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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 >> Kelly & Anor v Black Horse Ltd [2013] EWHC B17 (Costs) (27 September 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2013/B17.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC B17 (Costs) |
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TRANSFERRED FROM WANDSWORTH COUNTY COURT
London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) MARGARET KELLY (2) PAUL KELLY |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BLACK HORSE LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Daniel Saoul (instructed by SCM Solicitors, Barnet) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 1 August 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Senior Costs Judge Hurst:
SUBMISSIONS
"33. For all but the more serious or specialised personal injury claims, ATE insurance is block rated, rather than individually assessed. For block rating to work the insurer needs to be sure that it is receiving a full and fair selection of cases ranging from those where liability is unlikely to be in doubt, to those where it is contested. In order to avoid adverse selection, it is standard practice for ATE insurers to require solicitors to insure all available cases with the ATE provider. In practice, therefore, Claimants' solicitors cannot simply pick and choose from a variety of products and offer different policies to different clients. This approach is in any event incompatible with block rating.
34. The level of premium is not generally … predicated by or related to the amount of damages. It is set by reference to the risk to the insurer and his exposure to costs and disbursements in a failed case.
35. In setting a premium ATE insurers adopt two different approaches. They either adopt a single fixed premium that applies throughout the case whenever it is concluded, or a staged, or stepped, premium (as in this case), where the amount payable increases as the case progresses. Although fast track cases can be insured by single fixed premiums, most providers require multi-track cases to be separately rated."
"43. In the present case the figures passed to the senior underwriter were:
(i) Claimant's disbursements estimated at £2,000;
(ii) Opponent's profit costs estimated at £3,000;
(iii) Opponent's disbursements estimated at £1,500;
(iv) Total EML £6,500.
44. The underwriter is then required to assess the risk and to apply a percentage in order to calculate the premium. In this case liability had been denied and there was no Part 36 offer. The prospects of success had been assessed by case handlers as "acceptable", which in effect meant 51%. Mr Bellamy would not expect prospects of success to be rated much higher than this in a case about to go to trial where liability was still denied. Based on that information the underwriter applied a rate of 54% to the EML, producing a third stage premium of £3,510 plus IPT. The insurers expect to lose about half the cases which go to trial. Defendant insurers will therefore be called upon to pay the Stage Three premium in about 2½% of all cases."
"96. This is the first occasion on which the reasonableness of an ATE premium has been considered authoritatively by this court since its landmark decisions in Callery v Gray (No 1) [2001] EWCA Civ 1117; [2001] 1 WLR 2113 and Callery v Gray (No 2) [2001] EWCA Civ 1246; [2001] 1 WLR 2112. In those two judgments the court was principally concerned to decide whether an ATE premium was reasonable when ATE cover was taken out by a claimant before the first letter of claim was made, and when the defendant's reaction to the claim was still unknown. On the present appeal, three main issues arise for decision:
(i) What is the proper approach to proportionality in a small personal injury case where the ATE premium may appear large in comparison with the amount of damages reasonably claimed?
(ii) What is the proper approach to evidence of reasonableness of the choice and of the amount of the ATE premium in such cases?
(iii) Are both staged (or stepped) premiums and single premiums for ATE insurance legitimate for the purposes of the recoverability of an ATE premium by a successful claimant, and is it reasonable that such premiums should be wholly or partially block-rated?"
"109. In the present case the total EML of £6,500 compared favourably with the actual outturn of £6,875 revealed to the deputy district judge. Given the defendants' determination to go to trial, the handler's assessment of the risk at no greater than 51% was not unreasonable, particularly as DAS's experience was to the effect that more slipping and tripping cases taken to trial were lost than won. And on these figures it is impossible to say that a total premium of £4,680 was unreasonable. Put quite simply, if in two cases insurers face a 50% risk of having to pay out £6,500 on one of them, it is reasonable for them to charge a premium of £6,500 (not allowing for overheads or profit) on each. On the one they win, they will be able to get their premium paid by the defendant, and this will recompense for them having to pay out £6,500 on the one they lose.
110. On these figures it is quite impossible to say that a total premium of £4,860 was unreasonable. Indeed, it was not fixed at a sufficiently high level to reflect the risk and to provide a contribution to the insurer's reasonable overheads and profit."
"116. During the course of argument it was accepted on all sides that a party who has an ATE insurance policy incorporating two or more staged premiums should inform its opponent that the policy is staged, and should set out accurately the trigger moments at which the second or later stages will be reached. This obligation should be undertaken in addition to the obligations set out in CPR 44.15(1) and in paras 19.1(1) and 19.4 of the Costs Practice Direction. If this is done, the opponent has been given fair notice of the staging, and unless there are features of the case that are out of the ordinary, his liability to pay at the second or third stage a higher premium than he would have had to pay if the claim had been settled at the first stage should not prove to be a contentious issue.
