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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> TRX v Southampton Football Club [2022] EWHC 3392 (KB) (25 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2022/3392.html Cite as: [2023] Costs LR 15, [2022] EWHC 3392 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TRX |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHAMPTON FOOTBALL CLUB |
Defendant |
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2nd Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. DX 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR R DUNNE appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE STACEY:
Factual background
The Costs Judge Reasons: first decision
"Provided funding advice - CFA, 20% success fee that includes ATE [a reference to after the event insurance]". (p205)
"I am pleased to confirm the partners of Bolt Burdon Kemp have agreed for us to act for you under terms of business. Once I have received your previous solicitors' file of papers we should then be in a position to act on a no-win, no-fee agreement. I will shortly send out all the paperwork to you which will explain this in detail. If you have any questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to contact me and I can go through this with you." (p206)
"I then explained the claims procedure if, once we have got the file from Hudgell, we believe he has prospects. Firstly, we will obtain any outstanding records such as…" (p211)
"You have advised me you wish to bring a claim against the Defendant, Southampton Football Club, for childhood abuse. I am pleased to accept instructions from you to act on the terms set out in this letter and our current Terms of Business, attached. This letter and our Terms of Business contain important information that we give to all clients when they first instruct us." (p207)
"Bolt Burdon Kemp will act for you on a no-win, no-fee basis." (p208)
"If you win…as long as you stick to your obligations under our agreement, we agree to cap deductions to your compensation at 20%...If you lose…assuming you have stuck to your obligations under our agreement, you will not have to pay anything." (p208)
"Other than private fees, we will tell you about the other ways of funding that might be available.
Theses may include:
a) Conditional fee agreements
b) Much litigation is now conducted on a conditional fee basis. If we are able to offer such a scheme to you its terms will be included in a separate agreement. These Terms of Business will apply in so far as they are not varied by the Conditional Fee Agreement." (p200)
"Delivery of these Terms of Business to you, at any time during the period we are instructed by you, forms part of the contract between us from time to time. Subject to any prior agreement between us these Terms will apply to work undertaken both before and after these terms have been delivered to you. Any dispute or claim arising from our Terms of Business or any other aspect of the contract between us will be determined by the law of England and Wales and considered exclusively by the English and Welsh courts." (p203)
"The client called me back and I confirmed that I have now received a file from Hudgell and I have reviewed this. I said that the next steps are as follows: I will send the CFA and letter to him. ". (p216)
"We [referring to BBK solicitors] are not bound to act on a conditional fee basis until both you and we have signed this agreement." (p224)
"The hourly fee rates set out in the letter I sent to you with our Terms of Business will apply to all work undertaken in the case, including up to and after the time the Conditional Fee Agreement is made." (p236)
"[A]s they set out terms on which I will act for you. In effect, they are the main terms of the contract between us for me to carry out work for you in this matter. The hourly fee rates set out in the letter I sent you with our Terms of Business will apply to all work undertaken in the case, including up to and after the time the Conditional Fee Agreement is made." (p236)
"68. Paragraph 23 says:
"Subject to any prior agreement between us, these terms will apply to work undertaken both before and after these Terms have been delivered to you."
That is said to impose a liability to pay for work on the basis of an hourly rate for the work done, the argument being that, considered with the other sections that I read out, this created or was consistent with a separate private retainer. I do not accept this. The Terms were of a generic nature. To my mind in the context of all the documentation the reference to "prior agreement" could and should, as Mr Dunne argued, be properly interpreted as a reference to an agreement that the parties would enter into a conditional fee agreement once the files had come through from Hudgells and the solicitors had had an opportunity to consider them. That this was the understanding of the parties appears to be supported by the attendance notes. In other words, the Terms of Business were subject to the funding agreement that had been discussed.
"69. Paragraph 13 says:
"Conditional Fee Agreements…..If we are able to offer such a scheme to you, its terms are to be included in a separate agreement. These Terms of Business will apply in so far as they are not varied by the Conditional Fee Agreement."
