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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 >> Lord Chancellor v Lam & Meerbux Solicitors (Re Criminal Legal Aid (Remuneration) Regulations 2013) [2023] EWHC 1186 (KB) (23 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/1186.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1186 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
On Appeal from Master Whalan, Costs Judge in the matter of the Criminal Legal Aid (Remuneration) Regulations 2013
On Appeal from the Senior Courts Costs Office T20200236 at Woolwich Crown Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MASTER LEONARD SITTING AS A COSTS ASSESSOR
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The Lord Chancellor |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Lam & Meerbux Solicitors |
Respondent |
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Jack Holborn (instructed by Lam & Meerabux Sols) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 26 April 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cotter :
Facts
"Claims for fees by litigators in proceedings in the Crown Court must be made and determined in accordance with the provisions of Schedule 2 to these Regulations."
Schedule 2 sets out the scheme by which a graduated fee is calculated.
(a) NFE 7 was uploaded to section J (G). There were three documents at 0072, 0073 and 0074 comprising (as per the DCS counting of the print preview PDFs), 603 pages, 1549 pages and 820 pages respectively. These documents were as assessed by the officer as containing 145 pages, 366 pages and 248 pages material evidence and the remaining pages were either entirely blank or almost blank.
(b) NFE 8 was uploaded to section J (H). This was a 515 page document which the determining officer assessed as containing 217 pages of material evidence.
(c) NFE 10 was uploaded to section J (J). This was a 56 page document with the determining officer assessed containing 14 pages of material evidence.
"…When making an assessment of the amount of electronically served material to be included within the PPE the determining officer is exercising discretion under regulation 1(5)."
And
"The difficulty in this case is that the Excel spreadsheets…Have been saved as PDF in the print preview state to allow them to be uploaded to the DCS. This is not the same as being presented in the PDF format in the usual way and only serves to remove the functionality of Excel and renders the spreadsheet unworkable. This inevitably creates a significant amount of blank pages and space between the data which artificially increases the page count.
The determining officer does not accept that the litigator would have considered the data in this state and would likely have used the functionality that Excel offers such as being able to use the quick search etc. As such the determining officer believes the above allowance to be a reasonable representation of how many pages actually encompass the amount for data within the spreadsheet, taking into account the vast quantity of blank pages/space and the sporadic data littered throughout.
…However the relevant question is not whether PDF or Excel is the best format in which to work. The question is whether PDF or Excel gives the most realistic and representative page count for the download data which is identical in both formats save for some minor presentational differences.
I do not consider the method in which the information is manipulated and the method by which the litigator is to be remunerated (do not) have to be based on the same format document. Fundamentally, the extent of the data is the same in whichever format it is presented. It is incontrovertible the nearest equivalent to a paper document is the PDF and it should be the one which is used for the purposes of PPE. The disparity in page count simply demonstrates the unsatisfactory nature of using Excel spreadsheet print preview as a method of determining the page count. In that context an important factor to take into account the calculation of fees by reference to a PPE count dates from the time when all evidence was served on paper, and that the 2013 regulations, like their predecessors, are designed to make similar provision for documents served electronically. The PDF format is designed to mimic presentation on paper. Excel is not, and can offer different page counts depending upon the way in which the information in that format is managed, used or presented. 50 pages on legible data on paper will, if reproduced in PDF format, remain 50 pages of legible data with much the same appearance. In Excel format, depending on how the same data is managed or presented, the page count could run into hundreds.
There is no precise way to quantify an Excel document by reference to a page. Pages generated by the use of the print preview function will oftentimes split multiple rows of data over several hundred nonsequential pages. The material is placed into print preview will bear no resemblance to what the user will have seen on the screen and will often contain pages with little or no data on them.
As set out in paragraph 11 of R-v-Jalibaghodelehzi [2014] 4 Costs LR 781 (cited with approval by Holroyde J in Lord Chancellor-v-SVS Solicitors [2017] EWHC 1045, the intention of the 2013 regulations is that material should be included within the PPE work requires a similar degree of consideration to evidence served in paper. By implication the format used to quantify the PPE should also be that which most closely approximates a page of paper evidence."
Decision
"The discretionary power of the DO to include to exclude (sic) datum from the PPE count at paragraph 1 (5) of schedule 2 is, as Holroyde J stated an important and valuable control mechanism which ensures of public funds are not expended inappropriately.
This function, it seems to me, is carried out properly by a (sometimes broad) consideration of the substantive relevance and importance of the electronic data to the prosecution's case. I do not see that this function extends to an (often ad hoc) assessment of whether a page is technically "blank" or constitutes a "duplicate" of another page.
