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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 >> Pentecost v John [2015] EWHC 1970 (QB) (10 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/1970.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1970 (QB), [2015] 4 Costs LO 497 |
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Claim No: HQ10X04552 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE SENIOR COURTS OFFICE
Chief Master Gordon-Saker
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting with Master Leonard as Assessor)
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HENRY ANDREW PENTECOST |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ANTHONY CHRISTOPHER JOHN |
Defendant |
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Mr David Holland QC (instructed by Clyde & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 20th May 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
THE INDEMNITY PRINCIPLE AND CFAs
"Traditionally the idea that a solicitor would be interested in the outcome of his client's case (other than professionally) was seen as an undesirable state of affairs. The lawyer should be disinterested in order to give impartial and proper advice. He would therefore need to be paid the same whether the case was won or lost. An agreement which depended upon the outcome of events would run counter to this requirement. Consequently, agreements which did so were considered to be 'maintaining' the action and if they included a sharing of the spoils of the litigation they were said to be 'champertous'. Maintenance and champerty were crimes up to the middle of the last century. Even when abolished as crimes, they remained as torts and still rendered solicitors' agreements unenforceable…
The Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 ('CLSA') created CFAs. The wording of s 58 is not the simplest to understand because it recognises that agreements contingent on the outcome of events are generally unenforceable. So, it carved out an area of contingency fee agreements which would be enforceable, but did not otherwise alter the general position. As Ian Burnett QC [now Burnett LJ] poetically put it in Hollins v Russell [2003] EWCA Civ 718, CFAs are 'islands of legality in a sea of illegality.' They have now been joined in this situation by Damages-Based Agreements as of April 2013.
So the Golden Rule to remember in respect of CFAs is that they need to comply with the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 and any subordinate legislation. If they do not, they become unenforceable contingency fee agreements. They are then unenforceable against the client and, by operation of the indemnity principle, fees generated under such an agreement cannot be recovered from the opponent.
This effect is the root cause of the so-called 'Costs Wars' in the early part of this century. Non-compliance was comparatively easy to demonstrate based on the original regulations. Much of those have been swept away but new Regulations and a new CFA Order came into being on 1 April 2013 and there may be more attempts by paying parties to render successful parties' agreements unenforceable."
"(1) A conditional fee agreement which satisfies all of the conditions applicable to it by virtue of this section shall not be unenforceable by reason only of its being a conditional fee agreement; but (subject to subsection (5)) any other conditional fee agreement shall be unenforceable.
…
(4) The following further conditions are applicable to a conditional fee agreement which provides for a success fee –
…
it must state the percentage by which the amount of the fees which would be payable if it were not a conditional fee agreement is to be increased; …"
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
THE APPEAL
i) He was wrong to find that there were two, entirely separate, CCFAs. The CCFA executed in 2009 was simply a variation of its predecessor. Therefore, there did not need to be a further statement of the success fee under that CCFA.ii) Even if this is not correct, and there was a wholly new CCFA from July 2009, then that CCFA did not impact on the claimant's retainer, because that retainer was created under the 2008 CCFA, and events subsequent to the retainer are irrelevant. The claimant's retainer subsisted under the 2008 CCFA, in respect of which a written statement of the success fee had been prepared.
iii) Even if this is not correct, and a statement of the success fee was required under a second CCFA, the master should have found that the statement of the success fee prepared on 25 March 2009 was sufficient to satisfy this requirement under the second CCFA as well as the first.
iv) Alternatively, the master should have found that, in the absence of a statement of the success fee under the second CCFA, then the proper analysis was that the claimant's retainer did not provide for a success fee, and not that it unlawfully stipulated for such a success fee contrary to the requirement of s 58(4) of the CLSA.
THE SCOPE OF THE SECOND CCFA
"29. The statutory requirement was for the CCFA to state the percentage success fee applicable to the claimant's case. The CCFA's mechanism for doing this was to require the solicitor to prepare a written statement of the applicable success fee in every case where the CCFA was utilised: see clause 3.2.
30. In the present case, the solicitors prepared such a statement on 25 March 2009. The exercise was not repeated when the CCFA was reproduced the following July. The solicitors simply continued with the case, without interruption.
31. The claimant contends that, in these circumstances, the existing statement of the success fee was adopted under the post-July 2009 retainer. The solicitors discharged their obligation under clause 3.2 of the CCFA via the statement they had already prepared. That remained the success fee for which they had provided in writing, and which applied to the claimant's retainer. That retainer therefore satisfied s 58(4) of the CLSA."
RETROSPECTIVITY
"This agreement applies to all claims for personal injuries… conducted by the Solicitors for members of the Union including clinical negligence claims…whether instructions in respect thereof were first received before, on or after the date of this agreement…"
"When accepting instructions under this agreement in relation to a claim Solicitors must inform the member as to the circumstances in which the member may be liable to pay the Solicitor's charges…"
"When accepting instructions under this agreement in relation to a claim…the Solicitors must prepare and retain a written a written-statement (sic.) (" the written statement of the success fee")…"
"The Solicitors shall comply with their obligations under Clauses 3.1 and 3.2 by sending to the member a copy of the "Conditions of GMB Southern Region Legal Aid" worded as set out in the document annexed to this agreement or as may be subsequently agreed by the parties to this agreement."
"But, so far as I am aware, there is no principle of English Law which provides that a contract cannot in any circumstances have retrospective effect, or that, if it purports to have, in fact, retrospective effect, it is in law a nullity …. Often, as I say, the ultimate contract expressly so provides. I can see no reason why, if the parties so intend and agree, such a stipulation should be denied legal effect."
"40. From these authorities, I therefore draw the following conclusions:
1. A contract…can take effect retrospectively...
2. Retrospective effect occurs where this is intended by the parties. That intention can be found if provided for in the words of the contract or deed or by way of necessary implication divined from the surrounding circumstances and from business efficacy…
5. The parties' intention that a contract or deed is to have retrospective effect is more readily to be seen where the parties had a prior contractual relationship preceding the contract.. in question but it is still possible for such retrospective effect to occur where no such prior contractual relationship was in existence where such is provided for by the clear words of the contract or deed.
6. The retrospectivity principle is excluded where, exceptionally, the law or a relevant statutory provision precludes a contract or deed from having retrospective effect. An example of that prohibition is the technical rule governing estates held in land that any term being created cannot start to run from a date prior to the date of the lease."
THE REMAINING ISSUES
CONCUSION