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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Shepherd Construction Ltd v Pinsent Masons LLP [2012] EWHC 43 (TCC) (19 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2012/43.html Cite as: [2012] PNLR 31, [2012] BLR 213, [2012] EWHC 43 (TCC), 141 ConLR 232 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SHEPHERD CONSTRUCTION LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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PINSENT MASONS LLP |
Defendant |
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Roger Stewart QC (instructed by Beale & Company Solicitors LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 13 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
These Proceedings
The Amended Particulars of Claim
"8. The relationship between the Claimant and each of the Defendant practices whereby [Masons, Pinsent Masons or PMLLP] as the case may be regularly provided legal services to the Claimant across a range of issues and across a range of construction projects, was conducted on an informal basis. The nature of commissions and/or instructions of the Claimant was addressed on the telephone or in meetings, such that each action upon the Defendant was not recorded in writing by the Claimant. In seeking to cultivate a growing relationship with the Claimant, the Defendants from time-to-time indicated that they were content to proceed on this basis…
The Single Contract
10. As set out more fully below, regularly over a period of a number of many years, each of the Defendants provided advice, drafting and other legal services to the Claimant upon non-contentious massive, the considerations which was either monetary and/or the prospect of further instructions and/or work.
11. The relationship between the Claimant and each of the Defendants in succession was in the nature of a single contract or retainer comprising a range of specific instructions and commissions ("that Single Contract"). The Single Contract was based upon the on-going and close relationship between the Claimant and the Defendant; and upon the conduct of the parties over a number of years.
12. A term was necessarily implied into the Single Contract, and there was an equivalent duty of care at common law based upon the assumption of advice and/or drafting by the Defendants that the Defendants would exercise all reasonable skill and care in or about the provision of those legal services. This included an on-going duty upon successive Defendants to review the suitability of drafting amendments and/or drafting advice previously provided to the Claimant, in light inter alia of legislative and other legal developments. For the avoidance of doubt, this on-going duty to review was a duty upon [Masons] up to and including is 5 December 2004; [Pinsent Masons] between 6 December 2004 and 29 February 2008; and [PMLLP] is at all times after 1 March 2008, for the reasons set out in paragraph 15 relating to the transfer of the Single Contract.
13. The manner in which each of the three Defendants became, in succession and due to changes of corporate organisation, a party to a Single Contract with [Shepherd] is set out below:
(i) The Single Contract was [a] contract between [Shepherd] and [Masons] for the provision of legal services by a group of non-contentious lawyers within that firm, based on the relationship between those lawyers within [Masons] and [Shepherd's] senior commercial personnel. The Single Contract reflected consistency in terms of the personnel of [Masons]; the broad type of work undertaken; and broad consistency and continuity in terms of fees charged.
(ii) Subsequently:
(a) Upon dissolution of the [Masons] partnership, the Single Contract was discharged but then, as evidenced by the conduct the parties, concluded on the same basis between [Shepherd] and [Pinsent Masons] on or shortly after 6 December 2004. This is evidence inter alia by the e-mail dated 24 November 2004 [which talked about merger and building upon relations already forged]; and [Shepherd] also relies on the clear conduct of [Shepherd], [Masons] and [Pinsent Masons] in treating the Single Contract as having passed from [Masons] to [Pinsent Masons] without any alteration or re-negotiation.
(b) The Single Contract between [Shepherd] and [Pinsent Masons] was discharged on or about 29 February 2008 and upon the commencement of trading of [PMLLP] as an LLP from 1 March 2008, and as evidenced by the conduct of the parties, the Single Contract was concluded on the same basis as previously between [Shepherd] and [PMLLP]."
(a) The round robin letter sent to Shepherd in late 2007 by PMLLP that "the UK business and assets of [Pinsent Masons] will be transferred to [PMLLP] on 1 March 2008".
(b) An email dated 8 May 2008 from Mr Job to a Mr Smylie of Shepherd responding to the latter's request for an electronic copy of certain GC Works Contract amendments; Mr Job said that Shepherd's standard sub-contract "will almost certainly need updating".
(c) An e-mail dated 22 July 2008 to Mr Smylie in which another partner at PMLLP drew his attention to a draft bill amending the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996.
(d) An e-mail dated 11 August 2008 in which PMLLP provided comments on an attached set of draft amendments to the NEC3 sub-contract used by Shepherd.
