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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 >> VTB Commodities Trading DAC v JSC Antipinsky Refinery [2022] EWHC 2795 (Comm) (04 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2022/2795.html Cite as: [2022] Costs LR 1761, [2022] EWHC 2795 (Comm) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
COMMERCIAL COURT (KBD)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
VTB COMMODITIES TRADING DAC (formerly VTB CAPITAL TRADING LIMITED) |
Claimant/ Arbitration Claimant |
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- and - |
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JSC ANTIPINSKY REFINERY |
Defendant/ Arbitration Respondent |
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- and - |
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PETRACO OIL COMPANY SA |
Intervener |
____________________
The Claimant in person, represented with the permission of the court by Nick Hutt
Hearing dates: 28 October 2022 and 2 November 2022
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APPROVED BY THE COURT FOR HANDING DOWN
(SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL CORRECTIONS)
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down by the judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be Friday 04 November 2022 at 14:00.
Mr Justice Foxton :
INTRODUCTION
i) By Mr Hutt, the Chief Executive Officer of the Claimant (VTB) for permission to represent VTB at these hearings, the solicitors previously representing VTB having come off the record on 7 June 2022. This occurred because VTB is a sanctioned entity and no license has as yet been granted by the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI) to enable it to pay legal fees.
ii) By the Intervener (Petraco) for security for the costs of the trial ordered by Sir William Blair (the Cargo Trial) to determine Petraco's application for an award of damages pursuant to the undertakings offered by VTB when obtaining injunctions from Mr Justice Waksman (on 29 April 2019) and Mr Justice Teare (30 April 2019).
iii) By Petraco for an order that VTB be required to serve a response to a Request for Further Information served on 23 February 2022 (the RFI), in which Petraco seeks further information as to VTB's case on Russian law.
iv) By VTB, albeit it has been unable to issue an application notice because of the sanctions in place, to adjourn the security for costs application, and for extensions of the directions which would have the effect of vacating the Cargo Trial, currently listed for 23 May 2023.
PRELIMINARY RULINGS
"Although rule 39.6 allows a company or other corporation with the permission of the Court to be represented at trial by an employee, the complexity of most cases in the Commercial Court generally makes that unsuitable. Accordingly, permission is likely to be given only in unusual circumstances, and is likely to require, at a minimum, clear evidence that the company or other corporation reasonably could not have been legally represented and that the employee has both the ability and familiarity with the case to be able to assist the court and also unfettered and unqualified authority to represent and bind the company or other corporation in dealings with the other parties to the litigation or with the Court."
THE BACKGROUND
The Injunctions
i) A Worldwide Freezing Order against Antipinsky (the WFO).
ii) A mandatory injunction requiring Antipinsky to deliver a particular cargo of oil then on board the tanker Polar Rock (the Polar Rock Cargo), to VTB (the Cargo Injunction).
In the usual way, as a term of obtaining injunctive relief, VTB offered an undertaking in damages, in this case in the following terms:
"If the Court later finds that this Order has caused loss to the Respondent or any other person(s), and decides that the Respondent or that or those other person(s) should be compensated for that loss, the Applicant and Joint Stock Company VTB Capital Holding will comply with any order the court may make".
i) title in the Polar Rock Cargo remained with Antipinsky, such that VTB could injunct Antipinsky from delivering the cargo and Petraco had no legal right to delivery of the Polar Rock Cargo (and could not suffer loss by reason of any interference with such a right); or
ii) title in the Polar Rock Cargo had passed from Antipinsky to JSC Vo MachinoImport (MachinoImport) from whom Petraco said that it had purchased the cargo, such that VTB had no basis to injunct delivery of the Polar Rock Cargo and Petraco had a legal right to delivery of the cargo.
i) VTB was permitted to sell the Polar Rock Cargo.
ii) VTB was required to pay $30m into court to fortify the injunction (the Secured Sums).
iii) The issue between VTB and Petraco as to who had what rights in relation to the Polar Rock Cargo was to be tried on an expedited basis, with a three-day estimate (the Cargo Trial).
