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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 >> The Secretary of State for Justice the Lord Chancellor v SVS Solicitors [2017] EWHC 1045 (QB) (11 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/1045.html Cite as: [2017] 4 WLR 87, [2017] 3 Costs LO 331, [2017] WLR(D) 320, [2017] EWHC 1045 (QB), [2017] Lloyd's Rep FC 404 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MASTER ROWLEY (sitting as an Assessor)
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR JUSTICE THE LORD CHANCELLOR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SVS SOLICITORS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Anthony Montgomery (instructed by SVS Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21st March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Holroyde:
The statutory framework:
"Claims for fees by litigators in proceedings in the Crown Court must be made and determined in accordance with the provisions of Schedule 2 to these Regulations."
"(2) For the purposes of this Schedule, the number of pages of prosecution evidence served on the court must be determined in accordance with sub-paragraphs (3) to (5).
(3) The number of pages of prosecution evidence includes all
(a) witness statements;
(b) documentary and pictorial exhibits;
(c) records of interviews with the assisted person; and
(d) records of interviews with other defendants,
which form part of the served prosecution documents or which are included in any notice of additional evidence.
(4) Subject to sub-paragraph (5), a document served by the prosecution in electronic form is included in the number of pages of prosecution evidence.
(5) A documentary or pictorial exhibit which
(a) has been served by the prosecution in electronic form; and
(b) has never existed in paper form,
is not included within the number of pages of prosecution evidence unless the appropriate officer decides that it would be appropriate to include it in the pages of prosecution evidence taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances."
"The Determining Officer will take into account whether the document would have been printed by the prosecution and served in paper form prior to 1 April 2012. If so, then it will be counted as PPE. If the determining officer is unable to make that assessment, they will take into account 'any other relevant circumstances' such as the importance of the evidence to the case, the amount and the nature of the work that was required to be done and by whom, and the extent to which the electronic evidence featured in the case against the defendant."
"Raw phone data where a detailed schedule has been created by the prosecution which is served and relied on and is relevant to the defendant's case.
Raw phone data if it is served without a schedule having been created by the prosecution, but the evidence nevertheless remains important to the prosecution case and is relevant to the defendant's case, eg it can be shown that a careful analysis had to be carried out on the data to dispute the extent of the defendant's involvement.
Raw phone data where the case is a conspiracy and the electronic evidence relates to the defendant and co-conspirators with whom the defendant had direct contact."
"(6) The Senior Costs Judge may, and if so directed by the Lord Chancellor either generally or in a particular case must, send to the Lord Chancellor a copy of the notice of appeal together with copies of such other documents as the Lord Chancellor may require.
(7) With a view to ensuring that the public interest is taken into account, the Lord Chancellor may arrange for written or oral representations to be made on the Lord Chancellor's behalf and, if the Lord Chancellor intends to do so, the Lord Chancellor must inform the Senior Costs Judge and the appellant.
(8) Any written representations made on behalf of the Lord Chancellor under paragraph (7) must be sent to the Senior Costs Judge and the appellant and, in the case of oral representations, the Senior Costs Judge and the appellant must be informed of the grounds on which such representations will be made.
(9) The appellant must be permitted a reasonable opportunity to make representations in reply.
(10) The Costs Judge must inform the appellant (or the person representing him) and the Lord Chancellor, where representations have been or are to be made on the Lord Chancellor's behalf, of the date of any hearing and, subject to the provisions of this regulation, may give directions as to the conduct of the appeal.
(11) The Costs Judge may consult the trial judge or the appropriate officer and may require the appellant to provide any further information which the Costs Judge requires for the purpose of the appeal and, unless the Costs Judge otherwise directs, no further evidence may be received on the hearing of the appeal and no ground of objection may be raised which was not raised under regulation 28.
(12) The Costs Judge has the same powers as the appropriate officer under these Regulations and, in the exercise of such powers, may alter the redetermination of the appropriate officer in respect of any sum allowed, whether by increasing or decreasing it, as the Costs Judge thinks fit.
(13) The Costs Judge must communicate his decision and the reasons for it in writing to the appellant, the Lord Chancellor and the appropriate officer."
"30. Appeals to the High Court
(1) A representative who is dissatisfied with the decision of a Costs Judge on an appeal under regulation 29 may apply to a Costs Judge to certify a point of principle of general importance.
(2) Subject to regulation 31, an application under paragraph (1) or paragraph 11(3) of Schedule 3 must be made within 21 days of receiving notification of a Costs Judge's decision under regulation 29(13).
(3) Where a Costs Judge certifies a point of principle of general importance the appellant may appeal to the High Court against the decision of a Costs Judge on an appeal under regulation 29, and the Lord Chancellor must be a respondent to such an appeal.
(4) Subject to regulation 31, an appeal under paragraph (3) must be instituted within 21 days of receiving notification of a Costs Judge's certificate under paragraph (1).
(5) Where the Lord Chancellor is dissatisfied with the decision of a Costs Judge on an appeal under regulation 29, the Lord Chancellor may, if no appeal has been made by an appellant under paragraph (3), appeal to the High Court against that decision, and the appellant must be a respondent to the appeal.
(6) Subject to regulation 31, an appeal under paragraph (5) must be instituted within 21 days of receiving notification of the Costs Judge's decision under regulation 29(13).
(7) An appeal under paragraph (3) or (5) must
(a) be brought in the Queen's Bench Division;
(b) subject to paragraph (4), follow the procedure set out in Part 52 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998; and
(c) be heard and determined by a single judge whose decision will be final.
(8) The judge has the same powers as the appropriate officer and a Costs Judge under these Regulations and may reverse, affirm or amend the decision appealed against or make such other order as the judge thinks fit."
The proceedings in the Crown Court:
"Please find enclosed a disc containing ongoing disclosure in relation to your client. The disc is encrypted and the password remains the same."
"Dear Sirs,
R v [D], Blackfriars Crown Court 11th March, 2016
Disclosure of prosecution material under section 7 Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996
I write further to your disclosure request, the reasons for which were provided under cover email dated 27. 1.16.
You will be aware that the Crown has already served the extracts from the telephone downloads and billing data upon which it proposes to rely, and from which the telephone schedules have been produced. The unredacted downloads contain names and telephone numbers of people wholly unconnected to the case. As such middle digits have been redacted so that the numbers can be seen and checked but so that the parties cannot be identified or contacted from those numbers. The Crown did so in order to protect the privacy of those people not connected with the case. In addition viber and face book chat logs were removed from the downloads as they are not relied upon in evidence.
You have requested unredacted versions of the handset downloads and excel versions of the billing data. You have intimated that you require such material to be disclosed in order that you might prepare your own schedules of telephone contact and to check the accuracy of the Crown's timelines. The Crown maintains that the accuracy of the timelines can be checked with reference to the served evidence. However, we appreciate that in order to draft your own schedules you would require the entirety of those downloads in unredacted form. The billing data in an excel version has already been provided to you. The unredacted telephone downloads are now disclosed as attached.
This material is disclosed to you in accordance with the provisions of the CPIA, and you must not use or disclose it, or any information recorded in it for any purpose other than in connection with these criminal proceedings. If you do so without the permission of the court, you may commit an offence."
SVS's claim for fees:
"played a key part in this case in showing the roles each defendant played and the extent of their individual involvement. It is clear from the CPS disclosure note dated 2nd of February that this telephone evidence was central to the Crown's case, of which certain extracts had been selected and served. It is also clear that in order to test the Crown's case properly and to prepare the defence for Miss [D] effectively, full service of telephone downloads was needed to prove the relationship between the defendants."
SVS went on to explain the nature of the defence, important parts of which were that Ms D had had no phone contact at all with the fourth defendant or with phone numbers which were connected to him, and that her phone contact with the first defendant was explained by their having an affair rather than by her being involved in crime. They stated that the material contained on the discs had been the evidential basis on which they had been able successfully to advance the defence case at trial.
"I am unable to consider the discs without the NAE/exhibit list confirming that the discs were formally served by the CPS. The letters provided confirm that the discs were disclosed but they do not confirm that they were served."
" is the underlying material used by the Crown to make up various compendious schedules that went before the jury in the trial, namely exhibits CL/1, CL/2 and CL/3."
"My reasons for this are the discs provided were not formally served as evidence by the prosecution, therefore it falls into the category unused material. Unused evidence does not meet the ppe criteria and the work involved in considering it is already wrapped up in the graduated fee. Despite numerous requests by the litigator fee team, you have been unable to provide an NAE or exhibit list to confirm that the disc was formally served, therefore it can only be determined to fall into unused material."
"The point at issue is in relation to the "disclosed" telephone evidence on disc (disclosed under letter dated 2nd February 2016) and whether or not that evidence is deemed to be served evidence or unused material."
Later in the note, they said
"The LAA have stated in their written reasons that 'the discs provided were not formally served as evidence by the prosecution, therefore it falls into the category of unused material'. This is incorrect the discs were not served as unused material they were served as "ongoing disclosure". The question that we need a ruling on is whether the ongoing disclosure can be deemed to be served evidence? We do not intend to be present at the appeal and look forward to receiving the cost judge's decision."
"9. In my judgment the letter of 2 February 2016 served the relevant disc. The Regulations do not state that the documentation has to be formally served. The PPE forms part of the served prosecution documents or documents which are included in any Notice of Additional Evidence. The disc in this case was a served prosecution document.
10. If a prosecution document has been served, the Determining Officer is required to look in detail as to what the document consists of. There may be many instances where documentation or discs served under cover of a letter similar to that of 2 February 2016 are clearly unused material, or is material that is only peripheral to the case or the defence. In such a case the Determining Officer would be correct in determining that that material was not PPE.
11. However, there are cases such as this where it is quite clear that the content of the disc was central to the case (as opposed to just central to the defence) as it constituted the evidential basis upon which the Crown were able to prepare and put together the telephone schedules used at trial.
12. It would, in my judgment, be an unjust interpretation of the Regulations to conclude that material that had been served without a Notice of Additional Evidence must automatically be regarded as unused material and therefore excluded from the PPE count.
13. In my judgment, the material served under cover of the letter from the Crown Prosecution Service dated 2 February 2016 forms part of the served prosecution documents. I am satisfied that the contents of this electronically served material is such that, taking into account the nature and content of the document and all the relevant circumstances, it is appropriate that it should be included in the PPE."
The emphasis in the quotation of paragraph 11 is mine.
The appeal to the High Court:
"Ground 1: The learned Costs Judge erred in not applying the definition of 'Pages of Prosecution Evidence' contained in paragraph 1 of Schedule 2 to the 2013 Regulations. Had the learned Costs Judge correctly applied the statutory definition, he would have concluded that the 1,571 pages on the disc were not PPE because
a) they did not form part of the served prosecution documents because they were not served on the court;
b) they were not included in any notice of additional evidence;
c) in any event, the pages had never existed in paper form and neither the nature of the document or any other relevant circumstance made it appropriate to include it as PPE.
Ground 2: To the extent that the learned Costs Judge sought to exercise some sort of discretionary power to deem as PPE material that does not fall within the statutory definition, he was in error because no such discretionary power exists."
The application to adduce fresh evidence:
i) Ten mobile phones had been seized from the four defendants. In relation to one, it appears that no data were obtained. In relation to each of the remaining nine, the police obtained full downloads of the data stored on or relating to the phone.ii) Seven of those downloads were served as exhibits in the case. The other two phones - one attributed to Ms D and the other attributed to the second defendant were differently treated: the prosecution served as exhibits, in PDF format, those parts of the downloads on which they wished to rely, but excluded those parts of the downloads which related to messages using the Facebook and Viber platforms.
iii) Those downloads and part-downloads which were treated as exhibits were listed in the prosecution lists of evidence and exhibits. The excluded sections of the downloads were not listed as exhibits, but were instead included as items in a schedule of unused material (which was not signed off by a reviewing lawyer until 5th February 2016, after the letters of 2nd February had been sent).
iv) One of the discs provided to SVS on 2nd February 2016 contained Excel versions of downloads which had already been served as exhibits in PDF format. This disc, containing 108 pages of material, was labelled "Telecoms raw data", and appears to have been sent with the shorter letter. It was provided in a helpful response to a defence request for the data to be provided in a format which could more easily be read and manipulated by the defence.
v) The other disc labelled "Ongoing disclosure to [Ms D]", and apparently sent with the longer letter - contained 1,467 pages of material comprising a full version of data which had previously been served as exhibits in redacted form. This disc accordingly contained some data 201 pages - which had already been exhibited and was therefore already in the possession of the defence.
vi) SVS now acknowledge that the figure of 1,571 pages of electronic material for which they claimed remuneration was inadvertently overstated in two respects: first, because SVS overlooked the fact that the 108 pages of "Telecoms raw data" was material which was in a different format but was otherwise identical to material which they already had; and secondly, because they failed to take into account that 201 pages of the material on the "Ongoing disclosure" disc merely duplicated the redacted material previously provided to them. On that basis, it is acknowledged that the 1,571 pages which the Costs Judge ruled should be included in the number of PPE should be reduced to 1,262 pages.
The submissions:
"There is simply no proper basis upon which either the CPS or LAA can refuse to include telephone material served in digital form in the PPE, or caseworkers can refuse to make payment according to that PPE page count."
Mr Bedenham submits that statement went too far in seeking to impose a hard and fast rule when a case-by-case assessment of the relevant circumstances by the Determining Officer is needed. In any event, he says, Furniss can only apply to served prosecution evidence, and in this case the contentious 1,262 pages were not served. In this case, he argues, the prosecution did not rely on the Facebook and Viber messages, and therefore did not need to serve them as exhibits and did not serve them as exhibits. The discretion given to a Determining Officer or Costs Judge by paragraph 1(5) of Schedule 2 therefore could not arise here, and insofar as Costs Judge Simons purported to exercise a discretion, he had no power to do so.
"The Funding Order requires the Agency to consider whether it is appropriate to include evidence which has only ever existed electronically 'taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances'. Had it been intended to limit those circumstances only to the issue of whether the evidence would previously have been served in paper format, the Funding Order could easily so have provided. It seems to me that the more obvious intention of the Funding Order is that documents which are served electronically and have never existed in paper form should be treated as pages of prosecution evidence if they require a similar degree of consideration to evidence served on paper. So in a case where, for example, thousands of pages of raw telephone data have been served and the task of the defence lawyers is simply to see whether their client's mobile phone number appears (a task more easily done by electronic search), it would be difficult to conclude that the pages should be treated as part of the page count. Where however the evidence served electronically is an important part of the prosecution case, it would be difficult to conclude that the pages should not be treated as part of the page count."
The LAA Guidance to which I have referred above is consistent with that judgment.
Discussion:
" integral to the prosecution case and required the defence to review and examine it in detail for the purposes of properly preparing the defence cases. The crucial nature of this material to the trial was not in any dispute."
He emphasised forcefully that the defence advocates had had to check all of the telephone downloads with care if they were to agree to the schedule of calls and other details which the prosecution wished to put before the jury. He noted that it would have been open to the defence teams to refuse to agree the schedule until all relevant material had been properly served.
"Given the importance of the evidence it is unsurprising that the defence refused to agree to admission of the extracted data until it was able to examine all the data on the download. This was the defence application to the trial judge which he granted. The request was not only reasonable, it enabled the defendant's legal team to properly fulfil its duty to the defendant. It enabled the defendant's legal representatives to satisfy themselves of the veracity of the extracted date and to place the same in a context having examined and considered the surrounding and/or underlying data. It also enabled the defendant's legal team to extract any communications which they deemed to be relevant. Given the importance of the extracted material to the Crown's case and resultant duty upon the defendant's team to satisfy itself of the veracity and context of the same I am satisfied that this was additional evidence which should have been accompanied by a Notice in the prescribed form."
i) The starting point is that only served evidence and exhibits can be counted as PPE. Material which is only disclosed as unused material cannot be PPE.ii) In this context, references to "served" evidence and exhibits must mean "served as part of the evidence and exhibits in the case". The evidence on which the prosecution rely will of course be served; but evidence may be served even though the prosecution does not specifically rely on every part of it.
iii) Where evidence and exhibits are formally served as part of the material on the basis of which a defendant is sent for trial, or under a subsequent notice of additional evidence, and are recorded as such in the relevant notices, there is no difficulty in concluding that they are served. But paragraph 1(3) of Schedule 2 to the 2013 Regulations only says that the number of PPE "includes" such material: it does not say that the number of PPE "comprises only" such material.
iv) "Service" may therefore be informal. Formal service is of course much to be preferred, both because it is required by the Criminal Procedure Rules and because it avoids subsequent arguments about the status of material. But it would be in nobody's interests to penalise informality if, in sensibly and cooperatively progressing a trial, the advocates dispensed with the need for service of a notice of additional evidence before further evidence could be adduced, and all parties subsequently overlooked the need for the prosecution to serve the requisite notice ex post facto.
v) The phrase "served on the court" seems to me to do no more than identify a convenient form of evidence as to what has been served by the prosecution on the defendant. I do not think that "service on the court" is a necessary precondition of evidence counting as part of the PPE. If 100 pages of further evidence and exhibits were served on a defendant under cover of a notice of additional evidence, it cannot be right that those 100 pages would be excluded from the count of PPE merely because the notice had for some reason not reached the court.
vi) In short, it is important to observe the formalities of service, and compliance with the formalities will provide clear evidence as to the status of particular material; but non-compliance with the formalities of service cannot of itself necessarily exclude material from the count of PPE.
vii) Where the prosecution seek to rely on only part of the data recovered from a particular source, and therefore serve an exhibit which contains only some of the data, issues may arise as to whether all of the data should be exhibited. The resolution of such issues will depend on the circumstances of the particular case, and on whether the data which have been exhibited can only fairly be considered in the light of the totality of the data. It should almost always be possible for the parties to resolve such issues between themselves, and it is in the interests of all concerned that a clear decision is reached and any necessary notice of additional evidence served. If, exceptionally, the parties are unable to agree as to what should be served, the trial judge can be asked whether he or she is prepared to make a ruling in the exercise of his case management powers. In such circumstances, the trial judge (if willing to make a ruling) will have to consider all the circumstances of the case before deciding whether the prosecution should be directed either to exhibit the underlying material or to present their case without the extracted material on which they seek to rely.
viii) If regrettably - the status of particular material has not been clearly resolved between the parties, or (exceptionally) by a ruling of the trial judge, then the Determining Officer (or, on appeal, the Costs Judge) will have to determine it in the light of all the information which is available. The view initially taken by the prosecution as to the status of the material will be a very important consideration, and will often be decisive, but is not necessarily so: if in reality the material was of central importance to the trial (and not merely helpful to the defence), the Determining Officer (or Costs Judge) would be entitled to conclude that it was in fact served, and that the absence of formal service should not affect its inclusion in the PPE. Again, this will be a case-specific decision. In making that decision, the Determining Officer (or Costs Judge) would be entitled to regard the failure of the parties to reach any agreement, or to seek a ruling from the trial judge, as a powerful indication that the prosecution's initial view as to the status of the material was correct. If the Determining Officer (or Costs Judge) is unable to conclude that material was in fact served, then it must be treated as unused material, even if it was important to the defence.
ix) If an exhibit is served, but in electronic form and in circumstances which come within paragraph 1(5) of Schedule 2, the Determining Officer (or, on appeal, the Costs Judge) will have a discretion as to whether he or she considers it appropriate to include it in the PPE. As I have indicated above, the LAA's Crown Court Fee Guidance explains the factors which should be considered. This is an important and valuable control mechanism which ensures that public funds are not expended inappropriately.
x) If an exhibit is served in electronic form but the Determining Officer or Costs Judge considers it inappropriate to include it in the count of PPE, a claim for special preparation may be made by the solicitors in the limited circumstances defined by Paragraph 20 of Schedule 2.
xi) If material which has been disclosed as unused material has not in fact been served (even informally) as evidence or exhibits, and the Determining Officer has not concluded that it should have been served (as indicated at (viii) above), then it cannot be included in the number of PPE. In such circumstances, the discretion under paragraph 1(5) does not apply.
i) On the information available to the Costs Judge, he was plainly entitled for the reasons he gave, which I have quoted above - to conclude that the contentious electronic material had in fact been served. The shorter of the letters sent on 2nd February 2016 was wholly unclear as to the status of the material sent with it. The longer letter was to my mind clearly intended as a disclosure of unused material rather than as service of an exhibit; but the Costs Judge had to consider that letter in the light of the information available to him as to the central importance which was in fact attached at trial to all the data relating to Ms D's phone. The letter asserted that the material which had already been exhibited was sufficient to enable the defence to "check the accuracy of the timelines"; but the defence contended otherwise, and the Costs Judge was entitled to accept their submissions, as he did at paragraph 11 of his ruling (quoted in paragraph 24 above).ii) The additional evidence which I have permitted the Appellant to adduce provides some welcome clarification, and has come close to persuading me that the Cost Judge's decision was reached on a mistaken basis and cannot stand. After careful reflection, however, I do not reach that conclusion. As I have indicated above, the view initially taken by the CPS is not necessarily decisive of the status of material for the purposes of counting pages of PPE. In explaining why the relevant material was initially treated as unused, the witness statement belatedly adduced by the Appellant says that the prosecution did not need to rely on the material contained on the "Ongoing disclosure" disc in order to prove their case "because they were not relevant to the issues in the case". That assertion, however, is plainly contradicted by the note provided by defence counsel, and it is a striking weakness of the Appellant's case before me that no evidence has been adduced as to how the case was conducted at trial or as to how the material on the disc was in fact put before the jury. Moreover, the witness statement does not provide any very clear explanation of why the downloads from two of the seized phones were treated differently from the downloads relating to seven other phones: on the face of it, there is no obvious reason why they should have been treated differently, and it is curious that the prosecution should have been unwilling to serve an exhibit which was so important to the case that, if served, it would plainly fall within the LAA Guidance as to examples of material which will usually be counted as PPE. I do not doubt the information which the CPS have provided to the Appellant's witness; but I can only accept the witness statement as evidence of what it says, and not as evidence of what it does not say.
iii) I am therefore not persuaded that Costs Judge Simons was wrong to conclude that the relevant material was a served prosecution exhibit.
iv) Having reached that decision, he was plainly entitled to exercise his discretion under paragraph 1(5) as he did, and to conclude that the material should be included in the PPE.