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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Partakis-Stevens & Anor v Sihan & Ors (Re Consequential Matters) [2023] EWHC 1051 (TCC) (05 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2023/1051.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1051 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KB)
B e f o r e :
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(1) GEORGINA PARTAKIS-STEVENS (2) LAURENCE STEVENS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) BALJIT SIHAN (2) LESLEY SIHAN - and - (3) SERGIO ROMERO (4) ELIANA GUERCIO |
First and Second Defendants / Defendants to Additional Claim Third and Fourth Defendants / Claimants in Additional Claim |
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Mr Clifford Darton KC (instructed by Avisons Solicitors, Leeds LS1) for the First and Second Defendants
Mr Brad Pomfret (instructed by Eversheds Sutherland (International) LLP, Salford M3) for the Third and Fourth Defendants
Hearing dates: 20-21 April 2023
Date draft judgment circulated: 25 April 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Remote hand-down: This judgment was handed down remotely at 10:00am on 5 May 2023 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and by release to The National Archives.
His Honour Judge Stephen Davies:
Section | Paragraphs | |
A | Introduction and summary of decision | 1 - 3 |
B | The Stevens' costs of the main action as against the Sihans and the Romeros | 4 - 31 |
C | The Romeros' costs against the Sihans | 32 - 66 |
A. Introduction and decision
(a) The Stevens succeed in their claim in nuisance against the Sihans, with damages being awarded in the sum of £59,500.
(b) The Stevens succeed in their claim in nuisance against the Romeros, in that the court will order the Romeros to undertake limited remedial works to no 17 comprising the construction of slot drains around the outside perimeter of the paved areas to the rear and to the no 15 side of the house at no 17, such drains to be connected into the existing public drainage system. There is no separate award of damages against the Romeros.
(c) The Romeros are entitled to damages for misrepresentation and breach of contract and to contribution under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 against the Sihans, amounting to an indemnity against: (i) the costs incurred in complying with the injunction; (ii) the costs incurred in complying with the enforcement notice issued by the local planning authority (to the extent that they are required to do so); and (iii) the reasonable and reasonably incurred costs of defending the claim. These claims will be assessed at a future hearing if not agreed.
(1) I accept that the Stevens are entitled to interest on their judgment at 3% p.a. from the date of their letter of claim on the basis that by this date at the latest they had suffered a relevant loss, namely damage which required remedial works to remedy, regardless of the fact that by such date they had not undertaken or incurred all of the losses the subject of the award.
(2) I accept that both the Stevens and the Romeros are entitled to interest on costs paid at 3% pa.
B The Stevens' costs of the main action as against the Sihans and the Romeros
(i) First, because the Stevens, having instructed Mr Raine their valuer, disclosed a copy of his report and, in January 2020, said that whilst they were willing to negotiate they considered that if works were to be undertaken to no 17 they would be seeking an additional payment representing the 10% diminution in value identified by Mr Raine (or, alternatively, a levels reduction or a very substantial one-off payment).
(ii) Second, because the Romeros, whilst between their former solicitors JMW and their current solicitors Eversheds, said that they were unwilling to accept any change in the appearance of their rear garden (i.e. no levels reduction) and were seeking substantial compensation.
(iii) Third, because although the parties engaged in a mediation on 20 February 2020, no settlement was reached.
(iv) Fourth, because although the parties remained willing to and did continue to negotiate after the mediation, on 15 April 2020 the Sihans, having themselves changed solicitors, wrote WPSC to say that they were withdrawing from any previous offers. No proper explanation has ever been given as to why they did so and it is a very powerful point against them in seeking to rely upon their earlier willingness to settle before proceedings were issued.
(v) No further progress was achieved before proceedings were issued in June 2020, although in May 2020 the Romeros made clear their willingness to consider any suitable scheme if funded by the Sihans. After proceedings were issued no further WPSC offer was made by the Sihans. The Romeros made a WPSC offer in May 2021, whereby they offered to undertake remedial works to no 17 (involving a drainage scheme to no 17 either with or without a levels reduction, where the levels reduction would involve significantly greater expense) on the basis that they were paid for by the Sihans, who would also make a compensatory payment to the Romeros (which did not include any diminution in value) as well as paying their costs. The Sihans' preference was for the scheme without levels reduction, whereas the Stevens' preference was for the scheme with levels reduction. The Stevens were willing to engage, however, there was no WPSC response from the Sihans and no agreement was forthcoming, for reasons which are not explained in WPSC correspondence.
(vi) The Stevens also proposed a joint settlement meeting ("JSM") on a number of occasions from June 2021, but the Sihans were unwilling to do so until the liability experts had completed their discussions and evidence and, eventually, in August 2022 refused to agree on the basis that they were confident that the expert evidence of their expert and that of the Romeros would be preferred.
Conclusions as to the costs of the main action
Payment on account
C. The Romeros' costs against the Sihans
(a) The Romeros' liability for the Stevens' costs of the main action.
(b) The costs incurred by the Romeros in defending the main action.
(c) The costs incurred by the Romeros in bringing the contribution claim.
"366. It follows in my judgment that the Romeros are entitled as damages for misrepresentation amounting to a full indemnity in respect of the losses which they have incurred or will incur as a result of the misrepresentation, subject to questions of causation, reasonableness and mitigation. That will include the costs of complying with the injunction which I have decided should be ordered against the Romeros. It will also include all of the costs of this litigation, subject of course to any counter-arguments which the Sihans may be able to assert in relation to causation, reasonableness and mitigation (and in particular those which may be raised by reference to without prejudice subject to costs correspondence which I am not entitled to see at that point)."