"The expedited trial of the rights and obligations of the Claimant, the Defendant and the Intervener in respect of the Polar Rock Cargo and/or the Secured Sums including any losses that Petraco may have sustained under the cross-undertaking in damages and (for the avoidance of doubt) the Claimant's right to seek repayment of the monies paid into Court".
i) Antipinsky has not itself advanced any claim to the Polar Rock Cargo or participated in the Cargo Trial. Antipinsky is in receivership.
ii) Petraco has made it clear that it does not claim it ever acquired title to the Polar Rock Cargo, nor has it advanced a proprietary claim to the Secured Sums. Rather it claims it has a personal claim against VTB pursuant to the undertaking in damages for the loss it said the WFO and Cargo Injunctions caused it, and that it should be able to use the sums paid by VTB into court to fortify the injunctions for the purposes of satisfying that damages claim.
The Cargo Trial
i) On 21 May 2019, Petraco served its Particulars of Claim asserting its entitlement to damages under the undertaking. That asserted that title in the Polar Rock Cargo had passed from Antipinsky to MachinoImport, such that Antipinsky should not have been injuncted from delivering the cargo to Petraco and Petraco had suffered loss because the injunction had prevented it from exercising its contractual right to take delivery of the cargo.
ii) VTB served a defence, but also a counterclaim. VTB denied that Petraco had ever had any contractual right to delivery of the cargo, on the basis that MachinoImport had not acquired or retained title. On that basis it denied that Petraco suffered loss. It also argued that, as a matter of discretion, the court should refuse to award damages under the undertaking to Petraco. VTB's counterclaim advanced Russian law claims broadly based on alleged actionable interference by Petraco with VTB's contractual rights to delivery of oil from Antipinsky. That claim was not limited to interference with its right to the Polar Rock Cargo, but involved alleged interference with its rights to other cargos as well.
iii) Following the service of VTB's statement of case, and given the issues now in play, the Cargo Trial, which had been fixed for 29-31 July 2019, was adjourned.
Sanctions
i) The provision of discovery by 27 July 2022.
ii) The exchange of witness statements by 14 October 2022.
THE GENERAL LICENCE
The structure of the General Licence
"Provided that one of the sets of conditions in either Part A or Part B of this licence are complied with in full any Person or Relevant Institution may:
4.1. Receive payments from a DP [a person designated under the 2019 Regulations];
4.2. Make payments (directly or indirectly) for or on behalf of a DP;
4.3. Make payments for the benefit of a DP;
4.4. Process payments which relate to a DP; and
4.5. Carry out any other act which is reasonably necessary to give effect to 4.1 - 4.4 above".
i) Where the conditions of Part A or Part B are satisfied, they permit the payment of "professional legal fees", "Counsel's fees" and "Expenses".
ii) The term "Expenses" is defined as:
"any fees or expenses associated with the provision of the Legal Services including (but not limited to):
• fees for expert witnesses;
• translation fees;
• printing;
• travel expenses;
• subsistence expenses;
• courier expenses;
• legal searches;
• court transcripts;
• administrative fees necessary to provide legal services (i.e., Home Office fees); and
• bank transaction fees,
but excluding Counsel's fees."
iii) The General Licence does not refer to payments made to meet costs orders in favour of the other side or to comply with an order for security for costs.
iv) Payments under each of Part A and Part B are subject to an overall limit of £500,000 including VAT for the period from 28 October 2022 to 28 April 2023, and a separate limit for Expenses of 5% of the legal fees total or £25,000 including VAT, whichever is the lower (paragraphs 5 and 6 of Part A and paragraphs 4 and 5 of Part B).
v) Paragraph 7 of Part A and paragraph 6 of Part B provide:
"If at any point either:
7.1. It is estimated that in any individual case the limits for the professional legal fees, Counsel's fees or Expenses set out above will be exceeded; or
7.2. In any individual case, the limits for the professional legal fees, Counsel's fees or Expenses set out above are in fact exceeded,
this licence will not apply to any further payment of any nature in relation to the entirety of the Legal Services nor to any other act in relation to the provision of the Legal Services".
