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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 >> Reynolds v Stone Rowe Brewer (a firm) [2008] EWHC 497 (QB) (18 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/497.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 497 (QB), [2008] 4 Costs LR 545 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting with
MASTER SIMONS and MR ROBERT CARTER
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Tracy Reynolds |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Stone Rowe Brewer (A Firm) |
Defendant |
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Mr Nicholas Bacon (instructed by Stone Rowe Brewer) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Wednesday March 5th 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"On analysis of the relevant exchanges of correspondence/emails, I considered that the solicitors should be bound by an estimate of £18,000 to which I added the 15% "margin" available under Wong v. Vizards [1997] 2 Costs LR 46 [these figures making a total of £20,700]. I also limited the claimant's liability for counsel's and expert's fees to estimates given… I reached my decision on the basis of the documents and oral submissions…"
"In terms of the cost of taking this matter forward, you should appreciate that litigating a building dispute is inevitably a very expensive process. If the matter did proceed through to a trial, it is more than likely that your costs would be in the region of £10,000 to £18,000 plus VAT, and this is only of course an estimate which could be increased depending on how strenuously the matter is defended. Once you have obtained quotes from alternative contractors, I can assess the value of your claim against the potential cost of issuing proceedings and advise on the proportionality of these sums or otherwise. …"
"I am conscious of the fact that the costs in this matter are escalating and note that in our recent conversation you explained that you are under considerable financial strain meeting the mortgage payments…. As I explained to you at the outset, in any litigation of this nature a realistic estimate of each party's costs is in the region of £10,000 - £15,000 plus VAT to conduct the matter through to trial. For this reason and in light of the financial strain this litigation is placing on you …….[she gave advice on checking insurance]. In view of the rising costs in this matter and the inevitable lengthy period it will take in which to resolve the matter (at a further cost to yourself), I would advise that you seriously consider attempting to resolve the matter by way of expert determination, subject of course to the [contractor] agreeing to such a proposal ".
"In terms of your invoice I have been in shock to be honest and was not sure how to broach the issue. I presumed that the £600 you quoted for the drafting for the counterclaim would include letters and conversations that related directly to its content. I appreciate that since then there have been other matters arising including the issue of mediation but I expected an invoice for about £300. The reason for this is I had already paid the £600 for the drafting of the counterclaim to you on 2 March …. and on no occasion did you tell me that the letters and emails were and conversations were adding to the cost.
The above issue has resulted in me delaying my response which I now regret. I should have let you know how I felt and what I had thought earlier. The trouble is I am so reliant on you to represent me legally in this minefield that is litigation that I did not want to offend you. At the same time I cannot ignore the discrepancy in what I thought I owed and what you think I owe".
"In any litigation, as I have previously indicated, costs are likely to be in the region of £10,000 - £15.000 plus VAT in the event that the matter proceeds all the way to trial".
The solicitors offered to accept payment of their 10 May invoice in three equal monthly instalments over the next three months.
"In respect of my firm's invoice, I realise the sum incurred in respect of my firm's fees is significant. However, this invoice reflects the amount of time and work which has been carried out on your file since the previous invoice of 16 September 2005 and includes all the applications made to date to Court as well as the preparation of Witness Statements, liaising on joint instructions [to the expert] and preparing the Listing Questionnaire. As you know, a considerable amount of work has been completed on your file since the previous invoice including a number of applications for an Unless Order, Witness Summary and Directions and there have been a number of very lengthy telephone conversations with you which have contributed significantly to the overall cost incurred…. As you can see from the enclosed estimate of anticipated future costs from now until the trial (including the trial itself), in respect of my anticipated estimated fees, the sums already incurred by way of costs are greater than future costs. This anticipated estimate of future costs include Counsel estimated fees…, as well as the expert fees… the total costs in this matter are escalating and this is partly due to the litigation and also due to the manner in which it is being conducted, namely the number of lengthy conversation and lengthy emails /written correspondences in the matter. Provided such correspondences and telephone conversations can be kept to a minimum, my future fees in the matter may be less than the anticipated estimated costs. Alternatively, if the matters proceed on the same basis as at present, it is likely that future fees in the matter would exceed the estimated future costs.
As you can see from the enclosed invoice dated 29 November 2005, my initial estimate of anticipated legal fees and associated costs of conducting the case to trial in the sum of £18,000 plus VAT must now be revised. At this stage in the matter, I would estimate that your likely overall costs in this matter could be as much as £25,000 - £30,000 plus VAT. Given that the amount that you are seeking to recover in your counterclaim is in the region of £62,300 (including VAT), there is a real possibility that the escalating costs in this matter will become disproportionate to the amount you are seeking to recover…."
