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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 >> Overton v Horder [2008] EWHC 90109 (Costs) (28 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2008/90109.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 90109 (Costs) |
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Claim No: 5CK00028 |
SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
ON TRANSFER FROM CLERKENWELL COUNTY COURT
MASTER ROGERS SITTING AS A DEPUTY
DISTRICT JUDGE OF CLERKENWELL COUNTY COURT
B e f o r e :
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LAURA OVERTON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BRENT HORDER |
Defendant |
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Mr Michael McGowan (Legal Executive) (instructed by GM Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20 June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Rogers:
THE ISSUE
THE BACKGROUND
THE HEARING ON 20 JUNE
"Enforceability of the Claimant's Conditional Fee Agreement. For want of compliance with CFA Regulation 4(2)(e)(ii) SI 2000 No.692
The Conditional Fee Agreement in this case dated 21 January 2002 has ostensibly been prepared by a claims management company who are Accident and Advice Helpline [AAH]. AAH are not only the claims introducer but also the insurance intermediary (the policy of insurance dated 5 July 2002).
Despite the factual circumstances set out above the CFA declares that the solicitor has no interest in recommending this particular policy of insurance.
AAH operate a panel solicitor scheme. That much is clear from the documentation that was made available to Master Hurst in the case of Samonini v London General Transport Service, see paragraphs 4-15.
The above fiduciary relationship which arises from Bolt Burdon's membership of the AAH panel. The panel is one that ought to have been declared in the Conditional Fee Agreement.
CONSEQUENCES
The above amounts to a failure to comply with Conditional Fee Agreement Regulations 4(2)(e)(ii), as a consequence the Claimant's solicitors cannot recover costs under a Conditional Fee Agreement."
"4. Whether we consider any particular method(s) of financing those fees and disbursements mentioned in 2) above is appropriate. We explained that we consider the particular method(s) of financing those fees and disbursements in your case to be an insurance policy effected through the company specified in the schedule under number 8 in the schedule ('the insurance policy')."
"5. Our reasons for this are: there are risks in any litigation and for your peace of mind it is important to ensure that your exposure to payment of fees and disbursements is insured. This policy not only indemnifies you against the risk of having to pay your opponent's fees and disbursements. It also facilitates a funding arrangement with the bank specified in the schedule under number 9 of the schedule ("the Bank") to provide payment of some disbursements to which you are primarily liable as the case proceeds."
THE DEFENDANT'S SUBMISSIONS
"This Manual provides details of the working arrangements between the Panel of Solicitors, AAH and the third party. The Manual is not intended as a comprehensive statement and is not a substitute for reading any relevant source documents.
All parties acknowledge that if the Panel solicitor fails to comply with the provisions of this Manual, the Master Certificate and the Panel Solicitor's Agreement or any other relevant document it may lead to termination of the Panel Solicitor's Agreement and/or termination of the Client's Insurance Certificate. In such circumstances the Panel solicitor may become liable for any losses incurred by the client, AAH or any relevant third party."
AUTHORITIES RELIED ON BY THE DEFENDANT
Deborah Garrett v Halton Borough Council [2006] 5 Costs LR 798; [2006] EWCA Civ 1017;
Jones v Wrexham Borough Council [2008] 1 Costs LR 147; [2007] EWCA Civ 1356;
Samonini v London General Transport Services Ltd (Senior Costs Judge Master Hurst: January 2005);
Lewis v Lindsay (Regional Costs Judge Smedley: 12 October 2007);
Bevan v Power Panels; (Master Wright: 17 May 2007);
Fallon v M & W Mack Ltd. (District Judge Cooper: 21 May 2007).
"92. Nor do we accept that the Regulations should be construed narrowly because of their potentially draconian effect on solicitors. The purpose of the Regulations is to protect clients, not the financial interests of solicitors. In our judgment, the Regulations should be construed by giving the plain language in which they are expressed its normal and natural meaning. We do not accept that the word "interests" is ambiguous. For the reasons that we shall give it seems to us to be clear that it includes memberships of panels such as the Ainsworth Panel."
