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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> McIlwraith v McIlwraith & Ors [2005] EWHC 90010 (Costs) (21 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2005/90010.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 90010 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RICHARD PATRICK MCILWRAITH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) WILLIAM ANTHONY MCILWRAITH (as Executor of the Estate of Gordon McIlwraith) (2) STEVENS AND BOLTON (A FIRM) |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Alexander Hutton (instructed by Stevens & Bolton) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 26 April 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Master O'Hare
INTRODUCTION
BRIEF HISTORY OF PROCEEDINGS
LONDON SCOTTISH BENEFIT SOCIETY v CHORLEY
"The charges which have been disallowed by the Judges who have dealt with this matter so far consist in a large part of charges for which Mr Buckland has claimed to be compensated, consisting of the expenditure of very considerable time by him in the preparation of the documents and in the case which he conducted against Mr Watts. This seems to me to be a matter of principle in that respect, and it seems to me that the principle is well settled that though a solicitor who acts in person for himself can claim to be remunerated for his professional services in so far as they are not rendered unnecessary or impossible as, for instance, with regard to consultations with himself and that kind of thing and such costs are recoverable by the solicitor, in the case of a layman who is not a skilled legal person he can recover only his out-of-pockets.
The matter arises from long origin and goes back a very long way. Costs were not recoverable, or, apparently, considered in early times, but the statute of Gloucester, 6 Ed 1, c.1, provided for costs in the first instance, and then the matter was developed by the Statute 23 Hen. VIII, c.15. On that basis, certain principles have been established by decisions of the courts which regulate the matters with which we are concerned. There is a passage in 2 Co Inst. (1787), at p.288, in which it appears that legal expenses can be claimed, but not such expenses as for loss of time, travel and so on.
The matter then came before the courts in two cases to which we have been referred. In Harold v Smith (1860) 5 H.&N. 381, 385, Bramwell B. made some observations about litigants receiving indemnities in respect of their costs which are not, it seems to me, very helpful with regard to the present case. There was, however, a later case, London Scottish Benefit Society v Chorley which came before the Queen's Bench Division in 1884, 12 QBD 452, and the Court of Appeal, (1884) 13 QBD 872. This was a case of a claim by a solicitor who had acted for himself in proceedings. Bowen LJ delivered a judgment which I find most satisfactory and the clearest judgment on the subject. He said at pp.876-877:
"A great principle which underlines the administration of the English law, is that the courts are open to everyone, and that no complaint can be entertained of trouble and anxiety caused by an action begun maliciously and without reasonable or probably cause; but as a guard and protection against unjust litigation costs are rendered recoverable from an unsuccessful opponent. Costs are the creation of statute. The first enactment is the Statute of Gloucester, 6 Edw 1, c.1, which gave the costs of the "writ purchased". There is a passage in Lord Coke's commentary, 2 Inst. 288, which it is worthwhile to examine, as it affords a key to the true view of the law of costs. That passage is as follows:
"Here is express mention made but of the costs of his writ, but it extendeth to all the legal costs of the suit, but not to the costs and expenses of his travel and loss of time, and therefore "costages" cometh of the verb "conster", and that again of the verb "constare", for these "costages" must "constare" to the court to be legal costs and expenses."
What does Lord Coke mean by these words? His meaning seems to be that only legal costs which the court can measure are to be allowed, and that such legal costs are to be treated as expenses necessarily arising from the litigation and necessarily caused by the course which it takes. Professional skill and labour are recognised and can be measured by the law; private expenditure of labour and trouble by a layman cannot be measured. It depends on the zeal, the assiduity, or the nervousness of the individual. Professional skill, when it is bestowed, is accordingly allowed for in taxing a bill of costs; and it would be absurd to permit a solicitor to charge for the same work when it is done by another solicitor, and not permit him to charge for it when it is done by his own clerk. The question before us does not depend on the privileges of a solicitor. My judgment is the same as that of the Master of the Rolls; the costs claimed, subject to the exceptions which have been mentioned, ought to be allowed, because there is an expenditure of professional skill and labour. Is the rule which we lay down in conflict with the existing practice? I think that it is not; and it is some corroboration of our view that in Dixon's Lush's Practice, 3rd ed, p.896, the rule is laid down in similar terms to those in which we stated; it is there said that "an attorney regularly qualified is allowed to make the same charges for business done when he sued or defends in person, as when he acts as attorney for another." The late Lush LJ was a very great master of practice, and his view as to the costs payable to a solicitor who appears in person and is successful is the same as ours."
