![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Amin & Anor v Mullings & Anor [2011] EWHC 278 (QB) (17 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/278.html Cite as: [2011] PIQR P10, [2011] EWHC 278 (QB), [2011] 3 Costs LR 485 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
AT BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) A Amin (2) A Hussain |
Claimants/Respondents |
|
- and - |
||
(1) L Mullings (2) Royal Sun Alliance |
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
Gareth Compton (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing dates: 21st December 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Slade:
Relevant Facts
"Although the matter was listed for trial today on all the matters liability has been compromised on a 50/50 apportionment. I am told that of the heads of damage claimed by both parties to their respective claims, Mr Mullings having counterclaimed for his losses, have been resolved save for the outstanding matter of hire of vehicles by Mr Mullings pending payment of his write-off value for his vehicle."
"The need for hire it seems is not challenged. However, I am asked by counsel for the Claimant to consider the period of hire and the rate of hire, certainly for the first few vehicles at £90 per day."
The relevant provisions of the CPR
"20.2(1) This Part applies to-
(a) a counterclaim by a defendant against the claimant or against the claimant and some other person;
20.2(2) In these Rules-
(a) "additional claim" means any claim other than the claim by the claimant against the defendant;
20.3(1) An additional claim shall be treated as if it were a claim for the purposes of these Rules, except as provided by this Part.
20.7(1) This rule applies to any additional claim except
(a) a counterclaim only against an existing party "
"45.15(1) This Section sets out the percentage increase which is to be allowed in the cases to which this Section applies.
(6) In this Section
(b) a reference to 'trial' is a reference to the final contested hearing or to the contested hearing of any issue ordered to be tried separately;
(c) a reference to a claim concluding at trial is a reference to a claim concluding by settlement after the trial has commenced or by judgment;
45.16(1) Subject to rule 45.18, the percentage increase which is to be allowed in relation to solicitors' fees is
(a) 100% where the claim concludes at trial; or
(b) 12.5% where
(i) the claim concludes before a trial has commenced; or
(ii) the dispute is settled before a claim is issued.
45.17(1) Subject to rule 45.18, the percentage increase which is to be allowed in relation to counsel's fees is
(a) 100% where the claim concludes at trial;
(b) if the claim has been allocated to the fast track
(i) 50% if the claim concludes 14 days or less before the date fixed for the commencement of the trial;
(4) Where a trial period has been fixed and the claim concludes
(a) on or after the first day of that period; but
(b) before commencement of the trial,
the percentage increase in paragraph (1)(b)(i) or (1)(c)(i) shall apply as appropriate, whether or not a trial date has been fixed within that period.
(5) For the purposes of this rule, in calculating the periods of time, the day fixed for the commencement of the trial (or the first day of the trial period, where appropriate) is not included."
The costs judgment
"1.The question that remains live, is the percentage uplift for the additional liability in respect of the CFAs that the Claimant has conducted the litigation in respect of both claims and the Defendant has conducted in respect of its counterclaim. Although it is common ground that the Defendant's uplift on its additional liability should be 100 per cent having concluded the matter 'at trial' and by application of the rule 45.16 and 45.17 of the CPR.
2. What is however, in dispute, and remains an area in issue, is what the uplift should be for the Claimant's additional liability, because it is clear that the Claimant's claim on behalf of Mr Amin and Mr Hussain was settled in its entirety at court following negotiation before the matter was called in before me. The settlement on liability was apportioned equally between the parties and quantum of the Claimant's claims were agreed following those negotiations this morning."
"It seems to me that the issue turns on how one defines a 'trial'."
"8. It seems to me that the definition of "at trial" must include the time or date when the trial is fixed to take place, when parties attend, as they have done in this case expecting to give evidence at a trial, when lawyers and advocates attend expecting to present their respective cases before a judge for hearing. As night follows day, in my judgment, it must also include the negotiations that will inevitably take place and quite rightly should take place on the day of the trial to either settle the matter outright or narrow the issues and assist the court in that regard.