Varied use of the Excel and/or PDF format, in circumstances where material is often converted from the former to the latter, does not lend itself easily to an accurate assessment of blank pages. The process is never blindingly obvious, as was submitted by the respondent's advocate in R-v-Everett (ibid), and it almost invariably produces contradictory conclusions, notwithstanding the amount of time and effort expended on the process. This is illustrated vividly in this case, were Mr Orde's calculations differ markedly from those of the determining officer.
As such, the issue is whether, when substantive relevance is conceded, the PPE count should be based on the total recorded formally by the prosecution in the DCS system, or whether it should be subject to further reduction on the basis of an analysis of blank and/or duplicate pages, a process which seems to me to be invariably inconsistent and subject to variation or dispute, notwithstanding the time expended on the process.
It is quite clear to me as the court has far consistently in Jankis, Dafallah and Everett (ibid), the preferable course is for the PPE count to rely on the total recorded in the DCS system. The prosecution ultimately control the upload of digital data to this system and can edit out any pages, blank, duplicate or otherwise, if they consider it reasonable and proportionate to do so.
The DO still performs the core function, the important safeguard of assessment by reference to relevance and substantive importance to the prosecution case, so the function 1(5) is no way compromised by this approach.
Again, however, where substantive relevance is either conceded or assessed by this criteria, so that all digital datum is considered relevant for inclusion in the PPE count, there should not be a further deduction for what the DO considers to be either "blank" or "duplicate" pages
To entertain this process would be to invite repeated streams of inconsistency and dispute in cases assessed under the LGFS. It is in no way unreasonable or unjust to adopt the formal page count in the DCS system for the purpose of counting the PPE in LGFS claims."
Grounds of Appeal
(i) Ground One
The costs Judge erred in not correctly applying the statutory definition of "PPE" contained in paragraph 1 of schedule two of the 2013 Regulations. Had the Judge correctly applied the statutory definition he would have concluded the balance of the pages claimed on appeal by the Respondent were not "PPE".
(a) Electronic evidence is not automatically included in the PPE count unless the determining officer considers it appropriate to do so, taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances.
(b) Electronic evidence is generally only included in the PPE count if the evidence is important in the case and requires the same degree of consideration is "conventionally served evidence".
(c) Blank pages with no information on them do not require any close consideration so large quantities of obviously blank pages should not be included in the PPE account. Instead, time spent reviewing those black pages could be the subject of a "special preparation claim" based on time actually spent.
(ii) Ground Two
The costs Judge erred in failing to recognise electronic material uploaded to the DCS is electronic evidence which is caught by the statutory definition, and it follows that this material is not PPE unless it is assessed and included in the count by an exercise of discretion based on an assessment of the material.
(iii) Ground Three
The costs Judge failed to take proper account of the determining officer's statutory duty under paragraph 1 (5) of schedule 2 of the 2013 Regulations to assess the PPE account, and in particular by concluding the page count recorded on the DCS in no way compromises the statutory discretion to assess electronic evidence.
Respondent's submissions
"this approach is unfair and in error and sits comfortably with the general approach to remunerate pages."
"26. In relation to the litigator scheme, the precise number of pages is required notwithstanding the difficulty that that entails as indicated above. Indeed, things are made more complicated by the fact that the determining officer has attempted to manipulate the pages on the spreadsheet so as to exclude the blank or almost blank pages which inevitably arise from a print preview calculation. The amount of manipulation is a massive degree and I do not criticise the determining officer for attempting to reach an appropriate figure based on the spreadsheet. I do not think attempting to turn it into a PDF tends to be a successful method since it often simply encapsulates many blank pages as part of the PDF.
27. However, I would caution determining officers against being too rigorous in removing blank columns since, as Mr McCarthy pointed out, where paper PPE or PDF PPE is concerned, not every page is full of text in any event. This problem is highlighted by the determining officer's redetermination of the Huawei phone in the litigator's claim. It is not clear to me at all how numbers of pages which were allowed on the original redetermination have been reduced by significant percentages on the second determination of how that difference arose. I think Mr McCarthy was entirely justified in querying how that could be so."
Mr McCarthy stated
"In the circumstances of this case and in the absence of any proper explanation for the basis of adjustment carried out by the DO on the data had been removed and why, the proper approach is to start with the pagination as it appears on the CDCS. Taking that approach sits comfortably with a move towards a CDCS based evidence platform and remunerated for work done on the material served. The format in which it appears is by the page, as with all other exhibits and statements. Applying that rationale the LAA print out shows the more appropriate pagination being that claimed at 9,756 pages. That is the third basis upon which to remunerate in this case."
