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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> France v Freemans Solicitors & Anor [2010] EWHC 3291 (QB) (15 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/3291.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3291 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GRACE FRANCE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) FREEMANS SOLICITORS (2) HARVEY FOX |
Defendants |
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Guy Vassall-Adams (instructed by Freemans Solicitors) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 24 November 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
"270 deducted as conflict of interest non-claimable from LSC as already known when instructed."
Those are the words complained of. It appears that the spreadsheet was published no more widely than to Mr Field and to another employee within the firm, Mr Ackerley, whose approval was required before the sums could be paid out by the firm's accounts department. Although not accepted by the Claimant, it seems to me to be beyond argument that these two publications were the subject of qualified privilege. That defence the Claimant seeks to defeat, however, by pleading and proving malice against the Second Defendant.
i) The Second Defendant's responsibilities required him to keep records of payments to the Legal Services Commission and the spreadsheet in question summarised the outcome of the Claimant's claims for October 2008. It was necessary to record the reasons for any divergence between sums claimed and those paid.ii) The words complained of simply recorded a decision taken by Mr Michael Field, the Claimant's supervising solicitor, and the partner to whom the Second Defendant himself answered, that there had been a conflict of interest which made it inappropriate to claim a fixed fee payment in respect of Client number 3 (or for the firm to retain him as a client).
iii) The contemporaneous police station attendance notes, and the Claimant's own handwritten notes, demonstrate that there were conflicts of interest between all three clients and also suggest that Client number 3 was seen third in sequence. There was accordingly a strong evidential basis for the Second Defendant's concerns about the propriety of claiming fixed fees for attendances on all three.
iv) The contemporaneous emails show that the Second Defendant sought further information from the Claimant to clarify the position. When he remained unsatisfied, following her explanations, he referred the matter, together with the documentation, to Mr Field for him to come to a judgment on the matter. This took place on 6 November 2008.
v) All the contemporaneous documentation indicates that the Second Defendant's concerns were genuine and, in particular, his email of 6 November (discussed further below).
vi) This was the first occasion when the Second Defendant had raised any query as to whether payments could properly be made to the Claimant. There was no history of the Second Defendant querying the Claimant's fees, whether in relation to conflict of interest or any other matters.
"I've now studied Grace's typed attendance notes in respect of the conflict. They are far from clear and the hand-written version may be clearer but the chronology is apparently:
1st Client is … . Denies involvement. Was across road.
2nd Client is … . Admits offence. Exonerates [Client 1] but says everyone else involved.
3rd Client is … . Denies offence.
I would have conflicted after first Client. Typed note suggests blaming unspecified others (would have clarified exactly who but take it [Client 2] as admits it). [Client 2] says "everyone else" involved except [Client 1]. On face of it must be accusation against [Client 3] but typed note does not indicate who "everyone" is exactly.
Grace completely denies she was aware that there was a conflict until she spoke to the 3rd Client. There was a conflict between the first two as [Client 1] would need to be advised to exonerate himself by implicating [Client 2].
I think the real issue is that Grace insists that you have to speak to all Clients before deciding if there is a conflict. This is even the case apparently if the first Client blames the others as here. As I understand her position, it is that it is ethical to take instructions from a potential conflict but not give advice. Maybe the hand-written notes do not suggest it was a cut-throat in the same way as the typed notes do. The typed notes do not state who is being blamed rather than "the others". I fundamentally disagree with her interpretation of a conflict and would advise against submitting a claim for at least two of the Clients. Grace fundamentally disagrees with me. It's as simple as that. There is still the issue that her attendance times say she spent 6 and 12 minutes with these Clients which must suggest she knew there was a conflict. She bizarrely still denies that was all the time she spent despite it being explicit in her typed times.
I have pasted below my reply to Grace which I hope you will agree is a model of diplomacy. There are however several other issues on which I need your input.
Grace's last attachment is her amended attendance notes seeking to justify separate fees for the conflicts at Wandsworth Police Station. You'll see she has largely ignored my suggestion as to how [to] improve the notes. It has to now be your decision as to whether you want to pay Grace as claimed and whether you wish to claim fixed fees on the next CDS6.
It may also be semantic but you will see that the Client she did represent out of the three was [Client 3]. He instructed her as an own Client after the conclusion of her duty. The semantic point is that she has claimed £270 as a Client from her own duty which is not strictly true. Shall I pay £270 or £150.
…
I should point out, as you will know as you were copied in the e-mails, that Grace was never remotely accused of impropriety in respect of the conflicts. She was just asked to expand her attendance notes to address an unusual situation."
Ms France wishes to challenge its authenticity, and draft in an Internet expert to make an assessment, but there is no basis on which I can possibly suppose that it has or might have been dishonestly manufactured. The court requires more than bare assertion when addressing the viability of a malice plea.