vi) The effect of this provision would appear to be that in an "individual case" in which it is anticipated the total of professional legal fees or counsel fees will exceed £500,000, or Expenses will exceed the Expenses limit, the General Licence will not apply at all (rather than simply not applying to any excess). The words "any further payment" appear to be directed to payments after the point when it is estimated that the limits will be exceeded.
vii) The application of the limits in cases in which the law firm or counsel undertake different, or separate but related, matters for the same client is unclear. The definition of Legal Services is "legal services provided to a DP, including legal advice and/or representation, whether provided in the UK or another jurisdiction, in relation to any matter", with the definition of Legal Services feeding through to various provisions in the General Licence. However, the limits are expressed to apply to "professional legal fees, together with any Counsel's fees … in total for the duration of the licence". Certainly, work done pursuant to a single letter of engagement would appear to attract a single £500,000 limit.
Part A of the General Licence
i) Paragraph 3 provides that the payment must be "in relation to Legal Services which have been provided or are being provided to a DP …".
ii) Paragraph 4 requires that "the payment must be owed in accordance with an obligation which was entered into by the DP" prior to the designation date, language which is broad enough to cover ongoing services under a pre-designation mandate.
iii) Paragraph 7 of Part A, to which I have referred above, contemplates that fees which have yet to be incurred but which can presently be estimated can fall within Part A.
iv) The OFSI press release accompanying the General Licence (https://ofsi.blog.gov.uk/2022/10/28/legal-fees-general-licence/) describes Part A in the following terms:
"For legal work which is carried out in satisfaction of a prior obligation (for example where a law firm or barrister is engaged before the designation of the individual or entity), there is a £500,000 (inc. VAT) cap on the amount that can be claimed over the duration of the licence. This amount reflects the potentially costly nature of legal work and therefore covers legitimate requests, while still maintaining the policy intent of a financial sanctions designation."
That supports the view that it is the date of engagement which is significant.
v) The reporting requirements require production to OFSI of "the relevant letter of engagement between the DP and the Legal Adviser, Law Firm or Counsel", presumably for the purpose of identifying the date of engagement.
vi) This interpretation is also supported by the fact that Part A (unlike Part B) does not specify limits for the hourly rate for solicitors or counsel, presumably on the basis that where the engagement is entered into before designation, the existing contractual hourly rates will apply.
Part B
Can the limits of Part A and Part B be combined?
"Where applicable, these two caps can also be combined, meaning if work is undertaken for a designated person that involves fees for legal work carried out in satisfaction of a prior obligation (£500,000 limit) and work commenced post-designation (£500,000 limit), up to £1 million (inc. VAT) could be paid under the General Licence. For any fees above these caps, a specific licence must be sought."
SECURITY FOR COSTS
Petraco's Security for Costs Application
"the claimant is a company or other body (whether incorporated inside or outside Great Britain) and there is reason to believe that it will be unable to pay the defendant's costs if ordered to do so".
i) If Petraco wins, it will seek an interim payment which VTB would be required to pay within 14 days.
ii) As VTB's funds are frozen as a result of the sanctions, any application to obtain the funds necessary to meet the costs order would not be resolved for many months.
iii) The General Licence does not apply to payments of the other side's costs.
iv) As a result, VTB will not be in a position to make payment on the due date.
v) A company which is unable to meet a costs liability when due, because of the illiquid nature of its asset base, meets the requirements of CPR 25.12(2)(c): Chemistree Homecare Limited v Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd [2011] EWHC 2979 (Ch), [3] (Briggs J) and Holyoake v Candy [2016] 6 Costs LR 1157, [63] (Nugee J).
i) As I have stated, it seeks the full costs of the Cargo Trial, in which Petraco seeks to make out its entitlement to damages pursuant to the undertaking given by VTB. The security for costs application does not in any way seek to distinguish between VTB's response to that claim, and its counterclaim, nor to address what additional costs (if any) or issues the latter introduces.
ii) The order is for provision of security for costs in tranches, the first tranche payable within 14 days of VTB obtaining an OFSI license to make the payment. As Petraco explains, "under Petraco's proposed order, the obligation to pay security will only be triggered if and when VTB has obtained appropriate licenses to make such payments". As a result, an application for security justified by reference to the time it will take for VTB to obtain a licence to pay any costs order is only to be provided once VTB has obtained a licence to provide the security. Petraco accepts that this will require a special licence application.
iii) The consequence of not providing the security for costs is not the staying and ultimately striking out of the Cargo Trial, something which would be of no benefit to Petraco, but that the "Claimant's Defence and Counterclaim be struck out in its entirety without further order". That would presumably leave Petraco to establish its entitlement to damages pursuant to the undertaking.
