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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 >> Stella v Hodge Jones & Allan LLP [2024] EWHC 1704 (SCCO) (02 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2024/1704.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1704 (SCCO) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Mr Guiliano Davide Stella |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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Hodge Jones & Allan LLP |
Defendant |
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Mr Stephen Innes (instructed by TMC Legal Services Ltd) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 19 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Whalan:
(i) Is there a procedural bar to a consideration of the Application in the context of existing Part 8 proceedings?
(ii) Were the invoices delivered by the Defendant to the Claimant interim statute bills, or were they a series of interim invoices delivered as part of a 'Chamberlain' bill which became 'final' with the delivery of the last invoice in November 2021?
(iii) Can the Claimant demonstrate the existence of 'special circumstances' pursuant to s.70(3) of the SA 1974?
(iv) Should the court exercise its discretion to order a detailed assessment of the disputed invoices?
(v) Various ancillary issues, including whether the Claimant is entitled to a 'common law assessment' of the 26 invoices cited in the Application?
Costs on Account
It is normal practise to ask clients to pay sums of money from time to time on account of the charges and expenses which are expected in the following weeks or months. This helps to avoid delay in the progress of the case. …We may request further payments on account for charges and expenses to be incurred if the matter progresses. When we put these payments towards your bill we will send you a receipted bill. We will offset any such payments against your final bill but it is important you understand that your total charges and expenses may be greater than any advance payment.
If for any reason this matter does not proceed to a conclusion we will charge you for the work done and expenses incurred up to the date that our instructions ended.
Billing Arrangements
We will send you interim bills regularly, usually every month, so that you will keep up-to-date with your legal costs. The bills will be for work done by us and the expenses incurred (often called disbursements) such as barristers or doctors' fees. We usually then ask for further money on account of costs.
We will send you a final bill after completion of the work. Payment is due to us within 14 days of us sending you a final bill. ..
There is now no doubt, I venture to think, what the law is in a case such as the present. A solicitor is entitled to select a point of time which he regards as an appropriate point of which to send in a bill. But before he is entitled to require that bill to be treated as a complete self-contained bill of costs to date, he must make it plain to the client either expressly or by necessary implication that that is his purpose of sending in that bill, for that amount at that time. Then of course one looks to see what the client's reaction. If the client's reaction is to pay the bill in its entirety without demure it is not difficult to infer an agreement that the bill is to be treated as a complete self-contained bill of costs to date.
The disputed invoices cited in the Application Notice were paid by the Claimant.
Whether special circumstances exist is essentially a value judgment. It depends on comparing the particular case with the run of the mill case in order to decide whether a detailed assessment in the particular case is justified, and despite the restrictions contained in Section 70(3).
In many ways, a helpful test is to consider whether there is something in the fees claimed by the invoices, or the circumstances in which they were charged, which "calls for an explanation". If they do call for an explanation or further scrutiny, that is a strong indication that there should be an assessment. This is not the time for the explanation to be given and evaluated in detail. That is the purpose of the assessment procedure and the scrutiny it provides.
The current estimate given to you for the completion of your case is £150,000 to £175,000 plus VAT. This estimate is still correct but we will of course continue to review the situation and keep you fully informed if this changes.
This estimate repeated that set out almost a year earlier in correspondence dated 2nd December 2020 (417). It is noted that the estimate referred to 'the completion of your case'. Pursuant to the 34 disputed invoices, the Defendant charged the Claimant a total of £225,697.60 (including VAT), to a point where witness statements, any expert reports, further CCMC/CTR, trial preparation and trial were yet to occur.