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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Tandara v Weightmans Solicitors [2008] EWHC 90101 (Costs) (14 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2008/90101.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 90101 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MRS BELINDA TANDARA |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WEIGHTMANS SOLICITORS |
Defendant |
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Mr Friston (instructed by the Defendants ) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 22 January 2008 and 14 March 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Master O'Hare:
"In the event that your claim is successful (which is likely given that liability for the incident has already been admitted), we will limit our costs to the amount recovered from the Defendant."
i) In respect of the bills sent for detailed assessment should I assess all disbursements, including paid disbursements, at nil?
ii) In all the circumstances should any order I make in these proceedings relate to all of the bills delivered by the Defendants to the Claimant, not just the bills sent for detailed assessment?
IS THE CLAIMANT STILL LIABLE FOR PAID DISBURSEMENTS?
"113. Before leaving the subject of compliance, we should mention two other points which were discussed during the hearing and upon which there appeared to be common ground. They are not necessary to our decision but they could be of considerable importance in practice. They relate to the recoverability of the ATE premium and any disbursements which the client has in fact paid "up front" whether personally or by taking out a loan to do so.
114. Section 29 of the Access to Justice Act 1999 provides that:
"Where in any proceedings a costs order is made in favour of any party who has taken out an insurance policy against the risk of incurring a liability in those proceedings, the costs payable to him may, subject in the case of court proceedings to rules of court, include costs in respect of the premium of the policy."
It will be seen, therefore, that ATE insurance premiums are recoverable as costs in any proceedings, irrespective of whether or not there is a CFA between the receiving party and her legal representatives. The client's liability to pay the insurance premium arises from the contract of insurance, not from her contract with the legal representative. It arises whether or not there is a CFA and whether or not the CFA is enforceable. The CFAs which we have seen refer to the possibility of such insurance, but do not make it a term of the contract that such insurance is taken out. It would appear, therefore, that there is no bar to the recovery of the ATE insurance premium as costs whatever may be the bar to the recovery of the lawyers' charges and success fee.
115. Secondly, it is not uncommon for the client to put the solicitor in funds for the purpose of paying disbursements, for example the fees of medical or other experts. The funds may be provided either from the client's own pocket or financed by a loan to the client for which the client is legally responsible irrespective of the fate of the CFA. The solicitor is required to retain this money on clients' account until it is expended in accordance with the client's instructions. If the CFA fails, and the money has not been paid out, the solicitor would be required to pay it back to the client. If the money has been paid out, then this is money actually paid by the client. Mr McLaren accepted that this should be recoverable by the client as costs. The costs claim is that of the client, not of the solicitor. If the client has actually paid a debt to a third party, properly incurred in the conduct of the litigation, there seems no reason why this should not be recoverable from the paying party, insofar as it is reasonable and proportionate. (If a debt to a third party has been properly incurred, the paying party will not have to reimburse it until it has in fact been paid, but at that point it will become money actually paid by or on behalf of the client and thus recoverable from the paying party.) This is irrespective of whether the solicitor can enforce the CFA for his charges and success fee.
116. These two propositions would go a long way to remove any detriment suffered by the lay client as a result of a CFA being found unenforceable in costs proceedings. The client can recoup his or her own expenditure on the proceedings from the paying party. The true interests in the cases before us, therefore, are those of the solicitors rather than the clients. That does not in any way invalidate the conclusions to which we have come."
"Bills paid
Can it be said that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover their money because the consideration has wholly failed, being a consideration contrary to public policy or rendered under a contract which was void? If so, should such recovery only be on terms allowing TJG [the solicitors] some remuneration including disbursements and profit? Can the concept non in pari delicto apply and, if so, what remedy would be open to the plaintiffs? I freely admit to finding these matters of the greatest difficulty. There is no clear guidance to be found in the authorities or in the textbooks. To allow the plaintiffs to recover but on terms would in effect be to allow TJG to recover on a quantum meruit if not to enforce the agreement. This cannot be right. Conversely, can it be a correct approach to take the view that the agreement is unenforceable and that the parties must therefore be left in the position in which they find themselves? This would enable TJG to take advantage of the champertous agreement dependent upon the plaintiffs' discovery of its true nature. Conversely, is justice done by allowing the plaintiffs to take advantage of the services rendered by TJG without having to pay for them? One aspect of the law is tolerably clear, and that is, where property or goods are transferred under an illegal transaction or a lease granted for an illegal or an immoral purpose, the property will pass and an estate be created (see Feret v Hill (1854) 15 CB 207, [1843–60] All ER Rep 924, Belvoir Finance Co Ltd v Stapleton [1970] 3 All ER 664, [1971] 1 QB 210 and Tinsley v Milligan [1993] 3 All ER 65, [1994] 1 AC 340).
At the end of the day I take the view that, subject to any question of severance, where services have been rendered and paid for under an unenforceable contract in circumstances where it cannot be suggested that the payee has, apart from entering into the agreement, acted unconscionably towards the payer or been unjustly enriched at his expense, it is unreal to hold that the consideration, albeit one contrary to public policy, has wholly failed and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the price of those services while retaining the benefit of them. The better rationale is that the champertous agreement is unenforceable rather than void or voidable. This view appears to be consistent with Re Hutley's goods and Cole v Booker (1913) 29 TLR 295. In Rees v De Bernardy [1896] 2 Ch 437 there are references to 'champertous and void' but the agreement was apparently treated as voidable and set aside on the grounds of undue influence. Ratification was argued and negatived on the grounds that the co-heiresses at law never knew of their right to rescind the agreement. There could not have been any question of rescinding a void agreement.
Severance
Mr Spearman [counsel for the solicitors] submitted that severance could be effected by deleting the words 'for any lost cases' from the sentence ending 'our bills will be delivered when each matter is finalised in all respects with a 20% reduction from solicitor/client costs for any lost cases'. To my mind, this is not severance but an attempt at unilateral rectification by removing, to TJG's pecuniary disadvantage, the words creating a differential fee. Severance is not possible.
I therefore conclude as follows: (1) the plaintiffs are not liable for unpaid bills; (2) where bills have been paid, the parties must remain where they find themselves."
MY DECISION ON THE REFUND OF PAID DISBURSEMENTS POINT
"Where an illegal contract is still executory, the general rule of non recovery of money or property is displaced and a party may recover such items provided he repents and withdraws from the illegal purpose and gives notice repudiating the contract before he brings the action" (Halsburys Laws of England Vol 9(1) para 886).
SHOULD MY ORDER BE LIMITED TO THE BILLS SENT FOR ASSESSMENT?
"The power of the court under these rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order."
"Although this is not intended to be an exhaustive definition of the circumstances in which the power under CPR Part 3.1(7) is exercisable, it seems to me that, for the High Court to revisit one of its earlier orders, the Applicant must either show some material change of circumstances or that the judge who made the earlier order was misled in some way, whether innocently or otherwise, as to the correct factual position before him. The latter type of case would include, for example, a case of material non-disclosure on an application for an injunction. If all that is sought is a reconsideration of the order on the basis of the same material, then that can only be done, in my judgment, in the context of an appeal. Similarly it is not, I think, open to a party to the earlier application to seek in effect to re-argue that application by relying on submissions and evidence which were available to him at the time of the earlier hearing, but which, for whatever reason, he or his legal representatives chose not to employ."
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