BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just ยฃ1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Fresh Catch Ltd v CGU Insurance Plc [2006] ScotCS CSOH_179 (23 November 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_179.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotCS CSOH_179, [2006] CSOH 179

[New search] [Help]


 

OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 179

 

A4996/01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE

 

in the cause

 

FRESH CATCH LIMITED

 

Pursuers;

 

against

 

CGU INSURANCE PLC

 

Defenders:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: Davidson; Tods Murray

Defenders: Duncan; Simpson & Marwick

 

 

23 November 2006

 

[1] On 1 February 2006 the court pronounced an interlocutor in terms of Minutes of Tender and Acceptance for payment of a substantial sum by the defenders to the pursuer, found the defenders liable to the pursuer in the expenses of the action to the date of tender and decerned for payment of the expenses "as the same shall be taxed by the Auditor of Court". On the pursuer's motion for an additional fee, the court remitted the application to the Auditor for him to determine in terms of Rule of Court 42.14(2)(b). Such a disposal is competent though relatively uncommon.

[2] Where the question of entitlement to an additional fee is remitted to the Auditor rather than decided by the court, that question is considered at the diet of taxation. Certain steps relating to taxation are regulated by Rules of Court. Rule 42.1(2) specifies the time within which the entitled party must lodge an account of expenses in process. Rule 42.2(1A) specifies the time within which the party found liable in expenses must intimate specific points of objection to the account of expenses. There is no Rule specifically regulating the procedure to be followed in relation to the Auditor's consideration of whether an additional fee should be allowed. However, Practice Note 3 of 1995 provides as follows:

"Where an application for an additional fee has been remitted to the Auditor ... there shall be lodged with the account of expenses a full statement of reasons in support of the particular factors which are considered [to] justify the allowance of an additional fee.

A copy of the statement must accompany the intimation copy account of expenses under [Rule] 42.1(2)(b)."

This makes it clear that the statement of reasons must be intimated and lodged at the time the account of expenses is lodged. The Practice Note is referred to in para.42.14.1 of the annotations to the Rules of Court (at p.C340 of the Parliament House Book).

[3] The pursuer duly lodged its account of expenses (two extensions of time for this having been granted by the Court) but failed to lodge or intimate a statement of reasons in respect of the claim for an additional fee. I am told that this was because the partner handling the case was unaware of the Practice Note.

[4] The diet of taxation took place on 18 October 2006. Parties are agreed as to what happened at that diet. It was the Auditor himself who first raised the problem that no statement of reasons had been lodged. The pursuer's representative sought, and was granted, a short adjournment to consider the position. Upon his return he indicated that he accepted that the Auditor could not deal with the question of the additional fee in the absence of a statement of reasons. There is some uncertainty as to whether this meant that he accepted that the Auditor could not deal with the additional fee at that time, i.e. until a statement of reasons was lodged, or whether it meant that since a statement of reasons had not been lodged he could never deal with it. The Auditor's recollection, contained in a letter dated 14 November 2006, is that, upon his return, the pursuer's representative "stated that he would no longer be insisting on the recovery of an additional fee for the pursuers". Counsel appearing before me agreed that the recollection of those present on behalf of the parties at the diet of taxation was that there was no express abandonment of this sort. I do not need to resolve this difference. Whatever may have been said, it is clear that the pursuer's representative did not ask that the diet of taxation be continued to allow a statement of reasons to be lodged late. The diet of taxation was therefore concluded on that day. Counsel for the defenders submitted that the net effect of what the pursuer did was that it gave up its right to an additional fee. The Auditor has not yet issued his report.

[5] On 20 October the pursuer enrolled a motion in the following terms (amendments to the motion, made on 24 October, being indicated in italics):

"On behalf of the pursuer, in respect of their (sic) failure to lodge a Note of Argument with the Account of Expenses in accordance with Practice Note no.3 of 1995, for the court to exercise its discretion under Rule of Court 2.1 and to allow the same to be received late and to allow a further Diet of Taxation to allow the Auditor to consider the pursuer's motion for an additional fee ..."

Subsequently, it occurred to those acting for the pursuer that the Auditor should be asked, before the motion was heard, whether he would, at this late stage, be prepared to consider the statement of reasons and reconvene the diet of taxation to discuss the question of the additional fee in light of the matters raised in the statement. On 27 October the pursuers' solicitors wrote to the Auditor to this effect, arguing that any question of the defenders being prejudiced by having to attend a further hearing, if he were to allow one, could be dealt with by an award of expenses, the pursuer's solicitors personally accepting liability for the defenders' expenses of that further hearing. The defenders' solicitors responded on 31 October, stating that "in every conventional sense the taxation is finished" and that "we consider that this taxation has concluded and the matter is at avizandum". The Auditor set out his views by letter from the Principal Clerk dated 14 November 2006. He gave his account (to which I have already referred) of what had happened at the diet of taxation and said that he "treated the taxation of the pursuer's account as being at an end". It was against this background that I heard argument on the motion on 16 November

