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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Cohen v Fine & Ors [2020] EWHC 3278 (Ch) (01 December 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/3278.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3278 (Ch), [2020] Costs LR 1711, [2021] 4 WLR 1 |
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Appeal Ref: M20C296 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE BUSINESS &
PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
ORDER OF DISTRICT JUDGE MATHARU
DATED 11 JUNE 2020
Appeal from District Judge - Summary assessment of costs - Correct approach - Guideline Hourly Rates
1 Bridge Street West, Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
Harvey Cohen (as executor of Eric Hermes, Deceased) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Marion Fine (2) Shelley Hermes (3) Jonathan Hermes |
Defendant |
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At the request of the First Defendant, and with the agreement of the court and the other parties, Mr Sholom Fine represented the First Defendant, his wife
The Second and Third Defendants appeared in person
Hearing date: Monday 30 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
The following cases are referred to in the judgment:
1-800 Flowers Inc v Phonenames Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 721, [2001] 2 Costs LR 286
MacDonald v Tare Holdings Ltd [2001] Costs L.R. 142
McLinden v Redbond [2006] EWHC 234 (Ch), [2006] 4 Costs L.R. 651
Morgan v The Spirit Group Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 68, [2011] 3 Costs L.R. 449
Ohpen Operations UK Ltd v Invesco Fund Managers Ltd [2019] EWHC 2504 (TCC), [2019] Costs LR 1533
Judge Hodge QC:
Introduction and overview
The hearing below and the judgment
1. The issue of costs falls to be considered by the court at the conclusion of a case. Let me deal with the issues of law, if I may. First, what Mr Fletcher tells the court is that having regard to the provisions of CPR 46.3 – those are the court rules that govern the conduct of civil litigation – the court has a limitation on its powers to award costs in favour of a trustee or personal representative. He says that this will apply to a person who is or has been a party to any proceedings in the capacity of trustee or personal representative. He says that Mr Cohen is an executor and thus a trustee or personal representative. In that case, 44.5 [sic: probably 44.3 (5)] does not apply. He says that what that rule says is that the general rule is that that person is entitled to be paid the costs of the proceedings insofar as they are not recovered from or paid by any other person out of the estate. That is the principle. That has been followed by me in the substantive decision I made. What it goes on to say is: 'Where that person is entitled to be paid any of those costs out of the fund or estate, those costs will be assessed on the indemnity basis'. What that means is that if there is any doubt as to amounts, then such doubt is to be resolved in favour of the receiving party when it comes to the question of assessing quantum of costs. And he says that costs if ordered on an indemnity basis do not require to be tested on a proportionality basis.
2. Let me just deal with my discretion as to costs in relation to this matter. The submission being made by Mr Fletcher is that this is how it has been spent, proportionality does not come into the equation, and, therefore, they are entitled to some £50,000. He may well be right on the proportionality point that he has made, but that does not exclude reasonableness. It is wholly unreasonable to claim this amount of costs. I am provided with a statement of costs where I shall use examples only. There is duplication and there is exaggeration as follows. We have at items 70 and 71 'Preparing brief and bundle 2 hours 42 minutes' and 'Completing brief and bundle' another hour and 48 minutes. Let us look at item 78: 'Costing the file and preparing this N260 costs statement 3 hours 12 minutes'. Item 83: 'Updating the costs statement', another 36 minutes. Item 81: 'Considering service rules and requirements …', charging an hour for it. Matters of law that they should know and they are seeking to impose upon the defendants. Item 116: 'Considering the bundle', an hour. Preparing his costs statement, checking and signing, 3 hours and 6 minutes at 127. 128, 'Estimated time preparing for hearing', 2 hours. I am not undertaking a detailed assessment. What the court is doing is considering matters in the round. I am considering whether they have been unreasonably incurred or whether they are of an unreasonable amount.
3. I am appalled by the amount of costs that are sought by an executor I do have regard to the point forcefully made by Mr Fine, that it was always available to the executors to act quicker, more expeditiously, more promptly, thereby truncating or reducing any claim for costs. It is absolutely right that a reasonable amount should be recovered by the estate. £50,000 is absolutely not reasonable. All the court is prepared to order is a global total of no more than £27,000. That is both fair and reasonable having regard to the issues and what is reasonable in the circumstances. It seems to be the submission that the principle of indemnity costs engage some entitlement to substantial costs. That is not right and I am satisfied that this statement of costs cannot be substantiated. That is the decision of the court.
The appeal
(1) The District Judge was wrong and erred in law by failing to have regard, or give proper weight, to the fact that the summary assessment was of the costs of an executor and were to be assessed on the indemnity basis. Thus, it is submitted, that the District Judge applied the wrong test.
