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 High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Metcalf, R. v [2024] EWHC 1135 (SCCO) (13 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2024/1135.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1135 (SCCO) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Judgment on Appeal under Regulation 10 of the Costs in Criminal Cases (General) Regulations 1986
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
R. |
||
- v - |
||
PETER METCALF |
____________________
Mr Joshua Munro (instructed by Ward Hadaway LLP) for Mr Metcalf
Ms Francesca Weisman for the Lord Chancellor
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The appropriate additional payment, to which should be added the court fee of £100 paid on appeal, and assessed costs of £28,000 (plus any VAT payable), should accordingly be made to the Appellant.
Senior Costs Judge Gordon-Saker:
(1) The appropriate authority shall consider the claim and any further particulars, information or documents submitted by the applicant … and shall allow costs in respect of –
(a) such work as appears to it to have been actually and reasonably done; and
(b) such disbursements as appear to it to have been actually and reasonably incurred.
(2) In calculating costs under paragraph (1) the appropriate authority shall take into account all the relevant circumstances of the case including the nature, importance, complexity and difficulty of the work and the time involved.
(3) Any doubts which the appropriate authority may have as to whether the costs were reasonably incurred or were reasonable in amount shall be resolved against the applicant.
…..
(5) Subject to paragraph (6), the appropriate authority shall allow such legal costs as it considers reasonably sufficient to compensate the applicant for any expenses properly incurred by him in the proceedings.
(6) … the appropriate authority shall calculate amounts payable out of central funds in respect of legal costs to the individual in accordance with the rates or scales or other provision made by the Lord Chancellor pursuant to paragraph (7), whether or not that results in the fixing of an amount that the appropriate authority considers reasonably sufficient or necessary to compensate the individual.
(4) Where it appears, taking into account all the relevant circumstances of the case, that owing to the exceptional circumstances of the case the amount payable by way of fees in accordance with the table above would not provide reasonable remuneration for some or all of the work allowed, there may be allowed such amounts as appear to be reasonable remuneration for the relevant work.
"a) Reviewing all the served evidence, Operation Resolve disclosure and the Goldring Inquests Archive;
b) Preparing the first draft, and often subsequent drafts, of almost all of the written submissions and substantial correspondence (some of which are highlighted below);
c) Researching the authorities referred to in each skeleton argument which usually involved novel and/or difficult issues of law;
d) Attending all of the conferences and hearings in the case, and liaising closely with the solicitor and paralegal and the other counsel in relation to the division of work;
e) Preparing the skeleton argument on venue which involved important arguments on the risk to a fair trial of possible juror bias;
f) Preparing the application to dismiss and stay, which amounted to 175 pages of submissions. Preparing bundles of evidence based on detailed trawls of the voluminous evidence and disclosure that had by then been served;
g) Preparing bundles of authorities;
h) Reviewing a vast amount of press reportage spanning nearly 3 decades in preparation for the application to stay the prosecution as an abuse on the basis of adverse publicity;
i) Distilling the case for the purposes of taking instructions from Mr Metcalf, and preparing his proof of evidence (which was necessarily very long) and supporting bundle of documents;
j) Preparing a list of issues in the case (akin to a defence statement, which was not required as the case began before the CPIA 1996 came into force);
k) Preparing the skeleton argument on the admissibility of the Stuart-Smith Scrutiny report, which involved novel and difficult legal issues;
l) Considering the prosecution expert's report from Gregory Treverton-Jones KC and preparing the documents necessary to brief the experts Sir Robert Francis KC, Geoffrey Williams KC and Patricia Robertson KC – this involved both distilling the relevant facts in a fair way but also researching and setting out the authorities relevant to the difficult issues of professional conduct which lay at the heart of the case;
m) Preparing the skeleton arguments in relation to re-opening the admissibility of the Stuart-Smith Scrutiny following the prosecution decision to obtain expert evidence, whether as a matter of law there was a duty of candour, and whether the prosecution expert should be permitted to give evidence that there existed such a duty – again these arguments involved novel and difficult legal issues;
n) Preparing skeleton arguments in relation to the admissibility of expert evidence from the prosecution and the defence experts, not only as to the general principles applicable to the professional conduct of solicitors in 1989 / 1990, but also their application to the facts of the case;
o) Preparing numerous summaries of the evidence for each of the key topics and the key witnesses in the case, with supporting bundles, to assist in the preparation of cross-examination and speeches by Jonathan Goldberg QC and Tim Kendal;
p) Preparing the defence schedules setting out the relevant evidence drawn from the served case, the disclosure and the Goldring Inquests Archive which were put before the jury in hard copy, together with the supporting documents which were uploaded to the jury's iPads;
q) Cross-examining the IOPC officers to present the defence schedules and other documentary evidence helpful to Mr Metcalf's case;
r) Preparing the skeleton argument in support of the submission of no case to answer."