The status of VTB in the Cargo Trial
"Only the defendant may apply for security for costs of the proceedings under CPR r 25.12. VTB has always been and remains the claimant: it went on the offensive by launching a claim against Antipinsky in order to obtain injunctive relief to shore up its position in relation to the Cargo, specifically against Petraco, a competing buyer who would otherwise have lifted the Cargo. Petraco is in substance the defendant as, in response to VTB's claim and in order to vindicate its rights, it has had to seek relief against VTB under the cross-undertaking in damages, given to and enforceable by the Court.
The picture might be thought to be even more stark, because VTB has also launched a counterclaim against Petraco in respect of other cargoes".
i) Petraco, in seeking to enforce the undertaking in damages offered by VTB as a condition of obtaining the WFO and Cargo Injunctions, is not in the position of a claimant, and cannot be required to give security for costs of the enforcement exercise. That is clear from CT Bowring & Co v Corsi & Partners [1994] BCC 713. Petraco is not a voluntary participant in this litigation, but someone who has intervened to protect its interests in the face of the impact of the injunctions which VTB obtained, and Petraco seeks to be restored to the status quo ante before the injunctions were granted, rather than to place itself in a better position as a result of engagement with the court process than it was in before any court order was made (Millett LJ in CT Bowring at pp.724 and 728-29).
ii) VTB, in pursuing a counterclaim for loss allegedly caused by unlawful interference with its contractual entitlement to receive cargoes, is, so far as that counterclaim is concerned, in the position of a claimant. I accept that, in principle and subject to other moderating factors, an order for security for costs could be made in relation to its pursuit of that counterclaim. However, as I have stated, that has not been the focus of Petraco's application.
"This therefore is a starting point: to the extent that this is a claim under the undertaking in damages Petraco, not VTB, should be seen as being in the position of being the defendant; and by parity of reasoning VTB would be the claimant."
"It is however necessary, as I think, to consider what the effect of an order for security in this case would be if security were not given. It would have the effect, as the defendants acknowledge, of preventing the plaintiffs pursuing their claim. It would, however, leave the defendants free to pursue their counterclaim. The plaintiffs could then defend themselves against the counterclaim although their own claim was stayed. It seems quite clear - and, indeed, was not I think in controversy - that in the course of defending the counterclaim all the same matters would be canvassed as would be canvassed if the plaintiffs were to pursue their claim, but on that basis they would defend the claim and advance their own in a somewhat hobbled manner, and would be conducting the litigation (to change the metaphor) with one hand tied behind their back. I have to say that that does not appeal to me on the facts of this case as a just or attractive way to oblige a party to conduct its litigation.
Mr. Phillips for the defendants submits there would really be no problem because, if the defendants failed in their counterclaim and the plaintiffs' case contrary to the counterclaim effectively succeeded, then the stay could be lifted and the plaintiffs could be given judgment. But on that assumption one is bound to ask what would be the point of making the order at all except to give the defendants a tactical advantage in the litigation."
"(1) If there is a debarring order in place, its effect depends in the first instance upon its terms ..
(2) Where an order debars a defendant from defending particular proceedings, this should mean what it says: At the trial of the relevant proceedings the defendant should not be permitted to participate in the normal way. That is to say by doing such things as adducing evidence, cross-examining witnesses on the other side, or making submissions.
