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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Robinson v EMW Law LLP [2018] EWHC 1757 (Ch) (10 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/1757.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1757 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM MASTER JAMES IN THE SENIOR COSTS OFFICE
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
with MASTER HAWORTH sitting as an Assessor
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CHRISTOPHER IAN ROBINSON |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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EMW LAW LLP |
Respondent |
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Shaman Kapoor (instructed by EMW Law LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 11 June 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Roth :
Introduction
The costs proceedings
"I appreciate this letter is couched in somewhat equivocal terms and that is for one very good reason; given the length of time since the previous Hearing, I wish to give the parties the opportunity to make further brief submissions before I finally rule upon these points and move on with the remainder of the Assessment. That can be done in writing, if they wish me to conclude the Assessment on paper, or at the beginning of the further Hearing date if they wish to continue at a live Hearing."
The factual background
"In terms of the costs:
a. I think we can say (if there is a meeting) that we have operated to date on my standard ts and cs, of which you are of course aware. However, I attach a draft engagement letter which I think we should finalise. As indicated yesterday, I don't think that we need to make express reference to your time in this, but would be grateful for your thoughts.
b. Obviously, we are only going to provide costs information if they have agreed in principle to make a contribution towards the costs and, even if I had a 'print out', I would not provide this to them.
c. I have spoken briefly to a costs lawyer about the claim for your time. She agreed that, absent the consultancy agreement, these would not be recoverable but, as you are a consultant she would not be embarrassed to claim them – but could not say whether they would be recovered…."
"I've made some suggestions on the client care letter, as attached. From the date it is obvious that we have done this specially, so we may as well draft it so as to address the points that have been raised. I know we discussed fees and rates, and I thought there was at least one email, but I couldn't find it. Do you have an email or file note? …"
"Dear Chris
Confirmation of Instructions
EMW
Thank you for instructing Fidelity Law on this matter. I will be dealing with this matter on your behalf. Attached is also a copy of our standard terms and condition which apply to this matter.
Scope of work
Our work will comprise advising you on the terms of the claim by EMW set out in its letter dated 7 October 2014
…
Your commitment to us
You will provide us with full, accurate and timely instructions, in particular so that we can comply with our obligations to you in a cost effective manner. Your commitment to pay our fees and other costs, is set out in the attached terms and conditions.
Our fees for this matter will be based on an hourly rate of £300 per hour plus VAT, and disbursements."
"The Applicant was a private paying client for this matter and work by his solicitor, the principal of the firm Fidelity Law LLP [sic] Richard Brown, is charged at rates given in a client care letter, the firm being on the record as acting.
The Applicant himself is a practising solicitor who has a consultancy agreement with Fidelity Law LLP pre-dating the commencement of this matter. Accordingly work carried out by him in lieu of work being carried out by his solicitor is charged at the normal rate which the firm would charge clients for his work in accordance with CPR 46.5(6)(ii) and the principles for recovery of costs in such circumstances established in London Scottish Benefit Society -v- Chorley (1884) 13 QBD 872 and subsequently confirmed by later cases."
"It is correct that the client care letter, which is dated 01.05.15, was produced after the Respondent's email cited above [seeking a copy of the retainer]. The Applicant has never attempted to hide this. However, it was produced at a time when there was no agreement on the part of the Respondent to pay any of the Applicant's costs, which agreement was only reached after an offer from the Respondent on 13.05.15, revising a previous offer of 11.05.15. The client care letter, as is entirely permissible, shows that it covers work in advising the Applicant on the terms of the Respondent's claim in its letter of 07.10.14, which led to the application for an injunction. A client care letter can be sent at any stage of proceedings and can be retrospective. It was prepared at this point simply as a "belt and braces" approach since both the Applicant and the firm knew that the Applicant had always been aware of his liability for costs and the hourly rate for the work but it seemed pragmatic to prepare a formal client care letter since it was plain that the Respondent would argue that there was no retainer, which it has duly done at great length, and would accept no other evidence."
The decision of the costs judge
"When I looked at it last time, I was very specifically looking for anything that showed a specific agreement not to pay prior to the written retainer letter and I did not find it but what I have found on and around the date of the retainer letter is, in my view, very strong and contemporaneous evidence to the effect that Mr Christopher Robinson did not – there was no expectation, if I can put it this way, by Mr Robinson or by Mr Brown that Mr Robinson's time would be billed in this matter….
With regards to the specific technical point on implied versus written retainer, there I am going to find in favour of the paying party. If I can put it this way, I am in an element of doubt. It has been presented as a formal written retainer, there is reference in an email to "for the purpose of a meeting we can say that you were acting on my standard terms and conditions, of which you were, of course, aware". But even that is a somewhat elliptical reference. Clearly the client says, "I thought there was a letter, have you found one?" and in the PODs I was referred to that reference to there perhaps being a letter[. B]ut what I am most concerned about in the dates pre:- 1 May 2015 other than the technical point that I think does hold water, that if you advance a written retainer as your retainer, you cannot then fall back on implied retainer, and I think that is the point that the Defendant has taken all along…
On the standard basis, I really think that there is more than enough to this file to put me in a considerable doubt about anything prior to 1 May 2015…."
The appeal
"When once it is established that the solicitors were acting for the plaintiff with his knowledge and assent, it seems to me that he became liable to the solicitors for costs, and that liability would not be excluded merely because the union also undertook to pay the costs. It is necessary to go a step further and prove that there was a bargain, either between the union and the solicitors, or between the plaintiff and the solicitors, that under no circumstances was the plaintiff to be liable for costs."
"Once it was shown, as is now conceded, that Mr Glennie was indeed the client, then a presumption arose that he was to be personally liable for the costs. That presumption could, however, be rebutted if it were established that there was an express or implied agreement, binding on the solicitors, that Mr Glennie would not have to pay those costs in any circumstances."
And he added, at 1062E:
"The question is not who was primarily liable for the costs, whether [his employer] or Mr Glennie. The question is whether it was agreed that Mr Glennie should not be liable for those costs under any circumstances. The fact that it was never realistically anticipated that Mr Glennie would pay the costs was a factor to be taken into account in determining whether there was an implied agreement that he would not be liable for the costs in any event. But it was no more than a factor. It was not conclusive."
"I should have thought that a person wrongfully brought into litigation ought to be indemnified against the expenses to which he is unjustly put; but there cannot be a perfect indemnity, because it is impossible to determine how much of the costs is incurred through his own over-anxiety. When an ordinary party to a suit appears for himself, he is not indemnified for loss of time; but when he appears by a solicitor, he is entitled to recover for the time expended by the solicitor in the conduct of the suit. When an ordinary litigant appears in person, he is paid only for costs out of pocket. He cannot himself take every step, and very often employs a solicitor to assist him: the remuneration to the solicitor is money paid out of pocket. He has to pay the fees of the court, that is money paid out of pocket; but for loss of time the law will not indemnify him. When, however, we come to the case of a solicitor, the question must be viewed from a different aspect. There are things which a solicitor can do for himself, but also he can employ another solicitor to do them for him; and it would be unadvisable to lay down that he shall not be entitled to ordinary costs if he appears in person, because in that case he would always employ another solicitor."
Bowen LJ, agreeing with the Master of the Rolls, said at 877:
"… the costs claimed, subject to the exceptions which have been mentioned, ought to be allowed, because there is expenditure of professional skill and labour."
And in a brief, concurring judgment, Fry LJ stated at 877-78:
"I think that the conclusion at which we arrived will be beneficial to the public, because if the rule were otherwise a solicitor who is party to an action would always employ another solicitor, and whenever he is successful he would recover full costs; whereas under the rule of practice laid down by us, a solicitor who sues or defends in person will be entitled, if he is successful, to full costs, subject to certain deductions, of which his unsuccessful opponent will get the benefit" [i.e. the costs of taking instructions from, and attendances upon, himself].
"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 common law principle established by the Chorley case ("the Chorley principle") may be summarised as being that: (1) 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; (2) the reason is not because of some special privilege but on the purely pragmatic grounds that (a) there has actually been an expenditure of professional skill and labour by the solicitor party, (b) that expenditure is measurable, (c) the solicitor party would otherwise employ another solicitor and, if successful, would be entitled to recover the costs of that other solicitor, and (d) 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."
"The claimant is a company. Its sole business is, I am told, to provide the services or Mr Shackleton as counsel or arbitrator in international arbitration. He is a solicitor advocate. The claimant earns fees from its clients for so doing. In this case the claimant has claimed its fees from the defendants in an ICC arbitration and has obtained an arbitration award in its favour. In this jurisdiction the claimant has sought to enforce the arbitration award and has faced resistance from the defendants. In the course of overcoming that resistance the claimant has incurred legal costs by instructing two firms of solicitors and counsel to represent it. Mr Shackleton has also worked on the proceedings in this jurisdiction but is not paid for his work by the claimant because, as he puts it, he benefits in any event as its sole shareholder. He has said that there would be no sense in requiring the claimant to employ outside solicitors to enable it to recover the cost of work which he can undertake more efficiently and that the arrangement between the claimant and himself and the outside solicitors is an economical and appropriate way to divide the work required for the conduct of this litigation. The claimant therefore seeks an order that the claimant can recover as part of its costs compensation for the time spent by Mr Shackleton on this case notwithstanding that the claimant has no liability to pay such compensation to Mr Shackleton. The defendants resist such an order. They say that it breaches the indemnity principle pursuant to which a successful party cannot recover more than it is liable to pay."
"It is to be noted from these two cases that the indemnity principle does not require the litigant to be under a liability to pay for the legal services which have been bestowed upon him. It is sufficient if he suffers a loss. If he does so there is no breach of the indemnity principle because an award of costs indemnifies the litigant in respect of that loss. Moreover, "loss" for this purpose can be broadly defined. In Malkinson v Trim loss was established because the firm of which the solicitor litigant was a member expended time and resources on his case which would otherwise have been devoted to other clients."
"The claimant has suffered a loss because as a result of Mr Shackleton spending his time on the claimant's pursuit of its fees the claimant cannot use his services to earn fees for the claimant in other cases. There is no doubt that at least some of the services performed by Mr Shackleton were not duplicated by the solicitor and counsel instructed by the Claimant. For example he appeared as counsel before Flaux J and he prepared the skeleton argument for this application. If the claimant had instructed a solicitor and counsel to do that work there is no doubt that it would recover the costs of so doing. It would be odd if by using Mr Shackleton to do that work the claimant could recover nothing in respect of his work. That suggests that a just result would be one which enabled the claimant to recover a reasonable and fair amount of his time."
"I do not consider that such a conclusion breaches the indemnity principle because a broad understanding of "loss" is appropriate in this field. Further, to disallow his time would risk pushing "abstract principle" to a point where the result was not consistent with justice."