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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 >> Boodia & Anor v Slade (t/a Richard Slade And Company) [2023] EWHC 2963 (KB) (21 November 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/2963.html Cite as: [2024] 1 WLR 2084, [2023] EWHC 2963 (KB), [2023] WLR(D) 489, [2024] WLR 2084 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
KINGS BENCH APPEALS
ON APPEAL FROM THE SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
ORDER OF COSTS JUDGE JAMES DATED 22 AUGUST 2023
AND ON AN APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL
AN ORDER OF COSTS JUDGE JAMES DATED 18 MAY 2023
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) JUGMOHAN BOODIA (2) DEORANEE BOODIA |
Claimants and Appellants |
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- and – |
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RICHARD JOHN SLADE (t/a Richard Slade and Company) |
Defendant and Respondent |
____________________
Benjamin Williams KC (instructed by Richard Slade and Company) for the Defendant and Respondent
Hearing date: 4 July 2023
Judgment handed down in draft: 9 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
SECTION NUMBER |
SUBJECT |
PARAGRAPH NUMBER |
I |
Introduction | |
II |
Background | |
III |
The Judgment dated 15 June 2022 | |
IV |
The Judgment dated 18 May 2023 | |
V |
The Issues to be considered in this Judgment | |
VI |
Informed Consent Ground | |
VII |
Erlam and later cases |
|
VIII |
Submissions of the parties as to whether there were implied term as regards informed consent
(a) Submissions for the Appellants (b) Submissions for the Respondent |
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IX |
Discussion
(a) The effect of the express term (b) The implied term contended for by the Appellants (c) The application of the law to the instant case (d) Discussion
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|
X |
The Respondent's Notice | |
XI |
Conclusion | |
XII |
The linked application for permission to appeal on the consumer protection issues
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(a) Introduction (b) The decision on the consumer protection issue (c) Discussion on application for permission to appeal
(d) Decision on the linked application
(e) Grounds 2-4 |
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XIII |
Consequentials hearing |
MR JUSTICE FREEDMAN:
I Introduction
II Background
"Bills are rendered monthly in arrears. Our bills are detailed bills and are final in respect of the period to which they relate, save that disbursements (costs and expenses which we incur on your behalf) are normally billed separately and later than the bill for our fees in respect of the same period."
"Entitlement to Assessment
17. The client may be entitled to have RSC's charges reviewed by the court in accordance with the provisions set out in the Solicitors Act 1974"
"3. The question of whether the retainer permitted the rendering of interim statute bills was an issue before Master James. By para 2 of her judgment, the master recognised that the agreement in the retainer was "somewhat ambiguous between payments on account monthly and [statute] bills monthly". She noted that the retainer referred to a Solicitors Act assessment and a complaints procedure. Master James held that she "would be reluctant to make a finding of a fatal flaw in the retainer". The master held "it does seem to me that the retainer does what it needs to do or has potential to do what it needs to do". The claimants' point had been that the retainer did not provide for interim statute bills. This argument was rejected. The master went on to observe at para 3: "The claimants' second point, however, is a much stronger point …"
"Mr Dunne for the Claimants pointed out that Master James did not find that there was no entitlement in the retainer for the Defendant to render interim statute bills. I agree. The Master rejected the Claimants' argument that the retainer did not provide for the rendering of interim statute bills. The Master considered whether the bills rendered were bills within the scope of the Solicitors Act 1974 Sections 69 and 70 and so within the terms of the agreement between the parties."
This confirms how the contractual entitlement was decided and then from there Master James went on to consider and rule on the classification issue, that is whether the bills delivered were actually statutory bills.
"(i) whether the Claimants signed the Retainer with informed consent to the provisions within the Retainer providing for interim statute bills; and
(ii) if they did not, whether, for this reason, the Defendant's invoices, either individually or collectively, are or are not bills for the purposes of s.70 Solicitors Act 1974."
III The Judgment dated 15 June 2022
"75.…This then brings me to the last of the questions addressed on 10 June 2022, namely, are there other issues which, notwithstanding the above, are open to this Court to decide at this time (specifically issues around Consumer protection legislation as it affects Solicitor/Client relationships)?
76. In fact I can deal with that in very short order as both parties were ad idem that this is not the end of the matter as there are questions around Chamberlain Bills, Special Circumstances, Consumer Rights Act 2015 and so on, still to address: I should add that my understanding is that the Defendant has indicated that it will be pressing for all of these to be shut down fairly hard, both on the issue of whether the Claimants dealt as 'Consumers' or not and on the issues of Res Judicata/Issue Estoppel, Waiver and Procedure that have already been canvassed in relation to the Preliminary Issue now disposed of by the decision in Erlam."
IV The Judgment dated 18 May 2023
"What did not run as far as they Court of Appeal was the issue of whether the Defendant's retainer permitted it to raise Interim Statute Bills at all; I decided that it did. Slade J upheld that finding and the Claimants took it no further. The time to have raised the Consumer Rights Issues would have been then, not years later, In plain terms, I find that this is not an argument about the bills (per se) it is an argument about the retainer. It should have been made much earlier and has already been considered and decided by the Court, such that the Res Judicata issue estoppel applies."
V The Issues to be considered in this Judgment
(i) the substantive appeal against the decision of the Costs Judge in which she found that there was no requirement to prove informed consent in connection with the validity of a statutory bill ("the Informed Consent Ground");
(ii) whether the Court should give permission to appeal on the related matter in which the Costs Judge refused to permit the Appellants to pursue consumer rights and related grounds as an answer to the statutory bills; ("the Permission to Appeal application").
(iii) if permission to appeal is granted, the full appeal on the related matter ("the Appeal in the related matter").
VI The Informed Consent Ground
"25….When dealing with a client's right to seek an assessment of costs from his or her solicitors the Act seeks to strike a balance between allowing a reasonable time for a client to question the quantum of costs whilst protecting solicitors from having to deal with stale allegations of overcharging. Whilst the Act purports to regulate those rights it does not go so far as to oblige the solicitor to advise the client of these provisions in terms, nor to explain in plain English what the actual consequences of the application of those terms are for the client. I am personally sympathetic to the argument that it probably should.
26. Both counsel advised me that there are no regulations either connected with the Solicitors Act or Code of Conduct, arising from their obligations as a solicitor, which would oblige solicitors to explain to clients that the effect of the service of an interim statute bill (properly authorised by the retainer) would be to start the clock running for a potential Solicitors Act assessment and that there are different time limits depending on the circumstances."
"…the situation remains that there is no statutory or regulatory obligation to advise a client what the legal consequences are likely to be for him or her when a solicitor serves an interim statute bill. It is not normal for provisions explaining the legal consequences of contractual terms to be implied into a contract unless there is some additional statutory or regulatory obligation to do so as a result of a perceived need for consumer protection. Whilst there may be such a need here it has not resulted in any changes to the Act or relevant regulatory reform. In the absence of such, I take the view that if there is a clear contractual term reserving the right of a solicitor to deliver interim statute bills then he is entitled to do so, without having to spell out what the legal consequences of such an act would be for the client.".
(i) express consent;
(ii) a natural break in the proceedings; and
(iii) agreement or acquiescence resulting from conduct of the parties.
"This was the principle applied by the learned master and as a matter of discretion his approach and conclusions are not open to sustainable attack. In particular the party must know what rights are being negotiated and dispensed with in the sense that the solicitor make it plain to the client that the purpose of sending the bill at that time is that it is to be treated as a complete self-contained bill of costs to date: see the judgment of Roskill LJ in Davidson's v Jones-Fenleigh [1980] 124 SJ 204".
