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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Coghlan & Anor v Lexlaw Ltd [2023] EWHC 1453 (KB) (15 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/1453.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1453 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
____________________
ARRAN COGHLAN CLAIRE BURGOYNE |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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LEXLAW LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Andrew Young (instructed by Lexlaw Solicitors) the defendant
Hearing date: on paper
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Lewis:
Legal principles
"The ordinary and natural meaning of words may be either the literal meaning or it may be an implied or inferred or an indirect meaning: any meaning that does not require the support of extrinsic facts passing beyond general knowledge but is a meaning which is capable of being detected in the language used can be a part of the ordinary and natural meaning of words. …. The ordinary and natural meaning may therefore include any implication or inference which a reasonable reader guided not by any special but only by general knowledge and not fettered by any strict legal rules of construction would draw from the words." per Lord Morris at 1370.
"(i) The governing principle is reasonableness.
(ii) The intention of the publisher is irrelevant.
(iii) The hypothetical reasonable reader is not naïve but he is not unduly suspicious. He can read between the lines. He can read in an implication more readily than a lawyer and may indulge in a certain amount of loose thinking but he must be treated as being a man who is not avid for scandal and someone who does not, and should not, select one bad meaning where other non-defamatory meanings are available. A reader who always adopts a bad meaning where a less serious or non-defamatory meaning is available is not reasonable: s/he is avid for scandal. But always to adopt the less derogatory meaning would also be unreasonable: it would be naïve.
(iv) Over-elaborate analysis should be avoided and the court should certainly not take a too literal approach to the task.
(v) Consequently, a judge providing written reasons for conclusions on meaning should not fall into the trap of conducting too detailed an analysis of the various passages relied on by the respective parties.
(vi) Any meaning that emerges as the produce of some strained, or forced, or utterly unreasonable interpretation should be rejected.
(vii) It follows that it is not enough to say that by some person or another the words might be understood in a defamatory sense.
(viii) The publication must be read as a whole, and any "bane and antidote" taken together. Sometimes, the context will clothe the words in a more serious defamatory meaning (for example the classic "rogues' gallery" case). In other cases, the context will weaken (even extinguish altogether) the defamatory meaning that the words would bear if they were read in isolation (eg bane and antidote cases).
(ix) In order to determine the natural and ordinary meaning of the statement of which the claimant complains, it is necessary to take into account the context in which it appeared and the mode of publication.
(x) No evidence, beyond publication complained of, is admissible in determining the natural and ordinary meaning.
(xi) The hypothetical reader is taken to be representative of those who would read the publication in question. The court can take judicial notice of facts which are common knowledge, but should beware of reliance on impressionistic assessments of the characteristics of a publication's readership.
(xii) Judges should have regard to the impression the article has made upon them themselves in considering what impact it would have made on the hypothetical reasonable reader.
(xiii) In determining the single meaning, the court is free to choose the correct meaning; it is not bound by the meanings advanced by the parties (save that it cannot find a meaning that is more injurious than the claimant's pleaded meaning)."
"At common law, a meaning is defamatory and therefore actionable if it satisfies two requirements.
The first, known as "the consensus requirement", is that the meaning must be one that "tends to lower the claimant in the estimation of right-thinking people generally." The Judge has to determine "whether the behaviour or views that the offending statement attributes to a claimant are contrary to common, shared values of our society": Monroe v Hopkins [2017] EWHC 433 (QB), [2017] 4 WLR 68 [51].
The second requirement is known as the "threshold of seriousness". To be defamatory, the imputation must be one that would tend to have a "substantially adverse effect" on the way that people would treat the claimant: Thornton v Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2010] EWHC 1414 (QB), [2011] 1 WLR 1985 [98] (Tugendhat J)"
Materials
The claimants' case
"The claimants have terminated the retainer of their solicitors, the defendant, in respect of the litigation with BLM Law's clients, without paying the defendant what they owed them, being £93,259.62 with interest of 8% per annum over a base rate and statutory late payment fees. All monies received by the claimants in those proceedings are subject to an equitable lien in favour of Lexlaw. BLM Law and their clients need to be notified of this unpaid debt and equitable lien because there is a serious danger that Mr Coghlan and Ms Burgoyne will deliberately and wrongly knowingly cheat Lexlaw out of these monies and will not have the financial means to pay".