It seems to me that, taken in its factual context, the Claimant could and would reasonably read this as indicating that the Terms of Business were to be read within (which I think was the word used in his evidence) the context of the conditional fee agreement or, as Mr Dunne put it, complementary to it, in that they would be understood as running alongside it. In other words, supported perhaps by the understanding of the Claimant as I understood it to be – at least on the basis of some of the answers that he gave to Mr Dunne – it seems to me that the Terms of Business were indeed to be read as complementary to the conditional fee agreement and not separate from it. They were not otiose even before the CFA was entered into: there were matters which were potentially relevant in the Terms of Business before entry into the CFA such as the authority that was given to the solicitors."
Second decision under appeal
Third decision under appeal
(1) the receiving party is entitled to the costs of the detailed assessment proceedings except where:
(a) the provisions of any Act, any of these rules or any relevant practice direction provide otherwise; or
(b) the Court makes some other order in relation to all or part of the costs of the detailed assessment proceedings.
(2) [not relevant]…….
(3) In deciding whether to make some other order, the Court must have regard to all the circumstances, including:
(a) the conduct of the parties;
(b) the amount, if any, by which the bill of costs has been reduced; and
(c) whether it was reasonable for a party to claim the costs of a particular item or to dispute that item.
"The difficulties with certification or scarification had somewhat faded into the background by the time we got to the hearing on the indemnity point because of the way that the case was put, so the issue before me was not mis-certification so much as an issue as to the contractual arrangements between the Claimant and his solicitors, the indemnity principle."
"32. I am satisfied that there is a substantial basis for departing from the presumed rule, the presumptive rule in 47.20(1) and that it would be unjust not to do so in this case when considering not just the costs of the funding issues but also matters generally. Indeed it seems to me to be clear that some other order is appropriate: if not in this case, it might be asked, when would it be? Plainly, in most cases a Part 36 offer, or the absence of an effective one, will be determinative. But the question might reasonably be asked, what is the point of r.47.20(3) if the making of a Part 36 offer is the only consideration and that this matter assumes such pre-eminence that no or no substantial weight can be attached to the other factors?
33. I do accept Mr Mallalieu's point nonetheless that the ability to make a Part 36 offer – and I am not making any finding that the Defendants could not have made a Part 36 offer – should be given very substantial weight in determining the issue as to costs. As I think I indicated in the Milbrooke decision it is, in my view, right that I should give substantial weight to the failure on the part of a defendant to make an effective offer.
34. I have difficulty in describing the Claimant as having been successful in this assessment, given the extent of the reduction, the findings that I made and the agreements that have been reached. This is notwithstanding that the offer of the Defendant of £15,000 has been beaten."
The Legal Principles
"The applicable legal principles of contract construction are well-established. When interpreting a written contract, the court's task is to ascertain the objective meaning of the language which the parties have chosen to express their agreement. It does so, having regard to the meaning of the relevant words in their documentary, factual and commercial context. That meaning has to be assessed in the light of:
(i) the natural and ordinary meaning of the clause;
(ii) any other relevant provisions of the contract;
(iii) the overall purpose of the clause and the contract;
(iv) the facts and circumstances known or assumed by the parties at the time that the document was executed; and
(v) commercial common sense; but
(vi) disregarding subjective evidence of any party's intentions."
"….because swathes of the bill had been disallowed as it had been littered with completely unreasonable items…
….Part One of the bill was disallowed completely for want of a retainer before legal aid was granted, the Claimant went to counsel far too often and every e-mail appears to have been charged for."
"Where a defendant is faced with an exorbitant claim which he wishes to defend vigorously but where he is vulnerable to a finding that he is liable for a much smaller amount, there is a clear process provided by CPR Part 36 which he can follow to protect his position. Mr Levey submitted that there was nothing that Mr Gray could have done to stop the juggernaut of GEHC's attack on him. We do not accept that a trial of the complexity of the enquiry hearing was inevitable but, in any event, if Mr Gray had made an early payment into court of the proportion of the management fees and the Klamath Falls settlement monies, he would be in a much stronger position now to dispute his liability to pay GEHC's costs."
