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England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Shackleton And Associates Ltd v Shamsi & Ors [2017] EWHC 304 (Comm) (23 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2017/304.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 304 (Comm) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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SHACKLETON AND ASSOCIATES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ALI MARZOOK ALI BIN KAMIL AL SHAMSI (2) MOHAMMED ALI MARZOOK ALI BIN KAMIL AL SHAMSI (3) MARZOOK ALI MARZOOK ALI BIN KAMIL AL SHAMSI |
Defendants |
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Elizabeth Weaver (instructed by Fladgate LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 15 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Teare:
"I think that it seems absolutely plain what the issue is, which is whether or not this award should be enforced pending the appeal in France."
"Lest there be any doubt about this and so that this whole sorry matter does not recur and waste yet more time in this court ……………..the nature of the application that was being made by [the Defendants] was as plain as a pikestaff from 23 December 2014 onwards…………It is plain to me that the nature of the application was an order that the enforcement …and registration …..be adjourned or stayed pending the determination of that hearing before the Cour de cassation….""
The costs reserved by Flaux J. on 19 May 2015
Indemnity costs
The settlement negotiations
Introduction of irrelevant matters
Delay in payment
Mr. Shackleton's time
"Where an action is brought against a solicitor who defends it in person and obtains judgment he is entitled upon taxation to the same costs as if he had employed a solicitor, except in respect of items which the fact of his acting renders unnecessary."
"Professional skill and labour are recognised and can be measured by the law; private expenditure of labour and trouble by a layman cannot be measured. It depends upon the zeal, the assiduity, or the nervousness of the individual. Professional skill, when it is bestowed, is accordingly allowed for in taxing a bill of costs; and it would be absurd to permit a solicitor to charge for the same work when it is done by another solicitor and not to permit him to charge for it when it is done by his own clerk. "
"The reasoning which led this court to the conclusion which it reached in the London Scottish Benefit Society case must lead to the same conclusion in a case where the solicitor litigant carries on his practice as a solicitor in partnership. The successful litigant is entitled to an indemnity; there is no difficulty in measuring the cost of legal professional time and skill; and there is likely to be some saving of costs if the work is done within his own firm rather than if he is encouraged in practice to instruct another firm. "
"…the basis of the principle that a solicitor who acts for himself in litigation is entitled to compensation, by way of costs, for his time and trouble is a recognition that (in common with any other litigant) he ought to be indemnified against the expense to which….he has been unjustly put. The special position of a solicitor is that he does not need to employ others to provide professional skill and knowledge in the conduct of litigation. He can provide that skill and knowledge himself. Further, there is no difficulty in measuring what it costs him to do so; and there is a potential saving in costs if he is not discouraged from doing so. "
"A partner who is represented in legal proceedings by his firm incurs no liability to the firm; but he suffers loss for which under the indemnity principle he ought to be compensated, because the firm of which he is a member expends time and resources which would otherwise be devoted to other clients. The only sensible way in which effect can be given to the indemnity principle is by allowing those costs."
"In this he was plainly right, covering as he did the actual and direct costs of the work undertaken in the sense of indemnifying the respondents for the salaries, materials and out-of-pocket expenses of those engaged in the conduct of the experiments. No part of the respondents' expenditure on overheads was occasioned by this litigation and it would be unreasonable to transfer to the applicant the burden of meeting some part of it by reason only of the respondents' decision to prefer the services of their own staff to those of independent experts. "
"(1) It is the proper method of taxation of a bill in a case of this sort to deal with it as though it were the bill of an independent solicitor, assessing accordingly the reasonable and fair amount of a discretionary item such as this, having regard to all the circumstances of the case …………….(3) It is a sensible and reasonable presumption that the figure arrived at on this basis will not infringe the principle that the taxed costs should not be more than an indemnity to the party against the expense to which he has been put in the litigation….."
"introduce a rule unworkable in practice and to push abstract principle to a point at which it ceases to give results consistent with justice."
Conclusion
i) the Claimant may recover 80% of the costs of the hearing before Flaux J. with no order as to the remaining 20%;
ii) the Claimant's costs shall be assessed on the indemnity basis;
iii) the Claimant is entitled to recover costs in respect of the work done by Mr. Shackleton in a reasonable and fair amount.