(i) In Harrod's (Buenos Aires) Ltd v Another [2014] 6 Costs LR 975, the prejudice involved in receiving interim statute bills rather than requests for payments on accounts was recognised by Mr Justice Jacob:
"Much more significantly, it fails to take into account the modern practice of solicitors of sending bills on a regular basis which are complete bills, not interim bills. That causes difficulty when you have litigation which is ongoing. The client is called upon by these provisions to challenge an interim bill within one month, if he wants to do it as of right; and if he does not challenge it within twelve months then he has to show 'special circumstances' to challenge his solicitors' bill. That puts him in an impossible position. Either he challenges his solicitors' bill – the very solicitor who is now acting for him – and continues using that solicitor at the same time; or he has to change solicitor, all in the middle of litigation when he is facing another enemy. It may well be that the court would regard ongoing litigation as, itself, 'special circumstances'."
(ii) In Masters v Charles Fussell and Co (unreported) Costs Judge Rowley recognised the same problem (and referred back to Adams):
"The Draconian nature of the time periods in limiting a client's ability to obtain as assessment of a solicitor's statute bill has led the courts to require solicitors to 'make it plain' to their clients if they intend each bill to be a self-contained bill for a period and for which the time limit for challenge begins to run immediately."
In Masters, there was a contractual entitlement to have monthly bills and there was provision about the ability to seek assessments under the Solicitors Act 1974. The case was based on a contractual entitlement to interim statute bills, but the terms did not say, unlike in the instant case or in Erlam, that the monthly bills would be final for the period to which they related.
VII Erlam and later cases
"Informed Consent
74. The Claimant argues that any contractual agreement to the effect that the Defendant's regular invoices would be interim statutory bills would require the Claimant's "informed consent". In this context, that term refers to the proposition that, in order for any such agreement to be effective, the Defendant would have had to make the consequences of such an arrangement clear to the Claimant. That means in particular the loss, through the passage of time, of his right to apply for assessment of the Defendant's monthly invoices, even as the Defendant continued to act for him.
75. I believe that Mr Williams is right in saying that "informed consent", in this sense, has no bearing upon the appropriate interpretation of a contract of retainer. Adams v Al Malik , The Winros Partnership v Global Energy Horizons Corporation and other authorities which emphasise the importance of client knowledge, seem to me to address the delivery of an interim statutory bill where that is not authorised by the contract of retainer. The contractual position, in my view, is consistent with the judgment of HHJ Gosnell, sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court, in Richard Slade & Co v Erlam.
76. In Richard Slade & Co v Erlam , HHJ Gosnell (sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court) found that the following provisions in a contract of retainer permitted the delivery of interim statute bills:
"Bills are rendered monthly in arrears. Our bills are detailed bills and are final in respect of the period to which they relate, save that disbursements ( costs and expenses which we incur on your behalf) are normally billed separately and later than the bill for our fees in respect of the same period."
77. The logic of HHJ Gosnell's decision was that it was clear, by reference to that contractual provision, that the solicitor's monthly bills (final as they were for the work undertaken in relation to the period covered by each bill) were to be interim statutory bills, final for the work they represented. Although there is an obvious disadvantage to any client whose time to challenge a solicitor's interim statutory bill begins to run whilst that solicitor is still actively instructed, there is no statutory or regulatory obligation upon a solicitor whose retainer incorporates such a clear contractual term to spell out the full legal consequences of the delivery of such bills.
78. Although HHJ Gosnell's decision ultimately rested on the terms of a CFA which he found to have replaced the retainer in question, the conclusion to which I have referred seems to me to have been a part of his chain of reasoning, and not merely obiter. In any event I respectfully agree with him.
79. Whether a contract empowers a solicitor to render interim statutory bills falls, in my view, to be determined upon the normal principles of contractual interpretation. As HHJ Gosnell found, a solicitor and a client can agree that the solicitor may render interim statutory bills without delving into the legal consequences of that agreement. There is no requirement that the agreement itself should do so, and the client's subjective knowledge of the legal position is not to the point. If the retainer provides for the solicitor to deliver complete, final interim statutory bills for a given period, that will be sufficient."
"Ms Gemma McGungle, counsel for the Client, referred us to a number of paragraphs in the Solicitors' Regulation Authority Code of Conduct. But none of them deal specifically with the form of the bill. The only reference to explaining the client's right to complain about charges applies to the time at which the contract of retainer is made. Like HHJ Gosnell, and as we have already mentioned at [5] above, we consider that the law as it currently stands may fall short of adequate consumer protection."
"This is another case, following the recent decisions of this court in Belsner v Cam Legal Services Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 1387; [2023] 1 WLR 1043 (Belsner) and Karatysz v SGI Legal LLP [2022] EWCA Civ 1388; [2023] 1 WLR 1071 (Karatysz) , which, in our view, highlights the inadequacy of the 1974 Act for the purposes of regulating the relationship between solicitors and clients in relation to the costs of modern personal injury disputes. The 1974 Act restricts the time during which clients can seek court assessments of their solicitors' bills. There are, of course, regulatory requirements outside the 1974 Act, but this case highlights (as did Belsner and Karatysz ) that it is for consideration whether there should be further and more up-to-date statutory safeguards to protect clients in relation to the charging and payment of solicitors' fees."
VIII Submissions of the parties as to whether there were implied terms as regards informed consent
(a) Submissions for the Appellants
"A person who is a regulated person in relation to an approved regulator has a duty to comply with the regulatory arrangements of the approved regulator as they apply to that person."
(b) Submissions for the Respondent
(i) It does not follow that from the existence of statutory or regulatory obligations that they should give rise to coterminous contractual obligations. They were enforceable in different ways. This was recognised, as noted above, as regards fiduciary duties and professional duties by Sir Geoffrey Vos MR in Belsner at [80]. It is not necessary in order to make the solicitor subject to the requirements of the Code of Conduct.
(ii) It is not clear what are the consequences of such an implied term. It appears in effect to be said that any deviation from what is expected renders the solicitor unable to enforce the interim statute bill (to the extent that informed consent is required). This may go beyond what is necessary in order to give business efficacy to the contract.
(iii) Further, even if it were capable of application on the facts of the instant case, an implied term would potentially have unforeseen consequences in other cases which were unnecessary and went far beyond what was required in order to give business efficacy.
"An implied term?
"107. Mastercigars submits that there should be implied into the contract of retainer in this case a term that Withers must comply with the 1999 Code and in particular paragraph 6 of it which refers to the solicitor updating the costs information as the matter progresses. This term is said to be one which should be implied in fact in order to give business efficacy to the contract of retainer.
108. The first thing to note about the suggested implied term is that it is not necessary in order to make the solicitor subject to the requirements of the 1999 Code. The solicitor is already subject to the requirements of the Code, pursuant to rule 15 of the 1990 Rules. Further, the notes to rule 15 distinguish between three different levels of breach of the 1999 Code. If there were implied into the retainer a term that the solicitor would comply with the Code then any non-compliance would be a breach of contract whereas the notes to rule 15 contemplate that there can be some breaches of the 1999 Code which will not be a breach of rule 15 and will not be evidence of inadequate professional services under section 37A of the 1974 Act. Accordingly, the implied term would go further than rule 15 in precisely those cases where the need for an implied term is arguably at its lowest, that is, in relation to non-material breaches of the 1999 Code.
109. The next question in relation to the suggested implied term is what would be the contractual consequence of non-compliance? It seems to me that Mastercigars' case was that compliance with the 1999 Code was a condition precedent to recovery of any payment for any work which was not the subject of an estimate complying with the 1999 Code. Mr Farber did not accept the term "condition precedent" when I put it to him but that is what his submission in effect amounted to. That goes beyond implying a term that Withers shall comply with the code and implies a much more onerous requirement that they are not entitled to be paid if they do not comply with the 1999 Code. Formulated that way, it does not seem to me to be possible to say that the implication of a condition precedent of that kind is necessary to give business efficacy to the contract. Non-compliance with the Code carries with it the consequences set out in section 37A of and Schedule 1A to the 1974 Act…." (emphasis added).
IX Discussion
(a) The effect of the express term
(i) if the interim bill is final, the solicitor does not have the opportunity to seek a higher remuneration at a later stage as a result of the bill being final and not just a request for money on account;
(ii) if the bill is to be challenged at the time, then the challenge will occur at a point in time when memories are much more fresh than if the dispute has to be dealt with potentially years later;
(iii) in considering fiduciary duties of solicitors, leaving aside professional and duties under the Code of Conduct which are different, Sir Geoffrey Vos MR stated that solicitors act for themselves in negotiating a new fee arrangement with a client and have the freedom to negotiate a new retainer in their own interests. Enhanced obligations such as informed consent arising from a fiduciary duty relationship do not apply where solicitors are stipulating the terms on which they will act: see Belsner v CAM Legal Services Ltd [2023] 1 WLR 1043 at [72]-[81] and especially at [79] and Motto v Trafigura Ltd [2012] 1 WLR 657 at [108]-[110] per Lord Neuberger MR. Further, as Sir Geoffrey Vos MR said in Belsner at [80] "…the consequences of the breach of a professional duty, even one given effect by statute, are different from the consequences of breaches of fiduciary duties."
(b) The implied term contended for by the Appellant
"It is enough to reiterate that the process of implying a term into the contract must not become the re-writing of the contract in a way which the court believes to be reasonable, or which the court prefers to the agreement which the parties have negotiated. A term is to be implied only if it is necessary to make the contract work, and this it may be if (i) it is so obvious that it goes without saying (and the parties, although they did not, ex hypothesi, apply their minds to the point, would have rounded on the notional officious bystander to say, and with one voice, 'Oh, of course') and/or (ii) it is necessary to give the contract business efficacy. Usually the outcome of either approach will be the same. The concept of necessity must not be watered down. Necessity is not established by showing that the contract would be improved by the addition. The fairness or equity of a suggested implied term is an essential but not a sufficient pre-condition for inclusion. And if there is an express term in the contract which is inconsistent with the proposed implied term, the latter cannot, by definition, meet these tests, since the parties have demonstrated that it is not their agreement.
"In summary, the relevant principles can be drawn together as follows:
i) A term will not be implied unless, on an objective assessment of the terms of the contract, it is necessary to give business efficacy to the contract and/or on the basis of the obviousness test;
ii) The business efficacy and the obviousness tests are alternative tests. However, it will be a rare (or unusual) case where one, but not the other, is satisfied;
iii) The business efficacy test will only be satisfied if, without the term, the contract would lack commercial or practical coherence. Its application involves a value judgment;
iv) The obviousness test will only be met when the implied term is so obvious that it goes without saying. It needs to be obvious not only that a term is to be implied, but precisely what that term (which must be capable of clear expression) is. It is vital to formulate the question to be posed by the officious bystander with the utmost care;
v) A term will not be implied if it is inconsistent with an express term of the contract;
vi) The implication of a term is not critically dependent on proof of an actual intention of the parties. If one is approaching the question by reference to what the parties would have agreed, one is not strictly concerned with the hypothetical answer of the actual parties, but with that of notional reasonable people in the position of the parties at the time;
vii) The question is to be assessed at the time that the contract was made: it is wrong to approach the question with the benefit of hindsight in the light of the particular issue that has in fact arisen. Nor is it enough to show that, had the parties foreseen the eventuality which in fact occurred, they would have wished to make provision for it, unless it can also be shown either that there was only one contractual solution or that one of several possible solutions would without doubt have been preferred;
viii) The equity of a suggested implied term is an essential but not sufficient pre-condition for inclusion. A term should not be implied into a detailed commercial contract merely because it appears fair or merely because the court considers the parties would have agreed it if it had been suggested to them. The test is one of necessity, not reasonableness. That is a stringent test."