"Our estimate as to the likely overall costs of your case must now be revised to between £35,000 - £40,000 plus VAT".
"When the [contractor] first suggested the vacation of trial date from March, I highlighted my concerns regarding my finances,… I have already paid approximately £15,000 in terms of legal fees, disbursements and counsel's fees. This is in line with the original estimate received from [the solicitors] at the start of the case. I understand that the actions of [the contractor] and his various solicitors have increased my costs, but I believe the actions that I have taken which have also increased them such as issuing an Unless Order, amending my counterclaim, and challenging will actually serve to protect my position on costs which is in both our interest. In terms of my financial position it is strained to say the least… ".
"I have now paid nearly £30,000 to your firm for your fees, counsel's and other disbursements. Your estimates remain focussed on £30 - £40k but these must surely be over £50000 and you are not helping matters by giving incorrect cost estimates…."
"The estimate as to the likely overall cost of your case must now be increased in view of the fact that the trial has been adjourned and the judge has ordered a five day trial is up to £60,000 plus VAT".
"The second factor which has significantly increased costs is the sheer volume of detailed emailed correspondence you have sent to [the trainee solicitor, by this time a solicitor herself] requiring detailed responses from her. By way of example between 7 and 15 August, being six working days, she received eight emails from you including four pages of attachments, all of which she has had to read action and respond to.
She has worked almost exclusively on your file over this period of time, preparing witness statements in opposition to [the contractor's] application for relief from striking out, an application which, in my view, was bound to succeed and which [the solicitor] advised you of in a similar vein. Notwithstanding this advice, your instructions were to resist the application and these instructions were actioned. I understand that [the contractor's] application for relief was successful. These circumstances, have, by no means, been unusual in this case.
Against this background I am afraid that you appear to have a wholly unrealistic view of how costs in this case should be dealt with….".
"Our estimate as to the likely overall cost of your case can now be slightly decreased in view of the fact that the matter may now be concluded by way of a one day hearing of your counterclaim as up to £55,000 plus VAT".
THE JUDGE'S OBSERVATIONS
"I had been advised by [the solicitors] that my costs for litigation would be in the region of £10,000 to £15,000, which I could afford at that time. However this estimate given to me was widely out and my costs for the entire case are in the region of £90,000 and rising as the builder has lodged an appeal application".
"MASTER ROGERS: But the complaint is that there were no warnings between May and June and November as to the - it is a very substantial increase, is it not? …. It has doubled, effectively in a period of six months. We all know – we know that litigation can be (inaudible) I am not sure that lay clients do know, but the whole point of the estimate situation is that they should be kept informed as they go along so that they can indeed decide if they want to bring an end to the litigation because that sometimes happens. If you know that your litigation is costing you so much more than you thought you might just say, "Well, I can't afford this. I'm going to break it off now and cut my losses." Do you accept that between June and November there was no warning apart from the fact that obviously [the claimant] knew what was going on to the extent you were communicating with her about letters and about the progress of the action…
(p35)
MR ANDREWS: No, the first warning would have to be the letter of 29 November … I think at the stage that we have got to, the bills themselves were not significant in terms of breaching the earlier estimated figure.
MASTER ROGERS: Well they may not have been but here you have an estimate which suddenly goes up after a bill has been sent in … you see the earlier estimates, say up to and including - or imply up to and including trial, do they not? That is what they say in terms, do they not? They do not say – the difficulty you are in, it seems to me, is that you should have warned her that these costs were escalating well beyond what you had indicated. Whether it is 15 or 18 perhaps is not too (inaudible) but she is (p36) budgeting for £18000, is she not, on your footing to include a trial? And then to receive a bill which takes her up to that ceiling, if I call it that, and then to be told at the same time, "Oh, by the way, sorry, of course now we should have told you earlier" – that is not what is said but that must be the implication: "now we have looked at the bills, we realise that these costs are going to be greatly increased". Why did not someone write and say, "Look, these costs are clocking up"? That is the whole point of estimates and keeping the client informed. They need to know what is going on, not necessarily on a daily basis but regularly…. If you had said to her: "Look, we can't give you a figure at the moment… but it looks as if the £18000 is going to be breached; perhaps you ought to be looking at £25000 or £30000" or something of that sort, something to give her a warning that things were going beyond – which they do if it is long litigation. It is well known the costs go up, but the difficulty is not the costs going up but the problem is the client not knowing the extent to which they are going up. So they are not in the position of making a meaningful decision. She might have done a number of things: one I have already suggested. She might have stopped the litigation because she could not afford the litigation. She might have tried to find a cheaper solicitor, although whether she would have succeeded in that I do not know, or she might have decided to continue acting in person without the benefit of lawyers. Now, none of those options were given to her, were they, because she was not given the figures… (p37) [Mr Andrews is then recorded as referring to the explanations that were given at the time, in particular in July]… They are explanations of why the costs are higher but they do not actually address the point of why she was not warned they were going to be higher. If, for instance – take one example you have just read out – she changed her mind about a joint expert, then why did not the trainee solicitor write and say, "This is your instructions. You do know it is going to cost you more money, don't you?" Even if she had not put a figure on it, it would have helped her, would it not, because she would have realised what was going on. There is an explanation – there could be a rational explanation but it doesn't actually help to tell the client what it is costing, does it? I can understand, and I have seen some of (p38) the papers and the boxes - I know what was done. There is no question about the work you have done. The issue we are now concerned with, it seems to me, the crucial issue in this whole case, is what the effect of the estimates is, to what extent [the claimant] is entitled to rely on them because that is the problem, is it not?... (p39) I had this bundle in front of me when I was going through the correspondence in the boxes earlier today and I do not think there is any warning to [the claimant]…it does not necessarily have to say a certain sum but what it should say is, "I think that you ought to know that these costs are increasing sharply… [then, referring to Wong v Vizards]… It is a High Court decision on appeal from one of us here that if a solicitor gives an estimate on which they cannot rely, the solicitor should be bound by it but he should be allowed a 15% margin because estimates are estimates and cannot be accurate. So, it seems to me that what I am going to decide here is that the solicitors are limited to £18,000 (p40) plus 15% [that is, £20,700] whether you want to go outside and talk about it now in light of that decision I do not know, or we can go through the bills, but you know what the result is going to be in terms of costs.
MR ANDREWS: Sir, are you making that decision notwithstanding the fact that the estimates – were revisited?
MASTER ROGERS: Yes, I am.
MR ANDREWS: And the claimant advised?
MASTER ROGERS: Yes that is my decision because the earlier letters clearly say "to include trial" so, that is the decision. Now, if you want to go outside and discuss it … that is fine otherwise, we will plough through the bills but it is not going to be a very effective exercise for you, is it ?
MR ANDREWS: If that is your decision, Master, why do you need to go through the rest of the bills?
MASTER ROGERS: We do not… Of course this figure is your costs and we have disbursements to consider as well but that is a separate issue. As far as your disbursements are concerned a net figure of £20,700. Is that right? …
MR ANDREWS: Can I just briefly address you in relation to what you are suggesting and what your views are at the moment?
MASTER ROGERS: No, I have made a decision … (p41) I will give a reasoned judgment if you want me to but that is my decision. It seems to me quite plain.
MR ANDREWS: If that is your decision, Sir, then can I ask for permission to appeal?
MASTER ROGERS: Let us finish the bill off first, shall we? let us finish off the job. We have to do disbursements. We have not dealt with those yet. They are outside this estimate…"
APPLICABLE LAW AND SUBMISSIONS FOR THE SOLICITORS
"For advanced costs information – general
The overall costs
(a)the solicitor should give the client the best information possible about the likely overall costs, including the breakdown in fees, VAT and disbursements.
(b)The solicitors should explain clearly to the client the time likely to be spent in dealing with the matter if time spent is a factor in the calculation of the fees.
(c)Giving " the best information possible "includes:
(i)…
(ii) Giving a realistic estimate; or
(iii) Giving a forecast within a possible range of costs…
(iv) The solicitor should make clear at the outset if a quotation, estimate or other indication of cost is not intended to be fixed…
(v) Updating costs information
The solicitor should keep the client properly informed about costs as the matter progresses. In particular, the solicitor should:
……(b) explain to the client (and confirm in writing) any changed circumstances which will, or which are likely to, affect the amount of costs,
… (c) inform the client in writing as soon as it appears that a costs estimate …may or will be exceeded.
"I provided you with a fee proposal which hopefully sets out the fullest extent of your liability to this firm for costs likely to be incurred in the future".
"It could logically be argued, that since [the solicitor's] proposal included £660 per day for attendance at the trial, the figure of £9995 should be reduced by £1320 on the ground that the trial took two days less than the time allowed for in the fee proposal. On the other hand, I am also mindful that while the sum claimed by the solicitor ought not to vary "substantially" (as the Law Society's Guide says) from that previously estimated without a prior warning to the client, more especially if that estimate was expressed to be on a worst case basis, [the solicitor's] fee proposal was a projection or estimate rather than a warranty. In not reducing the figure of £9955 by £1320, I have effectively allowed to the solicitor a margin of approximately 15% over the worst case estimate given. I consider that a greater divergence would be substantial and unreasonable".