10. It seems to me that rule 45.16(1)(a) must include settlement being achieved on the day that the trial is due to take place, at trial, including, in my judgment, negotiations on the day and parties attending prior to the matter actually being heard before the judge. It seems to me that to find otherwise would, as I have indicated, fly in the face of the overriding objective to deal with the matter fairly. Accordingly, it is my judgment that the Claimant is entitled to a 100 per cent uplift on the additional liability and I find that the Claimant's claims did conclude at trial. Accordingly, the Claimant is also entitled in respect of counsel fees under CPR 45.17(1)(a) to a 100 per cent uplift on counsel's fees for the same reasons."
The Submissions of the Parties
"The first question to be determined is whether, on the basis of [the] solicitors' CFA agreement, this claim had concluded at trial. To my mind the word "trial" denotes an examination and determination of issues between the parties by a Judge, or some other tribunal."
Discussion and Conclusion
" fly in the face of the overriding objective to deal with the matter fairly."
The CPR
The Authorities
"I accept the submission made by Mr Morgan QC that in relation to counsel's success fees there is an intermediate stage, not available to solicitors, where "the claim concludes 21 days or less before the date fixed for the commencement of the trial". This is the reference referred to in Table 7 to Rule 45.25. I accept that a case which settles on the day of the final hearing cannot be a claim which concludes 21 or any other number of days "before the date fixed for the commencement of the trial". This case settled on the day of trial. Where settlement takes place on the day fixed for the commencement of the trial there is a lacuna in the Civil Procedure Rules. Counsel would get a 75 per cent success fee if the case settles up to midnight on the day before the date fixed for the hearing. Conversely, he would get 100 per cent if the judge at the commencement of the trial instructs the parties to go and settle the case as soon as it has been called into court. There would appear to be no figure prescribed by Table 7 in the period of time from one minute past midnight on the day of the trial to the time for commencement of that trial later that day."
"In those circumstances I accept the submission of Mr Morgan QC that a case "concludes at trial" if it settles on the day fixed for trial and Rule 45.25(1)(a) and 45.24(1)(a) must be interpreted in that way."
" I am afraid I find that I have to disagree with the learned Master's judgment on a number of matters. Firstly, I do not accept that there is a lacuna in the rules. Nor do I accept the reasoning of the learned Master in para. 23 that a case which settles on the day of the final hearing cannot be a claim which concludes twenty-one or any other number of days 'before the date fixed for the commencement of the trial'. It seems to me that this reasoning confuses sub-rule (5) which instructs the court how to calculate periods of time with the interpretation of Rule 45.17(1)(c)(i). It seems to me that counsel, in a multi-track claim, in a road traffic case is entitled to 75 percent if the claim settles or concludes (as the wording of the rule is) in a period which commences with twenty-one days before the date fixed for the commencement of the trial. The commencement of [a] period of time - namely, the twenty-one days - must exclude the day fixed for the commencement of the trial. However, so long as the claim concludes in that period, the commencement of which is determined by sub-rule (5), at any stage up to the time when the trial commences, i.e. counsel begins to open the case, then counsel is entitled to 75 percent, and the court should not countenance any lacuna in the rules, much less should it interpret the clear provisions in relation to solicitors in a way which is affected by the rule relating to counsel. It seems to me that the proper construction of the rule relating to counsel is the one that I have put forward. If that construction is correct, then everything else falls into what might be described as 'normal order' and is entirely consistent with sub-rule 45.15(6)."
"The first question to be determined is whether, on the basis of solicitors' CFA agreement, this claim had concluded at trial. To my mind the word "trial" denotes an examination and determination of issues between the parties by a Judge, or some other tribunal."
However Master Haworth distinguished both Dahele and Sitapuria from the case before him on the basis that the fixed costs regime in Part 45 did not apply to the facts of the case before him. The wording of the CFA did not mirror that of the provisions relating to success fees in Part 45 CPR.