Of course, that case was dealing with the position of the solicitor, and therefore it might be said to be not directly in point on the problem which we have to consider, but it appears quite clear from the words used by Bowen LJ that, in the case of a layman, he could not charge for his time, and this seems to me to cover the issue in the present case with regard to the disallowance of the claims for time and labour tendered by Mr Buckland. I am afraid that that is the end of that part of his appeal."
"[11] There are, I think, six elements in that reasoning. First, that a person wrongfully brought into litigation ought to be indemnified against the expense to which he is unjustly put: see the observation of Sir Baliol Brett MR 13 QBD 872, 875. Second, the need is for indemnity, not punishment or reward: see the reference in the judgment of Denman J 12 QBD 452, 455 to the general rule, laid down by Bramwell B in Harold v Smith (1860) 5 H&N 381, that costs are allowed only by way of indemnity, in the sense that a party cannot be allowed to recover by way of costs expenditure which he has not incurred. As Bramwell B put it in the earlier case, at p. 385:
"Costs as between party and party are given by the law as an indemnity to the person entitled to them: they are not imposed as a punishment on the party who pays them, nor given as a bonus to the party who receives them."
Third, application of those two principles leads to the conclusion that a person can recover the cost of employing a solicitor to assist him in the litigation: see per Sir Baliol Brett MR 13 QBD 872, 875, and per Bowen LJ at p.877. Fourth, an ordinary litigant - that is to say, a litigant who is not a solicitor -cannot recover, as costs, compensation for the expenditure of his own time and trouble. That is because "it is impossible to determine how much of the costs is incurred through his own over anxiety": per Sir Baliol Brett MR at p.875; or, as it was put by Bowen LJ, at p.877, because "private expenditure of labour and trouble by a layman cannot be measured. It depends on the zeal, the assiduity or the nervousness of the individual." Fifth, those considerations are of no weight where the litigant is himself a solicitor. "Professional skill and labour are recognised and can be measured by the law.": per Bowen LJ, at p.877. And, sixth, a rule of practice which enables a litigant who is a solicitor to recover, as costs, compensation for his own time and trouble is beneficial, because it is likely to lead to a reduction in the amount which the unsuccessful opponent will have to pay under an order for costs:
"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" - costs of taking instructions from, and attendances upon, himself "of which his unsuccessful opponent will get the benefit.":"
per Fry LJ, at pp.877-878, and see, also, the observations of Sir Baliol Brett MR, at p.875, and, in the Divisional Court, Manisty and Mr Watkin Williams JJ at 12 QBD 452, p.457,460."
"For the purposes of this rule, a litigant in person includes -
a. a company or other corporation which is acting without a legal representative; and
b. a barrister, solicitor, solicitor's employee or other authorised litigator (as defined in the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990) who is acting for himself."
"Attention is drawn to rule 48.6(6)(b). A solicitor who, instead of acting for himself, is represented in the proceedings by his firm or by himself in his firm name is not, for the purposes of the Civil Procedure Rules, a litigant in person."
"[22] One effect of CPR r48.6(6)(b) read in conjunction with section 52.5 of the Practice Direction, is that there is now more clearly recognised a distinction between the solicitor litigant who provides, in connection with his own litigation, professional skill and knowledge in the course of his practice as a solicitor - that is to say, who "is represented by himself in his firm name" - and the solicitor litigant who provides skill and knowledge in what might be described as "his own time" - that is to say, outside the course of his practice as a solicitor and (typically) outside the office. The latter is treated as a litigant in person for the purposes of CPR r48.6; and so is subject to the restrictions imposed by that rule, including the two-thirds restriction imposed by paragraph (2). The former is not. Nor is there any reason, consistent with the need to provide an indemnity, why he should be. Further, there is no reason, consistent with the need to provide an indemnity, why he should not recover the cost of providing professional skill and knowledge through employees of his practice."
