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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 >> Ramzan v IW Textiles and Bedding Products Ltd [2010] EWHC 90183 (Costs) (05 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2010/90183.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 90183 (Costs) |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS THE REGIONAL COSTS JUDGE
B E T W E E N:
____________________
MR IMRAN RAMZAN | Claimant | |
V | ||
IW TEXTILES AND BEDDING PRODUCTS LIMITED | Defendant |
____________________
Miss McDonald, Counsel – Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Subject to CPR 45.18, the percentage increase which is to be allowed in relation to Solicitors fees is –
(a) 100% if the claim concludes at trial.
(b) 12.5% where –
(i) The claim concludes before a trial has commenced or
(ii) The dispute is settled before a claim is issued.
A party may apply for a percentage increase greater or less than that amount if:
(a) The parties agree damages of an amount greater than £500,000.
This case it is agreed settles for an amount in excess of £500,000.
The Facts of the Case
The Initial Events
"I refer to recent meetings and confirm that I would be more than willing to act on your behalf".
There is a suggestion therefore that before that letter was written on 4th January, the claimant and his instructed Solicitors had met. It is unclear from that letter whether it was earlier in the day on 4th January or whether it was on 3rd January. There is some relevance to this because the Solicitors Conditional Fee Agreement is dated 3rd January.
Whether or not the van was faulty
Whether or not the driver was negligent or
Whether or not the employer had failed to maintain the van and was consequently negligent
He submits that there is a lack of independent evidence, the police investigation had not finished, and the coroner's inquest had not taken place. He contends there was a possibility that the driver's seat was faulty. The Claimant had been severely injured. He indicates that it was not clear as to whether the claimant had a role in the management of the van that was driven, and consequently the extent to which the claimant's position as the son of the managing director of the company would impose upon any settlement and whether the claimant's role in the company would sound in damages. Further he submits that due to the injuries suffered the assessment of quantum would be difficult.
- There was no independent evidence
- The driver was deceased
- The cause of the accident was unknown
- The claimant suffered serious injuries
- Was this case a road traffic accident or an employers liability claim
- Was the claimant the author of his own misfortune to the effect of having entered into a CFA Lite Agreement
- Part 36 offers
- That an account of the accident had already been provided to insurers
He submits that together the claimant suffered a substantial risk and suggests that the Solicitors when carrying out their risk assessment were entitled to view this matter as a 50/50 claim and that therefore the success fee should be claimed at 100%.
Authorities
"It seems to me that it would be absurd for Solicitors and Counsel who, justifiably in the context of this high value case, have charged high basic fees should be entitled to double their basic fees in sums in excess of £150,000 as a result of their seeking to obtain clarification from the Court in respect of one aspect of an agreed Order in circumstances where they have at no time been at any risk of not being paid their basic fees".
Conclusions
The chances of success,
The existence of additional or complicating factors,
Opportunities to reduce risk and
The cost of funding the claim.
Thereafter Moore-Blick LJ's Judgment sets out in some detail how the analysis was carried out.
"If the court is satisfied that the case falls within the relevant criteria it will assess the percentage increase or make an order for it to be assessed. If the percentage increase allowed is greater than 20% or less than 7.5% the percentage allowed will be that assessed by the Court. If the percentage is assessed at no greater than 20% or no less than 7.5%, the increase allowed will remain at 12.5% and the cost of the application and the assessment will be paid by the claimant."
This is a clause clearly aimed at preventing frivolous applications which puts a claimant at risk as to costs the Court is to award if a percentage between 12.5% and 20% is allowed as the success fee. Indeed, if such an amount is awarded, that will not remain the success fee and the figure will be reduced to 12.5%.
D N Harris
Deputy District Judge
5 January 2011