"The closing submissions were recorded by the Costs Judge at paragraph 59 and 60 of his judgment, which included the reference to Cook on Costs, 2007 Edition page 15. The passage in Cook on Costs stated that unless the client was notified of the further sums payable, preferably before they were incurred, then the solicitor would be unable to recover costs in excess of the estimated amount. In my judgment, that passage does not correctly state the law. It seems to me that on a fair reading of the judgment, the Costs Judge was relying on this passage in Cook on Costs. Insofar as the Costs Judge relied upon that passage in Cook on Costs he was led into error in making his finding as to the contractual position. The contractual position is that the solicitors are entitled to a reasonable fee and in the present case in respect of certain bills that fee is to be the subject of a detailed assessment. At the stage of the detailed assessment, the estimate has the relevance which I have described above as a yardstick and in respect of any case raised by the client as to reliance on the estimate. Although the Costs Judge referred in paragraph 67 [that is the paragraph quoted in paragraph [46] of Morgan J's judgment] to "all the evidence, oral and documentary", it seems to me that I must inevitably find that his reasoning is based on his analysis of the contractual position, which for the reasons I have given was incorrect. It follows that I must allow the appeal… ".
"In my judgment, so far as a statement of legal principle is concerned these cases are helpful and ought to be applied in the present context in the following way….. In a case where a solicitor does give his client an estimate but the costs subsequently claimed exceed the estimate, it will not follow in every case that the solicitor will be restricted to recovering the sum in the estimate. What these two decisions of the Court of Appeal repeatedly state is that the court may "have regard to" the estimate or may take into account the estimate and the estimate is a "factor" in assessing reasonableness…..".
"Solicitors are entitled to reasonable remuneration for their services: see section 15 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982. In considering what is reasonable remuneration, the court will want to know why particular items of work were carried out and ask whether it was reasonable for the solicitors to do that work and for the client to be expected to pay for it….
[98] The first part which an estimate can play in the assessment of reasonableness is the way described Dyson LJ in Leigh v Mitchelin Tyre PLC [26]… The estimate is a useful yardstick by which the reasonableness of the costs may be measured. If there is a modest difference between the estimate and the final bill, because an estimate is not a fixed price for the work, one may be very little surprised by the modest difference. The greater the difference the more it calls for an explanation. If there is a satisfactory explanation for the difference then the estimate may cease to be useful as a yardstick with which to measure reasonableness. Conversely, if there is no satisfactory explanation the estimate may remain a very useful yardstick with which to measure reasonableness
[99]… no doubt if the client put its case on the basis of estoppel by representation or a promissory estoppel then that would have to be considered. A client may have difficulty in showing such an estoppel. It might be said that the estimate was not the same as identifying a maximum or fixed price and the client could not rely on the estimate not being exceeded. Further in some cases (but perhaps not all cases) a client may have difficulty in showing that he may have acted differently if the estimate had been for the amount of the final bill. What should the court do where the client does not or is not able to, contend that there is an estoppel but he is able nonetheless to satisfy the court that he took the estimate completely seriously and it is possible he might have approached the litigation differently if he had been given a figure nearer to the figure in the final bill?
[101]… Wong v. Vizards is an authority at first instance, prior to Leigh v. Michelin Tyres PLC, of a case where there was reliance by a client on his own solicitor's estimates. The judge in that case did not approach the matter on the basis of an alleged estoppel. Instead, he indicated that "regard should be had" to the level of costs the client had been led to believe he would have to pay. The question was then expressed as to whether it was reasonable for the client to pay much more than the estimated costs. In my judgment the proper response to this decision is to hold that the court in that case was finding that, for the purpose of assessing reasonable remuneration payable to the solicitor, it is relevant as a matter of law to ask: "what in all the circumstances it is reasonable for the client to be expected to pay?" Thus, even if the solicitor has spent a reasonable time on reasonable items of work and the charging rate is reasonable, the resulting figure may exceed what it is reasonable in all the circumstances to expect the client to pay, and to the extent that the figure does exceed what is reasonable to expect the client to pay, the excess is not recoverable.
"105 The difference of 20% referred to in those paragraphs is very much a starting point rather than a final conclusion. The difference of 20% is given in the first instance to identify the cases in which an explanation ought to be provided. In paragraph 6.6 (2), the difference of 20% is regarded as being relevant in deciding what to do where there is no satisfactory explanation or there was reasonable reliance. But even then there is nothing automatic about the judgment in the individual case. The court still must "have regard" to the difference and the extent to which the court has regard is a matter for its judgment".
SUBMISSIONS FOR THE CLAIMANT
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION