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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 >> Atkins v The Lord Chancellor [2014] EWHC 1387 (QB) (08 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/1387.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1387 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
COSTS JUDGE SIMONS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting with Senior Costs Judge HURST as Assessor)
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MACLAVERTY COOPER ATKINS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE LORD CHANCELLOR |
Respondent |
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Judith Ayling (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
"…it appears that this case could fulfil the VHCC criteria as the trial is likely to last in excess of 40 days.
However, we note the number of non panel firms involved in this matter, and the disruption that could be caused by transfer of representation, especially taking into account the youth of many of the defendants, and the relatively limited costs benefit of contractual arrangements in all the circumstances of the case.
Given all these factors, and taking into consideration the optimum balance between the interests of justice and those of the public purse, the position of the Legal Services Commission is that there are exceptional circumstances here to justify funding this matter outside the relevant contractual arrangements, and so we do not intend to classify it as a VHCC…"
MCA followed this with a letter on 23 June 2010 expressing surprise but it did not take any other steps to challenge the LSC for instance by issuing an application for judicial review.
"He [the judge] regards your many months of work viewing CCTV as essential to your client's case. Much of the trial centred around the interpretation of CCTV images, not only of your client, but of others. It was as a result of your work in this respect that the defence schedule of CCTV which was placed before the jury, and upon which so much of the focus of the trial was directed, came into existence. Judge Moss is of the firm opinion that you could not properly and adequately have discharged your professional duty to your client without performing this work. He regards the rejection of your claim for costs in this respect by the Legal Services Commission as outrageous…"
The Law
"4(1)Where a representation order is granted…for proceedings in the Crown Court…
(a) the Commission must fund representation in accordance with its duty under section 14 (1) of the [ Access to Justice Act]; and
(b) the provisions of this Order apply.
6 (1) Claims for fees by litigators in proceedings in the Crown Court must be made and determined in accordance with the provisions of Schedule 2 to this Order…"
Provision is made in Article 29 for fees to be determined by an appropriate officer with provision for an appeal in Article 30 for an appeal to a Costs Judge. Article 31 deals with appeals to the High Court; Article 30 (7) provides that the single judge's determination will be final and Article 30 (8) provides:
"The judge has the same powers as the appropriate officer and the Costs Judge under this Order and may reverse, affirm or amend the decision appealed against or make such other order as he thinks fit."
"(2) For the purposes of this Schedule, the number of pages of prosecution evidence served on the court includes all –
(a) witness statements;
(b) documentary and pictorial exhibits;
(c) records of interviews with the assisted person; and
(d) records of interviews with other defendants
which form part of the committal or served prosecution documents or which are included in any notice of additional evidence, but does not include any document provided on CD – ROM or by other means of electronic communication."
"15(1) This paragraph applies where, in any case on indictment in the Crown Court in respect of which a fee is payable under part 2, any or all of the prosecution evidence, as defined in paragraph 1(2), is served in electronic form only, and the appropriate officer considers it reasonable to make a payment in excess of the fee payable under Part 2.
(2) Where this paragraph applies a special preparation fee may be paid in addition to the fee payable under Part 2…"
The following sub-paragraphs provide guidance as to how this fee is to be calculated.
"3. The Criminal Defence Service (Funding) Order 2007 as amended ("the Order") provides a detailed and formulaic scheme for the calculation of fees payable to the representatives of defendants in criminal cases. The graduated fee scheme, the current version of which is set out in the Order was first applied to advocates by way of the Criminal Defence Service (Funding) Order 2001. The scheme was updated in the version of the Order which came into force on 30 April 2007. In particular, Schedule 1 of the Order which was entitled "Advocates' Graduated Fee Scheme" contained the detailed provision by which advocates' fees were to be calculated with regard to the length of trial, the nature of the offence and the number of pages of prosecution evidence (PPE). Schedule 2 to the original version of the Order was entitled "Litigators' Fees in the Crown Court" and contained a simpler scheme by which (in short) the fees of solicitors engaged in representing defendants in the Crown Court were to be calculated by reference to specified hourly rates. Pursuant to the Criminal Defence Service (Funding) (Amendment) Order 2007 a replacement Schedule 2 was inserted in the Order which came into force on 14th January 2008. It extended to litigators the same model of graduated fee scheme that had previously applied to advocates. In particular, litigators' fees were now to be calculated pursuant to formulae based upon category of offence, length of trial and pages of prosecution evidence…
5. Pursuant to Article 6 of the Order, claims for fees by litigators in proceedings in the Crown Court must be made and determined in accordance with the provisions set out in Schedule 2 which was inserted by the Criminal Defence Service (Funding) (Amendment) Order 2007. The calculation of a litigator's fees in respect of a Crown Court trial depends upon whether or not the number of pages of prosecution evidence exceeds the "PPE cut off" as set out in paragraph 4. If the number of pages does not exceed that cut off the litigator's fee is calculated in accordance with paragraph 6. The final fee will be the basic fee, plus the length of trial proxy (if applicable) plus any uplift in respect of multiple defendants, transfers or retrials. If the number of pages of prosecution evidence does exceed the PPE cut off then the fee is calculated pursuant to the formula set out in paragraph 8. The final fee will then be an initial fee plus an increment calculated by reference to the number of pages of prosecution evidence. The number of pages of prosecution evidence in a particular case is calculated by reference to paragraph 1(2) of Schedule 2…
9. In my judgment the appeal must be allowed and the special preparation fee of £25.44 awarded by the costs judge must be set aside. My reasons are as follows:
(a) the wording of Paragraph 15 incorporating the definition in paragraph 1 (2) does not and cannot include DVD footage of the relevant section of road in this case. Indeed the wording clearly excludes such material.
(b) the costs judge's expressed reason for his conclusion, namely that the DVD was "central to the charge against the Defendant" and as such important for the solicitor to study, did not explain the basis on which he concluded that the DVD was within the definition, and was in itself no reason for such inclusion.
(c) his decision although expressed to be "on the facts of this case" is contrary to the clear wording of the Order.
(d) although it is clear from the background material put before me by the appellant that express consideration was given to electronic material in the consultation process which preceded the Order and that the intention was to exclude from Paragraph 15 electronic material of this kind, I have not found it necessary in considering the construction of the Order to seek assistance from that background material because the meaning is clear. However, it is the position that the expressed intention is reflected in and entirely consistent with the wording and meaning of the Order.
(e) The clear effect of paragraph 1(2) is to exclude from the calculation of prosecution pages of evidence any DVD, CD Rom, audio or video tape or other electronically served material. The definition excludes or, to use the wording of the Order, "does not include any document provided on CD –ROM or by other means of electronic communication." There is a limited saving for"any document" so served in Paragraph 15 ; but any material served electronically which does not come within the definition of " any document provided on CD-ROM or by other means of electronic communication" for example a DVD of moving footage is outwith the definition in paragraph 1(2) and outwith Paragraph 15. The result is that such material is not part of the fee calculation at all save as part of the basic/initial fee. That result also reflects the intention of the authors of the Order.
(f) Paragraph 15 also excludes any special preparation fee being awarded in respect of such material unless the material is within the definition in paragraph 1(2). If (and only if) such material is served in electronic form only, and it consists of "any document" can the additional material so served qualify for a special preparation fee in excess of the fee payable under Part 2 if the appropriate officer considers it reasonable to make such payment. The words "any document" in my judgment in context mean a still image, rather than moving footage (whether in the form of a DVD , CD-ROM or video or audio tape or some other electronic form) not intended for conversion to still images or which can not be so converted .
(g) I am fortified in my conclusion as to the meaning of paragraph 1(2) by the decision of Walker J in Goodman and Farr v Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs (2007) 3 Costs LR 366 He concluded that the words "pages of prosecution evidence" did not encompass the DVDs and inlays in that case, which constituted real evidence and had not been copied, photographed or converted in to the form of electronic documents as distinct from a hard document. They did not constitute such pages. He said this at paragraph 45 "The schedule has chosen to work by reference to pages of prosecution evidence. That connotes to my mind something which is on a page." He left open the question of whether a page might take the form of an electronic document. The definition in the Order at that time did not contain the words subsequently added referring to documents provided on CD-ROM or otherwise electronically. The additional words considered together with Paragraph 15 resolve the question which Walker J left open to the extent explained in this judgment."
"18. In paragraph 9(f) of his judgment Penry-Davey J was doing no more than recognising that documents (whether pages of writing or pictures) may be provided electronically. Indeed, increasingly documents are circulated in all walks of life only by electronic means. Books may be downloaded onto various commercial devices. The Crown Prosecution Service are working on a scheme to enable trials to be conducted by prosecution, defence and judge without any paper but with all material being provided and used electronically. In all these examples, which could be multiplied, the recipient of the electronic material has undoubtedly been provided with documents with an identifiable page count. That is not to say that a recording of speech which could be transcribed can properly be described as a document, any more than could an audio book, nor that it can be equated with pages of prosecution evidence. Penry-Davey J was content to interpret the 2007 Order without recourse to the pre-legislative history of the consultation process because he considered the interpretation to be clear. I respectfully endorse that view. Whilst as a matter of legal theory it would be possible to depart from the interpretation of the Paragraph 15 arrived at by Penry-Davey J, on the basis that he heard only one side of the argument, in my judgment his reasoning is unassailable. Paragraph 15 is concerned with documentary material that has been served upon the defendant in electronic form only. The solicitors' submission that it provides a wide discretion to remunerate litigators in respect of time spent dealing with any electronic evidence is inconsistent with the plain language of the 2007 Order.
The consultation document is a proper aid to construction. Despite the criticisms advanced by Mr McNally of the data set which led to the proposal in paragraph 3.25 of the consultation paper (some of which echo those made in response to the consultation paper) it is clear that the proposal being made excluded additional payment for considering 'taped' material. The legislative history thus reinforces the conclusion arrived at by reference to the language of the Order itself."
Discussion
"The judge has the same powers as the appropriate officer and the Costs Judge under this Order and may reverse, affirm or amend the decision appealed against or make such other order as he thinks fit."
This does not give rise to some right, independent of the terms of the Order and the Schedules, to give some relief which is not provided for therein. It enables the Court to do what is fit to implement the Order. For instance, it might be that, if the Court had been with MCA, it could make an interim payment order to provide for some payment to MCA on account.
Decision