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 £1, 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!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> JH v CH & SAP (Costs: the Chorley principle, Litigants in person) [2020] EWCOP 63 (23 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2020/63.html Cite as: [2020] EWCOP 63, [2020] Costs LR 1681 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
B e f o r e :
____________________
JMH | ||
(by her litigation friend AB) | Applicant | |
and | ||
1) CFH | ||
2) SAP | Respondents |
____________________
SAP in person
Julian Reed (instructed by KSN solicitors) for KSN solicitors
Hearing dates 15 July 2020 & 23 October 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background
Representation
Submissions
Discussion and Decision
Pre 12th April 2019 Costs
Costs between 12 April 2019 and 8 August 2019
The Chorley Principle
London Scottish Benefit Society v Chorley [1884] 13 QBD 872. In that case three principal solicitors successfully defended themselves and were permitted to recover their profit costs of so doing. The principle, as stated by the Court of Appeal, provides that a solicitor who uses his professional skills in his own cause ought to recover those costs because, otherwise, he would always employ another solicitor: it would be wrong in principle to permit an unsuccessful opponent to obtain a benefit from the solicitor acting for himself. However, such costs could not include matters such as a consulting or attending on himself: that case involved, I believe, sole practitioners and, at least prior to 2002, the principle appears to have been applied only to solicitors or partners who carried out their own litigation either personally or through their clerk.
"A partner who is represented in legal proceedings by his firm incurs no liability to the firm; but he suffers loss for which under the indemnity principle he ought to be compensated because the firm of which he is a member expends time and resources which would otherwise be devoted to other clients. The only sensible way in which effect can be given to the indemnity principle is by allowing those costs. And, as I have sought to explain, that is a solution which, for over a hundred years, the courts have adopted as a rule of practice."
"a solicitor who acts for himself as a party to litigation can recover not only his out of pocket expenses but also his profit costs, but he cannot recover for anything which his acting in person has made unnecessary;"
The reason this principle applies, said the MR, is pragmatic: there has been an expenditure of professional skill and labour, that expenditure is measurable; the solicitor would otherwise employ another solicitor; and, since he cannot recover for anything which his acting in person has made unnecessary, the unsuccessful party will have the benefit of that disallowance and so would pay less than if the solicitor party had instructed another solicitor. He held that the Chorley principle extended to LLPs because the rationale underlying the principle (loss due to expenditure of time and resources which would have been spent on clients) applies equally to LLPs. Further, an LLP is a corporation which is to be regarded as acting with a legal representative in the same way in which a company acting through an in-house solicitor in possession of a practising certificate or equivalent would not be treated as a litigant in person. The principle still only applied to principals, EMW being a principal.
Costs after 8 August 2019
HHJ Evans-Gordon
Note 1 As there is a dispute over the will there is no personal representative. This hearing proceeded on the basis that, as the First Respondent is the residuary beneficiary of her mother’s will, she is the only person affected by the outcome. [Back]