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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Bath Rugby Ltd v Greenwood& Ors (Costs : special considerations) [2020] EWHC 2856 (Ch) (27 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/2856.html Cite as: [2021] 2 P & CR 16, [2020] Costs LR 1577, [2020] EWHC 2856 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN BRISTOL
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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BATH RUGBY LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) CAROLINE GREENWOOD (2) DAVID ARTHUR GREENWOOD (3) EDWIN JOHN HORLICK (4) ERIC NEWBIGIN (5) DR SAVIO ANIL DE SEQUERIA (6) PETER FRANCIS SHERWIN (7) 77 GREAT PULTENEY STREET LIMITED (8) GODFREY DOUGLAS WHITE |
Defendants |
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William Moffett (instructed by Stone King LLP) for the Third, Fourth, Seventh and Eighth Defendants
The First, Second, Fifth and Sixth Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Consequential matters dealt with on paper
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII on the date shown at 16:30.
HHJ Paul Matthews :
COSTS
Rules
"the general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party".
In my judgment it is appropriate to make a costs order in the present case. There can be no doubt that the defendants are the successful parties, and the claimants the unsuccessful. Ordinarily, therefore, it would follow that a costs order for the claimant to pay the defendants' costs would follow. The only question is the basis of those costs.
Special practice
"10. … the claimant applying for the declaration is seeking for his own benefit the protection of a court order against the existence of any adverse rights and for this purpose must join as defendants all persons or representatives of all persons who may have adverse rights. The court must for this purpose be satisfied that there are no adverse third party rights whether or not such defendants take part in the proceedings. The policy of the law in these circumstances is to encourage the defendants to contribute to the investigation by the court encouraged by the knowledge that until the full facts are known and an informed decision whether to oppose the application can be reached they will be indemnified against costs incurred, and thereafter (in case their decision to oppose proves erroneous) undeterred by any risk that by doing so they may incur an adverse order as to costs. It is just that, as the price of the exercise of the court's extraordinary jurisdiction in his favour, the claimant should provide the fullest available information to third parties to enable them to make an informed decision whether to oppose the application and to act on such information and pay for the costs of this exercise; and that after this exercise has been completed the claimant should pay the costs of the defendant if the defendants succeeds in his objection, but should have no right to recover his own costs if the objection fails."
Authorities
"a plaintiff seeking a declaration that restrictive covenants do not affect his property is expected to pay his own costs. He is also expected to pay the costs of any defendants who enter an appearance down to the point in proceedings at which they have had a full opportunity of considering the matter and deciding whether or not to oppose the application. Any defendant who then decides to continue, and appears unsuccessfully before the judge, does so at his own risk as to his own costs at that stage. Such defendant should not however be ordered to pay the plaintiff's costs."
"It appears that from 1937 or thereabouts there has been an established practice in these matters that where a party applies under section 84 of the Law of Property Act, 1925, to clear his title, he must pay his own costs and he must also pay the costs of the defendants down to the point in the proceedings at which they have had a full opportunity of considering the matter and deciding whether or not to oppose the application, but the defendants get no costs thereafter."
"First, it would appear that under such an order the defendants have their costs, unless there were some special circumstances, down to the final appointment before the Master under which the case is adjourned to the judge. I wondered whether, since the defendants filed a great deal of evidence, the order giving them their costs ought to have stopped perhaps at some earlier stage, but it was necessary for them to investigate the position and obtain the large number of transfers which they put in evidence, and the actual increase in the costs already involved in finding that evidence cannot be substantial. It is difficult to see where one would draw the line in seeking to make a special order and I will therefore follow the ordinary rule."
"The last point is whether the costs of the defendants should be on a party and party or common fund basis. It seems to me in principle that they ought to be on a common fund basis since the obtaining of the order is something in the nature of a luxury to the plaintiff for which he ought to pay."
The "party and party" basis mentioned there is now referred to as the standard basis, and the "common fund" basis as the indemnity basis. It is however fair to say that Goff J recorded in his judgment that counsel for the claimant conceded the basis of assessment, even though it accorded with what the judge himself thought was right in principle.
Discussion
"11. As it seems to me the rationale for the Rule of Practice is equally applicable today as it was prior to the CPR and both the Rule of Practice and the rationale are (subject to three minor glosses) fully consistent with the CPR. The first gloss is that the Rule of Practice is a guideline in the exercise of the discretionary jurisdiction as to costs rather than a rule. It has less rigour than a rule and is more flexible. The second is that there is a need to reflect the emphasis placed by the CPR on pre-action disclosure. The Rule of Practice reflected a time when full disclosure was only to be expected after proceedings had been commenced. The opportunity to obtain such disclosure after the CPR may and indeed generally should, be afforded before proceedings are commenced and the defendant may be able to take an informed decision whether to oppose the application before the proceedings commenced. In either event the claimant should be obliged to pay the costs of the exercise, but the exercise may be completed before the proceedings commenced. The third relates to the level of costs. Under the pre-CPR practice the entitlement of the defendant was to costs on a common fund or solicitor and client base. The equivalent basis today is indemnity costs."
Arguments
"Sometimes a distinction is drawn between the scale of costs to which the defendant may be entitled. The indemnity basis may be chosen down to at least the time when the defendant had the opportunity to make a final assessment of merits; thereafter the standard basis may be chosen. (See CPR, Part 44, r 44.3.)"
In this connection he points out that the learned author says in the penultimate line "the standard basis may [not 'must'] be chosen".
"Where the application under s.84(2) fails, the the applicant is usually ordered to pay the costs of the other parties," referring in a footnote to "Re Dolphin's Conveyance [1970] Ch 654, where, under the old scales, costs were ordered on a common fund (ie indemnity) basis to the end of the last Master's hearing and as between party and party (ie standard basis) thereafter".
Mr Moffett adds that the costs decision in Re Dolphin's Conveyance (a decision of Stamp J) is not stated in the report, but that counsel representing the defendants in that case was Mr GH Newsom QC, and therefore he would have known first hand what the costs order was, and was able to state it of his own knowledge in his book. I accept this, and proceed on the basis that the costs order in that case was as stated in Preston and Newsom. However, no reasons for the decision are expressed.
Assessment
Decision
PERMISSION TO APPEAL
Conclusion