THE EXECUTOR'S CASE
"The established practice of the courts has been to disallow any costs claimed in respect of the time spent by the litigant personally in the course of instructing his solicitors. In the case of litigation by a corporation, this has not been strictly applied, for it has been recognised that, if expert assistance is properly required, it may well occur that the corporation's own specialist employees may be the most suitable or convenient experts to employ. In summary, and since I have been asked to state the principle involved, it is, as the Taxing Master appreciated, that: when it is appropriate that a corporate litigant should recover, on a party and party basis, a sum in respect of expert services of this character performed by its own staff, the amount must be restricted to a reasonable sum for the actual and direct costs of the work undertaken."
"went well beyond the ordinary work which will be necessary for presenting a claim to an engineer and in particular its reformulation went very well beyond the work necessary for preparation of a final account. This was not [counsel] submitted the ordinary work which one would expect to fall within the overhead commitment of a company presenting and pressing a claim in the ordinary course but was exceptional work directly done in order to formulate and present a claim and negotiate a settlement. The work was not done under the directions of a solicitor nor was it done by an expert, but it might have been, and it was argued that Richards & Wallington were not to be penalised because they did not go to solicitors or to an outside expert earlier, and this was work for which they could perfectly legitimately have claimed and recovered had the work been done by an outside expert.
Reliance was in particular placed on the decision of Lloyd-Jacob J in the case of Re: Nossen Patent [1969] 1 All ER 775, and [counsel] laid stress on the principle contained in that case at 778E-F [cited in para 23 of this judgment] which indeed represents, perhaps, the high watermark so far as authority is concerned of his case.
...
[Counsel for the paying party] argued that a party cannot, in the ordinary way, recover his own costs of performing professional work and if he is to do so he must show that the work falls within a recognised category, for example, where a solicitor is acting for himself or in a case falling within an exception described by Nossen's case
The argument has been very clearly and helpfully presented on both sides and that enables me to present my decision rather more shortly. In substance I find myself in agreement with [counsel for the paying party] on the central submission which he makes. The dividing line between expert and factual evidence is never an easy one but essentially, I think [the employees] were engaged on a factual exercise; they were certainly not independent experts; they were not, in truth, acting as experts at all and in my judgment, these costs fall within the ordinary cost that a litigant must bear of digging out his own factual material, through his own employees, to prove his own case. Had outside experts been introduced to carry out this work then it by no means seems to me to follow that it would in any event have been recoverable as a cost of the litigation."
"[40] The narrowness of the principle in Nossen's case is emphasised by the decision of Bingham J in Richards & Wallington (Plant Hire) Ltd v Monk & Co Ltd
[41] The question therefore arises whether the work done by the claimant's staff in the present case was expert work of the kind that may be the subject of an order for costs under the principle stated in Nossen's case, or was fact-finding work of the kind for which costs were refused in the Richards & Wallington case.
...
[43] Familiarity with a party's business does not make a witness into an expert either for the purpose of testimony or for the purpose of the recovery of costs. In this connection it seems to me to be irrelevant that the work might have been done at greater expense by employees of a firm of solicitors instructed by the claimant. It is the nature of the work in question that qualifies for inclusion of a costs order, not the amount of cost incurred or saved."
THE CLAIMANT'S CASE
"[8] A further factor concerns the weight to be placed on cost cases decided under the Rules of the Supreme Court, such as Re: Nossen's Letter Patent [1969] 1 WLR 638, Lloyd-Jacob J referred to during the costs hearing. Such cases have little or no bearing on the interpretation and application of the CPR Costs Code. These cases were decided under the RSC and, in AEI Ltd v Phonographic Performance Ltd [1999] 1 WLR 1507, CA, a case decided under the RSC, Lord Woolf MR pointed out that the CPR are much more specific as to the matters to which the courts should have regard in deciding what costs order should be made than the predecessor RSC, even though the overall discretion provided to the court under both costs regimes is equally broad.
[9] It follows that I do not accede to Stork's submission that Re: Nossen's Letter Patent has any significant relevance to the question of how the costs of personnel employed by Amec who assisted in the claims, documents and evidence preparation exercises should be dealt with under the CPR.
...
[112] Amec engaged its own personnel and agency staff to undertake much of the work involved in collating, analysing and presenting the primary evidence and the supporting evidence of Mr Prudhoe. These personnel also undertook much of the preparation of the visual evidential aids such as isographs, histograms, graphs, bar charts, photographs, tables, as built programmes and overlays. Had this work been undertaken, at greater expense and with the use of many more hours of time, by legally qualified personnel employed by Masons as Amec's solicitors, this work would in principle be recoverable. However, Stork maintains that it is irrecoverable in principle because of the impact of the Richards & Wallington case decided in 1984 and the even older case of Re: Nossen's Patent. Both cases, having been decided under the RSC, are of no assistance in determining this question under the CPR, even if the wording of the relevant rules is similar.
[113] CPR 43.2(1)(a) defines costs as including: "fees, charges, disbursements, expenses, remuneration " In principle, the time charges involved in employing these personnel fall within each of these categories of costs. It is a matter for detailed assessment whether the tasks performed, on an hour by hour basis, the number of hours claimed, the personnel involved and the hourly rate for other disbursements, were incurred at all and, if so, were properly and reasonably incurred. However, it would be contrary to the overriding objective if necessary expenditure which was incurred at less expense than would have been involved had Amec's solicitor's employees undertaken the work was not recoverable in principle.
[114] I find that the claimed expenditure is recoverable in principle."
"[131] The judgment of Judge Kennedy in Biguzzi was endorsed by Lord Woolf. Both Hart J and Judge Thornton have held that cases prior to CPR no longer have the binding effect which would prevail pre-CPR. I accept [the point made by counsel for the receiving party] that the category of cases has widened following the trend of diversification. The judgment in the Factortame case supports [the submissions of counsel for the receiving party]. It is clear from that judgment that [the accountants in that case] were entitled to recover costs for work which included playing a major part in gathering voluminous and complex evidence as to loss which could have been carried out by solicitors and that their involvement was cost effective (paragraph 78). I also accept [the submission of counsel for the receiving party] that the Amec judgment prevails over the Admiral judgment for the reasons which he gave. The instruction of Websters by Allianz was proportionate. Much of the work undertaken by them could have been undertaken by Richards Butler (solicitors for the receiving party). The issue of costs is in part procedural and in part based on common law. Both counsel have relied on pre CPR cases.
[132] I am unable to accept Mr Bacon's submission that the work is only recoverable when it is done by experts and that the cases relied upon by Mr Morgan only relate to procedural issues so far as costs are concerned. In this decision, I am not jettisoning all case law developed by judicial decision on the facts of real cases. I am accepting the modification which flows from the Amec judgment and the Factortame judgment.
[133] The introduction of CPR with the overriding objective and the concept of proportionality has shifted the consideration of costs towards a fresh interpretation. That is apparent from the judgments in Factortame and Amec. Nossen's Patent and Richards & Wallington no longer apply. [The relevant test] is not whether the work is solicitors work or client's work. It is whether the instruction of these skilled professional marine recovery agents in this case reduced the legal work required. In my judgment, that test has been met and work is recoverable in principle, subject to the reasonableness and proportionality tests. "
THE EXECUTOR'S REPLY
MY DECISION ON THE CLAIMANT'S PRIMARY CASE
"On inter partes taxations a litigant's travel costs have always been irrecoverable, with the limited exception created in favour of litigants in person. The historical basis for this rule is set out by Bowen LJ in London Scottish Benefit Society v Chorley (1884] 13 QBD 872, 876-877. I take the passage from the approving citation of it by Danckwerts LJ in Buckland v Watts [1970] 1 QB 27, 36 [this passage has already been cited in paragraph 17 of this judgment].
Thus the segregation of a party's travelling costs from those recoverable inter partes is regarded as part of a general rule excluding unquantifiable elements. As a reason, this does not perhaps bear much scrutiny. Is it really any harder to quantify the train fare from Liverpool to London than to determine a proper fee for counsel? The exception may be better regarded as a policy limitation than as a legal distinction. Certainly both in and after Coke's time, local courts were in chronic decline and the cost of coming to Westminster for justice was widely regarded as a scandal which was aggravated by the irrecoverability of the expenses: see Veall, The Popular Movement for Law Reform 1640-1660 (1970), pp.36-39, where it is said that Coke himself estimated that litigants were spending a million pounds a year in coming to London for justice in the first quarter of the 17th century. But the anomaly, if that is what it is, has become enshrined in the law."
