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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Nicolson v Grant Thornton UK LLP [2016] EWHC 710 (Admin) (25 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/710.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 710 (Admin), [2016] 2 Costs LR 211 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JEREMY BAKER
____________________
THE REVEREND PAUL NICOLSON | Appellant | |
v | ||
GRANT THORNTON UK LLP | Respondent | |
LONDON BOROUGH OF HARINGEY | ||
TOTTENHAM MAGISTRATES' COURT | Interested Parties |
____________________
WordWave International Limited trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr A Choudhury QC (instructed by BWB) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
Mr T Buley (instructed by London Borough of Haringey) appeared on behalf of the First Interested Party
The Second Interested Party did not appear and was not represented
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN:
Introduction
Factual background
"The costs included in the calculation of the £125 are therefore only those deemed to be incurred as an integral part of the overall process leading to the issue of a summons."
"The Council has provided us with their calculation of costs to support the charge of £125 per summons issued.
...
In our opinion the apportionments contained within the calculation that the Council has provided us were not always sufficiently supported by robust evidence and contain elements of subjective judgment. This means that we are not able to agree the £125 summons charge exactly. In our opinion the Council has adopted an approach which is aimed at excluding costs not associated with a summons and whilst the basis would ideally be less subjective there is no evidence to suggest that the Council is deliberately apportioning inappropriate costs to increase the fee charged on summonses as a means to increase the income they receive from charging these costs. We are satisfied that the Council has not set out with any intention to raise income to cover other general fund expenditure. The Council's approach is to aggregate the relevant employees' costs, direct costs, indirect costs and overheads that result from the processes carried out that lead to the issue of a summons. The Council then divides the total aggregated costs by the summons issued to obtain the cost per summons.
Importantly, the Council's calculation does reflect the normal categories recognised by the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy ("CIPFA"), ie staff costs, direct costs, indirect costs and overheads. We have reviewed the Council's calculation which results in a total cost of £130, which they have chosen to recharge £125."
"The Council only recovered the costs on cases associated with issuing a summons. The Council do not and are not allowed to add in costs associated with recovery actions in relation to non-payers who are not summonsed. The Council has been clear about differentiating costs across the four broad categories of council taxpayers:
(1) those that pay with no issues;
(2) those who pay with some action but before summonses point;
(3) those costs and activities that are unrelated to summons processes, eg annual billing;
(4) those costs that relate to work involved in issuing a summons where the summons takes place."
"The method of calculation used by the Council is not the only method they could have chosen to use and there may well be methods that more accurately assess the amount of those costs.
Although in our view the Council has shown that the level of costs it recovers is on the whole not unreasonable for the purposes of the 1992 Regulations, we consider that a more detailed calculation of the Council's costs will provide the Council with a better understanding of the actual costs associated with issuing a summons. This detailed calculation will then need to be re-performed periodically."
"The actions of the Magistrates have already been considered by the court.
The Council has accepted the income in good faith, unaware of any failing in the processes followed by the Magistrates.
As auditors of the Council, of primary concern is the actions of the Council, which are in this instance primarily around the calculation of the costs reasonably incurred, which we have considered above."
"Whilst the Council need to undertake a more comprehensive fully detailed costing exercise, the amount it is claimed has been shown to be not unreasonable and does compare broadly with other London boroughs. Although different processes are used across authorities and surcharges will differ, we would expect them to be broadly similar.
As we consider that the actual costs claimed were broadly reasonable, there will be little or no benefit in applying to the court for a declaration. The lack of a more detailed assessment of costs reasonably incurred can be addressed by the Council implementing the recommendation that it should carry out such an assessment in the future, which it intends to do and which we will monitor. For the reasons set out in the preceding section, we do not believe that, even if we were to conclude that the impact of the judicial review of the Magistrates' Court's actions potentially rendered any of the income in the Council's accounts unlawful, that we should seek a declaration for this reason."