Evidence justifying the ATE premium claimed
117. If an issue arises about the size of a second or third stage premium, it will ordinarily be sufficient for a claimant's solicitor to write a brief note for the purposes of the costs assessment explaining how he came to choose the particular ATE product for his client, and the basis on which the premium is rated – whether block rated or individually rated. District judges and costs judges do not, as Lord Hoffmann observed in Callery v Gray (Nos 1 and 2) [2002] UKHL 28 at [44]; [2002] 1 WLR 2000, have the expertise to judge the reasonableness of a premium except in very broad brush terms, and the viability of the ATE market will be imperilled if they regard themselves (without the assistance of expert evidence) as better qualified than the underwriter to rate the financial risk the insurer faces. Although the claimant very often does not have to pay the premium himself, this does not mean that there are no competitive or other pressures at all in the market. As the evidence before this court shows, it is not in an insurer's interest to fix a premium at a level which will attract frequent challenges."
"15. Mr Smith sets out the formula used for calculating the premium:
• an exposure multiplicand is calculated, being the sum of own disbursements and opponent's costs (subject to any limit of indemnity on the former);
• a risk multiplier is applied to the exposure multiplicand;
• a basic risk multiplier is ascertained in the same way as a success fee is ascertained, namely by dividing the chance of losing by the chance of winning;
• this basic figure therefore represents the pure "burning cost" of the insurance (that is the "break even" cost disregarding the need for the underwriter to fund its business overheads and make a profit);
• the basic figure is then adjusted to include an allowance for overheads, marketing and brokerage costs and profit;
• this provides the overall risk multiplier;
• the overall risk multiplier is applied to the exposure multiplicand, to derive the net premium;
• insurance premium tax is then applied to produce the overall figure.
16. Mr Smith says that this method of calculating the risk multiplier was approved by the Court of Appeal in Rogers v Merthyr Tydfil CBC ..."
"No criticism is made [by the defendants] of the actual mechanism used by First Assist in order to calculate the premium, save that it is too high."
"141. Fourthly, the defendants say that the premium is startlingly high. It may appear so to many people (and indeed the Judge said that there was "no denying that the premium claimed in this case is extremely high"), but, as the Judge said, there was no "expert evidence of policies providing similar cover available on the market at lower premiums" and "no criticism is made of the actual mechanism used by First Assist in order to calculate the premium". In addition, there was cogent evidence that the 15% uplift was reasonable."
"15. One can draw all this together:
(a) In relation to CFAs and ATE Insurance, the basic costs rules and practice about reasonableness and proportionality apply. Thus, to the extent that the mark-up or uplift under the CFA or the premium for the ATE Insurance is unreasonable or disproportionate, it should be disallowed, at least on a standard assessment.
(b) A CFA percentage increase will not be reduced simply on the ground that, when added to base costs which are reasonable and (where relevant proportionate), the total appears disproportionate.
(c) A primary factor in considering the reasonableness of the percentage increase must be the prospects of the claimant succeeding on its claim. This is to be judged primarily as at the date that the CFA is entered into. The greater the prospects of success, the lower the reasonable and proportionate percentage will be. It is difficult to be prescriptive about this however and there is no magic sliding scale. Where the chances of success, judged objectively at the time when the CFA is entered into, are about even or less, the greater the justification will be for a 100% mark-up. Where the chances of success are great, there will almost invariably be a strong feeling that the CFA mark-up should be significantly discounted. Where the claimant was as good as bound to win, no mark-up may be allowed.
(d) Similar considerations apply to the ATE Insurance. It must be a reasonable presumption that premiums are linked to an assessment of risks and the prospects of success in the litigation. The premium which can be allowed on a costs assessment can be adjusted downwards to reflect the fact that at the time when the insurance was entered into the prospects of success were good or high.
…"
"20. As for the ATE Insurance, on its face the premium was very high for a case which at the time it was arranged … Redwing was likely to be the substantial winner. A premium of £8,480 for cover of £20,000 appears substantially excessive, judged at that time.
21. As indicated to the parties at the conclusion for the costs hearing, I had and do form the view that Redwing should have 20% of the CFA uplift and of the ATE Insurance premium. The reasons are as follows:
…
(b) In relation to the ATE Insurance premium, there being no presumption that it was reasonable and bearing in mind that this is a summary assessment of costs on a standard basis, whilst one can understand why a claimant might well want the safety net of such insurance, the risk of losing, judged at the time when it was entered into, was sufficiently low to undermine the reasonableness of imposing anything near 100% of it on the paying party in this case. In the absence of any evidence from the Claimant as to the reasonableness of the premium but without deciding that as such the premium is itself unreasonable, I have formed the view that it would only be reasonable to make Mr Wishart pay 20% of the premium. I must and do presume that a wholly unrealistic assessment of risk was made to justify the imposition of a premium of some 42% of the insured amount. I have a very real doubt that anything more is reasonable."
"The Defendant is aware that ATE insurance policies carry with them numerous onerous exclusions and limitations which can prevent the insured making a claim."
CONCLUSION