(3) The case law does appear to demonstrate the existence of a residual discretion or trial management power to permit a debarred defendant to take some part in the trial of the relevant proceedings. It seems to me that this discretion is a narrow one. In particular circumstances I can see that the exercise of this discretion might include the permitting of some limited submissions or the permitting of some cross-examination. More generally, it strikes me that a debarred defendant should normally be able to address the court on the form of order to be made after the substantive decision on the trial has been made, and in relation to the pointing out of any errors in the relevant judgment. It also strikes me, but I say this on a strictly provisional basis because it is not a matter I am deciding at this stage, that it does strike me that the debarred defendant ought to be able to address the court on the question of the costs of the relevant proceedings. But I repeat that that is not a question which I am deciding in this judgment.
(4) The overriding principle however is that debarring orders should mean what they say. The debarred defendant should not normally be permitted to participate in the relevant trial in a way which undermines the debarring order, and permits the defendant to escape the effect of the debarring order. A debarring order is an important sanction available to the court in the exercise of its case management powers, and an important method of ensuring that the court's case management orders are respected. As such, defendants should not normally be allowed to escape from the consequences of a debarring order when the trial of the relevant proceedings takes place.
(5) Where a debarring order does have the effect of preventing a defendant from participating in a trial, the position does not then go by default. At the trial the claimant must still demonstrate to the satisfaction of the court that the claimant is entitled to the relief sought in the relevant proceedings.
(6) The striking out of the defence does not mean that the court cannot have any regard to that defence. It can still be considered by the court for the purposes of understanding the statements of case in the relevant proceedings as a whole. It also appears, by reference to what Sales J is recorded as saying in the second decision in Thevarajah, that looking at the defence for the purposes of understanding the claim can also, in an appropriate case, extend to hearing from counsel for the debarred defendant in order for counsel for the debarred defendant to provide assistance for the benefit of the court in understanding the nature and extent of the relevant claim."
If an Order for Security is Appropriate as a Matter of Principle, Would an Order be Appropriate on the Circumstances of this Case?
i) Regulation 66 of the 2019 Regulations permits the Treasury to grant general or particular licences, and can be of a definite or indefinite duration.
ii) The General Guidance produced by OFSI identifies as one purpose for which a licence might be granted the payment of "fees for the provision of legal services", including legal fees and disbursements. It would appear that licences of this kind can be anticipatory in nature, the General Guidance providing:
"You are strongly encouraged to apply for a licence in advance of providing substantive legal services in order for you to have certainty as to the fees that will be recoverable while the designated person remains listed"
and stating that the application should provide "an estimate of the anticipated fees".
iii) The legal fees exception extends to making a payment into court for security for the other side's costs, which is perceived as being different from paying security for damages into court. It would seem to follow that meeting the other side's costs in litigation is a licensable activity in itself. I am not, therefore, presently persuaded that VTB cannot apply for a license at this stage in anticipation of any future costs liability to Petraco, and would not be willing to order security for costs (were it otherwise appropriate to do so) without more information on this issue. I return to this issue at [76]-[80] below.
SHOULD THE CARGO TRIAL DATE BE MAINTAINED?
i) Disclosure is due by 1 November. Beyond ensuring that relevant documents are preserved, VTB has taken no steps to locate relevant documents.
ii) Witness statements are to be served by 9 December.
iii) Expert reports in both disciplines are to be served by 13 January 2023, with the Joint Memoranda by 3 February 2023.
iv) Supplemental witness statements are to be served by 10 February 2023.
v) The PTR is to take place by 24 March 2023.
"I think my own view is that looking at this case I know that the parties had in mind potentially moving it. It is just about conceivable, just about conceivable, that if licences are in place at October you could put in place a timetable to a May trial. It will be tight. There may well be a contested application at that point, if licences are in place, and I am not prejudging it because it may well depend on what the positions of the witnesses are, what the positions of the experts are and so forth. But it does not seem to me to be yet completely illogical to suppose that a trial could take place in May, if all goes well over summer, because also, to an extent, if it looks like things are moving, people may even without licences being in place be able to do some work, witnesses may be able to think about what they are going to say and so forth. I think we will keep it with the date in the diary, but you are going to have to jump in autumn one way or the other."