(i) Insofar as the reference to "all of the costs of this litigation" includes the Romeros' costs of the additional claim, that is not a pleaded part of the Romeros' case on which they succeeded, is inconsistent with paragraph 5(c) and is wrong in principle to award such costs as damages.
(ii) Insofar as it includes the costs of the Stevens and the Romeros in relation to the main action, it is wrong in principle to award such costs as damages.
(iii) Insofar as such costs are recoverable as damages, there is a need to prove causation and also the basis of assessment should be the standard and not the indemnity basis.
Costs as costs
(i) It is virtually impossible to separate out the factual investigation required as between the separate claims, since the detailed investigation of what was done, both pre and post purchase, was relevant to the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 ("CLCA 78") claim, to the neighbour dispute misrepresentation claim, to the planning permission misrepresentation claim and to the breach of contract claim. The factual investigation relevant to the 5 April 2018 email indemnity claim was virtually non-existent.
(ii) Whilst it might be said that the factual issues relevant to the planning permission claims can be separated from the factual issues relevant to the CLCA 78 and neighbour misrepresentation claims, that does not really assist since the factual investigation relevant to the planning permission claims straddles both the planning permission misrepresentation claim (on which the Romeros failed) and the breach of contract claim (on which they succeeded). On any view, the costs of the expert liability evidence related to the CLCA 78 claim whereas the cost of the valuation expert evidence related to both of the misrepresentation claims. The legal issues related to all of the issues.
Indemnity costs
Costs as damages
(i) There is usually no difficulty about recovering the costs which the claimant has been ordered to pay in earlier proceedings (21-002). In this case, for the reasons given in paragraph 34 above, there is no issue as to how the costs are to be assessed and, given the conclusions I have reached as to my decision under the costs jurisdiction, no difference between recovery as damages or recovery as costs.
(ii) The long-established position, at a time when there was a significant difference between the recovery of costs as between the parties (party and party costs, which were only allowed when necessarily incurred) and as between the party and their solicitor (solicitor and client costs, which were payable in full), was to allow recovery of solicitor and client costs as damages against a third party whose wrong had caused the loss (21-003).
(iii) In 1986 standard costs were introduced, which allowed the successful party to recover costs reasonably – and not just necessarily – incurred and reasonable in amount, as were indemnity costs, which allowed the successful party to recover costs except where unreasonable in amount or unreasonably incurred (21-004).
(iv) In 1996 Carnwath J relied upon this change in deciding that the costs recoverable by a claimant in such cases were limited to what they would have recovered on the standard basis: British Racing Drivers Club Ltd v Hextall Erskine & Co [1996] 3 All E.R. 667 (21-005). In his decision he noted that previously the rule had differentiated between cases where the parties were the same, where only party and party (now standard) costs were allowed, and cases where the parties were different, where solicitor and own client costs were allowed as damages. He noted that, as had been said by Scott LJ in The Tiburon [1992] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 26, albeit obiter, even under a claim to recover costs as damages only costs reasonably incurred would be allowed, regardless of whether the case involved one claim with two defendants or successive claims with two separate defendants and this corresponded most closely with an assessment on the standard basis, which is what would be directed. He concluded that "litigation costs have traditionally been subject to special rules for policy reasons" and that such costs should be subject to a taxation on the standard basis in all cases.
(v) That decision was followed subsequently by other first instance judges, on grounds of judicial comity, but with varying levels of enthusiasm (21-005).
(vi) The editor however considered that this approach was mistaken, not least because of the subsequent change, introduced by the CPR, requiring recoverable costs on the standard basis to be proportionate as well as reasonable, whereas such restriction did not apply to indemnity costs. He also noted that there was also a real difference between standard and indemnity costs, as regards the burden of proof, which also explains why the indemnity basis tends to be more generous than the standard basis, and finally he observed that there was also a potential difference even between indemnity costs and solicitor and own client costs if awarded as damages because the standard of reasonableness is measured by the duty to mitigate loss which is not an exacting duty (21-006 to 0008).
(vii) Eventually, in Hermann v Withers [2012] EWHC 1492 (Ch), Newey J consciously departed from the British Racing Club case and awarded as damages costs assessed on the indemnity basis incurred by the claimant in obtaining legal advice on a problem arising out of the negligence of his former solicitors (21-011). He essentially agreed with the criticisms expressed by Sir Anthony Colman in National Westminster Bank plc v Rabobank Nederland [2007] EWHC to the effect that the change in the method of assessment of standard basis had undermined the correctness of Carnwath's decision and that the decision could not be justified on public policy grounds. More recently, in Hawksford Trustees Jersey Ltd v Halliwells LLP (in liquidation) [2015] EWHC 2996, HHJ Pelling QC (sitting as a High Court Judge) followed the approach of Newey J. The editor has suggested that this issue awaits resolution by the Court of Appeal.
(viii) At paragraph 21-037 the editor also considered the cases involving string contracts resulting in one action with the contracting parties being joined in down the line as third and fourth parties etc, where the courts had permitted the recovery of solicitor and own client costs down the line. At paragraph 21-038 the editor considered the decision of the Court of Appeal in Penn v Bristol & West Building Society [1997] 1 WLR 1356, where the court allowed the defendant building society to recover in the claim against the third party solicitor to recover no more than the standard basis costs which it had incurred in its unsuccessful defence of the claim brought by it by the claimant. However, the decision turned on a construction of the then costs rule in RSC Ord. 62 r.3(2) which has no place in the CPR.
(1) To follows the approach of Carnwath J in the British Racing Club case and award only standard costs, on the basis that this is the applicable rule in all cases.
(2) To follow the approach of Newey J in Hermann v Withers and award only indemnity costs, on the same basis.
(3) To determine the approach which in my view is consistent with principle and meets the practical justice of the case.
Payment on account