"We have specifically considered the fact that the Council has not carried out a detailed calculation to arrive at the amounts claimed for costs, but we have concluded that the actual costs charged and the methodology applied were not unreasonable. We have reviewed a selection of summons and liability order costs charged by other councils and the Council's charge for the summons is in line with others when the costs of the liability order are included."
Legal background
The Regulations
"34. Application for liability order
(1) If an amount which has fallen due under regulation 23(3) or (4) is wholly or partly unpaid, or (in a case where a final notice is required under regulation 33) the amount stated in the final notice is wholly or partly unpaid at the expiry of the period of 7 days beginning with the day on which the notice was issued, the billing authority may, in accordance with paragraph (2), apply to a magistrates' court for an order against the person by whom it is payable.
(2) The application is to be instituted by making complaint to a justice of the peace, and requesting the issue of a summons directed to that person to appear before the court to show why he has not paid the sum which is outstanding.
(3) Section 127(1) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980(1) does not apply to such an application; but no application may be instituted in respect of a sum after the period of six years beginning with the day on which it became due under Part V.
(4) A warrant shall not be issued under section 55(2) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 in any proceedings under this regulation.
(5) If, after a summons has been issued in accordance with paragraph (2) but before the application is heard, there is paid or tendered to the authority an amount equal to the aggregate of—
(a) the sum specified in the summons as the sum outstanding or so much of it as remains outstanding (as the case may be); and
(b) a sum of an amount equal to the costs reasonably incurred by the authority in connection with the application up to the time of the payment or tender
The authority shall accept the amount and the application shall not be proceeded with.
(6) The court shall make the order if it is satisfied that the sum has become payable by the defendant and has not been paid.
(7) An order made pursuant to paragraph (6) shall be made in respect of an amount equal to the aggregate of—
(a)the sum payable, and
(b)a sum of an amount equal to the costs reasonably incurred by the applicant in obtaining the order.
(8) Where the sum payable is paid after a liability order has been applied for under paragraph (2) but before it is made, the court shall nonetheless (if so requested by the billing authority) make the order in respect of a sum of an amount equal to the costs reasonably incurred by the authority in making the application."
"42. It seems to me that in principle the intention in the Regulations is to enable the local authority to recover the actual cost to it of utilising the enforcement process under Regulation 34, which is bound to include some administrative costs, as well as any legal fees and out of pocket expenses, always subject to the overarching proviso that the costs in question were reasonably incurred. However, bearing in mind the court's inability to carry out any independent assessment of the reasonableness of the amount of those costs, the Regulations should be construed in such a way as to ensure that the costs recovered are only those which are genuinely attributable to the enforcement process.
...
46. In principle, therefore, provided that the right types of costs and expenses are taken into account, and provided that due consideration is given to the dangers of double-counting, or of artificial inflation of costs, it may be a legitimate approach for a local authority to calculate and aggregate the relevant costs it has incurred in the previous year, and divide that up by the previous (or anticipated) number of summonses over twelve months so as to provide an average figure which could be levied across the board in "standard" cases, but could be amplified in circumstances where there was justification for incurring additional legal and/or administrative costs."
The 1998 Act
"8. Immediate and other reports in public interest.
In auditing accounts required to be audited in accordance with this Act, the auditor shall consider—
(a) whether, in the public interest, he should make a report on any matter coming to his notice in the course of the audit, in order for it to be considered by the body concerned or brought to the attention of the public, and
(b) whether the public interest requires any such matter to be made the subject of an immediate report rather than of a report to be made at the conclusion of the audit."
"16. Right to make objections at audit.
(1) At each audit of accounts under this Act, other than an audit of accounts of a health service body, a local government elector for an area to which the accounts relate, or any representative of his, may attend before the auditor and (in accordance with subsection (2)) make objections—
(a) as to any matter in respect of which the auditor could take action under section 17; or
(b) as to any other matter in respect of which the auditor could make a report under section 8.
(2) No objection may be made under subsection (1) unless the auditor has received written notice of the proposed objection and of the grounds on which it is to be made.
(3) An elector sending a notice to an auditor for the purposes of subsection (2) shall at the same time send a copy of the notice to the body whose accounts are being audited."
"17. Declaration that item of account is unlawful.
(1) Where—
(a) it appears to the auditor carrying out an audit under this Act, other than an audit of accounts of a health service body, that an item of account is contrary to law,
The auditor may apply to the court for a declaration that the item is contrary to law.
(2) On an application under this section the court may make or refuse to make the declaration asked for, and if it makes the declaration
Then it may also—
….
(c)order rectification of the accounts.
….
(4) A person who has made an objection under section 16(1)(a) and is aggrieved by a decision of an auditor not to apply for a declaration under this section may—
(a) not later than six weeks after being notified of the decision, require the auditor to state in writing the reasons for his decision, and
(b) appeal against the decision to the court;
And on such an appeal the court has the same powers in relation to the item of account to which the objection relates as if the auditor had applied for the declaration."
"16. ... the first question is whether the auditor's decision on lawfulness is wrong and, if so, (and the item is unlawful) the second question is whether the exercise of his discretion not to seek a declaration was wrong.
...
17. What makes a decision 'wrong' ... depends on the subject matter, the nature of the decision at issue and the nature of the error relied on ... A pure error of law would simply be wrong. A finding of primary fact would be less readily held wrong than an inference drawn from documents or an evaluation of factual material in which the court was as well placed as the auditor to make a decision. The exercise of the discretion is wrong either where it is wrong in principle or where it is outside the range of decisions reasonably open to the decision maker or has been made without consideration of the relevant factors. This involves an approach to discretion probably indistinguishable from judicial review principles.
18. This is especially important where an appeal relates to the exercise of a discretionary judgment by an expert and specialist person or body in the course of a specific statutory function, such as local government auditors ..."
The grounds of appeal
Ground 1: the omission ground
"24. Haringey ceased charging for the post summons costs element in September 2008 as the majority of expenditure was incurred prior to this stage. As the Council had moved towards seeking a higher number of arrangements via telephone call by direct debit, the process was easier and required less manual intervention by officers if the repayment arrangement is not revised by an additional amount once a liability order was granted by the court. We therefore have decided to waive the costs incurred after summons in obtaining the liability order.
...
39. As a matter of historical interest, the amount of court costs charged by Haringey in 2004/2005 was £30.33 for the summons and £10.42 in respect of the liability order. In May 2005, Haringey Council charges for court costs were £76.00 for the summons and £12.00 for the liability order. In May 2007, Haringey Council charges for court costs were £83.00 for the summons and £12.00 for the liability order. In September 2008, Haringey Council charges for court costs were £95.00 for the summons and nil for the liability order."
"The Council's approach is to aggregate the relevant employees' costs, direct costs, indirect costs and overheads that result from the process which is carried out that lead to the issue of the summons. The Council then divide the total aggregated costs by the summons issued to obtain the cost per summons."
"The [Council] specifically excluded costs not considered to be relevant (wholly or in part) to the process of issuing the summons. The [Council] excluded ... the cost associated with work subsequent to the issue of the summons."
"6.11.1. The review panel found that other councils had obtained agreement to raise court costs recharged to non-payers by a significant level. This charge is intended to act as a deterrent to both late and non-payers and enables councils to fund improved recovery measures. The review panel concluded that the benefits and local taxation service could improve performance by ensuring that it agrees the highest possible level of court costs to be charged to non-payers.
Recommendation B2: court costs.
That the benefits and taxation service ensure the maximum possible is charged for court costs and to review the charge at regular intervals subject to any guidance/legislation governing court costs."
"30. My view of recommendation B2 is that it confirms that court costs should be sought at a maximum level in respect of the cost of such action and this should be compliant with the Regulations in this respect. As a principle, I support this statement, and believe that the costs of such action should avoid being sought from council taxpayers who pay on time. The mention of court costs being a deterrent is one that is carried through to the present day with the warning that court costs be incurred."
"I stand by my comments ... the prospect of incurring courts costs does act, as a matter of fact, as a deterrent."
Ground 2: the error ground
"Inclusion of overheads within the calculation is, in our view, appropriate in the absence of any specific statutory requirement to exclude them, as they are part of the costs reasonably incurred by the Council in connection with the application."
Ground 3: the irrationality ground
Conclusion
MR JUSTICE JEREMY BAKER: I agree.
MR CHOUDHURY: My Lord, I'm grateful for your Lordship's judgment in that matter.
My Lord, that leaves costs, and I apply for the respondent's costs in this matter. I do so for three reasons: first, of course, there is the general principle that costs follow the event. This is a statutory appeal and the ordinary general principle that the unsuccessful party shall pay the costs of the successful party should apply.
The second reason is that Reverend Nicolson was told from the outset that if the appeal was unsuccessful, costs would be recovered in full. I do have a copy of some correspondence, I don't know if your Lordships wish to see that. (Handed)
The second last page of that clip, my Lord, is the first letter sent by my instructing solicitors after the appeal was lodged. Paragraph 3 notes that:
"It is strongly recommended you seek independent legal advice at the earliest opportunity. Appeals under section 17 are heard before the High Court. As such, these proceedings are likely to involve significant costs. If your appeal is unsuccessful, my client, who is represented by its own counsel, will seek to recover its costs from you in full."
At the very last page of the bundle, a further reminder last month in response to requests from Reverend Nicolson to put further documents into the bundle, that whilst the costs of producing the bundle would not be sought at that stage, the final paragraph of that email of 19 January says that:
"If the respondent is successful in defending the case, it will seek to recover its costs in full."
Reverend Nicolson describes himself as a seasoned campaigner --
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: You said there was a third reason.
MR CHOUDHURY: Not quite yet, my Lord.
He has been involved in at least two sets of litigation already, and the costs position ought not to be a surprise to him.
The third reason is this: that the auditor is not acting in its private capacity upon appointment by the Audit Commission. The auditor's costs are therefore met ultimately by the taxpayer. We are talking about public funds here.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: So what you're saying is that your costs would be paid by ...?
MR CHOUDHURY: The successor body to the Audit Commission, the initials of which are PCAA. But it's right, my Lord, that unmeritorious challenges to the exercise of the auditor's discretion should not be funded by the public purse.
In fairness to Reverend Nicolson, I should point out two matters that are relevant to the exercise of your discretion. The first is that your Lordships can in your discretion make an order different from the normal costs order, of course, and you can take into account whether or not a matter of public interest has been raised. There is an authority suggesting that if that is the case, then the court might not order a full costs award in the usual way.
Our position, my Lord, is that this was simply a challenge to the auditor's exercise of discretion. That challenge has failed. No point of general public interest has been raised or established by the judgment, and the principle ground of appeal, as it became clear yesterday morning, was based upon a misconception on the facts about amalgamation, and that is clearly not a proper basis upon which a normal order for costs should be set aside.
The second matter which I raise, my Lord, is something which arises under the Audit Commission Act, the 1998 Act. Section 17(5), if your Lordships might turn that up, it's at tab 18 of the bundle at page 506.
It provides that:
"On an application or appeal under this section relating to the accounts of a body, the court may make such order as it thinks fit for the payment by the body of expenses incurred, in connection with the application or appeal, by-
(a) the auditor
...
(c) the person by whom the appeal is brought."
So that provides that expenses incurred can be ordered as against the audited body, that's the Council in this case. We make it clear, my Lord, that the respondent is not seeking an order for expenses against Haringey in this case. There is authority which suggests that expenses as used in this subsection means something over and above, or other than, general costs, so if there's a shortfall as a result of the costs order --
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: So under this section, the order may be made against the auditor, and what was (b) has come out, as I read it.
