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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 >> Cassidy v Stephensons & Anor [2009] EWHC 1562 (QB) (23 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/1562.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1562 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West Manchester |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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Elizabeth Cassidy (Administratrix of the Estate of Paul Nevitt deceased) |
Claimant |
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And |
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Stephensons Legal Services Commission |
Defendants |
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Jamie Carpenter (instructed by Barlow Lyde & Gilbert) for the First Defendant
Mukhtiar S Otwal instructed by and for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 June 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Holman :
Except so far as regulations otherwise provide, where services have been funded by the Commission for an individual as part of the Community Legal Service—
(a) sums expended by the Commission in funding the services (except to the extent that they are recovered under section 11), and
(b) other sums payable by the individual by virtue of regulations under this section,
shall constitute a first charge on any property recovered or preserved by him (whether for himself or any other person) in any proceedings or in any compromise or settlement of any dispute in connection with which the services were provided.
(4) Except so far as regulations otherwise provide, any sums remaining unpaid on account of a person's contribution to the legal aid fund in respect of any proceedings, and, if the total contribution is less than the net liability of that fund on his account, a sum equal to the deficiency shall be a first charge for the benefit of the legal aid fund on any property (wherever situated) which is recovered or preserved for him in the proceedings.
(5) The reference in subsection (4) above to property recovered or preserved for any person shall include his rights under any compromise arrived at to avoid or bring to an end proceedings and any sums recovered by virtue of an order for costs made in his favour in the proceedings.
(6) Except so far as regulations otherwise provide–
(a) any sums remaining unpaid on account of a person´s contribution in respect of the sums payable by the Board in respect of any proceedings, and
(b) a sum equal to any deficiency by reason of his total contribution being less than the net liability of the Board on his account,
shall be a first charge for the benefit of the Board on any property which is recovered or preserved for him in the proceedings.
(7) For the purposes of subsection (6) above it is immaterial what the nature of the property is and where it is situated and the property within the charge includes the rights of a person under any compromise or settlement arrived at to avoid the proceedings or bring them to an end and any sums recovered by virtue of an order for costs made in his favour in the proceedings (not being sums payable to the Board under subsection (5) above). [I note in passing that subsection (5) is not applicable here]
"The tail of Clause 10(7) and Clause 10(8) are, in substance, drawn from the current Legal Aid Act 1988. They define the scope of the legal aid statutory charge, which allows the Legal Aid Board to recover any outstanding costs from the property recovered or preserved as a result of their case by litigants who received legal aid. Let me make it clear, for the record, that the Government intend the charge created in this Bill in relation to funding provided by the community legal service fund to have exactly the same scope as the legal aid statutory charge has now. These amendments are aimed solely at brevity; they in no way represent a change in substance."
It is difficult to think of a clearer statement than that.
"They are possible because of certain other differences in the drafting of the Bill and the 1988 Act. In the 1988 Act the equivalent words to what is now Clause 10(8)(a) are necessary for two reasons. First, they make it clear that the statutory charge bites on cases settled before proceedings are issued. The appearance in Clause 10(7) of the words "or dispute", which do not appear in the current Act, mean that Clause 10(8) is no longer necessary for that purpose
Secondly, Clause 10(8)(a) serves to make clear that the charge bites on any property contained in a compromise or settlement, regardless of whether that was the property originally at issue in the proceedings. This is necessary because case law has established that the words "recovered or preserved in proceedings" relate only to property formally at issue in the case. Amendment No 81, which inserts additional words in Clause 10(7), is intended to preserve this position."
The last sentence imports some ambiguity in that "this" could relate to the first sentence of the paragraph or the second. I reject Mr Otwal's suggestion that Lord Falconer stated the law incorrectly. I agree with Mr Carpenter that the second sentence refers to Hanlon and "this" must relate to the first sentence.
"all money payable to or recovered by a client in connection with a dispute by way of damages, costs or otherwise, whether or not proceedings were begun, and whether under an order of the court or an agreement or otherwise, shall be paid to the client's solicitor, and only the client's solicitor shall be capable of giving a good discharge for that money."