The defendant's case
"a. The Defendant believed that it had an equitable lien over the monies recovered or to be recovered by the Claimants;
b. that equitable lien arose because the Defendant had acted for the Claimants on a contingent fee basis in the Garstangs Claim
c. the Defendant then valued its solicitors' lien in the sum of £93,259.62;
d. the solicitors acting for the Garstangs parties in the litigation were, as a result of the 21 May 2020 letter, on notice of the Defendant's assertion of an equitable lien;
e. In the premises, the solicitors acting for the Garstangs parties ought to make payment to the Defendant in accordance with the solicitors' lien in the event that a situation arose which meant that the Garstangs parties would be making payment of any sum to the Claimants; and
f. in the event that the solicitors acting for the Garstangs parties ignored the equitable lien, the Defendant would seek to recover the sum due to it from the solicitors so acting for the Garstangs parties"
Discussion
[The pleaded words complained of do not include the words in the third paragraph shown in square brackets.]
Letter from LexLaw to BLM Law.
21 May 2020
Dear Sirs
NOTICE OF: (I) LEXLAW LTD'S EQUITABLE LIEN FOR UNPAID LEGAL FEES; (II) REQUIREMENT FOR DEFENDANTS TO DISCHARGE LEGAL FEES; AND (iii) INTENTION TO ENFORCE EQUITABLE LIEN AGAINST DEFENDANTS
Re: Arran Coghlan & Claire Burgoyne (the "Claimants") v. (i) Garstangs
Solicitors (a firm); (ii) Garstangs Burrows Bussin LLP (trading as Garstangs
Burrows Bussin Solicitors); (iii) Cartwright King Limited (trading as Cartwright
King Solicitors); (iv) Roger Alexander Ingram; (v) Michael Edward Garstang; (vi)
Glen Keith Henry; (vii) Richard Barrington Cornthwaite (the "Defendants")
Claim Number: BL-2018-002139
Your Clients: the Defendants
Our Client's Former Clients: the Claimants
Our Client: LexLaw Limited
We write further to the above Claim and on behalf of our above named client. We write
to give you formal notice of our client solicitor's equitable lien in the fruits of the litigation
between your clients and our client's former clients (together the "Parties").
Please note that, pursuant to a Conditional Fee Agreement, our client has an equitable
lien over fees in the amount of £93,259.62 plus interest at 8% per annum over base
rate and late payment fees (together the "Payment"), which has arisen as a result of
our client's retainer with the Claimants in the above Claim. Please let us know as and
when you require an up to date calculation of the Payment.
We remind you that the importance of the equitable lien has been a longstanding
principle of English law, [with Lord Mansfield having held in Welsh v. Hole (1779) 1
Dougl KB 238 that "if the attorney give notice to the defendant not to pay till his bill
should be discharged, a payment by the defendant after such notice would be in his
own wrong, and like paying a debt which has been assigned, after notice"].
In the more recent Court of Appeal's decision in Khans Solicitors v. Chifuntwe [2014]
1 WLR 1185, reaffirmed the importance of the equitable lien, holding that:
"In our judgment, the law is today (and, in our view, has been for fully two
centuries) that the court will intervene to protect a solicitor's claim on funds
recovered or due to be recovered by a client or former client if.. . the paying
party is on notice that the other party's solicitor has a claim on the funds
for outstanding fees" (emphasis added).
We also remind you that the Supreme Court even more recently reiterated in Gavin
Edmondson Limited v. Haven Insurance [2018] UKSC 21 that solicitors remain entitled
to enforce their equitable lien against the paying party in litigation, with Lord Briggs
holding that Sir Stephen Sedley's statement in Khans Solicitors (as quoted above) was
"a correct statement of the law".
This letter constitutes notice that no settlement sums should be paid to our former
clients unless the Payment due to our client has been discharged by your clients
pursuant to our client's equitable lien. Your clients now have the requisite notice and
knowledge to render a subsequent payment of settlement monies direct to the claimant
unconscionable (to the extent of the Payment), as an interference with our client's
interest in the fruits of the litigation.
In the event that you disregard this notice of our client's equitable lien, our client has
given us instructions to enforce its lien against your clients and to recover from your
clients not only the Payment sum due but also the costs of and occasioned by and
incidental to such enforcement on the indemnity basis.
In the circumstances please confirm:
(i) receipt of this notice;
(ii) that you will keep us regularly updated as to settlement discussions;
(iii) that you will seek the updated level of the Payment whenever relevant in
settlement discussions;
(iv) that your clients will discharge the Payment directly to our client out of any
agreed settlement monies (bank details will be emailed to you).
We look forward to hearing from you by return and no later than noon on 26 May.
All of our firm's legal rights remain strictly reserved and nothing in this correspondence
is intended to waive or restrict any of the same.
Yours faithfully
LEXLAW