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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Ali v Nazma & Ors [2020] EWHC 3195 (Fam) (27 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/3195.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3195 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Mohammed Sarfraz Ali |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Anisha Taj Nazma Taj Sabrina Taj Zarah Taj |
Respondents |
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Mr Thomas Dumont QC (instructed by Ashfords LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 4 December 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice MacDonald:
INTRODUCTION
SUBMISSIONS
i) The amount for attendance on clients is excessive in circumstances where the respondents to the appeal were not required to put in further evidence. In the circumstances, 13.6 hours liaising with their clients is reasonable for the purposes of preparing the appeal and merits a reduction £3,888 to £2,500, i.e. a reduction of £1,388.
ii) The amount of time claimed for attendance on opponents of 10 hours is excessive in circumstances where the appellant's solicitors spent 2.5 hours in relation to such correspondence. This merits a reduction from £1,697 to £750, i.e. a reduction of £940.
iii) The amount of time claimed on attendances on others of 7.5 hours is excessive given that preparing the brief was been charged for separately, where the majority relates to time spent by a partner and where the Appellant's solicitors spent 3.5 hours on this element. This merits a reduction by half from £2,032 to £1,016, i.e. a reduction of £1,016.
iv) The amount of time claimed for attendance on documents is excessive in circumstances where the perusal of the appeal summons, grounds of appeal, and appellant's first Skeleton Argument should have taken no more than 30 minutes, not 3 hours by reference to the appellant's solicitors spending 30 minutes reviewing Mr Dumont's Skeleton Argument. This merits a reduction from £840 to £300, i.e. a reduction of £540.
v) The amount of time claimed for the preparation of leading counsel's brief of 13 hours by three fee earners is grossly excessive and unreasonable as demonstrated by the fact it is said to have cost £2,392 to prepare a brief for which leading counsel's fees were £6,000 or 40% of the brief fee. This merits a reduction to £1,200 (equivalent to four partner hours, i.e. a reduction of £1,192.
vi) The time claimed of 4.5 hours for a partner to prepare a bundle index is likewise grossly excessive and in any event unnecessary where it was not the respondents' appeal. The appellant's solicitors simply needed to review the index and make suggested changes, which an associate could have completed. This merits a reduction on the fees from £1,757 to £530, i.e. a reduction of £1,227.
vii) The time claimed of 4.5 hours to prepare and update their Statement of Costs is excessive in circumstances where it took the appellant's solicitor 1 hour. This merits a reduction from £889, to £300, i.e. a reduction of £589.
i) The costs of the appeal below were "effectively" awarded on an indemnity basis given that the entire costs claimed were awarded.
ii) The executor's obligation to account is referred to in the substantive judgment of the court as being of "cardinal importance".
iii) The Administration of Estates Act 1925 s. 25(b) expressly requires an executor to render and inventory and account when required to do so by the court.
iv) The appellant swore, when he applied for a grant of probate, that he would produce an account of the Estate when required to do so by the court.
v) The appellant first refused to produce an account, and then promised an account, but failed to produce it within the time promised.
vi) When the appellant did produce an account, it was hopelessly inadequate. Had the account that he rendered been adequate, no order and no appeal would have been necessary.
vii) The court, with all this information before it, required him to produce an account by order dated 7 August 2019.
viii) The appellant should then have accepted his statutory obligation, which he had sworn to perform.
ix) Instead the appellant chose to put his beneficiaries, on whose behalf he was administering the Estate, to the trouble, delay and expense of an appeal.
x) The appellant's appeal was in essence an appeal on a technicality, not on the merits, based on the procedure which resulted in the order made against him. Within this context, in circumstances where the appeal was by way of re-hearing, there was no prospect of any technical deficiency in the court proceedings below, resulting in the appellant not rendering an account.
"The Respondent beneficiaries, the Deceased's widow and three children from his first marriage, have now been without a proper understanding of the extent of and the administration of their inheritance for over a decade. It would be unconscionable for this situation to pertain any longer. It is high time that the Appellant discharged his cardinal duty to provide when called upon an inventory of the estate and an account of his administration of that estate."
i) The attendance on clients is not excessive where there are four clients who make up two parts of the family, the Deceased's widow, and her step-children from an earlier marriage. Each side needed to be kept informed, and have matters explained to them within the context of an appeal that was a convoluted process, with a large amount of evidence submitted by the appellant, including at four witness statements and in which the appellant chose to put in issue the validity of the Will he had proved. The evidence needed to be reviewed with the clients, and instructions needed to be taken on the wide-ranging allegations raised by the appellant in case any further evidence should be necessary. The time that was needed to review and explain matters of this kind to two groups of lay clients should not be underestimated and no reduction should be made.
ii) The time for attendance on opponents is not excessive. The time spent was in fact 7 hours, has been logged and reflects the letters and emails which the respondents' solicitors had to write to the appellant's solicitors. There is no suggestion that the correspondence has been other than appropriate in the circumstances. By using Grade C and D fee-earners the fees were kept down. No reduction should be made.
iii) The time spent on attendance of others is not excessive. Correspondence with counsel was necessarily full. The solicitors took on a greater proportion of the groundwork than counsel, as is shown by the ratio of counsel's fees in the bill. Because the appellant's solicitors had not agreed the hearing bundle with the respondents' solicitors, substantial correspondence was necessary with the court. No reduction should be made.
iv) The amount of time spent on attendance on documents is not excessive. The respondents' solicitors actually worked on the papers received, rather than simply reading them. The grounds of appeal and first skeleton required careful consideration, rather than simply being forwarded to counsel for his more expensive time to be spent unnecessarily. Two Skeleton Arguments were filed, notwithstanding no direction for a second Skeleton Argument, totalling 29 pages.
v) The time spent on drafting leading counsel's brief was not excessive. A fully-prepared brief resulted in a saving of counsel's time in preparation, so that the respondents' counsel only charged £6000 whereas the (three) counsel instructed for the Appellant at various stages charged £33,000. No reduction should be made.
vi) The respondents were required to supply their own index for the appeal hearing and that was done on the advice of leading counsel. The appellant's evidence was submitted in a haphazard and ill-prepared fashion. It contained very little of the matter before the Registrar, nor the crucial correspondence leading up to the application for an inventory and account. No reductions should be made.
vii) The time for preparing the statement of costs was not excessive. The statement of costs was a difficult document to prepare. Care had to be taken to ensure that costs for the underlying dispute with the Appellant as executor and the litigation over the statutory demand for his costs liability should not be included. Within this context however, Mr Dumont recognises that time spent on preparing costs schedules is a particularly sensitive issue and that the respondents' will accept a 15% reduction to £750, i.e. a reduction of £139.
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION