H177
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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> BUPA Ireland Ltd & Anor -v- The Health Insurance Authority & Ors [2013] IEHC 177 (30 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2013/H177.html Cite as: [2013] IEHC 177 |
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Judgment Title: BUPA Ireland Ltd & Anor -v- The Health Insurance Authority & Ors Neutral Citation: [2013] IEHC 177 High Court Record Number: 2005 532 JR Date of Delivery: 30/04/2013 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Cooke J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation [2013] IEHC 177 THE HIGH COURT COMPETITION [2005 No. 532 J.R.] BETWEEN BUPA IRELAND LIMITED AND BUPA INSURANCE APPLICANTS AND
THE HEALTH INSURANCE AUTHORITY, THE MINISTER FOR HEALTH AND CHILDREN, IRELAND AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL RESPONDENTS RULING of Mr. Justice Cooke delivered the 30th day of April 2013 1. On the 7th March, 2013, the Court delivered its judgment on the preliminary issues which had been directed to be tried in relation to the liability of the respondents (in effect the second named respondent) for damages and the quantification of any such damages arising from the remittal of those issues by the Supreme Court on foot of its appeal judgment of the 16th July, 2008, which set aside the original High Court judgment of McKechnie J. of the 23rd November, 2006. 2. In its judgment of the 7th March, 2013, this Court found, essentially for the reasons summarised at para. 134 of that judgment, that the applicants' claim for damages could not be maintained. 3. The respondents now apply for an order for their costs against the applicants. The applicants not only resist that application but apply to be awarded their costs, or at least part of their costs, against the second named respondent. In the alternative they argue that any order for costs in favour of the respondents ought to be reduced to take account of particular issues upon which the applicants succeeded. 4. The costs in question are the costs incurred since the remittal of the issues to the High Court being principally those incurred by the parties on the various procedural applications, the delivery of pleadings on the issues and the hearing of this case before the Court for seven days in January/February, 2012. All costs previously incurred in the proceedings, both in the High Court and in the Supreme Court have been dealt with in the order of the Supreme Court of 17th December, 2008, which awarded all costs of the litigation in both the High Court and the Supreme Court up that point in favour of the applicants. In exercising its discretion on the award of costs in the application now before it, this Court is therefore concerned only with considerations relevant to the trial and outcome of the liability issue and not with any of the variety of the considerations relevant to the earlier course of the judicial review proceedings and the outcome of the case in the Supreme Court. Those considerations have effectively been met and satisfied by the determination of the Supreme Court. 5. There is no dispute as to the starting point and the basic rules for consideration of these issues. Order 99, r. 1(1) of the Rules of the Superior Courts provides the primary provision, namely, that "The costs of and incidental to every proceeding in the superior courts are to be in the discretion of those Courts respectively". 6. The second basic rule is that provided for jury and non jury cases in subrules (3) and (4) to the effect that costs are to follow the event. It is to be noted, however, that under subrule (3) the language used is that: "The costs of every action, question, and issue tried by a jury shall follow the event unless the Court, for special cause, to be mentioned in the order, shall otherwise direct". In non-jury matters, on the other hand, subrule (4) provides that: "The costs of every issue of fact or law raised upon a claim or counterclaim shall, unless otherwise ordered, follow the event". (Emphasis added.) This would seem to suggest that the issue of costs in non-jury proceedings is to be addressed with more particular regard to the distinct issues of law or fact within the proceedings, rather than by disposing of the costs of the action in their totality. 7. If it is clear as a basic rule that costs are to follow the event, it must also follow, obviously, that where any party who has not succeeded "on the event" seeks to resist the application of the primary rule, it is that party which bears the onus of demonstrating that the circumstances justify displacement of the primary rule. That is the position of the applicants before this Court. 8. In arguing that the primary rule should be displaced both to the extent that the applicants should recover an award for costs and, in the alternative, that the respondents should not recover their costs in their entirety, counsel for the applicants have relied upon a number of authorities:
Fyffes plc v. DCC plc and Others [2006] IEHC 32; Cork County Council v. Shackleton and Others [2011] 1 IR 443 and John Ronan and Sons v. Cleanbuild Limited and Others [2011] IEHC 499. 10. The appeal in the case of Grimes v. Punchestown Developments & Co. Limited concerned an unsuccessful applicant for an injunction to restrain a particular use of land by the respondent under the Local Government (Planning and Development) Act 1976. He had sought to appeal an order for costs awarded against him in the High Court upon the ground that it was only on the day before the hearing of the injunction application that the respondent had disclosed a prior use of the land for the same purpose. The Supreme Court upheld the High Court costs order on the basis that the High Court discretion had been correctly exercised by applying the normal rule. Denham J. (as she then was) pointed out:-
12. In the case of Fyffes plc the defendants had succeeded in the substantive action, but the plaintiff sought to urge the Court to exercise its discretion so as to exclude the costs relating to one particular issue ("the dealing issue") upon which the defendants had not succeeded. Laffoy J. having referred to the Grimes case and reviewed a number of other authorities from other common law jurisdictions, expressed the view that the Court's discretion in a case to which the subrule of (4) applies is "considerably tempered by the provision which stipulates that, as a general rule, costs should follow the event". She referred to the difference of language between subrules (3) and (4) already mentioned above, but noted that no argument had been advanced to her as to the significance of that distinction. She observed:-
15. The Fyffes case is, accordingly, authority for the proposition that it can be appropriate in cases where subrule (4) applies to have regard to the role which specific issues have played within a piece of litigation, but that it requires exceptional circumstances to warrant departing from the primary rule in order to deprive the successful party of the order for costs which would normally follow. Nevertheless, in complex commercial litigation at a high level, this approach to the significance and consequences of individual issues within the litigation may well be appropriate. 16. The costs issue considered by Clarke J. in Cork County Council v. Shackleton was one which arose in somewhat special circumstances following parallel proceedings of considerable complexity. The applicant had sought to set aside an arbitration award made by the respondent in favour of the notice party. The litigation arose in the context of detailed provisions of the Planning and Development Act 2000, under which a local authority could require, as a condition of the grant of a planning permission for a building development, that part of the land be made available for affordable housing. The notice party in the relevant proceedings was the company which had applied for the planning permission and been the beneficiary of the arbitration award determining the amount of houses to be transferred to the local authority under the planning permission. As is clear from the extensive judgment, the issues raised in the litigation were complex and considerable difficulties had been encountered by all concerned in interpreting and construing the legislation in question. The substantive issues were determined in favour of the applicant in circumstances where it was the notice party that had sought to uphold the arbitration award and provide the opposition to the applicant's contentions. As the successful party, the applicant sought to recover its costs, but the notice party also maintained an entitlement to recover costs because of the unusual and special circumstances of the litigation notwithstanding the fact that it had lost. 17. In addressing the question as to whether and on what basis the Court might depart from the primary rule that costs should follow the event in these circumstances, Clarke J. considered the case law relating to "public interest challenges" and then the arguments advanced as to whether the litigation was a "test case" which justified a departure from the primary rule. He pointed out that test cases can arise in very many different circumstances, but concluded:
21. In the case of John Ronan and Sons v. Cleanbuild Limited, Clarke J. returned to the issue which he had previously addressed in his judgment in ACC Bank plc v. Johnston (Unreported, Clarke J. High Court, 241h October, 2011) and in the other authorities he refers to at paragraph 3.1 of the judgment. He there outlines the approach to be taken when the Court is invited to depart from the overriding principle that costs should follow the event, particularly in complex cases involving several parties and multiple issues. He points out that the case law clearly establishes that the starting point is that the party who wins the event gets full costs, but that this overriding rule may require to be departed from where the successful party is shown to have "materially added to the costs of the proceedings by raising additional grounds or arguments which the Court found to be unmeritorious". He pointed out however, that:
23. The intermediate position is one in which no order for costs is made so that the relevant parties are left to bear their own costs. That was the solution reached by Clarke J. in the Cork County Council case to reflect, in effect, the fact that the notice party, although a private party, probably had little option but to stand over the arbitrator's award while the applicant was a public authority answerable to the Government department that had introduced the legislation out of which much of the difficulty arose. 24. At the other end of the spectrum, the most radical departure from the primary rule is that of an award of costs in favour of the losing party against the party which has succeeded. It is clear from the authorities that this approach should only be adopted in rare and exceptional circumstances and in cases which invariably involve considerations of public interest or features which go beyond the immediate interests of the parties to the litigation. An instance of this approach is to be found in, for example, McEvoy v. Meath County Council [2003] 1 IR 208, where the successful respondent was required to pay 50% of the applicant's costs of the proceedings in circumstances where the proceedings had raised public law issues of general importance and the applicants had no private interest in the outcome but had acted solely in furtherance of a valid public interest in the environment and thus by way of "public interest challenge". In Dunne v. Minister for the Environment [2008] 2 IR 775, on the other hand, the Supreme Court set aside an order in which Laffoy J. in the High Court had dismissed the substantive claim of the plaintiff, but made a costs award in his favour. The judgment of Murray C.J. makes it clear that there is no fixed category of "public interest challenge" cases which determine whether such a radical departure from the primary rule is appropriate. At paragraph 35 of the his judgment, Murray C.J. said:-
Conclusion 27. That, however, is not the issue which is now before this Court in relation to the particular costs upon which it must rule. As pointed out above, the costs with which this application is concerned are confined to the costs of the trial of the preliminary issues arising upon the remittal by the Supreme Court of the questions of liability for and quantification of damages. Taken in isolation these issues could not be characterised as public interest issues or those of a test case. The claim has been pursued by the applicants in order to recover compensation for the commercial loss they claimed to have sustained. The claim has been defended by the respondents upon the basis that the ultra vires adoption of the 2003 Scheme did not, as a matter of Irish or European Union law, give rise to an entitlement to damages on the part of the applicants. That is the defence upon which the respondents have succeeded. 28. In the judgment of the Court, therefore, this is not an instance in which the Court could not merely depart from the primary rule, but effectively reverse it by awarding the costs in favour of the party which has failed. In the judgment of the Court, it is only possible to adopt such an approach in exceptional cases which present some of the features mentioned in paragraph 24 above in order to do justice to the unsuccessful party. The issues before this Court on the remittal did not involve any novel proposition brought before the Court by the unsuccessful party in a manner which could be said to serve a wider public interest. Nor can it be said that there has been anything in the conduct of the respondents in the nature of "unsatisfactory features" of the kind referred to by Denham J. in the Grimes case. As will appear from the judgment of this Court on the 7th March, 2013, and particularly from the summary contained at paragraph 134, the principal aspect of the issues which went against the respondent was that of the reliance placed upon res judicata. The Court is satisfied, however, that no criticism could be directed at the second named respondent for having raised or argued that ground, nor could it be said to have been in any sense wasteful, vexatious or "unsatisfactory" as an aspect of the conduct of the proceedings on the part of the respondents. From the point of view of this Court, the issues thereby raised were difficult and the answer to them by no means obvious because of the complex nature of the issues which formed the basis of the judgment of McKechnie J. and the fact that the Supreme Court refrained from expressing any view on many of the relevant findings contained in the original High Court judgment. For these reasons, the Court is satisfied that it would be going too far to award costs to the applicants. 29. The position remains, however, that the matter before the Court can be characterised as "commercial litigation at a high level" in which it is possible to identify the manner in which the main issues were determined for and against the respective sides. While the exercise is obviously not a precise science, it is clearly in the interest of doing justice between the parties to take these considerations into account when it is possible to do so with some degree of confidence. As will be apparent both from the preliminary issues defined by this Court (see paragraph 20 of the judgment of the 7th March, 2013), and from the manner in which the various arguments raised have been addressed in that judgment, a major area of dispute between the parties has been directed at the effect to be attributed to the judgment of the Supreme Court upon the findings of McKechnie J. on substantive issues as to the nature, extent and gravity of the impact of the 2003 Scheme for the purposes of assessing the alleged infringement of the wrongs relied upon by BUPA. It was strongly contended and forcibly argued on behalf of the respondents that the applicants ought not to be entitled to reopen such issues and require them to be retried by the High Court. That aspect of the case was, as already indicated, determined against the respondents. 30. Having regard to the importance of that aspect of the case and the role it played both in the time taken at the hearing and the influence it had on the analysis of the issues generally, the Court is satisfied that the balance of justice between the parties in respect of this final stage in the litigation (at least in this Court), is best reflected in an award of costs in favour of the respondents limited to 75% of the costs recoverable on taxation. |