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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 >> Colicci & Ors v Grinberg & Anor (Re Costs) [2023] EWHC 2075 (Ch) (11 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2075.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2075 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
B e f o r e :
acting as a judge of the High Court
pursuant to section 9(1) Senior Courts Act 1981
____________________
(1) MR ROBERT COLICCI (2) MS ROSANNA MARIA COLICCI (3) MS JOSEPHINE COLICCI |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) MS NORA MIKHAILOVNA GRINBERG as executrix of the estate of ERNESTO COLICCI deceased (2) ECSI LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Angeline Welsh KC (instructed by iLaw Solicitors Limited) for the first defendant
Hearing dates: 13, 14, 15 and 16 March, 18 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mark Anderson KC :
Costs to 23 March 2022
The period after 23 March 2022
Was it a Part 36 offer?
The offer
Our clients will pay to your client the sum of £150,000 by telegraphic transfer to your firm's client account in full and final settlement of this claim to include your client's claim to any interest (whether directly or as residuary beneficiary of the estate of Ernesto Colicci deceased (the Estate)) in the 40 shares in ECSI Limited contained within the Estate (the Shares), and your client will simultaneously transfer the Shares in equal parts to Robert Colicci and Rosanna Colicci. There is no counterclaim to be taken into account. For the avoidance of doubt, this is a claimant's Part 36 offer.
The costs position
If this offer is accepted within 21 days (the relevant period), our clients will be entitled to be paid their costs of the proceedings (including recoverable pre-action costs) up to the date on which you serve written notice of acceptance of this offer in accordance with CPR 36.13(1), such costs to be assessed on the standard basis if not agreed.
Was the outcome at least as advantageous to the claimants as the proposals contained in the offer?
Is it unjust to award the CPR 36.17(4) sums?
The defendant's submissions
Jockey Club Racecourse Ltd v Willmott Dixon Construction Ltd [2016] EWHC 167 (TCC) where an offer that the claimant recover 95 per cent of its claim was held to be a genuine attempt to settle, but only (argues Ms Welsh) because the case was open and shut.
JMX v Norfolk & Norwich Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2018] 185 (QB) where an offer to settle at a 10% discount was held to be a genuine attempt at settlement, but only (argues Ms Welsh) because of the very high value of the claim.
Yieldpoint Stable Value Fund v Kimura Commodity Trade Finance Fund [2023] EWHC 1512 (Comm), where the claimant had offered to settle for a "meaningless" discount of 1 per cent (see [24-25] - the offer also involved foregoing a six-figure sum of interest, but that is not how the Part 36 offer was pitched). Mr Stephen Houseman KC, sitting as a judge of the High Court, found that that was not a genuine attempt to settle.
Decision
a. I note that in Jockey Club (see [37]) Edwards-Stuart J would have regarded a discount of £20,000 from a claim for £400,000 to be sufficiently meaningful as to amount to a genuine attempt at settlement. Although the claim in that case appears to have been open and shut (liability was eventually conceded), the strength of the claimant's case did not feature prominently in Edwards-Stuart J's reasoning.
b. I also note that Mr Houseman KC in Yieldpoint would have regarded an offer to forego a six-figure sum of interest as "potentially meaningful" (in contrast to the "meaningless" offer to discount a $5m claim by just 1 per cent), even though an offer pitched in that way would still have been for 96 per cent of the claim (see paragraphs 9(ii) and 25 of the judgment).
c. Foskett J in JMX rejected the contention that an offer to settle for 90 per cent was not a genuine attempt at settlement.
Payment on account of costs
(8) Where the court orders a party to pay costs subject to detailed assessment it will order that party to pay a reasonable sum on account of costs unless there is good reason not to do so.