"act as a solicitor, or as such issue any writ or process, or commence, prosecute or defend any action, suit or other proceeding, in his own name or in the name of any other person in any court of civil or criminal jurisdiction "
Non-compliance with section 20 leaves the unqualified person open to the sanctions of the criminal law and to the civil law of contempt. The acts made unlawful by section 20 include the issuing or filing of documents in court (cf sections 28 and 119(1) of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990). Accordingly there are many other pieces of work which may be undertaken in the course of litigation quite lawfully, even if done for reward, so long as the unqualified person undertaking them is not thereby conducting the litigation, acting as a solicitor or pretending to be one. The concept of a professional McKenzie friend was recognised by Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division in R v Bow County Court ex parte Pelling [1999] 1WLR 1807.
"The first issue turns on the meaning of the term "costs". On this issue [the argument of counsel] for the company proceeded on the footing that the company was not a litigant in person. His submission was that under Section 51 of the Supreme Court Act 1981 which gave the court the widest discretion in relation to the costs of and incidental to all proceedings and enabled Rules of Court to be made prescribing scales to be paid to legal or other representatives, costs could not be limited to the costs of legal representatives, including their disbursements.
The discretion conferred on the court was by Section 51(1) subject to the provisions of the Act of 1981 or any other enactment and to Rules of Court. I turn first to the Rules of Court prescribing scales of costs to be paid to legal and other representatives It is apparent that the scales of costs are for the Regulation of solicitor's charges and disbursements but apart from the special provisions which relate to litigants in person, and to the equally inapplicable provision relating to costs in small claims cases (which specifically allow the costs of lay representatives of a party), there is nothing to suggest that the term "costs" can refer to other costs such as those actually or notionally incurred by a party, who is not a solicitor, spending time on the litigation instead of earning money elsewhere.
There is, therefore, no provision in the Rules that would enable the Plaintiff, who was not, and did not employ, a solicitor, to recover costs. That is inconsistent with the meaning traditionally attributed to "costs". (Peter Gibson LJ)"
"I agree with Hirst and Peter Gibson LJJ that the first basis on which the company put its case must fail. Counsel for the company relied heavily on Section 51(2) of the Supreme Court Act 1981. That sub-section, however, does no more than create a rule making power in respect of scales of costs to be paid to "legal or other representatives;" the latter, by Section 51(13) being any person exercising a right of audience or right to conduct litigation on his behalf. It is argued that in this case the director was exercising a right of audience in relation to the proceedings in which he was permitted to represent the company. However, even granted that that is so, Section 51(2) of the Act of 1981 does no more than create vires to make rules in relation to the scales of costs, if any, to be paid to such a representative. It says nothing as to whether or not the particular category of representative is entitled to costs, or whether his client is entitled to have him feature on his bill of costs. It does not displace in any particular case the rule that allowable costs are, and are limited to, remuneration for the exercise of professional legal skill; see Buckland v Watts [1977] 1 QB 27, 37G per Sir Gordon Willmer, applying the judgment of Bowen LJ in London Scottish Benefit Society v Chorley [1884] 13 QBD 872, 876 It was that rule that required the passing of the Litigants in Person (Costs and Expenses) Act 1975 to make specific provision for the remuneration of litigants in person. However, this part of the appellant's argument does not rely on the Act of 1975, but on a general right to claim costs in respect of a (legally) unqualified representative. No such right exists." (Buxton J)
"Well, [counsel for the receiving party] has put the matter very plainly and he does not pretend really that this falls within the boundaries of existing decisions, but he does say that it raises an important question and it may be that the boundaries should be pushed a bit further out. That is essentially the sort of matter that the Court of Appeal ought to rule on, is it not? There is a very large sum of money involved and if existing principle is not satisfactory, then it should be reviewed and it is in a way a striking thing that Nossen's case is really the only authority that anybody can ever refer to."
"...any fee or reward charged by a lay representative for acting on behalf of a party in proceedings allocated to the small claims track."
"[28] I find it curious that a more liberal principle for the recovery of costs should be applied to a corporation than to an individual or to a partnership, but since the Claimant in the present case is a corporation, I do not have to consider this aspect of the decision in Nossen's case further."
"the desirability of promoting arrangements whereby litigants could undertake much of the preparation of their case but with access to legal advice and representation as necessary. This is often known as "unbundling"."
MY DECISION ON THE CLAIMANT'S SECONDARY CASE
"A litigant in person in ordinary parlance is a party to litigation who represents himself by appearing in court himself. If someone other than himself represents him, then notwithstanding that that other person is his agent, that party is not a litigant in person."
CONCLUSION