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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 >> Willers v Joyce & Ors [2019] EWHC 2183 (Ch) (08 August 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2183.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2183 (Ch), [2019] Costs LR 1351 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND
AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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PETER WILLERS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ELENA JOYCE (2) JOHN NUGENT (in substitution for and in their capacity as Executors of the Will of ALBERT GUBAY, deceased) - and - (1) DE CRUZ SOLICITORS (A FIRM) (2) DE CRUZ SOLICITORS LIMITED (3) HUGO PAGE QC (4) ADAM CHICHESTER-CLARK |
Defendants Defendants for the purposes of costs/Costs Respondents |
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MR J. CARPENTER (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP) appeared on behalf of the First and Second Costs Respondents.
MR P. LAWRENCE QC (instructed by Kennedys Law LLP) appeared on behalf of the Third and Fourth Costs Respondents.
Hearing dates: 9 and 10 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rose:
Background
i) De Cruz Solicitors, a firm of three partners who had acted for Mr Willers under a conditional fee agreement entered into on 9 July 2010 and had the conduct on his behalf of the Langstone Action (as described in paragraphs 147 onwards of the Judgment). I shall refer to the firm De Cruz Solicitors as "the Firm".ii) De Cruz Solicitors Ltd, a company which was incorporated on 23 August 2013. It took over the practice of the Firm on 10 December 2013 and had the conduct of the Malicious Prosecution Claim on behalf of Mr Willers. I shall refer to De Cruz Solicitors Ltd as "the Company" and I shall refer to the Firm and the Company together as "De Cruz";
iii) Hugo Page QC a barrister at Blackstone Chambers who had been leading counsel acting for Mr Willers in both the Langstone Action and the Malicious Prosecution Claim.
iv) Adam Chichester-Clark a barrister at 3 Stone Buildings who had been junior counsel acting for Mr Willers in both the Langstone Action and the Malicious Prosecution Claim. I shall refer to Mr Page and Mr Chichester-Clark together as "the Barristers".
The costs of the Langstone Action
i) Langstone pay Mr Willers' costs of the action, such costs to include both his costs of defending the action and of his Part 20 claim against Mr Gubay;ii) Langstone pay Mr Gubay's costs of defending the Part 20 proceedings;
iii) Langstone make an interim payment on account in the sum of £1 million to Mr Willers' solicitors. This was paid out of security for costs that had been paid into court by Langstone at an earlier stage;
iv) Mr Willers' application that Mr Gubay be jointly and severally liable with Langstone for the payment of his costs was dismissed;
v) The application that Langstone pay Mr Willers' costs on the indemnity basis was also dismissed.
i) by consent, Mr Willers' bill of costs was assessed at £1,450,000, (rather than £3,461,483.31). This sum took into account the costs claimed in the bill, interest, costs otherwise payable by Mr Willers to Langstone (for various interlocutory matters where Mr Willers had been ordered to pay Langstone's costs) and all interlocutory costs liabilities where Langstone had been ordered to pay Mr Willers' costs.ii) Langstone was ordered to pay Mr Willers' costs of the detailed assessment.
iii) Langstone was ordered to make an interim payment to Mr Willers of £250,000.
The Costs Shortfall claim in the Malicious Prosecution Claim
"the difference between the liability for the costs incurred by Mr Willers in the Langstone Action and those received after assessment on the basis that the action should never have been prosecuted in the first place and/or that such costs are a foreseeable result of commencing litigation;"
I shall refer to the amount claimed as the Costs Shortfall.
i) Mr Willers was "put to proof that his legal representatives have an extant, non-contingent right to enforce their claimed costs against him; and in particular he is put to proof that there is no agreement, understanding, or other factor that would permit him to avoid paying those costs to them in the event this action fails";ii) the quantum of the Costs Shortfall was not admitted;
iii) it was denied that the Costs Shortfall was recoverable as a matter of law. In particular it was averred that the judgments of Master O'Hare on the proper construction of the conditional fee agreements and the appropriate uplift were binding on Mr Willers such that he was estopped from seeking now to recover those costs which had already been assessed against him;
iv) it was denied that the costs which were not assessed as due from Langstone on detailed assessment were caused by anything done or not done by Mr Gubay.
i) £487,147 unpaid fees of Mr Page excluding interest; this is owed to Mr Page by the Firm rather than by the Company;ii) £452,509 unpaid fees of Mr Chichester-Clark excluding interest; this is owed to Mr Chichester-Clark by the Firm rather than by the Company;
iii) £1,071,826 unpaid fees of De Cruz excluding interest.
The funding arrangements between Mr Willers and his legal team
Legal services in the Langstone Action
"If the court carries out an assessment and disallows any of the success fee percentage because it is unreasonable in view of what we knew or should have known when it was agreed, then that amount ceases to be payable unless the court is satisfied that it should continue to be payable.
If we agree with your opponent that the success fee is to be paid at a lower percentage than is set out in this agreement, then the success fee percentage will be reduced accordingly unless the court is satisfied that the full amount is payable.
It may happen that your opponent makes an offer that includes payment of our basic charges and a success fee. If so, unless we consent, you agree not to tell us to accept the offer if it includes payment of the success fee at a lower rate than is set out in this agreement.
As with costs in general, you remain ultimately responsible for paying our success fee."
i) neither the Firm nor the Company had entered into any agreement with Mr Willers, other than the assignment in 2014, further deferring payment of any sums due under the Langstone CFA;ii) he had not sought to have the fees charged to him by the Firm assessed because "he believes the Bill of costs to be fair and reasonable";
iii) there was no agreement with De Cruz under which Mr Willers' liability to De Cruz would be forgiven either in whole or in part in the event that he did not obtain judgment for the entire amount of the Costs Shortfall in the Malicious Prosecution Claim;
iv) there was no arrangement with, or assurance given by, the Barristers that in the event that Mr Willers did not recover enough damages to pay all their fees, they would not seek to recover all the monies owed to them from De Cruz; he said that the Barristers expected their fees to be paid in any event. In response to a question what arrangement or understanding had been reached between De Cruz and the Barristers regarding the time for payment of their outstanding fees Mr Willers replied:
"Mr Page QC's fees are payable on a conventional basis. There is no other agreement or understanding, save that Mr Page QC has indicated to [the Firm] that, regardless of the result of these proceedings, he is currently minded not to enforce [the Firm's] the obligation to him until [the Firm] and/or [the Company] make a further costs recovery from Mr Willers".The same answer was given in respect of Mr Chichester-Clark.
v) in response to a request to explain why, if there was no agreement to defer payment, the Barristers had not pursued De Cruz for the sums owing to them, the answer was that they did not "wish to force Mr Willers to sell his home to satisfy their fees pending determination of Mr Willers' claims against Mr Gubay."
vi) if the damages in the Malicious Prosecution Claim were paid to Mr Willers, they would be paid directly by the Executors to De Cruz "in the conventional way".
"43. De Cruz did not enforce Mr Willers' liability for the balance of the costs of the Langstone Action, because it was not apparent that he could pay them and I did not want to see Mr Willers bankrupted or forced to sell his home before the conclusion of the [Malicious Prosecution Claim]. However, Mr Willers was always aware that he would remain liable for those costs until they were paid. We discussed his liability on a regular basis and he assured me that they would be paid. It was in order to reinforce the liability and Mr Willers' promise to pay that he executed the charge [over his share in his house]."
"However, I never thought it at all likely that the Barristers would do so in the absence of Mr Willers being able to discharge the liability, so this was no more than a theoretical concern."
"27. Viewed objectively, the position is thus that De Cruz (the Firm) and De Cruz (the Company) were both extending credit to Mr Willers in relation to the sums allegedly owing after the Langstone Action, on an indeterminate basis, with the expectation - although apparently no formal agreement with Mr Willers - that repayment would never be sought unless and until Mr Willers came into some cash (i.e., that there was at least initially no question of Mr Willers undertaking to sell the matrimonial home in the event the litigation was unsuccessful); in circumstances where that extension of time incurred interest charges from counsel; and where the only route by which Mr Willers could possibly come into some money apart from selling his home was apparently via litigation with the Executors or parties he claims to be closely related to them; …".
Legal services for the Malicious Prosecution Claim
"I agreed that the Company would act for Mr Willers under an ordinary private fee paying retainer. However, since Mr Willers had no readily available financial resources, we were prepared to defer payment of our fees until such time as he was able to pay. A potential source of payment was the [Isle of Man Proceedings] within which Mr Willers had made a counterclaim for around £5 million. That was due to be tried from 25 March 2014. And of course, if Mr Willers succeeded in the [Malicious Prosecution Claim], he would expect to recover his costs from Mr Gubay. The Company was able to retain Mr Page QC and Mr Chichester-Clark on the same basis. They were the obvious barristers to instruct as they already knew the circumstances of the Langstone Action inside out and they were willing to act on a deferred fee basis."
"Mr Willers owed his solicitor a lot of money at the end of the Langstone action, in which he had been wholly successful, and if he had won the malicious prosecution proceedings he would have recovered damages that would have paid off some or all of that liability. It was a liability that he would otherwise have had to meet from the assets that I have described above, subject (of course) to the outcome of the IoM proceedings. I accept, without hesitation, that if Mr Willers recovered substantial damages, then it is likely that he would have used these to defray his liability to De Cruz and that in that event De Cruz would be likely to discharge the liability that firm owed to counsel. That did not and does not seem to me to affect the fact that it was Mr Willers's claim, properly brought to recover damages for loss which he personally had suffered as a result of the matters complained of against Mr Gubay."
The law
i) costs orders against non-parties are to be regarded as exceptional; but in this context that means no more than outside the ordinary run of cases where parties pursue or defend claims for their own benefit and at their own expense. The ultimate question in any such "exceptional" case is whether in all the circumstances it is just to make the order.ii) This is inevitably a fact specific jurisdiction but some considerations will often be in play.
iii) The discretion will not be exercised against "pure funders" that is those with no personal interest in the litigation who do not stand to benefit from it, are not funding it as a matter of business, and who in no way seek to control its course. In their case the public interest in a funded party getting access to justice is given priority over the interest of the successful unfunded party recovering his costs.
iv) Where however the non-party not merely funds the proceedings but substantially also controls or at any rate is to benefit from them, justice will ordinarily require that, if the proceedings fail, he will pay the successful party's costs. The non-party in these cases is not so much facilitating access to justice by the party funded as himself gaining access to justice for his own purposes. He himself is "the real party" to the litigation, a concept repeatedly invoked throughout the jurisprudence.
v) It is not necessary that the non-party be the only real party to the litigation provided that he is a real party in very important and critical respects.
"There is, in my judgment, no jurisdiction to make an order for costs against a solicitor solely on the ground that he acted without fee. The access to justice which this can provide, for example in cases outwith the scope of legal aid, confers a benefit on the public. Section 58 of the Act of 1990, which legitimises conditional fees, inferentially demonstrates Parliament's recognition of this principle. For it would be very curious if a legal representative on a contingency fee and, therefore, with a financial interest in the outcome of litigation, could resist an order for costs against himself but one acting for no fee could not. Whether a solicitor is acting for a remuneration or not does not alter the existence or nature of his duty to his client and the court, or affect the absence of any duty to protect the opposing party in the litigation from exposure to the expense of a hopeless claim. In neither case does he have to "impose a pre-trial screen through which a litigant must pass": see per Sir John Donaldson M.R. in Orchard v. South Eastern Electricity Board [1987] QB 565, 572-574."
"… A person who is not a party to proceedings can be ordered to pay costs in those proceedings if he has made himself a quasi-party, for example, by being a party to separate proceedings which have been heard together with the proceedings in which the costs order is sought, or by funding the proceedings or by initiating them for some purpose of his own and it is reasonable and just to make the order. The legal representative who acts as a legal representative does not make himself a quasi-party and no jurisdiction to make an order for costs against him under section 51(1) and (3) arises. However, a legal representative who goes beyond conducting proceedings as a legal representative and behaves as a quasi-party will not be immune from a costs order under section 51(1) and (3) merely because he is a barrister or a solicitor.
In this case, in my judgment, neither solicitors nor counsel acted in a way which made them liable to the jurisdiction of this court under section 51(1) and (3) to make a costs order against a person who is not a party to the proceedings. Acting pro bono is not, of itself, sufficient to make a legal representative a quasi-party. More is required."
"80. There are two good reasons for the distinction. First, such services are of enormous benefit to the proper administration of justice, including securing equality of arms in access to the courts. That was a particular feature in this case. Secondly, there are strict professional rules as to the way in which and the terms on which such services can be provided. Thus if solicitors offer normal legal services on terms which are not contrary to the rules governing the profession and do not act in ways that fall within the wasted costs jurisdiction under section 51, one would not, as a general rule, expect them to be vulnerable to an order that they pay the other side's costs.
81. The services supplied by the solicitors in this case were not, as far as anything of which we have been made aware is concerned, anything other than those of an ordinary solicitor acting for, if I may say so, a challenging client in complicated litigation. … They simply took a risk and extended credit to their client. It would be a sad day if solicitors could not extend credit, even to their litigation clients, without fear of vulnerability to a section 51 order. These solicitors were just like a builder who rebuilds a fire damaged house expecting that the home owner will pay him out of the proceeds of his home insurance policy. That is why the application under section 51 against them fails."
"66. It is important, therefore, that a court which is invited to make an order for costs against persons who have, in one way or another, assisted a claimant to obtain the legal representation which will put him on an equal footing with the defendant should recognise that, if such orders become commonplace, the form of assistance which has led to the making of the order is unlikely to be forthcoming in future cases. It is one thing to make a finite monetary contribution to the claimant's fighting fund or to contribute time and skill pro bono or under a no-win/no-fee arrangement; it is quite another thing to accept an unlimited liability to contribute to the defendant's costs if the claim fails."
"10. Let us now suppose that the solicitors have the major financial interest in the outcome of the appeal but that the claimants have a modest financial interest in it as well. It would be very surprising if the existence of the claimants' modest financial interest meant that the solicitor's financial interest counted for nothing when deciding what order for costs it was just to make. Why should the existence of the claimants' modest financial interest deprive the court of the jurisdiction to make an order against the solicitors, which absent that interest it would undoubtedly have?"
"19. Those observations do not, and did not purport to, set out in definitive terms exactly what is the borderline between the case where a solicitor acts purely as such in the ordinary way on behalf of the client and is therefore immune from the jurisdiction of the court under sections 51(1) and (3), and on the other hand a case where the solicitor's acts are such that he is within the scope of that jurisdiction."
"26. … It seems to me that, taking the essence of what Lord Brown says in that passage [sc. in Dymocks] together with what the Court of Appeal had said on that particular point in the Tolstoy-Milosavsky case, it is correct to regard [the solicitors] in the present case in relation to the conduct of the appeal as having acted in part for the sake of their own benefit in a respect which was of no interest or concern to their clients and as having acted as a matter of business to seek to establish their right to be paid, not by their own clients in practice, the profit costs on these four cases and all the others of which these were representative.
27. In those circumstances, which could be common in relation to cases where the enforceability of a CFA is at stake but would be most unusual in any situation, it seems to me proper to regard the solicitors as having acted in respect of the appeal in a dual capacity; acting for their clients, certainly, and with a real interest of those clients to protect, but primarily acting for their own sake . . ."
"15. What the court must seek is therefore some element which indicates that - as it is sometimes put in the case-law - the solicitor has, at least to some extent, acted outside his role as a solicitor for his client, or, as I would add, for a purpose outside that role. While this may be problematic where the applicant cannot identify any act which is not explicable or called for by the proper discharge of the solicitor's professional obligations to his client in the conduct of the litigation, that is not always fatal. In such a case, it will in my view be of great, and possibly decisive, importance whether the interests - and hence the motivations - of the solicitor and the client or in any significant respect incongruent. That was so in Myatt v National Coal Board [2007] 1 WLR 1559 where the solicitor had a substantial and apparently much greater additional interest in a successful appeal in that it would create a binding judicial precedent enabling him to recover his profit costs in 60 other similar cases. Myatt was however unusual in both its facts and results. Typically, the solicitor's interest is no more than a direct linear consequence of his client's potential success: he will be paid if his client is paid and not if not. Moreover, even if there were a significant lack of congruence, the degree of the discrepancy - possibly combined with other factors in a discretionary evaluation - may still make it inappropriate to make any order for costs, or lead the court to limit the order to only part of the costs."
"However, as Lloyd LJ said in argument, suffering a loss if the claimant loses is the economic mirror image of enjoying a profit if the claimant win. Thus, there is no doubt but that, as a result of the indemnity, the solicitors had an interest in the outcome of the claim, over and above the statutorily sanctioned interest due to the no-win no fee agreement and 10% uplift. However, it is by no means unknown, and perfectly proper, for solicitors to conduct litigation for a client knowing that, unless the client wins, the solicitors may find it impossible, or will find it hard, to recover their fees. Further, it is common for solicitors, particularly in high profile cases, to publicise the fact that they acted for the successful party in litigation. In each such case, the solicitor has an interest in the outcome of the litigation. An even more everyday point is that solicitors, and barristers, have a very real interest in winning a case for their client, especially when the client is substantial: there is a significantly greater prospect of further instructions from the client."
Discussion
"VDC then turned to what seemed to be the main purpose of the call. He said Mr Willers (PW) owes 'us' £3.5M. He said that any settlement would need to include that as otherwise PW would retain liability to his lawyers. He asked if there was any sum in excess of £3.5M that the executors would be willing to offer on the 'clean break' basis. He explained that PW would need 'something for himself' as well as the £3.5M. VDC explained that the £9M offer comprised the £3.5M plus £5.5M for PW. VDC explained that PW would need to pay off the £3.5M in full and that anything else was for him.
I said the parties were a long way apart. I explained that the executors were fed up at the end of the mediation and that they felt they had gone as far as they could. They had their own responsibilities and were prepared to fight the case.
VDC seemed to take that on board but repeated his comment that PW would need to pay off the lawyers in full. I commented that the lawyers themselves would need to take a view as to PW's solvency (the point being that the lawyers themselves are at risk). VDC initially queried this and said "lack of liquid assets" but then when I made the point that DeCruz and PW had given us extensive details as to PW's lack of solvency he did not demur further (maybe further investigation needed). VDC again said there was no way of bridging the gap without PW discharging his liability to his lawyers.
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