purchase been by a stranger."
"In order to preserve the honour and honesty of the profession it was a rule of law which the court had laid down and would always insist upon that a solicitor could not make an arrangement of any kind with his client during the litigation he was conducting so as to give him any advantage in respect of the result of that litigation. That might be said to be on account of the fiduciary relation between the solicitor and the client. But the doctrine was founded upon a higher rule. The responsibility of persons engaged in the profession of the law was very great, and their conduct must be regulated by the most precise rules of honour. The Court thought that, unless the rule was carried out to its fullest extent, there would be a temptation to solicitors which they should not be subjected to. It was useless to say that in the particular case the solicitor was not tempted and that he acted from the most honourable motives. The law was universal that, without considering the motives of the particular solicitor, a solicitor must not persuade his client, or indeed accept from his client a voluntary offer, so as to obtain any advantage dependent upon the result of the litigation which he was then conducting."
"Contentious business agreements
(1)
(2)
(a)
..."
Champerty
"... the law of maintenance depends upon the question of public policy, and public policy ... is not a fixed and immutable matter. It is a conception which, if it has any sense at all, must be alterable by the passage of time."
"A contingency fee, that is, an arrangement under which the legal advisers of a litigant shall be remunerated only in the event of the litigant succeeding in recovering money or other property in the action, has hitherto always been regarded as illegal under English law on the ground that it involves maintenance of the action by the legal adviser. Moreover, where, as is usual in such a case, the remuneration which the adviser is to receive is to be, or to be measured by, a proportion of the fund or of the value of the property recovered, the arrangement may fall within that particular class of maintenance called champerty.
... Before such a system were introduced to our legal regime careful consideration would have to be given to its public policy aspect. Notwithstanding the help we have received from counsel, this does not appear to me to be a suitable occasion for attempting to investigate that aspect in depth and for arriving at a final conclusion upon it. We should not, I think, make any declaratory judgment in this respect which we have no power to implement. It may, however, be worthwhile to indicate briefly the nature of the public policy question. It can, I think, be summarised in two statements. First, in litigation a professional lawyer's role is to advise his client with a clear eye and an unbiased judgment. Secondly, a solicitor retained to conduct litigation is not merely the agent and adviser to his client, but also an officer of the court with a duty to the court to ensure that his client's case, which he must, of course, present and conduct with the utmost care of his client's interests, is also presented and conducted with scrupulous fairness and integrity. A barrister owes similar obligations. A legal adviser who acquires a personal financial interest in the outcome of the litigation may obviously find himself in a situation in which that interest conflicts with those obligations ..."
"There is, I think, a clear requirement of public policy that officers of the court should be inhibited from putting themselves in a position where their own interests may conflict with their duties to the court by the agreement, for instance, of so-called `contingency fees' ..."
"In the most recent decades of the present century maintenance and champerty have become almost invisible in both their criminal and their tortious manifestations. In practice, they have maintained a living presence in only two respects. First, as the source of the rule, now in the course of attenuation, which forbids a solicitor from accepting payment for professional services on behalf of a plaintiff calculated as a proportion of the sum recovered from the defendant."
"I accept ... that modern perception of what kinds of lawyers' fee arrangements are acceptable is changing. But it is a subject upon which there are sharply divergent opinions and where I should hesitate to suppose that my opinion, or that of any individual judge, could readily or convincingly be regarded as representing a consensus sufficient to sustain a public policy. The difficulties and delays surrounding the introduction of conditional fee agreements permitted by statute emphasise the divergence of view. In my judgment, where Parliament has, by what are now (with section 27 of the Access to Justice Act 1999) successive enactments, modified the law by which any arrangement to receive a contingency fee was impermissible, there is no present room for the court, by an application of what is perceived to be public policy, to go beyond that which Parliament has provided."
"40.
41.
"Where legislation has provided for conditional fees and contingent fees to be lawful in certain cases, those cases must be taken to be the limits of what is permissible, and the courts should not create any further cases: Awwad v Geraghty & Co [2001] QB 570, 593G, 600E; Factortame Ltd (No 8), para 61."
Statutory intervention: conditional fee agreements and damages-based agreements
"Conditional fee agreements
(1)
(2)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(3)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(4)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(4A)
(a)
(b)
(4B)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(5)
"Damages-based agreements
(1)
(2)
(3)
(a)
(i)
(ii)
(4)
(a)
(aa)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(5)
(6)
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(6A)
(7)
`payment' includes a transfer of assets and any other transfer of money's worth (and the reference in subsection (4)(b) to a payment above a prescribed amount, or above an amount calculated in a prescribed manner, is to be construed accordingly);
`claims management services' has the same meaning as in the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (see section 419A of that Act).
(7A)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
The judge's judgment
"In my judgment, [the judgment of Lord Neuberger in Sibthorpe v Southwark] is a fatal (and on me binding) answer to Candey's `broad' contention. As Lord Neuberger has made clear, there is now a very hard distinction between potentially champertous transactions between non-lawyers and potentially champertous transactions involving a lawyer. The former cases are considered according to the broad and flexible standard articulated in paragraph 34(1) above. The latter cases are assessed according to an altogether different standard: they are either sanctioned by statute or they are not; and if they are not, the common law does not ride to the rescue. In this case, the Assignment is not sanctioned by the 1990 Act and - assuming it to stand alone - clearly fails as a champertous transaction."
The appeal
Conclusion
Lord Justice Phillips:
Lady Justice Simler: