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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 >> Marcura Equities FZE & Anor v Nisomar Ventures Ltd & Anor [2018] EWHC 523 (QB) (16 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/523.html Cite as: [2018] 2 Costs LR 227, [2018] EWHC 523 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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(1) MARCURA EQUITIES FZE (2) DA-DESK FZ-LLC |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) NISOMAR VENTURES LIMITED (2) CLAUS HYLDAGER |
Defendants |
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Christopher Quinn (instructed by Collyer Bristow LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 7 March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
NICHOLAS VINEALL QC:
Background and history of the proceedings
6.1. Mr Schulz was employed by the Second Claimant from July 2012 until he resigned on 28 February 2017, but he continued to work as a consultant to the First Claimant until mid-April 2017; and
6.2. Mr Schulz was involved with the development and marketing of PortLog. Mr Schulz signed service, resignation, and consultancy agreements with the Claimants which contained express confidentiality obligations and post-terminations restrictions, on which the Claimants relied.
What was the status of the settlement meeting on 2 February 2018?
25. Negotiations which have taken place expressly on a "without prejudice save as to costs basis" are admissible on the question of costs as an exception to the general rule which precludes the admission of without prejudice communications: see Calderbank v Calderbank [1976] Fam 93, Cutts v Head [1984] Ch 290 and Unilever v Procter & Gamble [2000] 1 WLR 2436 at 2445C–E. However, if the parties wish to exclude the general rule that would otherwise apply, they must say so: see for example, the judgment of Hoffmann LJ, as he then was, in Muller v Linsley & Mortimer [1996] PNLR 74 at 77 where he said:
"Some of the decisions on the without prejudice rule show a fairly mechanistic approach, but the recent cases, most notably the decisions of this court in Cutts v Head [1984] Ch 290, and the House of Lords in Rush & Tompkins Ltd v Greater London Council [1989] AC 1280, are firmly based upon an analysis of the rule's underlying rationale. Cutts v Head shows that the rule has two justifications. First, the public policy of encouraging parties to negotiate and settle their disputes out of court and, secondly, an implied agreement arising out of what is commonly understood to be the consequences of offering or agreeing to negotiate without prejudice. In some cases both of these justifications are present; in others, only one or the other. So, in Cutts v Head the rule that one could not rely upon a without prejudice offer on the question of costs after judgment was held not to be based upon any public policy. It did not promote the policy of encouraging settlements because as Oliver LJ said: 'As a practical matter, a consciousness of a risk as to costs if reasonable offers are refused can only encourage settlement …' It followed that the only basis for excluding reference to a without prejudice offer on costs was an implied agreement based on general usage and understanding that the party making the offer would not do so. Such an implication could be excluded by a contrary statement as in a Calderbank offer."
26. See further Reed Executive plc v Reed Business Information Ltd [2004] EWCA Civ 887; [2004] 1 WLR 3026 at paras 20 to 21.
27. There is simply no evidence that any such contrary statement was made here.
What form of order to make?
The right approach to costs where everything else has been settled
Costs after settlement before trial in ordinary civil litigation
47 It is open to parties in almost any civil proceedings to compromise all their differences save costs, and to invite the court to determine how the costs should be dealt with. The court has jurisdiction in such a case to determine who is to pay costs, but it is not obliged to resolve such a free-standing dispute about costs. Accordingly, by settling all issues save costs, the parties take the risk that the court will not be prepared to make any determination other than that there be no order for costs not only because that is the right result after analysing all the arguments, but also on the ground that such an exercise would be disproportionate.
48 In BCT Software Solutions Ltd v C Brewer & Sons Ltd [2004] FSR 150 Chadwick LJ said this at para 24 (which was approved in Venture Finance plc v Mead [2006] 3 Costs LR 389 ):
"In a case where there has been a judgment after trial, the judge may be expected to be in a position to decide whether one party or the other has been successful overall; whether one party or the other has been successful on discrete issues; whether the fact that the party who has been successful overall but unsuccessful on some issues calls for an order which reflects his lack of success on those issues; and whether-having regard to all the circumstances (including conduct) as CPR r 44.3(4) requires-the order for costs should be limited in one or more of the respects set out in CPR r 44.3(6) . But where there has been no trial - or no judgment - the judge may well not be in a position to reach a decision on those matters. He will not be in a position to decide those matters if they turn on facts which have not been agreed or determined. In such a case he should accept that the right course is to decide that he should not make an order about costs. As the arguments on the present appeal demonstrate, it does the parties no service if the judge-in a laudable attempt to assist them to resolve their dispute-makes an order about costs which he is not really in a position to make."
49 However, Chadwick LJ immediately went on to say in the next paragraph, para 25:
"There will be cases (perhaps many cases) in which it will be clear that there was only one issue, that one party has been successful on that issue, and that conduct is not a factor which could displace the general rule."
This would seem to me to be clearly right. Given the normal principles applicable to costs when litigation goes to a trial, it is hard see why a claimant who, after complying with any relevant protocol and issuing proceedings, is accorded by consent all the relief he seeks, should not recover his costs from the defendant, at least in the absence of some good reason to the contrary. In particular, it seems to me that there is no ground for refusing the claimant his costs simply on the ground that he was accorded such relief by the defendants conceding it in a consent order, rather than by the court ordering it after a contested hearing. In the words of CPR r 44.3(2) the claimant in such a case is every bit as much the successful party as he would have been if he had won after a trial.
50 The outcome will normally be different in cases where the consent order does not involve the claimant getting all, or substantively all, the relief which he has claimed. In such cases the court will often decide to make no order for costs, unless it can without much effort decide that one of the parties has clearly won, or has won to a sufficient extent to justify some order for costs in its favour. Thus the fact that the claimant has succeeded in obtaining part of the relief he sought may justify his recovering some of his costs, for instance where the issue on which the claimant succeeded was clearly the most important and/or expensive issue. But in many such cases the court may consider that it cannot fairly award the claimant any costs because, for instance, it is not easy to assess whether the defendants should have their costs of the issue on which the claimant did not succeed, and whether that would wipe out the costs which the claimant might recover in relation to the issue on which he won.
51 In many cases which are settled on terms which do not accord with the relief which the claimant has sought, the court will normally be unable to decide who has won, and therefore will not make any order for costs. However, in some cases the court may be able to form a tolerably clear view without much effort. In a number of such cases the court may well be assisted by considering whether it is reasonably clear from the available material whether one party would have won if the case had proceeded to trial. If for instance it is clear that the claimant would have won, that would lend considerable support to his argument that the terms of settlement represent success such that he should be awarded his costs. An example of such a case is Brawley v Marczynski [2003] 1 WLR 813 where the court could determine without too much effort who would have won, and then took that into account when awarding costs.
(a) Offers to settle
(b) The fact that the Claimants have only recovered £35,000
(c) Other criticism of the Claimants' conduct
Costs order
Basis of Assessment
Payment on account of costs