Analysis
"(2) For the purposes of this Schedule, the number of pages of prosecution evidence served on the court must be determined in accordance with sub-paragraphs (3) to (5).
(3) The number of pages of prosecution evidence includes all —
(a) witness statements;
(b) documentary and pictorial exhibits;
(c) records of interviews with the assisted person; and
(d) records of interviews with other defendants,
Which form part of the committal or served prosecution documents or which are included in any notice of additional evidence.
(4) Subject to sub-paragraph (5), a document served by the prosecution in electronic form is included in the number of pages of prosecution evidence.
(5) A documentary or pictorial exhibit which —
(a)has been served by the prosecution in electronic form; and
(b)has never existed in paper form,
is not included within the number of pages of prosecution evidence unless the appropriate officer decides that it would be appropriate to include it in the pages of prosecution evidence taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances."
"Fees for special preparation
20. — (1) This paragraph applies in any case on indictment in the Crown Court —
(a) where a documentary or pictorial exhibit is served by the prosecution in electronic form and—
(i) the exhibit has never existed in paper form; and
(ii) the appropriate officer does not consider it appropriate to include the exhibit in the pages of prosecution evidence; or
(b) in respect of which a fee is payable under Part 2 (other than paragraph 7), where the number of pages of prosecution evidence, as so defined, exceeds 10,000,
and the appropriate officer considers it reasonable to make a payment in excess of the fee payable under Part 2.
(2) Where this paragraph applies, a special preparation fee may be paid, in addition to the fee payable under Part 2.
(3) The amount of the special preparation fee must be calculated from the number of hours which the appropriate officer considers reasonable—
….
(4) A litigator claiming a special preparation fee must supply such information and documents as may be required by the appropriate officer in support of the claim.
(5) In determining a claim under this paragraph, the appropriate officer must take into account all the relevant circumstances of the case."
"Redetermination of fees by appropriate officer
28.— (1) Where—
…
(c) a litigator is dissatisfied with—
(i) the calculation by the appropriate officer of the fee payable to the litigator in accordance with Schedule 2; or
…
the advocate, instructed advocate or litigator, as the case may be, may apply to the appropriate officer to redetermine those fees, to review that decision or to reclassify the offence, as appropriate.
…
(6) The applicant must supply such further information and documents as the appropriate officer may require.
(7) The appropriate officer must, in the light of the objections made by the applicant or on behalf of the applicant—
(a) redetermine the fees, whether by way of confirmation, or increase or decrease in the amount previously determined;
..
as the case may be, and must notify the applicant of his decision.
(8) Where the applicant so requests, the appropriate officer must give reasons in writing for the appropriate officer's decision.
Appeals to a Costs Judge
"29.—(1) Where the appropriate officer has given his reasons for his decision under regulation 28 (8), a representative who is dissatisfied with that decision may appeal to a Costs Judge.
…
(11) The Costs Judge may consult the trial judge or the appropriate officer and may require the appellant to provide any further information which the Costs Judge requires for the purpose of the appeal and, unless the Costs Judge otherwise directs, no further evidence may be received on the hearing of the appeal and no ground of objection may be raised which was not raised under regulation.
(12) The Costs Judge has the same powers as the appropriate officer under these Regulations and, in the exercise of such powers, may alter the redetermination of the appropriate officer in respect of any sum allowed, whether by increasing or decreasing it, as the Costs Judge thinks fit."
Appeals to the High Court
"30.
(5) Where the Lord Chancellor is dissatisfied with the decision of a Costs Judge on an appeal under regulation 29 , the Lord Chancellor may, if no appeal has been made by an appellant under paragraph (3), appeal to the High Court against that decision, and the appellant must be a respondent to the appeal.
..
(8) The judge has the same powers as the appropriate officer and a Costs Judge under these Regulations and may reverse, affirm or amend the decision appealed against or make such other order as the judge thinks fit."
Case law
"While that is enough to decide this appeal in the solicitors' favour, I would add this, as appeals on this issue are now numerous. The Funding Order requires the Agency to consider whether it is appropriate to include evidence which has only ever existed electronically "taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances". Had it been intended to limit those circumstances only to the issue of whether the evidence would previously have been served in paper format, the Funding Order could easily so have provided. It seems to me that the more obvious intention of the Funding Order is that documents which are served electronically and have never existed in paper form should be treated as pages of prosecution evidence if they require a similar degree of consideration to evidence served on paper. So in a case where, for example, thousands of pages of raw telephone data have been served and the task of the defence lawyers is simply to see whether their client's mobile phone number appears anywhere (a task more easily done by electronic search), it would be difficult to conclude that the pages should be treated as part of the page count. Where, however, the evidence served electronically is an important part of the prosecution case, it would be difficult to conclude that the pages should not be treated as part of the page count."