MR CHOUDHURY: I beg your pardon, my Lord?
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: What was subsection (b) has come out, so where does it say the order can be made against the Council?
MR CHOUDHURY: It's in the second line of the main paragraph, "payment by the body."
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: "By the body," I see.
MR CHOUDHURY: And "the body" is the audited body, which is the Council.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: Yes, I see.
MR CHOUDHURY: My Lord, it seems that that kind of order ought to be made more properly in a case where the authority itself has acted in a way which has led to the appeal being brought, or has acted in some other way which has incurred further expense for the auditor, and it's probably not a general provision to be used to order costs against --
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: Is there some authority on this section?
MR CHOUDHURY: There is, my Lord. (Handed)
This is an extract from Jones on Local Government Audit Law, and at paragraph 9.44 on the second page of the extract it refers to the predecessor provisions to the 1998 Act.
"The 1982 act differs from the earlier provisions in that a positive order of the court ...(Reading to the words)... repeated in the 1982 Act. However, the continued existence of special provisions indicate that they are intended to serve some other purpose ...(Reading to the words)... are concerned with the question of whether the auditor's unrecouped expenses should be borne by the ratepayers on whose behalf he was acting. It is of course to be expected that in the ordinary way ...(Reading to the words)... by the generality of ratepayers in England and Wales."
And 9.47 on the facing page:
"It is clear from this decision that expenses in section 19(5) and 27 of the 1982 Act are to be distinguished from tax costs and are expected to exceed them ...(Reading to the words)... in addition to asking for costs in the ordinary way against any losing party other than the authority."
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: So is that what you're doing?
MR CHOUDHURY: We're not doing that, my Lord, although the suggestion has been made by the writer there that it should be sought in all cases, we don't consider this is an appropriate case to seek expenses against the Council. We seek costs against --
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: So insofar as -- if you get an order for costs but don't get all your costs, you'll be seeking reimbursement from the Audit Commission, is that right, whatever the new body's called?
MR CHOUDHURY: Yes, the PCAA.
I point that out merely, my Lord, because it is a power that you have and something that you ought to bear in mind.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: Yes, thank you.
Do you want to say anything about costs?
MR BULEY: I'm happy to deal with it now, or -- I'm happy to deal with it now or in a minute if you prefer to rule on the first issue first, but I do also have an application for costs against the Reverend Nicolson. My Lord, in that regard I think I need to draw your Lordship's attention to the general principle that applies in this court to second sets of costs, I don't know if you're familiar with that.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: No, show me, please.
MR BULEY: Yes, can I hand up the case. (Handed)
My Lord, it's a transcript, I've taken the liberty of adding some page numbers. If my Lords could go to page 7 added by me. This was a judicial review claim. There's reference in paragraph 33 to a case called Bolton MDC, which was a planning case, and there was agreement between counsel that the principles in that case originally applied in planning applied more widely in the Administrative Court. Then picking up the passages from Bolton that are relevant, paragraph 34, what is the proper approach proposed by Lord Lloyd, and then the subparagraphs. First, general discretion of the court. The second one is important, so (ii):
"The developer [for whom read interested party] will not normally be entitled to his costs unless he can show that there was likely to be a separate issue on which he was entitled to be heard. That is to say, an issue not covered by counsel for the Secretary of State [the first respondent]; or unless he has an interest which requires separate representation."
My Lord, can I then just take you -- so that's the general principle, that's the principle I have to deal with, as it were. Can I just take the court over the page then to paragraphs 38 and 40. The point being made in paragraph 38, which I won't read out in full, if you look in the middle of the paragraph, was that that was a case where the judge held that:
"In these circumstances the Secretary of State may have been a convenient defendant, but the real defendant surely was Schering because ..."
If the court then reads paragraph 40 in full. (Pause)
It's really the middle of the paragraph:
"... chose to make very serious allegations of criminality against a well known pharmaceutical company."