64. Lord Wolfson KC responded:
"Yes, absolutely. By the 1st November, as I understand it, the parties will need to make their mind up, and if not, the court may make their mind up for them, so to speak."
i) The imposition of international sanctions following the Russian invasion of Ukraine has had devastating effects on VTB, reducing its headcount from over 80 personnel down to 19, all of whose contracts expire at the end of the year.
ii) Half of those 19 personnel are traders, with only one (relatively junior) Swiss lawyer, and for a prolonged period they had to work without pay.
iii) There has been a succession of crises to be managed: obtaining the ability to pay debts, replacing suppliers who refused to continue dealing with VTB, seeking to replace departing personnel and negotiating extensions to staff contracts. Mr Hutt said that, with a significantly reduced team, "we also have a number of issues that we need to deal with and firefight on a daily basis".
iv) While VTB is at fault in failing to recognise that progressing this litigation is one of the fires to be fought, I am not satisfied that a greater level of diligence by VTB would have fundamentally changed the position as it now subsists.
i) As I have explained above, the General Licence does not appear to apply to work on cases in which the current estimate of fees will exceed £500,000 between 28 October 2022 and 28 April 2023, a week before the trial would begin.
ii) PCBB has estimated its future costs at £3,900,000. Whatever detailed points might be made about the recoverability of that figure, PCBB's total costs for the Commercial Court trial would appear to be below the figure of in excess of £5m which Petraco are to spend. On any view, the level of costs required to bring this case to the eve of trial will be very substantially in excess of £500,000.
iii) The expenses limit of £25,000 would not seem anything like sufficient to cover an electronic disclosure platform provider, expert fees in Russian law and the oil market, application fees, printing, travel, couriers, searches and transcripts.
iv) The effect of these matters on my understanding of the General Licence is that PCBB will not be able to bring itself within the scope of the General Licence.
v) While Lord Wolfson KC floated the possibility that the General Licence may reduce the volume of work which OFSI faces, and increase the speed with which it can resolve applications for specific licences, that is wholly speculative. It offers no sufficiently concrete reason to proceed on the basis that OFSI will resolve VTB's applications in time to hold the current trial date.
vi) That is particularly the case when the apparent complexities of VTB's position are taken into account. In a letter to OFSI of 1 November 2022, PCBB noted that counsel who acted in the case to date have stated that they will only act if all past costs are paid, and if PCBB hold a sufficient amount on account for future costs. OFSI's response to such a request is unknown. PCBB assert that VTB's use of its funds to pay legal fees would also require licences from the Swiss authorities (where VTB is incorporated) and Germany (where funds are held). A previous request to the Swiss authorities (SECO) took three months to resolve. There is no sensible basis for anticipating any imminent resolution of these issues.
OUTSTANDING APPLICATIONS
The RFI
i) VTB's inhouse lawyer should obtain the Russian law advice obtained by PCBB for the purpose of pleading the Russian law causes of action.
ii) On the basis of and with the benefit of that material, VTB is to use its best endeavours to answer the RFI.
iii) That "best endeavours" answer is to be served within 6 weeks.
Section 2 of the DRD
i) to identify which VTB personnel worked on the Legacy Contracts and the October Contracts, were involved in the Moscow Meeting and the negotiations subsequent to that meeting including the Langham Meeting, the March Contracts and the April Contracts;
ii) to locate where the emails and electronic documents of those individuals are stored;
iii) to identify where documents relating to the arbitrations commenced by VTB are located;
and to report that information to Petraco's solicitors in a letter. If there is no evidenced attempt to engage seriously with these tasks, that is a matter to which the Court may have regard at any future hearing.
FURTHER APPLICATION TO OFSI
i) "The parties are on an equal footing" (CPR 1.1(2)(a)). In this case, VTB will face no similar delay in obtaining an enforceable costs order if it prevails.
ii) Ensuring that the case is dealt with "expeditiously and fairly". That includes avoiding delay while steps are taken by a party to put itself into a position to comply with orders of the court.
i) The hourly rates used, which exceed guideline rates.
ii) The involvement of three equity partners.
iii) The fact that the case has moved law firms twice (albeit on the second occasion the case moved with the team).
iv) The level of counsel fees - £1.5m in total.
v) The additional costs which will have been incurred through the use of four counsel, two of whom are now KCs.