"(ix) If an exhibit is served, but in electronic form and in circumstances which come within paragraph 1(5) of Schedule 2, the determining officer (or, on appeal, the costs judge) will have a discretion as to whether he or she considers it appropriate to include it in the PPE. As I have indicated above, the LAA's Crown Court Fee Guidance explains the factors which should be considered. This is an important and valuable control mechanism which ensures that public funds are not expended inappropriately."
"It seems to me that in these circumstances there is no reason why a determining officer (or costs Judge on appeal) should not take a broad approach and conclude that as only a proportion of the images may be of real significance to the case, only that proportion should be included in the page count. Inevitably that will be nothing more than "rough justice" in the sense of being compounded of much sensible approximation; per Russell LJ in Re Eastwood [1974] 3 WLR 454 at 458. But that is the nature of the assessment of costs."
"in this particular case the exercise of discretion is not easy. On the one hand the prosecution chose to serve this evidence as an exhibit…it is not difficult to conclude that the solicitors will have wished to look for photographs indicating that use. On the other hand it is unlikely that the vast majority of photographs will have been relevant to the task. It would seem unlikely that the solicitors will have looked in detail at each of the 20,608 images served on disc. Most will have required a glance or less."
In my view the Judge was referring to images within an exhibit. He also stated at para 19:
"doing the best that I can it seems to me that it would be appropriate to allow no more than 1000 pages of images. That is approximately 5% of the total" (underlining added)
"30. In my judgment it is the failure to understand what is the true nature of digital evidence, that has led judges to go down the route they have done in ordering the formal service as part of the prosecution case of thousands of "pages" that in reality do not exist and which will never be read. I myself recall, while still at the bar, and when download evidence first began to be served, it was served in printed form on sheets of paper, although in nothing like the volume now involved. Litigators and advocates protested that this was unmanageable and asked for it to be served on Excel spreadsheets so that it could be searched. In no time at all that became the normal practice."
And
"52. At para 5 there are recited the provisions of Schedule 2 of the Criminal Legal Aid (Remuneration) Regulations 2013 and their reference in para 1(5) to documentary or pictorial exhibits which have been served in electronic form but have never existed in paper form. They are not included within the number of PPE unless the appropriate officer decides that it would be appropriate to include it in the PPE taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances. This is clearly critical because it does give to the determining officer ("DO" hereafter) a discretion to count such material as PPE where appropriate to do so. Of course, that is dependent upon it having been served.
53. At para 8 reference is made to the Legal Aid Authority ("LAA" hereafter) Crown Court Fee Guidance and how DOs should approach the matter. They will take into account whether the document would have been printed by the prosecution served in paper form prior to 1 April 2012. If so, then it will be counted as PPE. If the DO is unable to make that assessment, they will take into account "any other relevant circumstances" such as the importance of the evidence to the case, the amount and nature of the work that was required to be done and by whom, and the extent to which the electronic evidence featured in the case against the defendant. That is clearly the correct approach as it enables the DO to ensure that those who have done necessary work will be rewarded. It is certainly not intended to grant a substantial golden bonus to all litigators and advocates simply because there was a mass of electronic data in a case."
"they do not need to consider in detail evidence which is obviously not relevant. The argument that all of the evidence served on a phone download should be included because the solicitor will not know whether it is relevant until it has been viewed, is not particularly helpful one. An experienced solicitor will know whether particular classes of data are likely to be relevant. In the vast majority of cases the solicitor will know the technical information relating to the operation the phone is unlikely to be relevant and will spend no time looking at it."
"18….It has been recorded in many costs judge decisions that the conversion of data on excel spreadsheets into printable pages is fraught with difficulty.
…
"20. The issue is whether it is appropriate for the determining officer to reduce the PPE by the number of blank pages that he found. It is not a course of action that, it seems to me, is one that should be widely adopted. The repeated phrase that the calculation of the graduated scheme is meant to be mechanistic individual PDF's being scrutinised page by page. I can understand why the determining officer took that approach in this case having decided that the PDF had been created from an Excel spreadsheet which is known for producing such blank pages. It seems to me to be an approach that could only be adopted in extremis.
