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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Cole v. Silvermills Estates And Land Ltd & Anor [2011] ScotCS CSIH_37 (14 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2011/2011CSIH37.html Cite as: [2011] ScotCS CSIH_37, 2012 SC 1, 2011 GWD 20-461, [2011] CSIH 37, 2011 SLT 779 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord Justice ClerkLord EmslieLady Dorrian
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[2011] CSIH 37A39/10 OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in the Reclaiming Motion by
MALCOLM COLE Pursuer and Reclaimer;
against
(FIRST) SILVERMILLS ESTATES AND LAND LIMITED First Defender and Respondent: and (SECOND) IAN HENDERSON Second Defender: _______
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Second Defender: Non participating party
14 June 2011
Introduction
[1] This is a reclaiming motion against an
interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary dated 10 November 2010 by which he sustained the
defender's plea to the relevancy and dismissed the action.
The history of the dispute
[2] The
defender and the pursuer were respectively landlord and tenant of a restaurant
at 7 Fleshmarket Close, Edinburgh. When the lease ended they had a dispute as to liability
for repairs. That led to an action in the Court of Session. The action was
sisted for arbitration.
[3] By Deed of Submission the pursuer and the
defender referred the dispute to arbitration by Mr Ian Henderson MRICS (the
arbiter). Mr Henderson was convened as a defender, but has not compeared.
[4] Clause 12 of the Deed provided as follows:
"12. The Arbiter shall also have the power, subject to any agreement between the Parties, to order in any award that all or part of the legal or other expenses incurred by a party in the course of the Arbitration shall be paid by the other party, such expenses to be taxed by the Auditor of the Court of Session. The Arbiter shall also have power to make an award of expenses from time to time in the course of proceedings."
The Deed also gave the arbiter power to make an interim or part award (cl 9).
[5] In its finalised pleadings in the
arbitration the defender craved inter alia -
"An order for the expenses of the claimants (sc the defender) (as taxed by the Auditor of the Court of Session) to be paid by the respondent (sc the pursuer).
The pursuer counterclaimed. His crave for expenses in the counterclaim was in the same terms.
[6] On 22 August 2008 the arbiter issued his
decision. He found for the defender in the claim and refused the
counterclaim. He awarded expenses in the claim to the defender in the
following terms:
"The respondent, Malcolm Cole, is held liable to the claimants, Silvermills Estates and Land Limited for the expenses incurred by the claimants in this Arbitration; all such expenses to be agreed or taxed by the Auditor of the Court of Session" (at para 5.1.2.3).
He awarded expenses in the counterclaim to the defender in the same terms (para 5.2.3).
[7] The arbiter issued his decision with a
covering email in which he said inter alia:
"Please see attached my Final Decision in respect of this Arbitration. I now regard this Arbitration as concluded."
[8] Since the award was made by an arbiter, the
remit to the Auditor of the Court of Session was a private remit subject to the
Auditor's willingness to accept it. The Auditor in the event accepted the
remit. On 5
November 2009
he held a diet of taxation. The pursuer objected to the competency of the
taxation on the ground that the award did not specify the scale of taxation
that the Auditor was to apply. The Auditor upheld the objection and declined
the remit. He relied on a statement of the Extra Division in Apollo
Engineering Ltd v James Scott Ltd (2009 SC 525) that when an
arbiter remits an award of expenses to the Auditor of the Court of Session, he
must specify on which scale expenses are to taxed, otherwise the Auditor cannot
begin his task (ibid, at para [32]); and a statement to similar effect
in Hastings, Expenses in the Supreme and Sheriff Courts of Scotland (at
p 71).
[9] The defender thereupon submitted a motion
to the arbiter seeking inter alia to have the expenses taxed on the
Court of Session scale and to have an account remitted to the Auditor to tax
and report. The pursuer opposed that motion on the grounds that the arbiter
was functus officio. The arbiter disagreed. He indicated that in his
opinion his remit was not exhausted until he decerned for expenses following
receipt of a taxed account from the Auditor. He invited the parties to make
further comments before he dealt with the defender's motion.
[10] The pursuer then raised this action. He
seeks inter alia interdict against the arbiter from carrying out any
further functions qua arbiter between the parties, and interdict against
the defender from inviting or moving the arbiter to do so.
The decision of the Lord Ordinary
[11] The
Lord Ordinary held that the arbiter had not exhausted his remit. In his view,
the remit included the determination of the question of expenses in a manner
that would enable the Auditor to tax the account. The arbiter's decision
failed to do this. It was therefore still open to him to make a further
order. The decision of 22 August was an interim or part award only. The Lord
Ordinary therefore pronounced the interlocutor reclaimed against.
Submissions
[12] Counsel for the pursuer submitted that the
arbiter's award was clearly final. Therefore he could not make any further
judicial orders (Sim Group Ltd v Jack, 2002 SLT 847 at 852;
Hunter, The Law of Arbitration in Scotland, p 253; Melville and Irons, Treatise
on the Law of Arbitration in Scotland, pp 199-200). If an arbiter had
failed to deal with part of his remit, he could not rectify his failure by
issuing further orders. The whole decision in this case was a nullity. Any
further order would be incompetent (Grampian RC v John G McGregor
(Contractors) Ltd, 1994 SLT 133).
[13] Counsel for the defender submitted that an
arbiter was functus only when he had issued a final award that dealt
with all matters remitted to him. The remit expressly included the question of
expenses. Therefore the arbiter's jurisdiction was not exhausted until there
had been a taxation and he had decerned for payment of the taxed expenses in a
specific sum. The arbiter was right to entertain the defender's motion. The
Lord Ordinary was right in holding that the arbiter's decision was an interim
or part award. The defender could now seek further orders from the arbiter (a)
sanctioning the employment of counsel; (b) authorising the Auditor to
grant a percentage uplift on the scale fees and (c) certifying certain
witnesses as experts.
Conclusions
[14] Counsel
for both sides presented their submissions on the basis that the only question
in this case was whether the arbiter could now make good his failure to specify
the scale on which the Auditor of the Court of Session was to tax the expenses:
in short, whether the arbiter was functus. In my opinion, that approach
is misconceived.
[15] The case turns, in my view, on the logically
prior question whether the arbiter did fail to specify the scale on which
expenses should be taxed.
[16] In presenting their submissions as they did,
counsel were influenced by the following statement of the Extra Division in Apollo
Engineering Ltd v James Scott Ltd (supra). It is the
statement on which the Auditor relied.
"Where an arbiter does decide to make a finding in expenses, it is a matter for him to decide what the level of these expenses might be. He can fix a sum himself, or he can remit the assessment of the appropriate amount, at least in the first instance, to a man of skill, such as the Auditor of the Court of Session, to tax. But in doing that, he requires to advise the Auditor of the basis upon which he is to tax the expenses by reference to a particular scale. Without doing that, the Auditor could not begin his remitted task" (at para [32]).
[17] On the face of it, that statement would
suggest that the omission of any reference to the scale of expenses in this
case disables the Auditor from taxing the account of expenses at all. But the
statement has to be read in its context. In that case the joint deed of
appointment gave the arbiter power to award payment of any sums due and payable
under a sub-contract and to award damages due in respect of any breach of the
sub-contract; but it was silent on the question of expenses. The arbiter
therefore awarded expenses in the exercise of his inherent power to do so (Robertson
v Brown (1836) 15 S 199; Pollich v Heatley 1910 SC
469, at p 482).
[18] The present case can readily be
distinguished. It began as a Court of Session action in which counsel were
employed. The substantial sums at stake were obviously appropriate for an
action in this forum. The counter-claim was well into six figures. The
parties then thought it expedient, in view of the nature of the issues, that
the dispute should be resolved by a man of skill. That was the context in
which the remit to the arbiter empowered him to award expenses as taxed by the
Auditor of the Court of Session. In their pleadings in the arbitration, both
parties craved expenses in exactly the same terms.
[19] In these circumstances, in my opinion, the
logical and reasonable interpretation of the arbiter's remit, and consequently
of his award, is that the parties contemplated and agreed that the taxation
would be on the Court of Session scale. The submission that was made to the
Auditor on behalf of the pursuer was therefore unsound.
[20] On that view, the arbiter is functus.
He has fulfilled his remit to the letter. His award of expenses exactly echoes
the wording of the remit and of the parties' respective craves. No further
orders of a judicial nature remain to be made by him.
[21] Counsel for the pursuer referred us to the
approach taken by the Lord President in Grampian RC v John G McGregor
(Contractors) Ltd (supra, at p 138G-I). In that case the
arbiter was expressly empowered to deal with the question of expenses. He
issued an award which disposed only of the merits of the dispute and expressly
reserved the question of expenses. That reservation was held to be sufficient
to show that it was truly a part award and to leave the matter of expenses open
for further determination by the arbiter. The present case is materially
distinguishable. Here, the arbiter issued what was explicitly a final award in
terms of an express power to award expenses and without reservation of any
further matters. It is therefore impossible to regard this as having been a
part award.
[22] The parties are agreed that it is implicit
in the remit and in the arbiter's award that the expenses are to be taxed as
between party and party. In my opinion, the fact that the taxation is to be
conducted on the Court of Session scale means that on a party and party basis
the fees of counsel will be recoverable in any event; and that the auditor will
be entitled to award a percentage uplift on the scale fees at his discretion (Tods
Murray WS v McNamara, 2007 SC 435). However, on the view that the
arbiter is functus, I consider that it is now too late for the defender
to obtain certification of any witness as an expert since such certification
could be made only by the arbiter.
Disposal
[23] I
conclude therefore that the Lord Ordinary erred in holding that the arbitration
remained live. His interlocutor must therefore be recalled.
[24] I propose to your Lordship and to your
Ladyship that we should sustain the pursuer's second and third pleas-in-law,
repel the defender's pleas-in-law and grant interdict in terms of the pursuer's
first and second conclusions.
EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord Justice ClerkLord EmslieLady Dorrian
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[2011] CSIH 37A39/10 OPINION OF LORD EMSLIE
in the Reclaiming Motion by
MALCOLM COLE Pursuer and Reclaimer;
against
(FIRST) SILVERMILLS ESTATES AND LAND LIMITED First Defender and Respondent: and (SECOND) IAN HENDERSON Second Defender: _______
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Second Defender: Non participating party
14 June 2011
[25] As your Lordship has explained, this is case
in which problems arose at the end of an arbitration between the parties. The
arbiter having purported to issue his Final Award on 22 August 2008, the defender sought
further orders from him by motion dated 25 November 2009. The pursuer in response
maintained that the arbiter was functus officio, and raised the
present action to interdict the defender and arbiter from proceeding further
along the lines proposed. On 26 January 2010 Lady Stacey pronounced an interim
interdict in terms of the first and second conclusions of the summons. Her
interlocutor was in the following terms:
"The Lord Ordinary having heard counsel, no caveat having been lodged, ad interim interdicts the first defender (a) from inviting or moving the second defender to carry out any further functions qua arbiter between the parties or to issue any further orders or interlocutors in respect of the arbitration that was entered into between the pursuer and the first defender in terms of the Deed of Submissions agreed between them dated 3 March 2006 and (b) from attempting to use or rely upon any such orders or interlocutors that might have been issued by the second defender since 22 August 2008 and decerns; ad interim interdicts the second defender purporting to carry out any further functions qua arbiter between the parties or to issue any further orders or interlocutors in respect of the arbitration that was entered into between the pursuer and first defender in terms of the Deed of Submissions agreed between them dated 3 March 2006 and decerns."
[26] For all of the reasons set out in your
Lordship's opinion with which I am in full agreement, the arbiter's Award of 22 August 2008 was clearly final and he
was thus disabled from taking any further steps in the arbitration. The
pursuer's action of interdict, and the interim interdict pronounced by
the Lord Ordinary on 26 January 2010, were accordingly justified.
Conversely the later decision of 10 November 2010, dismissing the action on
the view that the arbiter had not exhausted his remit and was not functus
officio, was in my view erroneous and cannot stand.
[27] Contrary to the pursuer's submission, there
is no reason to think that the arbiter's Award quoad expenses was in any
way invalid, or that the Award as a whole is at risk of reduction. It is true
that the Auditor of the Court of Session declined to tax the defender's account
of expenses on the ground that the scale to be applied had not been expressly
specified. However, again for the reasons set out in your Lordship's opinion,
I am satisfied that the appropriate scale was a matter of plain implication in
the parties' Deed of Submissions, and that this implication must be deemed to
carry through into the arbiter's Award. The parties' dispute had begun in the
Court of Session; counsel had been instructed throughout; the taxation of any
award of expenses was, by agreement, to be remitted to the Auditor of the Court
of Session; and in these circumstances it seems to me that, even without
express provision, the parties clearly intended any award of expenses to be on
a party and party basis and taxed on the Court of Session scale. As the
defender put it in a letter to the arbiter dated 25 November 2009,
"... throughout it was tacitly understood ... that parties proceeded on the basis that expenses (if awarded) would be taxed on the Court of Session scale. Indeed, both parties employed Counsel in the arbitration."
[28] The practical result of all of this is that
the defender holds a valid award of expenses from the arbiter which now falls
to be taxed on the Court of Session scale. In such a taxation, sanction for
junior counsel should not be a problem for the defender, and an uplift on the
solicitors' fees may also be available at the Auditor's discretion. However,
as your Lordship has held, the opportunity to have witnesses certified has now
been lost, and in addition the defender has in my view also lost the
opportunity to have the direct "costs" of the arbitration fixed and apportioned
between the parties in terms of paragraph 11 of the Deed of Submissions.
[29] On the whole matter I share your Lordship's
conclusion that the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor must be recalled, and
concur in the measures proposed in the final paragraph of your Lordship's
opinion.
EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord Justice ClerkLord EmslieLady Dorrian
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[2011] CSIH 37A39/10 OPINION OF LADY DORRIAN
in the Reclaiming Motion by
MALCOLM COLE Pursuer and Reclaimer;
against
(FIRST) SILVERMILLS ESTATES AND LAND LIMITED First Defender and Respondent: and (SECOND) IAN HENDERSON Second Defender: _______
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Second Defender: Non participating party
14 June 2011
[30] I am in complete agreement with your Lordship in the chair that the logical and reasonable interpretation of the arbiter's remit, and of his award, is that the parties contemplated and agreed that the taxation would be on the Court of Session scale and that the arbiter is accordingly functus.
[31] As to disposal, although the pursuer and
reclaimer was in error as to the reasoning, the arbiter was indeed functus.
The respondent had asked the arbiter to act further in the cause, and the
arbiter had indicated a willingness to do so. He was willing to entertain a
motion not only in respect of the scale, a matter which this court has
concluded had been decided, but also on other matters which cannot now be
considered, such as certification of witnesses. The pursuer was therefore entitled
to prevent him doing so. Accordingly I agree with your Lordship that the interlocutor
of the Lord Ordinary should be recalled and an interlocutor pronounced in the
terms proposed in paragraph 24 of your Lordship's opinion.