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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 >> Rosenblatt v Man Oil Group S.A [2016] EWHC 1382 (QB) (13 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1382.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1382 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MASTER HAWORTH sitting as an assesor
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ROSENBLATT | Claimant/Respondent | |
and | ||
MAN OIL GROUP S.A | Defendant/Appellant |
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WordWave International Limited
Trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R MALLALIEU (instructed by Cormac T. Cawley & Co.) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"Should any of these assumptions prove to be incorrect, we reserve the right to revisit our fees."
The background
"The primary purpose of this letter is to explain the basis upon which we will carry out your instructions. We are obliged by regulations of the Law Society formally to bring to your attention our terms of business and billing policy. Accordingly, I enclose this Firm's terms of engagement, which should be read in conjunction with this letter. Where the terms of engagement differ from the terms in this letter, the terms of this letter will apply."
"Our charges will be calculated by reference to the time spent in working on the transaction. Time spent on your affairs will include meetings with you, drafting documents, considering, preparing and working on papers, correspondence and making and receiving phone calls."
"As I said, at this stage it is difficult to give you a definitive indication of the professional costs involved in this particular transaction, particularly when we have not yet commenced the detailed work and the structure of the pre-IPO Funding is not known. However, the fee proposal set out below is based on our experience of acting in relation to transactions similar to this, particularly on the multi-jurisdictional matters and our detailed discussions in relation to the appropriate fee basis ... I would estimate that our fees in relation to the IPO Fundraising and Admission would be between £150,000 and £175,000. You have stated that the company would prefer to agree a fixed fee. We have therefore discussed this with you and agree that our engagement should be on the following basis.
The fixed fee to cover Pre-IPO Funding and for the IPO Fundraising and Admission in the sum of £185,000. We have stated that we would agree such fee on the basis that 50 % payable within 7 days of the signing of this letter of engagement and the balance upon the admission of the company to the AIM list. Any out of pocket expenses and VAT would be payable in addition to the fixed fee. However, given the cash flow position of the company, we agree the payment of the initial sum of £92,500 may be deferred until 7 days after the first receipt of any funds raised by the company prior to the IPO by way of debt or equity finance. If the IPO should not proceed to completion, then our fees will be limited to £92,500, plus any out of pocket disbursements and VAT applicable which will be payable forthwith on the decision to stop the IPO process if it has not been paid prior to that date. Our fee proposal is based on the following assumptions:
(a) the transaction proceeds as anticipated without additional complications;(b) we do not carry out any work other than that which is included in the scope of work set out in paragraph 1 above;(c) all fees are quoted exclusively of VAT if applicable and disbursements which are payable in addition to the fees quoted;(d) completion of the pre-IPO funding occurs before 31 March 2012 and admission occurs before 31 May 2012."
"Should any of these assumptions prove to be incorrect, we reserve the right to revisit our fees."
"The scope of the work under the IPO has increased since the specifications set out in our terms of engagement. That would normally merit an increase in our charges but I agreed a fixed fee ... and I will honour that arrangement."
"I accept that Mr Man complained about the substantial and unanticipated cost of which the defendant had not been kept informed. It would have been remarkable if he had not."
"I have seen nothing to suggest before 10 May 2012 the defendant was put on specific notice that the claimant had decided that the fixed fee arrangement was no longer appropriate, or before 31 May 2012 on the scale which these had been incurred and it would appear even then the figures were understated. I will come to that."
"However, I wish to inform you that it was agreed ... to resume the IPO process ... this issue will also show further work concerning your outstanding invoice which we are committed to execute as soon as possible."
The master's decision and reasons
"... for which the claimant had a legitimate claim for payment at its specified hourly rates. It incorporated the same hourly rates and the claimant expressly reserves its position should the assumptions upon which those fixed fees were based be superseded."
"Again, the question seems to me not to be whether the varied terms applied but the basis upon which the claimant was entitled to charge the defendant for its work should the fixed fee assumptions be superseded."
"The fixed fee arrangement capped on those assumptions the hourly charges included in the 7 March letter and on the basis of which the claimant had been instructed from an early stage. It follows that in the event of the assumptions being superseded, the claimant's claim for payment (subject to the usual principles governing costs between solicitor and client) would be based on the work undertaken by the claimant at the agreed hourly rates. Evidentially, the agreement left room for discussing the terms of the arrangement on a commercial basis, but the claimant was entitled to fall back on the hourly rates expressly provided for in its contract of retainer."
"That is subject to an important proviso. In the 7 March 2012 letter, the claimant committed to working on a fixed fee basis and reserved the right to revisit that if the fixed fee assumptions were superseded. It must follow that the claimant could not claim to be authorised by the defendant to undertake any work to be charged outside the fixed fee structure without first notifying the defendant to the effect that the fixed fee assumptions had now been superseded, but the claimant now proposed to exercise its option to charge additional fees and what those fees would be. If the defendant did not wish to accept that, the defendant could cease instructing the claimant and remain liable only for the appropriate fixed fee."
"I have also concluded that contractually, the claimant was entitled to charge by reference to its stated hourly rates should the fixed fee assumptions be superseded, but that it was incumbent upon the claimant to notify the defendant that it was exercising its option to revisit its fees and to obtain prior authority to undertake work at those hourly rates or whatever alternative basis might have been agreed. Without that, in our view, there was no proper basis for claiming costs against the defendant beyond the fixed fee structure."
"The meeting of 15 June 2012 was held in order to reach agreement on the basis for which the claimant would now charge for its work. To that point, in our view, the defendant had authorised nothing new on the fixed fee but it was now incumbent on the defendant to come to an agreement as to how additional costs were to be accounted for. The claimant's position was evident that its hourly rates as specified in the retainer letter could be charged. That was the basis of the reported current cost level of £400,000, albeit understating its fees by about £94,000, and the revised total cost estimate of £600,000 against which Mr Rosenblatt offered a £300,000 cap."
"I can understand he was shocked by the figures put to him. It appears that £300,000 was beyond anything the defendant was willing to agree. It is certainly on the defendant's evidence beyond what the defendant could afford. I have concluded that in all the circumstances, the defendant decided that the only option was to keep working with the claimant and to hope for the best."
"However, the defendant was not put on notice of that until 10 May 2012 and not in any precise terms until 30 May 2012. I accept Mr Man's evidence that by the time he was informed his accrued costs was £300,000, it was already too late for the defendant to exercise any cost control. The claimant's failure to keep the defendant informed as to accruing costs put him in an almost impossible position. The contractual rights aside, it cannot be reasonable for a client, particularly a client who had agreed a fixed costs structure, to be required to pay costs amounting to hundreds of thousands of pounds in excess of the estimates where the client has been given no notice of those costs or any chance to control them."
"The fact that the specific costs information given to the defendant from time to time after 30 May 2012 was substantially understated has in my view no bearing on the claimant's right to recover its fees for the works undertaken after 15 June 2012. The defendant, already faced with costs it could not afford to pay, decided to carry on instructing the claimant. It would not have acted differently if the reported figures had been higher."
The arguments
Discussion