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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Oral Contraceptive Group Litigation XYZ & Ors v Schering Health Care Ltd & Ors [2004] EWHC 823 (QB) (31 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/823.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 823 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF THE ORAL CONTRACEPTIVE GROUP LITIGATION | ||
XYZ & OTHERS | CLAIMANTS | |
- v - | ||
SCHERING HEALTH CARE LIMITED & OTHERS | DEFENDANTS |
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190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG,
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant did not attend and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday, 31 March 2004
MR JUSTICE COOKE:
"The detailed assessment took place in the solicitor's office to save the expense of transporting the documents to London. For that reason there was no tape recording made of what I said. Unfortunately, the solicitor's note is not an accurate record of what I said and, given the time that has elapsed, it is not possible to settle a note that I can approve. However, I summarised my reasons in the judgment I handed down when granting permission to appeal. That judgment contains as accurate a record as can now be produced." [Quote unchecked]
I do not therefore need specifically to determine the points raised in relation to the solicitor's note of the judgment, but deal with this matter on the basis of the judgment given by the costs judge when giving permission to appeal.
"For these reasons therefore these actions fail. I am fully aware that this result will come as a serious disappointment to all the Claimants involved in this case. It may or may not be any comfort to them to know that this trial was almost certainly the most exhaustive examination that this question has yet received and that their case could not have been more effectively put forward than it was by the highly skilled and dedicated legal team who acted for them."
"Legal Aid costs are assessed on the standard basis: see regulation 107A(2) Legal Aid in Criminal Proceedings (Remuneration) Regulations 1994[1]. Accordingly, the court will only allow costs which are proportionate to the matters in issue and resolve any doubt in favour of the paying party, here the Board: see CPR 44.4(2). The court will not allow costs which have been unreasonably incurred or are unreasonable in amount: see CPR 44.4(1)." [Quote unchecked]
"(a) the conduct of all the parties …
(b) the amount or value of any money or property involved;
(c) the importance of the matter to all the parties;
(d) the particular complexity of the matter or the difficulty or novelty of the questions raised;
(e) the skill, effort, specialised knowledge and responsibility involved;
(f) the time spent on the case; and
(g) the place where and the circumstances in which work or any part of it was done."
"In assessing a brief fee, it is always relevant to take into account what work that fee, together with the refreshers, has to cover. The brief fee covers all the work done by way of preparation for representation at the trial and attendance on the first day of the trial. But in heavy litigation, particularly where there is a team of barristers and experts, additional work is involved in ensuring that the client is properly represented and his case fully developed beyond simply appearing in court. In this litigation, counsel had to meet together to consider their strategy and tactics and prepare material. They also had to have meetings with their experts, including meetings with experts from abroad prior to their going into the witness box to give evidence. Some of these meetings were lengthy and took place at weekends.
Then there was the work involved in the preparation of final submissions. Each counsel has said that between the time the court rose on 18 December 1997 and the start of final submissions on 1 February 1998, he expended a very substantial number of hours working on this case and preparing the written submissions for which the judge had asked …
I consider that in principle the approach of the taxing master was correct. Counsel are only entitled to charge for work which they have been instructed to do and where the work is done on legal aid, which has been authorised by a legal aid certificate, instructing counsel on legal aid is governed by the legal aid regulations which, among other things, require that any instructions delivered to counsel should include a copy of the certificate or other authority to instruct counsel. There is no need for counsel to be unaware of the extent to which work is or is not authorised. In the present context, the authorisation was for representation at the trial and the relevant instructions were the delivery of the brief. It follows that counsel had to base their claim to remuneration upon the delivery of the brief and what was required for the representation of the assisted party in court. The remuneration should therefore be the brief fee and the daily refreshers. The daily refreshers are calculated by reference to the time during which the trial is proceeding and certainly cannot be charged for days the court is not sitting.
This conclusion does not mean that counsel should not be remunerated for necessary work which is an incident of the proper representation of their client, it means that in a privately funded case, a barrister must negotiate a brief fee that is sufficient to cover such work or make some other special agreement for the delivery of supplementary instructions and/or the agreement of an additional fee, and in legal aid work the barrister may, on the legal aid taxation require that the brief fee and the refresher rate properly reflect the amount of work that actually had to be done.
In the present case I consider that the brief fee should be assessed and allowed having regard to the full history of the trial as now known. It thus should take into account the need for counsel to have meetings with each other and with experts out of court hours and to prepare final submissions, but it should also take account of the fact that all heavy trials include such a need to a greater or lesser extent. The preparation by counsel of his examinations in-chief and cross-examinations and of his final submissions are an ordinary part of his conduct of a trial on behalf of his client. It is all part of the work which he accepts an obligation to perform by accepting the brief and for which he is remunerated by the brief fee and the agreed refreshers." [Quote unchecked]
"One must envisage an hypothetical counsel capable of conducting the particular case effectively but unable or unwilling to insist on the particular high fees sometimes demanded by counsel of pre-eminent reputation. Then one must estimate what fee this hypothetical character would be content to take on the brief … There is, in the nature of things, no precise standard of measurement. The taxing master, employing his knowledge and experience, determines what he considers the right figure. The judge in his turn must, I think, consider whether upon his own knowledge and experience the figure adopted by the taxing master falls above the upper or below the lower limit of the range with which in his view the proper figure would come. If, and only if it does fall above or below those limits, he should substitute his own figure." [Quote unchecked]
"Although no longer required by the Code of Conduct, it is still usual for a barrister to be separately instructed and remunerated by a separate fee for each item of work he undertakes rather than for the amount of time spent on a case. On assessment, the practice of the Supreme Court's Cost Office has always been to require solicitors to submit accounts of counsel's fees charged on a by item basis and any 'composite fee' to be broken down into component parts. Thus a barrister will ordinarily be paid a brief fee, with or without daily refreshers, for appearing in a court or tribunal and a separate fee for each item of advice or drafting. Payment 'by the piece' i.e., without reference to the time actually spent, may be said to benefit the client or paying party because only time reasonably expended is remunerated. Unlike that of a solicitor, time actually spent by a barrister is not necessarily time to be remunerated." [Quote unchecked]
"The use of hours worked multiplied by an hourly rate will seldom be helpful in taxing counsel's fees … The time expended by counsel is not necessarily the time to be remunerated. Only the time reasonably expended is to be remunerated otherwise the inefficient, slow worker gets better pay for the same work than the efficient worker. Add to this the risk, not a feature of these present cases, of counsel consciously or unconsciously exaggerating the time expended and the limitation on the hours worked, the approach becomes even more apparent. When the hours worked out of court are then multiplied by an hourly rate substantially higher than that payable as refreshers for hours spent in court, the dangers of the system are very obvious. In our view, the policy that hours spent by a counsel in preparation are not generally of assistance, is a sound one and should be reaffirmed." [Quote unchecked]
Note 1 The Costs Judge must have intended to refer to regulation 107A of the Civil Legal Aid (General) Regulations 1989, as amended by paragraph 15 of the Civil Legal Aid (General) (Amendment) Regulations 1994. [Back]