BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Burnden Holdings (UK) Ltd & Anor v Fielding & Anor [2019] EWHC 2995 (Ch) (07 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2995.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2995 (Ch), [2020] BPIR 110, [2019] Costs LR 2061 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) BURNDEN HOLDINGS (UK) LIMITED (IN LIQUIDATION) (2) STEPHEN JOHN HUNT (AS LIQUIDATOR OF BURNDEN HOLDINGS (UK) LIMITED) |
Claimants/ Respondents |
|
- and - |
||
(1) GARY JOHN FIELDING (2) SALLY ANNE FIELDING |
Defendants/ Applicants |
|
-and- (1) PROJECT APPLEDENE PC (A CELL OF A PROTECTED CELL COMPANY INCORPORATED IN JERSEY) (2) GRIFFINS (A FIRM) |
Respondents |
____________________
Christopher Parker QC and Caley Wright (instructed by Enyo Law LLP) for the Claimants
James Potts QC and Matthew Parfitt (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Defendants
Simon Browne QC (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 22 October 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli:
Introduction
i) The first claimant ("BHUK") was ordered to pay the defendants' costs of the action, to be assessed on the standard basis;
ii) BHUK was ordered to pay £1.2 million on account of that costs liability;
iii) Interest is payable on those costs at the rate of 3% above base rate from the date(s) on which the costs were paid by the defendants until 19 September 2019 or earlier payment and interest is payable at the Judgments Act rate from 19 September 2019.
i) It is agreed that Mr Hunt is to be ordered to pay 15% of the defendants' costs of the action;
ii) Further interim payments on account of costs are to be made by BHUK (in the sum of £450,000) and by Mr Hunt (in the sum of £350,000);
iii) The costs ordered to be paid by Mr Hunt will bear interest at the same rates in respect of the same time periods as in respect of BHUK's costs;
iv) It is agreed that the third party who funded the claimants' costs of the action from August 2017 until the conclusion of the trial, Project Appledene PC (a Cell of a Protected Cell Company incorporated in Jersey) ("Appledene") will (in addition to having already funded the interim payment of £1.2 million) pay a further sum of £1m to the defendants in respect of BHUK's liability for costs. In addition, an indemnity from Appledene to BHUK for a further £800,000 of its costs liability will be made available to the defendants. This will be used to fund the further interim payments referred to at (ii) above.
i) Whether Griffins (the firm in which Mr Hunt is a partner) should be liable to pay any part of the defendants' costs of the action on the grounds that it was a third-party funder;
ii) If so, whether it should be required to make a payment on account and in what amount, and what rates of interest, for what periods, should apply to those costs; and
iii) The appropriate costs award to make in respect of the first consequential hearing, as between the claimants and the defendants.
It is agreed that resolution of the second group of issues will need to await my decision in relation to the first group. In this judgment, accordingly, I deal only with the first and third issues.
Griffins' liability for costs
The law
i) Although costs orders against non-parties are 'exceptional', this means no more, in this context, than that the case is outside the normal run of cases which parties pursue for their own benefit and at their own expense.
ii) The ultimate question in any such exceptional case is whether in all the circumstances it is just to make the order.
iii) Generally the discretion will not be exercised against 'pure funders', described as those with no interest in the litigation, who do not stand to benefit from it, are not funding it as a matter of business and in no way seek to control its course.
iv) "Where, however, the non-party not merely funds the proceedings but substantially also controls or at any rate is to benefit from them, justice will ordinarily require that, if the proceedings fail, he will pay the successful party's costs." The non-party in such a case is "not so much facilitating access to justice by the party funded as himself gaining access to justice for his own purposes".
v) In such a case, the funder is a "real party" to the litigation, although it does not have to be the only real party.
"proof of causation is a necessary pre-condition of the making of a section 51 order against a non-party".
"While I see the force of these considerations I do not think it appropriate to make an order the effect of which is that the Platinum funders or Blackrobe will be liable for costs which they have played no part in causing the defendants to incur. The fact that they are, in a sense, inheritors of the work of others is not a sufficient reason."