"…[The paying party]…did not put itself in the "stronger position" referred to in Global that would have enhanced its prospects of now successfully disputing its liability to pay the Claimant's assessment costs"
"it was trite law that in Part 36 cases a near miss is not good enough, see judgment of Stewart J in JLE v Warrington & Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust… [and the Costs Judge saw] no reason why the position should be different here, where the Claimant had gained a more advantageous result by going to assessment, with the margin of the win not being a matter which the court can take into account." [22]
"25. First, I do not find it persuasive that a paying party who makes no offer at all, should be in a better position than a paying party who does make an offer but one which is just short. That would place a non-offering paying party at an advantage over a paying party who has tried to settle the costs, but whose offer has not been quite enough. It would provide a potential reward for a paying party, who sits back, having deliberately made no offer, to rest secure in the knowledge that a successful challenge can always be advanced later under CPR 47.20(1)(b) if the bill is reduced by a significant amount after a good day in court. In circumstances such as these, Rule CPR 47.20(1)(b) and (3)(b) could simply be argued in every case where the bill has been reduced without an offer made, in disregard of the Court of Appeal's guidance in Global, that a party who is vulnerable for a smaller sum than the amount claimed, should use Part 36 to protect their position. Moreover, what tariff should be used to decide whether enough has come off to reverse CPR 47.20: 25%, 30%, 50%, more? There is simply no guidance upon which to draw.
26. Second, whilst rule 47.20(3)(b) indeed requires the court when considering whether to make a different order, to take into account the amount by which the bill has been reduced, I am puzzled (with one exception) how a circumstance could ever arise in which a paying party who has made an offer to settle which has been short (in addition to those who have deliberately made no offer) could successfully deploy that rule. The exception is where a paying party would have no way of knowing whether there has been fraud or other skulduggery by a receiving party, such as claiming costs where it was known that there had been a failure to comply with the indemnity principle. Such a situation would arise where the receiving party had made a bargain with his solicitor not to be liable for any costs so by operation of the indemnity principle, nothing would be recoverable from the paying party. These would be matters to which only the Costs Judge would be privy, since a retainer letter, which would provide the answer, is a privileged document only available for the court to read upon receipt of the receiving party's papers lodged for assessment under CPR 47.19 PD 3.12. Other than that, I cannot think of a circumstance where a paying party whose without prejudice offers have been too low, could successfully argue that the receiving party should be deprived of the costs of assessment. That is particularly the case here where the SSHD's open offer under PD paragraph 8.3 to CPR 47.9 was also way off the mark, with nil having been offered, a deficiency of over £41,000.
27. Even if I am wrong about that, there are sound explanations here why the costs were reduced substantially. Part One of the bill was disallowed completely for want of a retainer before legal aid was granted, the Claimant went to counsel far too often and every e mail appeared to have been charged for. None of these matters, however, in my judgment, would justify any adjustment under which the SSHD should benefit from a different costs order.
…
33. The conclusion I have reached is that having failed to protect itself by making an effective offer under CPR 36 or by a "without prejudice save as to costs" offer, or through its open offer, the SSHD cannot succeed on a "Let's see by how much the bill has been reduced" argument and then deploy CPR 47.20(1)(b). To permit that would be to discourage the making of offers, and enable paying parties who advance no offers, to be in a better position to argue for a "different order", than those who make offers in a genuine attempt to settle the costs. However, as I have said, I am aware that there is no consistency on the Costs Judges' corridor on this point. For that reason, I consider a definitive view at a higher level would assist parties in understanding where they stand, when they make a Part 36 offer which is too low, or no offer at all, but then argue that they can rely on CPR 47.20(1)(b) to their advantage, depending upon how good a day they have had in court. If asked, I would give permission to appeal and in that eventuality, invite the parties to transfer the case to the High Court so that the appeal is dealt with by a High Court Judge whose decision will be binding."
"In the context of personal injury litigation where the claimant has a strong case on liability, but quantum is inflated, the Defendant's remedy is to make a modest Part 36 offer. If the Defendant fails to make a sufficient Part 36 offer at the first opportunity, it cannot expect to secure costs protection. Different considerations may arise in cases where the claimant is proved to have been dishonest."
"The overall result was that both parties had lost heavily."
Submissions
Analysis and conclusions
First issue: terms governing the contractual relationship prior to the formation of the CFA
Second issue: period between 3 and 17 October 2017
Third issue: Rule 47.20 and the costs order
Conclusions on issue three
"Where the Court makes some other order in relation it all or part of the costs of the detailed assessment proceedings."