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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Adams v Paetzold & Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 112 (25 January 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/112.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 112 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(Mr Justice Gray)
Strand London WC2 Friday, 25th January 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
SIR MURRAY STUART SMITH
____________________
JOHANNES ADAMS | ||
- v - | ||
(1) CHRISTOF GEORG PAETZOLD | ||
(2) TERENCE MACINNIS | ||
(3) PERSONS UNKNOWN |
____________________
of Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone No: 0207-421 4040
Fax No: 0207-831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"We would usually inform you of our intention to render an uplift at or near the conclusion of the case when the above circumstances can be ascertained.
... We shall . . . also require payments on account through the continuation of the matter [which] will of course be credited against the bills rendered. ...
We will request payments on account based on our expense rate on a regular basis and, at the end of the matter, a final bill which will include all costs (including uplift) and disbursements not previously billed."
"This is an interim bill charged on the basis of our expense rate on account of costs and disbursements. We reserve the right to charge a markup on this amount at a later date."
"There are two kinds of interim bill, and the difference between them is crucial:
(a) Interim statute bills.
These are called statute bills because they comply with all the requirements of the Solicitors Act 1974 and result in all the consequences which flow from such compliance - the solicitor can enforce payment by suing the client, the client can obtain an order for a detailed assessment.. . .
Although they are interim bills they are also final bills in respect of the work covered by them. There can be no subsequent adjustment in the light of the outcome of the business.
(b) Interim bills on account
... The Solicitors Act 1974, s65(2) provides that in respect of contentious business a solicitor may request the client to pay a reasonable sum on account of costs ...
A bill on account is really nothing more than a request for payment on account in fancy dress. Not being a statute bill it cannot be sued upon by the solicitor, the client cannot apply for a detailed assessment of it ...
One advantage to the solicitor of rendering a bill on account is that it need not be the final quantification of all the work included in it, but is merely the minimum amount of his charges to date. It also avoids the risk of limiting any between-the-parties costs recoverable in respect of this period to the amount of the bill on account on the indemnity principle ... and any risk of appearing to charge by results. For this reason it is important to make it clear to the client that the bill on account is simply a request for payment on account of the statute bill which will be delivered later. Wording on the following lines will achieve this:
'There is statutory provision for various discretionary factors to be taken into account when calculating solicitors' fees, some of which cannot be assessed until all the work is completed; these will be taken into account in our final bill when we shall be able to make an overall evaluation of the matter."
"In my judgment this appeal turns on questions of fact rather than propositions of law. I do, however, accept the proposition that the receiving party cannot recover from the paying party costs exceeding those which the receiving party was contractually bound to pay his solicitor, whether by way of mark-up or otherwise. I accept also that it is permissible for a solicitor to charge at or towards the conclusion of contentious business an uplift upon the amounts charged in interim invoices, provided of course that the interim invoices were indeed interim invoices and not final bills. Finally, I accept that it is unlawful for a receiving party to recover from the paying party costs which he had agreed at the outset with his client would be payable only in the event of success in the litigation.
The question I have to decide is how to apply those principles to the facts of this case. I accept that, as the Master found, Stephens Innocent sent to the claimant on the 10th August 1994 a letter in the terms which I have recited;even if a copy of that letter was not countersigned, it appears to me that those terms were accepted by conduct on the part of the claimant, in particular by his paying invoices clearly reserving the right to charge an uplift later on. I do not accept that it is possible for me to conclude that that letter of August 1994 is a sham as Mr Macinnis invited me to do. The letter states what factors were to determine whether an uplift was to be applied and those factors did not include the outcome of the litigation. Accordingly I reject the contention of the second defendant that in relation to the period after August 1994 there was an unlawful champertous agreement or that there was a breach of the indemnity principle.
In arriving at that conclusion I have not overlooked the fact that two of the bills submitted after the 10th August, 1994 did not state on their face that they were interim bills only, nor did they make any reference to an uplift being charged later on, but that was, in my judgment, because within Stephens Innocent it took time to implement the new way in which invoices were drafted and submitted. I accept the submission from Mr Hutton that the terms of the letter of the 10th August 1994 applied to those two bills. So much for the period from August 1994 onwards.
I come now to the period from the original retainer in February 1990 up to 1st August 1994. It is the case of the claimant that throughout that period the terms of the retainer were broadly similar to the terms contained in the August 1994 letter. I accept that there is evidence that a retainer letter of some sort was sent to the client under cover of Stephen Innocent's letter of the 1st February, 1990. The letter has been mislaid. What were its terms?Mr Lockyear, in the passage from his affidavit which I have already quoted, deposed that the fee structure in the February 1990 letter was essentially the same as the fee structure described in the 1994 letter. Mr Lockyear was not cross-examined in the course of the hearing before the Master, although it may well be that Mr Macinnis and those assisting him at that stage were unaware of the possibility of doing so. The fact of the matter is that, for whatever reason, both the original and the copy of that 1990 letter have gone astray. There is no evidence that the claimant did ever sign or return it. Moreover, Mr Hutton has told the court that it has proved impossible to find any letter sent by Stephens Innocent to any client dating back to 1990 which would indicate clearly what precisely were the standard terms of the firm in those days. I have to say I find this to be most unsatisfactory.
Furthermore, it is to be noted that none of the interim invoices rendered from 1st February 1990 to August 1994 purports on its face to be an interim invoice, nor is any reference made to the possibility of an uplift being charged at a later stage. To the contrary, there is at the foot of each of those invoices a printed note which is in the following terms:
'There are provisions in sections 70, 71 and 72 of the Solicitors Act 1974 relating to taxation of costs which give you the right to have the bill checked by an officer of the High Court.'
That note would appear to me to be inconsistent with the reservation of a right on the part of a solicitor later to charge an uplift: See Cook on Costs, 2000 at pages 5 to 8.
In these circumstances I have come to the conclusion that, notwithstanding the broad assertion in the affidavit of Mr Lockyear, it is not established that the invoices rendered prior to August 1994 were interim invoices. Accordingly Master Seager Berry was wrong to have permitted a 65% uplift in respect of the invoices submitted prior to August 1994. It follows that this appeal is allowed to the extent that I order that the final certificate issued by Master Seager Berry be amended in accordance with this judgment."