"We consider that a professional funder, who finances part of a claimant's costs of litigation, should be potentially liable for the costs of the opposing party to the extent of the funding provided. The effect of this will, of course, be that, if the funding is provided on a contingency basis of recovery, the funder will require, as the price of the funding, a greater share of the recovery should the claim succeed. In the individual case, the net recovery of a successful claimant will be diminished. While this is unfortunate, it seems to us that it is a cost that the impecunious claimant can reasonably be expected to bear. Overall justice will be better served than leaving defendants in a position where they have no right to recover any costs from a professional funder whose intervention has permitted the continuation of a claim which has ultimately proved to be without merit."
i) The funder had approached its involvement throughout as a commercial investment.
ii) The litigation was sufficiently out of the norm to warrant the making of an indemnity costs award against the claimant. While the funder had not itself directed the way the case was conducted, it had sufficient opportunity to investigate and form a view as to the nature of the claim and the support for the allegations being made before choosing to fund it.
iii) The funder must have known that the claimant was most unlikely to be able to pay any substantial costs awarded against her.
iv) The funder had halved its commitment to funding but retained the same potential share of recoveries, which highlighted the commercial self-interest motivating it.
v) The funder had negotiated to receive a substantial commercial profit which would have taken priority over any compensation payable to the claimant.
" it is not easy to see why the choice of the funder as to the amount of its funding should dictate the amount of costs it should pay to the litigant's opponent if the litigation fails. That is because the amounts provided by a funder to a claimant may have no correlation whatever to the costs which a defendant or defendants are thereby caused to incur in defending themselves."
The facts
"Griffins took the decision that it would provide limited funding to BHUK in order to allow an appeal to be brought against the striking out of the claim. My expectation was that most (if not all) of the advance to BHUK would be repaid from a costs order from the Court of Appeal if BHUK was successful. Then, with the case restored and properly pleaded, I would be in a position to approach commercial litigation funders to take the proceedings forward."
"That the Liquidator be entitled to additional remuneration being the set amount of £202,641."
"Whilst technically the remuneration would have been paid to me, I would have passed those funds on to Griffins when received."
"To approve that the Liquidator be remunerated at the rate of 50% of realisations, being 50% of net realisations after costs of the action and litigation against Fielding."
Application of the law to the facts
"Pure" or "commercial" funder
Limitation by reference to the period of funding
Limitation by reference to the Arkin Cap
" no basis upon which a funder who advances money to enable security for costs to be provided by a litigant should be treated any differently from a funder who advances money to enable that litigant to meet the fees of its own lawyers or expert witnesses. Both the provision of security for costs, if ordered by the court, and the payment of the litigant's own lawyers and experts, are costs of pursuing the litigation which, if not met, will result in the litigation being unable to proceed. I do not understand why contribution to different categories of the costs of pursuing the litigation should attract different regimes. All the sums advanced are used in pursuit of the common enterprise and for the benefit of all of the funders."
"The proper analysis is that the funders have enabled Excalibur to discharge, pro tanto, its own costs liability to the defendants. The funders gave to Excalibur the use of the relevant funds for a purpose not essentially different from payment of Excalibur's own costs. It was simply a contribution to the costs which Excalibur had to meet in order to be able to pursue the action, notwithstanding that the money advanced to enable security to be provided was advanced for the specific purpose of meeting one particular cost faced by Excalibur, the cost of providing security for the defendants' costs when ordered so to do by the court. It was as much an investment in the litigation as was the amount advanced by Psari and Mr Lemos to enable Excalibur to pay its own lawyers."
i) The funding was for the limited purpose of getting the action (at that point struck out and inadequately pleaded) back on track so that funding could be obtained from a professional funder.
ii) To the extent that the funding was advanced to enable the appeals to the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court to be pursued, the claimants were successful.
iii) While I have concluded that Griffins were a real party, I have not accepted the defendants' claim that they did so on the basis of the enormous levels of potential return on investment. The level of fixed return (on an interest-free basis) was reasonable given the credit risk being assumed.
iv) Moreover, notwithstanding the liquidator's entitlement to 50% of net recoveries, Griffins' funding stood also to benefit the creditors of the insolvency estate.
v) While I have rejected the contention that the cap should be reduced by the extent to which the funding was used to pay costs awards in favour of the defendants, I nevertheless think that this is a factor on the facts of this case to be taken into account in deciding whether there should be a cap. That is principally because once the amount used to fund costs awards, and security for costs, is put to one side, Griffins expended in the region of only £100,000 on the claimants' costs of pursuing the action. While accepting that a funder cannot assume that the opposing party's costs will be the same as those of the party it is funding (as Snowden J pointed out in Davey v Money), the discrepancy in the present case is enormous: according to figures contained in correspondence from the defendants' solicitors, the costs incurred by them during the period during which the defendants were funded by Griffins are in excess of £1 million (including a success fee). That is more than ten times the amount of the claimants' costs funded by Griffins.
vi) I consider that the just solution, taking all of the above into account and striking a balance between the entitlement of the defendants, as the successful party, to be paid their costs and the risk of discouraging funding which facilitates access to justice, is to order Griffins to pay costs limited to the amount of their funding.
Costs of first consequential hearing