21.Mr McCarthy challenged the appropriateness of the determining officer's approach given that it was impossible for solicitors to challenge which pages have been disallowed in the absence of any information. I think there is a good deal of force in Mr McCarthy's point albeit that it is one which, as a matter of practicality, would be difficult to deal with in any proportionate fashion.
22. Ultimately, I have concluded that I should not take the PDF as my starting point, although the determining officer had little choice but to use that document. It is a document (whoever created it) which would appear to be unsatisfactory for the purpose of calculating PPE. The difficulty in challenging the subsequent manipulation of that document by determining officer only highlights that this is not satisfactory.
23. I prefer to take the view that the document on the DCS is the one which ought to be contemplated, at least in this case. The move towards evidence being produced on the DCS is clear and if there is a reliable page count on that platform, it seems to me to be inevitable that that is the one on which reliance will be placed in due course. Whilst there are practical difficulties in The determining officer not being able to see that document, for the purposes of this case alone, I am prepared to accept Mr McCarthy's information of the page count on the DCS that it contains few if any blank pages as will be expected from the print preview to excel document." (underlining added)
"13...that documents produced in excel format often provoke difficulties in establishing an accurate PPE count for the purposes of the LGFS. It is often necessary, on the correct application of the discretion at regulation 1(5) of paragraph one of schedule 2 to the 2013 regulations and in order to exercise the "valuable control mechanism" cited by Mr Justice Holroyde in SVS Solicitors to look critically at the substantive content of a disputed electronic document in order to arrive at an accurate page count."
I respectfully agree. The Master then went on, to decide on "the particular facts of the case", that he accepted the submission that the page count on DCS was
"...not simply a product of the print preview function but rather a page count formally recorded in the DCS."
Having reached this conclusion he continued:
"it seems to me, however, that when exercising the formal (often quite technical) requirements of the LGFS, the only fair and equitable way of reaching a total PPE count -and this regard the inclusion exhibit of undoubted general relevance-is to adopt the count recorded in the DCS."
So whilst at first blush this last comment would appear to support the view that the count on DCS should be taken as the page count, consideration of the full report shows that the Master viewed the page count, on the facts of that case, as not "simply a product of having activated the print preview function". In the present case the sole document uploaded onto the DCS resulted from activation of the print preview function.
"21. In my view Mr. Orde is right to say that there is a burden on the Appellant when seeking to assert that a higher assessment should be made, to establish that the material was relevant and needed to be considered closely. The Appellant was instructed in the criminal proceedings and will know what issues arose. The Appellant will know what evidence was relied upon by the prosecution and what evidence amongst the material served was relevant. The difficulty with assessing the pages of electronic material is that it tends to include a large amount of irrelevant material. That was the case here. The premise of the claim to include the material as PPE is that it is material that required some consideration as opposed to being material that only required a glance. In the absence of Mr. Mackrell taking me to any further relevant material I think I am entitled to assume that if there was a substantial amount of any further material which was relevant and had not been included in the allowance for 'paper' PPE then he would have been able to identify it (not least because one might assume that it was material specifically flagged up and noted as relevant when the solicitors considered it following service).
22. In any event having looked at the material and indeed sampled sections of it, I am not satisfied that I should increase the allowance made in respect of this material provided to me. The Determining Officer's allowance appears to come within the bounds of a reasonable and sensible approximation even accepting that that there are probably some other images which are or may be relevant and were not caught by those which Mr. Mackrell specifically took me to."
"…in common with all telephone download reports that I have seen, the download report in this case contains a great deal of data which is patently of no evidential value. Where, as in this case, the report is clearly divided into separate categories such as contact, messaging and image data, the appropriate approach is first to identify those categories of data that merit inclusion within the PPE count (so, in this case, excluding for example the "Device/Installed Apps" section) and second, in respect of each of those categories of data, to identify an appropriate PPE count on the facts of the case."
(a) A substantial amount of blank pages may arise as a result of formatting, and
(b) Such pages do not contain any relevant evidence which required consideration.
However I do not accept that a determining officer (or Costs Judge) must adopt the rigid two staged approach he suggests is mandated by paragraph 1(5). Rather the discretion is a broad one, reflecting the varied nature of electronic evidence, and there is nothing to prevent the approach taken by the determining officer in this case. The lodestar of the assessment of electronic evidence is the aim to ensure that remuneration is appropriate and to avoid either underpayment, when consideration has been given to its content, or overpayment, through "golden bonuses", simply because there is a large volume of such evidence, even though it has not been considered. The fact that either would result from taking a particular figure for pages is an obviously relevant circumstance which not only could, but should, be taken into account.
Conclusion