(e) An e-mail dated 9 April 2009 in which Mr Job contacted Mr Smylie drawing his attention to a new £4 billion framework agreement relating to Academy schools.
(f) An e-mail dated 27 July 2009 in which Mr Job contacted Mr Smylie commenting on the Court of Appeal judgement in the Hare case to the effect that he recommended that amendments be made to " pay when paid" provisions in the standard sub-contracts.
(g) By an e-mail dated 7 October 2009, a PMLLP partner contacted Mr Smylie setting out an opinion on a recent unrelated adjudication case in the House of Lords.
The paragraph concludes:
"[Shepherd] and [PMLLP] have both proceeded on the clear understanding that, from 1 March 2008, the legal services - including advisory work and drafting - previously provided by personnel within [Pinsent Masons] would be provided by [PMLLP]. Given the clear conduct of the parties, upon which [Shepherd] relied and was intended to rely by [PMLLP], [PMLLP] can not now in conscience deny the existence or nature of the relationship. Furthermore, given the high degree of consistency and continuity in terms of the personnel involved in such work; the broader type of work undertaken; the nature of the working relationship; and in terms of fees charged, there was plainly a Single Contract between [Shepherd] and [PMLLP]."
The Arguments
Discussion
(a) A solicitor's functions and responsibilities must primarily be determined by his or her retainer.
(b) There is no suggestion or assertion that there was any express agreement, oral or otherwise, by which the Single Contract between Shepherd and each of the three firms was concluded.
(c) It seems to be accepted and indeed the draft amended pleading asserts that Shepherd was billed for the provision of individual pieces of work by the respective firms. There is no suggestion that Shepherd ever made or was asked to make any payments in relation to the Single Contract(s).
(d) I do not see how the placing of specific commissions on a more or less informal basis, even if there are a large number of them, can give rise to a necessary implication that there was or must be some overarching general retainer by which the solicitor is required to keep under relatively constant review all advice and drafting previously done. The very fact that there were specific commissions suggests that that is all that they were.
(e) The facts that the respective firms of solicitors sent out unsolicited briefings or invited the client to breakfast meetings or seminars or even sought to solicit (doubtless within the requisite professional rules) more work from the client does not give rise to any such implication.
(f) The facts that the same people within the respective solicitor firms had contact with and generally gave advice to Shepherd again does not give rise to there being some general retainer.
(g) It is not alleged, save in one respect, that anyone from the respective solicitor firms actually knew that advice previously given (in this case in 1998) had become in the light of the Enterprise Act 2002 not only obsolete but commercially imprudent. Whilst it might (arguably) be possible to imply into the obligation within the 1998 retainer to exercise reasonable care and skill that, if Masons had actually become aware at a later stage that the advice given earlier had become redundant and gave rise to potential commercial problems, it should so have advised the client, that is not the allegation here. The only exception to this is the advice, if such it was, volunteered by Mr Job in July 2009 that, in the light of the Court of Appeal's judgment in the Hare case, Shepherd should look to amend their standard terms. However, this can not be causative as the e-mail came some months after the requisite Trinity sub contracts had been entered into and, in any event, Mr Job, knowing of the Court of Appeal decision, complied with any obligation to pass on to his former client reservations about earlier advice of which he had actually become aware.
(h) I do not consider that the draft amended pleading extends to asserting that the successor firms owed an obligation pursuant to the Single Contract(s) to review advice and drafts provided by the earlier partnerships. I say this because it is expressly accepted in the draft amended pleading that there were separate Single Contracts between Shepherd on the one hand and during the periods of time over which each was in existence Masons, Pinsent Masons and later PMLLP. It is even more unlikely to be implied that the Single Contract between a later partnership and Shepherd required that later partnership to review advice and drafts given or provided by earlier partnerships.
(i) The facts that Masons and Pinsent announced in late 2004 that they were merging and that later in late 2007 PMLLP told clients that the business and assets of Pinsent Masons was being transferred to it does not obviously give rise to some implied Single Contract whereby the later firms undertook to review earlier advice and drafts provided by them or the earlier firms. The PMLLP advice was qualified in any event that PMLLP is was not responsible for advice or services provided prior to 1 March 2008; either, as Shepherd asserts, it did not receive that advice in which case it cannot rely on it, or it did get the advice and it was subject to the qualification.
Decision