Again, in paragraph 97 of the judgment:
"97. We do not accept the first of these submissions. There was a close relationship between Websters and Ainsworth. Websters were dependent on Ainsworth for referrals of cases, although it is unclear to what extent. As Mr Morgan points out, cases are the life blood of solicitors. The profit generated by cases are likely to be of greater significance to solicitors than commissions paid on insurance premiums or ATEs in connection with CFAs. The indirect financial interest in maintaining a flow of work through membership of a panel of solicitors is greater than the direct financial interest in commissions paid for insurance premiums. The advice to use the Ainsworth insurance product came in a CFA that it had apparently supplied to its panel solicitors and which bore its livery… "
"Surprisingly, the defendants' points of dispute do not raise the issue of proportionality, nor do they challenge the quantum of the insurance premium. Similarly, the status of the investigation is not queried. This case can only be decided on the evidence and submissions put before me but I feel bound to say that it seems unlikely that the scheme being run by AAH would stand up to close scrutiny."
"For the same reasons the oral advice given to the client – 'We have no financial or other interest in recommending the insurance policy to you, except that we are on the Accident Advice Helpline Panel of solicitors and insurance policies are part of the Accident Advice Helpline scheme' does not adequately make clear to the client the nature of the solicitor's interest or that panel membership was more than a mark of quality."
"69. If, therefore, the CFA had not been a CFA Lite, I would have held that there had been a non-compliance with Regulation 4(2)(e) by the solicitors' failure to disclose their interest and the CFA would have been unenforceable."
"4. Information to be given before Conditional Fee Agreements made
(1) Before a Conditional Fee Agreement is made the legal representative must –
(a) inform the client about the following matters, and
(b) if the client requires any further explanation, advice or other information about any of those matters, provide such further explanation, advice or other information about them as the client may reasonably require.
(2) Those matters are –
…
(e) whether the legal representative considers any particular matter or matters of financing any or all of those costs is appropriate and, if he considers that the contract of insurance is appropriate or recommends a particular such contract –
(i) his reasons for doing so, and
(ii) whether he has an interest in doing so."
"10. It is submitted that the Defendant's error is in considering whether BBK had an interest in the referrals, rather than the insurance.
11. Paragraph 4(2)(e)(ii) requires the solicitor to inform the client whether he has an interest in '[recommending] a particular [ATE] contract'. In other words, the solicitor must answer the question which the client might pose: 'Why are you recommending this insurance?' Not, 'Why have you been instructed to act for me?'
12. The fact that the solicitor is on a referral panel per se does not answer the former question. It is an answer to the latter question, but that is not a matter falling within the ambit of the CFA Regulations 2000. If it is governed by anything, it is governed by the Solicitors Introduction and Referral Code 1990. A breach of that code is not alleged here and, even if proved, would have no effect on the enforceability of the CFA.
13. It is only if the answer to the former question is 'I am recommending this insurance, because I am obliged to consistently with my membership of this referral scheme' that the necessary link is created between the scheme and the insurance, such that the solicitor has an interest in recommending the insurance."
"17. Thus, when the Court of Appeal stated (at para 92) that an interest 'includes membership of a panel such as the Ainsworth panel', it is submitted that they plainly meant a panel, membership of which is conditional upon recommending particular insurance, not simply any referral panel. Had they meant the latter, the words "such as the Ainsworth panel" would have been redundant.
18. Indeed, had it been the mere membership of the panel which gave rise to the interest, then that interest would have been declared by saying 'we are on the panel', but the Court of Appeal clearly held that that was not sufficient disclosure of the interest (para 101).
19. Furthermore, if mere membership of a panel created an interest, it would mean that a referral scheme which was connected to no ATE insurance at all, and which left its panel solicitors free to choose any ATE product they liked, would give rise to a declarable interest in whatever ATE insurance they recommended. That cannot be right. To come back to the questions posed by the client in paragraph 10 above, the answer to the first would be (and could only be), 'I am recommending this insurance, because I think it is most appropriate for your case'."
"8.2 For other claims insured with NIG the level of cover is £50,000. (In all cases it is a matter for the panel solicitor to ensure that cover is adequate.)"
"36. Mr Patel has made references to a number of cases, but whilst Garrett clearly established basic principles, it seems to me that all these cases depend on their own particular facts. The principle set out in Garrett was that financial interests had to be disclosed. Not every firm of solicitors has the same financial arrangement with every claims management company and therefore each of these cases must be decided on their own particular facts and I have found little help from these cases other than the general guidance given in the case of Garrett.."
MY DECISION
"… If Davies & Company decided not to take out insurance policies with Lawcall but took them out with another company, there is no evidence to suggest that this would affect their commercial arrangement with Lawcall."
CONCLUSION