[6] On behalf of the pursuer, counsel submitted that his clients were in a "Kafkaesque trap". The powers of the Auditor were limited. He was given a specific power to allow points of objection to be intimated late under Rule 42.2(1C). That was inapplicable to the present circumstances, but the fact that that power had to be given specifically showed that the Auditor had no general dispensing power. It followed that although the Auditor had not yet produced his report and was still seized of the matter, nonetheless he had no power to allow the statement of reasons in late. Accordingly the pursuer had to apply to the Court. He suggested that the Court had power under Rule 2.1 to grant the relief sought. For the defenders, counsel submitted that when the difficulty arose the pursuer had two options: it could either have asked the Auditor to continue the taxation and to allow the statement of reasons to be lodged late, which the Auditor would have had power to allow; or it could have asked for an adjournment to enable the pursuer to apply to the Court by motion along the lines of the present motion. The pursuer did neither. Instead, it allowed the diet of taxation to be concluded. He submitted that in those circumstances the present motion was incompetent. The auditor had concluded the diet of taxation and was now functus officio save in respect of producing his report. Further, the Court was functus officio since a final interlocutor had been pronounced dealing with all aspects of expenses, including the question of an additional fee. The Court had no power under Rule 2.1 to grant the relief sought. That Rule was concerned only with time limits imposed by the Rules of Court. The pursuer's non-compliance was with a direction in a Practice Note rather than with anything in a Rule of Court. In the alternative, he submitted that the pursuer was personally barred by the conduct of its representative at the diet of taxation. Having sought and obtained an adjournment to consider the problem, he chose to do nothing. The position was similar to that where a party might be precluded from reclaiming an interlocutor passed "of consent": Anderson v British Coal Corporation 1992 SLT 398. Finally he submitted that I should refuse the motion on its merits. The pursuer was in the present difficulty because of a deliberate decision at the diet of taxation not to do anything.

[7] In the course of argument counsel helpfully referred me to the following cases: U.C.B. Bank plc v Dundas & Wilson 1991 SLT 90, Taylor v Marshalls Food Group Ltd. (No.3) 1999 SLT 629, Petrie v North Milk Cooperative Ltd. (24 March 2005, Lord Reed, unreported), Coyle, Petitioner (25 October 2006, Gordon Reid QC, unreported). None were directly in point but they provided useful guidance. The first two of those cases help to identify the point in time after which it is too late for a party to move the court to allow an additional fee. In the U.C.B. Bank case, it was held to be competent to move for an additional fee some months after an interlocutor making an award of expenses and decerning for payment of the expenses as taxed by the Auditor, since an allowance of an additional fee did not involve any alteration or recall of the decerniture. In Taylor, however, it was held that it was too late to move for an additional fee after the Auditor had produced his report of taxation, since once the report has been issued the matter of expenses has been finally dealt with (subject to the Note of Objections procedure) and the (previously inchoate) interlocutor decerning for expenses takes effect. Both the Auditor and the court are at that stage functus.

[8] The present case falls between those two positions. The Auditor has not issued his report. It cannot therefore be said that the matter of expenses has been finally dealt with by him. Nor has the inchoate interlocutor decerning for the expenses as taxed yet taken effect. Accordingly, it cannot be said that the motion is incompetent for the reasons given in Taylor. Nonetheless, I have come to the conclusion that the court has no power to accede to the motion. The motions in U.C.B. Bank and Taylor were motions for an additional fee. They were properly made to the court in terms of the Rules. Similarly, a motion to allow an account of expenses to be lodged after the 4 month period prescribed by Rule of Court 42.1(2)(a) requires to be made to the court: see Rule 42.1(2)(aa). The reason for this is that the lodging of the account of expenses triggers the start of the taxation process. However, once the matter is before the Auditor in the taxation process, matters of procedure are for him and any application for relief for failure to comply with a procedural requirement should be made to him. This is demonstrated by Rule 42.2(1C). The power to relieve a party from the consequence of failing timeously to intimate points of objection is given to the Auditor, not to the court - though the exercise of the discretion by the Auditor may be challenged by judicial review (see Coyle) or, possibly, at a hearing on a Note of Objections (c.f. the discussion at para.[19] of Petrie). In that case, the requirement to intimate points of objection within a certain period is imposed by the Rules. Accordingly the power to relieve from the consequences of failure to comply with this requirement, if it is to be given to the Auditor, has to be given in the Rules. But other matters of procedure, not regulated by Rules of Court, are also for him to determine. Because the practice and procedure relevant to taxation of expenses is not laid down by a Rule of Court, no Rule of Court is required to give the Auditor power to relieve a party from the consequences of a failure to comply with any particular procedural requirement. For example, I was told that the Auditor sometimes continues the diet of taxation to allow further vouching to be lodged, ex hypothesi late. This is simply a facet of the discretion he is called upon to exercise in the course of the procedure before him. The fact that, as here, a particular procedural requirement is set out in a Practice Note does not alter the position. As counsel for the defenders conceded, correctly in my opinion, the Auditor would have had power in the present case, had he been asked to do so, to allow the statement of reasons to be lodged late and to continue the diet of taxation for this purpose. Further, it is a discretion which can be exercised by him at any time until he has completed the taxation. Just as a court has power to allow further matters of argument, and possibly even evidence, to be raised after the conclusion of a hearing whilst the case is at avizandum, so too the Auditor has a discretion, upon an application by one or other party, to allow further matters to be raised before him at any time before he issues his report. Such a power will, perhaps, not readily be exercised and its exercise may, of course, be the subject of challenge by judicial review or otherwise - but in the first instance the discretion is his and it is not for the court at this stage to tell him how to exercise it.

[9] In the present case, it is not clear to me that the Auditor has sought to exercise his discretion. His statement, in his letter, that he "treated the taxation of the pursuer's account as being at an end" suggests that he regards the fact that this stage has been reached as precluding him, as a matter of law, from entertaining the pursuer's application. If that is his view, it is, in my opinion, incorrect.

[10] It may be that the pursuer will make a further application to the Auditor. For that reason it is better that I say nothing about the submissions made to me about the merits of the application.

[11] For these reasons, I refuse the motion as incompetent.

 

 

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_179.html