So, my Lord, pulling back then and seeing what principles might arise, the starting point I completely accept is that I have to show why a second set of costs should be awarded. One basis for doing that will be that there was a separate interest to be represented, and whether, as pursuant to that principle or pursuant to the court's wider discretion, what this case does demonstrate is that it may be of -- it's a matter for your Lordships in this case -- but it may be a reason to award a second set of costs where a second defendant, or second respondent, is facing allegations of a serious nature against it directly. That is this case, in my submission, because the reality of this case, albeit pursued against the auditor, who of course had no choice but to appear, and I don't claim any priority over their costs, the reality of this case is that it's part of the Reverend Nicolson's wider campaign against my client, and it involves the making by him of very serious allegations of acting pursuant to an improper purpose and matters of that kind, and of illegality by my client, albeit tested by reference to the auditor's decision. In those circumstances, I say it is a proper case for the second award of costs. Obviously there may be issues of quantum, but those are my submissions.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: Right.
So, Reverend Nicolson, they're both seeking their costs against you.
THE APPELLANT: Can I say something?
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: Yes, of course you can.
THE APPELLANT: Thank you for the serious consideration of what has been put to you, and for the response. I raised this case because since April 2013 the poorest people in Tottenham, probably among the poorest people in the United Kingdom, have had their benefits taxed by Tottenham Council. That means that somebody on £73.10 a week JSA can be paying £8 a week tax for the first time since the Poll Tax, and also they will be paying the Bedroom Tax, which could be up to £20 taken out of the £73.10 a week. They can't afford that, let alone the £125 costs, so if the costs had any amount put into it which should not be allowed, it had to be challenged, it had to be challenged in the interests of the 58 per cent of households in Haringey Borough which are renters and not owners, so there was a genuine purpose in the interests of the poor, not against Haringey, because what Haringey does affects the poor, and I stand for the poor, rather than against any authority or any of the officials at the Local Authority.
I should say as far as me paying costs, I don't own my house, at the end of the month I have around £1,000 left every month, I am in debt, I don't have my bank statement here, but my annual income is about £26,000 a year and that's made up of three pensions.
I don't regret taking this case, I do think it is important, I'm disappointed, if I may say so, that you haven't raised the issue I did raise, that there is a responsibility on everybody involved to take into account the circumstances of the poorest residents of a borough, but that was not mentioned at all, and the fact that the only costs available on 2 August 2013 were the 2010 costs again hasn't featured either in your answer or in the auditor's investigations.
Those are my disappointments, but I'm grateful to you for having listened.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: Right. We'll retire and discuss the issue of principle.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: We have considered the various submissions made to us. The conclusion we have reached is that the respondent is in principle entitled to its costs. It is the successful party. It has not been found to be in any way at fault in the discharge of its duties. It had no option but to defend the case. It did write to the claimant right at the outset to warn of costs consequences of pursuing the matter, and it had responded in detail to the claimant's objection in its decision before proceedings were issued.
Therefore it seems to us that, although we have sympathy for the claimant's position and we are satisfied he is acting out of the best of motives, in the interests of the poor in the borough, we can see no reason why we should depart from the usual rule in terms of exercise of discretion. We have considered whether there is sufficient public interest to justify a different order, but we do not see there to be a real public interest in the issues on this appeal, which have effectively turned on factual matters particular to this case. The general guidance was set out in the earlier Nicolson case, and this case has really been looking at particular facts. So we do not see a sufficient public interest to call for an order other than one which follows the event.
That said, we are not satisfied that the Council should get its costs against the claimant. It seems to us that there should be no order in relation to those costs.
MR CHOUDHURY: My Lord could offer summary assessment today, because it was a one day matter, but given it is a litigant in person, the usual practice is to order the costs to be assessed.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: I think that would be preferable. I don't think the Reverend Nicolson could be expected to be going through your schedule, which is quite a high schedule, I would say.
MR CHOUDHURY: Yes.
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN: I understand you had the main burden of the appeal, but it still seems quite high.
All right.