(c) The application of the law to the instant case
(i) an implied term is not to be based on what is reasonable or fair or equitable, but the test is necessity;
(ii) the concept of necessity must not be watered down. Necessity is not established by showing that the contract would be improved by the addition;
(iii) a term will not be implied unless, on an objective assessment of the terms of the contract, it is necessary to give business efficacy to the contract and/or on the basis of the obviousness test. It will be a rare case where the business efficacy and the obviousness tests are not both satisfied;
(iv) the business efficacy test will only be satisfied if, without the term, the contract would lack commercial or practical coherence;
(v) the obviousness test will only be met when the implied term is so obvious that it goes without saying.
(d) Discussion
(i) To the extent that there are duties to explain the pricing and costs to a client and of their rights in the event of dispute, those are regulatory and statutory duties. It is not a part of those duties that they are to be incorporated expressly into the contract. Hence it is that the Appellant is driven to the implied term. HH Judge Gosnell was right to say at [28] that it was not normal for provisions explaining the legal consequences of contractual terms to be implied into the contract unless there was a statutory or regulatory obligation to incorporate such provisions into the contract. Likewise, Costs Judge Leonard was right to say in Ivanishvili that "there is no statutory or regulatory obligation upon a solicitor whose retainer incorporates such a clear contractual term to spell out the full legal consequences of the delivery of such bills….[77] and "If the retainer provides for the solicitor to deliver complete, final interim statutory bills for a given period, that will be sufficient. [79]"
(ii) Any duty to ensure clients receive the best information about pricing and the likely overall costs of the case are professional duties by statute or regulations. They are different from the common law duties and the consequences of breaches of common law duties. It does not therefore follow that there is scope for implied incorporation. There is an analogy here with Belsner at [80], referred to above where Sir Geoffrey Vos MR adopted the same reasoning to refuse to imply into fiduciary duties analogous regulatory duties.
(iii) It is not necessary to imply the term because the solicitor will be subject to sanction for failing to observe the statutory or regulatory duties without incorporating the implied term into the contract. The touchstone of necessity is not therefore satisfied. Or using other words, the tests of business efficacy or obviousness are not satisfied in that there are other ways of procuring compliance. If the statutory and/or regulatory duties were intended to be incorporated into the contracts, then the duties would have required expressly their incorporation as such.
(iv) The implied term contended for would have consequences going far beyond what is intended. It would have the effect of the inability of solicitors to be unable to enforce their entitlement to interim billing however minor the alleged deviation from the statutory or regulatory requirement or the impact on the client or the ability of the client to counteract the alleged prejudice caused by the deviation: see Mastercigars.
(v) Whilst breaches of the Code of Conduct have different consequences, the breach of the alleged implied term would be a more blunt instrument, particularly where it is said to be in effect a condition precedent to the ability to enforce the right of interim billing.
(i) The Court accepts the reasoning in the instant case where the right to issue an interim statute bill was incorporated expressly and in clear terms into the contract. Previous authorities, insofar as they are said to contain different dicta, are largely about different situations, namely either that it was not an express incorporation of the contractual term or the contractual term was not as clear and unambiguous as in Erlam (and this case which contains a condition in substantially the same terms).
(ii) Although the dictum of Fulford J Adams v Al Malik has gained some traction in recent years, it was in case about a natural break in the proceedings, and therefore different from a case about incorporation of a contractual term. As noted above, it was also in the context of a permission to appeal case in which only a litigant person (albeit a solicitor) appeared.
(iii) Erlam was a reasoned decision which considered earlier authorities, and found that the dictum in Adams v Al Malik had been too widely applied. The Respondent submit that the matter is therefore to be treated as settled at first instance as a result of the decision in Erlam: see Re Lune Metal Products [2007] Bus LR 689 at [9] per Neuberger LJ. That might be pitching it too high, but I am satisfied that there is good reason to follow the decision of Erlam because it considered the relevant earlier authorities and it contained convincing reasoning. Added to this is the fact that Erlam has now been followed by Costs Judge Leonard in Ivanishvili (which does not in reasoning set out fully above).
X The Respondent's Notice
XI Conclusion
XII The linked application for permission to appeal on consumer protection
(a) Introduction
(b) The decision on consumer protection
"20. Mr West's Skeleton Argument includes a quote that the Court will not (except under special circumstances) permit the same parties, "to open the same subject of litigation in respect of the matter which might have been brought forward as part of the subject in contest, but which was not brought forward, only because they have, from negligence, inadvertence or even accident, omitted part of their case..." is said by the Defendant to be 'powerfully relevant' to the Claimants' conduct in these proceedings, listing five separate occasions when the matter was before the Court and the Claimants did not notify either the Court or the Defendant of their intention to run the Consumer Rights Issues. Based upon the dates of the legislation behind the Consumer Rights Issues, the Defendant asserts (and I find) that they were available to the Claimants throughout that time and they could and should have been run as part of their earlier arguments about the retainer."
....
23. I accept that Mr West is right in arguing that it is simply too late to raise the Consumer Rights Issues. The matters remitted to me by the Court of Appeal were to do with whether the Bills rendered are in fact Interim Statute Bills or whether for various reasons (including the Vlamaki test) they are not, and there has been much to-ing and fro-ing about which arguments remain open to the Claimants on that front. Had the Court of Appeal been seised of the Consumer Rights Issues (and for this to happen they would have to have been raised before me and before Slade J) then that Court could have decided those issues when they were considering the Appeal. There would then have been a definitive and binding decision at a high level, long ago.
24. Instead, matters were remitted to me by the Court of Appeal several years ago, on the basis that there was an effective term in the retainer allowing for Interim Statute Bills to be rendered. Matters have proceeded since then on that basis a great deal of time, effort and money has been spent accordingly. To raise at this very late stage, Consumer Rights Issues that go right back to the situation as it was before Slade J and the Court of Appeal ruled, is clearly a step away from goodness and one that should not be permitted to happen.
25. If the Claimant's position is that they have had the Consumer Rights Issues in mind for quite some time, for example since Mr Carlisle's note of 5 December 2019 which referred to the Vlamaki test and to contra proferentum then I would find that it is an abuse of process to have addressed that in such an elliptical manner only to bring it into sharp focus several years later. In fact, for the reasons stated in earlier paragraphs of this Judgment, I do not accept that the Claimants flagged up the Consumer Rights Issues on 5 December 2019; the reference in Mr Carlisle's note to matters of ambiguity, has no relevance to the Consumer Rights Issues which have to do with fairness to the consumer. This appears to be a line of argument that has fairly recently occurred to the Claimants and it is in my judgment an abuse of process in the Henderson v Henderson sense to run it now when the question of raising Interim Statute Bills under the retainer was decided and upheld several years ago."
(c) Discussion on the application for permission to appeal
(d) Decision on the linked application
(i) Ground 1 – it is not apparent from the argument how it is that the Costs Judge was barred from dealing with the estoppel arguments which she had specifically said that she would hear in her order dated 27 January 2023 against which there was no appeal. Nor is it apparent why her decision provided a fetter on the then extant appeal, bearing in mind that the appellate court is not bound by her decision.
(ii) Grounds 2-5 – bearing in mind that the Court was not deciding the consumer protection issues, but whether there was a bar to deciding the consumer protection issues at this stage, it is not apparent why these are independent grounds of appeal at this stage. I do not rule out the possibility that there might be arguments that these matters in some way inform in respect of the Grounds 6-8, but it is not apparent why these should be independent grounds of appeal.
(iii) Ground 9 – this might be regarded as part and parcel of the Claimants' challenge as to the effect of the determination about the contractual retainer. If it is something else, this would require explanation.
(e) Grounds 2-4
XIII Consequentials hearing