(2) The District Judge was wrong and erred in law by failing to have sufficient regard to the components of the N260 costs statement and effectively imposed her own unilateral tariff without any calculation or proper reasoning, contrary to the Court of Appeal's guidance in 1800 Flowers Inc v Phonenames Limited [2001] EWCA Civ 721, [2001] 2 Costs LR 286. The allowance of £27,000.00 against the costs itemised in the claimant's N260 costs statement of £48,846.00 (including VAT, Counsel's fees and disbursements) is said to have been "wholly arbitrary".
(3) The District Judge was wrong and fell into serious procedural error by making it clear throughout the hearing that it was to last only an hour and by failing to consider the options of an adjournment of the claimant's costs for later summary or detailed assessment. This failure resulted in an outcome that was not properly considered, was arbitrary and unjust. Rather than proceed, if there were a lack of judicial time at the hearing on 11 June 2020, an adjournment to some later date could have meant that the claimant's costs would have been subsequently considered thoroughly and with proper attention (as canvassed for in the alternative at paragraph 9 of the claimant's skeleton argument for the hearing on 11 June 2020). As it was, the summary assessment was dealt with in what is said to have been "a very rushed and rather intemperate fashion" resulting, so the claimant submits, in procedural unfairness.
"In addition to the terms of the draft order, the claimant seeks an order for the summary assessment of his costs. That summary assessment should take place if possible at the hearing on 11 June 2020 (to save and avoid further future costs). If there is insufficient Court time on the 11 June 2020, and in the alternative, the Court is asked to re-list the matter for a summary assessment with an ELH of 1 hour by telephone. In the further alternative, the Court is asked to direct that the claimant's costs be the subject of detailed assessment. In any event, the claimant's costs are to be assessed on the indemnity basis pursuant to CPR 46.3. Having regard to the overriding objective and principles of proportionality, summary assessment is to be preferred to detailed assessment."
" … I want Glaisyers to be paid. I am infinitely grateful for the good work they did and have done for us. I just want the payment to be a fair one.
I am not able to pinpoint regarding the costs because I have no knowledge of the area and I cannot afford a solicitor. I do not have the knowledge to be able to go through all the services we are being charged for and to point out the duplications, all the things that we are being overcharged for, and also how unnecessary certain things we are being charged for, were. …
In fact, as I recall it, and as I understood it, the second of the hearings that took place in the High Court would not have been necessary had the solicitor served some papers to my brother, or something akin to this, in the correct way. …
I am grateful to Glaisyers for the good work they have done for us and, of course, I want to pay them for this. But I believe we have been vastly overcharged and I think that certain matters should have been dealt with differently."
The authorities
"The court was wrong not to assess costs on the detailed breakdown of costs actually incurred, as shown by the successful party's statement of costs, and instead substituting its own tariff: McLinden v Redbond [2006] EWHC 234 (Ch), [2006] 4 Costs L.R. 651 (Evans-Lombe J). The judge in a trademark dispute summarily assessed the costs at the end of the trial at £10,000 as against the £38,000 claimed. In carrying out the summary assessment the judge had not conducted any sort of detailed analysis of the objector's statement of costs but appeared to have applied his own tariff as to what costs were appropriate for a one-day paper only appeal. That approach was wrong in principle: 1-800 Flowers Inc v Phonenames Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 721, [2001] 2 Costs LR 286.
A claimant represented under a CFA claimed damages of £40,000. At trial she was awarded £13,419 plus costs. The costs amounted to £99,000, including a 100% success fee. The trial judge considered that the claim had in reality been a small fast track personal injury case, and on that basis ordered that the defendant should contribute £25,000 to the claimant's costs. On appeal, the Court of Appeal noted that the judge had the claimant's full bill of costs before him but did not make his decision by reference to the detailed breakdown of costs that it contained. It could not therefore be said that he carried out a summary assessment in arriving at the figure of £25,000. The court ordered that the costs should be subject to detailed assessment, to be carried out as if the case had been allocated to the fast track: Morgan v The Spirit Group Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 68, [2011] 3 Costs L.R. 449. "
112. The judge was plainly right in saying that the court must control costs. CPR 44PD para 13.13 says in terms that the court will not give its approval to disproportionate and unreasonable costs. Moreover it is in the nature of the jurisdiction to assess costs summarily that the ambit of the court's discretion when carrying out a summary assessment is very wide.
113. That said, however, I am of the view that in the instant case the judge erred in principle when he in effect applied his own tariff to the case, without carrying out any detailed examination or analysis of the costs actually incurred by the Opponent as set out in its statement of costs.
114. In my judgment, it is of the essence of a summary assessment of costs that the court should focus on the detailed breakdown of costs actually incurred by the party in question, as shown in its statement of costs; and that it should carry out the assessment by reference to the items appearing in that statement. In so doing, the court may find it helpful to draw to a greater or lesser extent on its own experience of summary assessments of costs in what it considers to be comparable cases. Equally, having dealt with the costs by reference to the detailed items in the statement of costs which is before it, the court may find it helpful to look at the total sum at which it has arrived in order to see whether that sum falls within the bounds of what it considers reasonable and proportionate. If the court considers the total sum to be unreasonable or disproportionate, it may wish to look again at the various detailed items in order to see what further reductions should be made. Such an approach is wholly unobjectionable. It is, however, to be contrasted with the approach adopted by the judge in the instant case.
115. In the instant case, the judge does not appear to have focused at all on the detailed items in the Opponent's statement of costs. Rather, having concluded that the total of the detailed items was unreasonably high he then proceeded to apply his own tariff - a tariff, moreover, which appears to have been derived primarily from a case in which the Opponent had not been involved and about which it and its advisers knew nothing. In my judgment the jurisdiction to assess costs summarily is not to be used as a vehicle for the introduction of a scale of judicial tariffs for different categories of case. However general the approach which the court chooses to adopt when assessing costs summarily, and however broad the brush which the court chooses to use, the assessment must in my judgment be directed to and focused upon the detailed breakdown of costs contained in the receiving party's statement of costs.
116. I would therefore allow the cross-appeal, set aside the summary assessment and direct a detailed assessment of the Opponent's costs.
"No doubt, very often the approach embodied in that paragraph is appropriate. However, it seems to me that in many cases it would be wrong — and I think that this case is one — for this court not to assess the costs below. First, my decision on costs puts an end to whole case because Mr McDonald succeeded in setting aside the statutory demand (the only relief he sought apart from costs) and at this stage he is getting his costs so that is the end of the matter. For things to be drawn out further by a detailed assessment of the costs seems undesirable if it can be avoided."
Like Neuberger J, Evans-Lombe J concluded that, in allowing the appeal, he should summarily assess the costs in the lower court and substitute his own assessment for the Chief Registrar's assessment of the creditor's costs. To do so would further the overriding objective of dealing with the case justly and at proportionate cost, by saving expense, dealing with the case proportionately, ensuring that it was dealt with expeditiously and fairly and allotting to the case an appropriate share of the court's resources. It would also be consistent with the direction in CPR 1.4 (2) (i) to deal with as many aspects of the case as the court could on the same occasion.
As Lownds v Home Office: Practice Note [2002] EWCA Civ 365, [2002] 1 WLR 2450 shows, it is very important for the judge to take a global view of the proportionality of the costs incurred but, before he fixes a figure for costs, he must advance from that to an item by item consideration of the individual elements of the bill by way of a summary assessment or alternatively, he must direct a detailed assessment which will fulfil that task. Naturally, any judge carrying out a summary assessment appropriately focused on the detailed breakdown of costs will have firmly in mind that the court's discretion when carrying out such an assessment is very wide and that a minute examination of detail is not always required and a broad brush can, where appropriate, be used. It would be a great pity if the summary assessment procedure were to become bedevilled by formulaic and time consuming intricacy which would often be wholly disproportionate to the exercise being carried out and the nature of the litigation in hand."
Decision
"It is unsatisfactory that the guidelines are based on rates fixed in 2010 and reviewed in 2014, as they are not helpful in determining reasonable rates in 2019. The guideline rates are significantly lower than the current hourly rates in many London City solicitors, as used by both parties in this case. Further, updated guidelines would be very welcome."
The same can be said for the currently hourly rates in many North-West commercial litigation solicitors' practices. Doubtless in response to this exhortation, a working group of the Civil Justice Council has been established (under Stewart J) to conduct an evidence-based review of the basis and amount of the Guideline Hourly Rates, and to make recommendations accordingly to the Deputy Head of Civil Justice and to the Civil Justice Council. The working group recognise that the approach to, and the evidence for, fixing Guideline Hourly Rates is a complex matter (as, from my experience on its predecessor, I know only all too well). According to paragraph 27-21 of Cook on Costs, the working group was originally due to report towards the end of this year. Although the project was suspended almost immediately upon the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, it still appears to be on schedule as, at the time of writing the current edition, the suspension had been lifted. The editors anticipate a consultation period early in 2021. In the meantime, what is to happen as regards hourly rates?
A 295 (217) B 260 (192) C 220 (161) D 160 (118)