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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Legal Services Commission v Aaronson & Anor (t/a Aaronson & Co Solicitors) [2008] EWHC 90096 (Costs) (14 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2008/90096.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 90096 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LEGAL SERVICES COMMISSION |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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FRANCIS JOEL AARONSON LINDA FRANCES AARONSON AARONSON & CO SOLICITORS (A FIRM) |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Miss Alison Trent (instructed by Alison Trent & Co) for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing dates: 27 to 30 November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Wright:
THE BACKGROUND
"Upon hearing Counsel for the Claimant and the Defendants and reading the written evidence filed by the parties.
IT IS ORDERED that:
1. The Defendants do have permission to appeal from the Order of Deputy Master Hoffman of 14 February 2006 dismissing the Defendants' application that the Claimant's claim herein be stayed.
2. The Defendants' appeal be allowed and pursuant to Section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996 all further proceedings in this claim be stayed until further order.
3. The Claimant do pay the Defendants' costs of this claim including the costs of the application such costs to be the subject of immediate detailed assessment if not agreed.
4. The Claimant do pay to the Defendants the sum of £45,000 on account of costs by the 9th day of June 2006."
"This is a Part 8 claim and Part 8 applies.
The Claimant considers this claim is suitable for the Part 8 procedure.
The facts are set out in the Witness Evidence of Elizabeth Long with exhibit attached in the Red Ring Binder.
Details of Claim.
The Claimant seeks the following relief:
1. An Order pursuant to Regulation 3 of the Legal Services Commission (Disclosure of Information) Regulations 2000 (as amended) and/or Clause 3.8 and Clause 3.15 of the Standard Terms of General Civil Contract, that the Defendants provide to the Claimant or its agents at such time and place as the court may determine, all publicly funded client files in their possession, custody or power, which are open, or are closed and have not as yet been billed.
2. Any further or other orders as the Court thinks fit.
3. That the Defendants pay the costs of and occasioned by this claim including the costs of any interim proceedings."
"Part A
We Aaronson & Co Solicitors on behalf of the defendant intend to apply for an order (a draft of which is attached) that the Claimant's claim herein be stayed pursuant to Section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996 because the claim has been brought in breach of an arbitration agreement. The Defendants have not taken any substantive steps in response to the claim.
Part B
We wish to rely on:
the attached witness statement."
"IT IS ORDERED that:
1. The Claimant's claim be stayed until further Order pursuant to Section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996.
2. The Defendant must pay the Claimant's costs of the application."
"This is an application to stay the present proceedings brought pursuant to Section 9 of the Arbitration Act 1996. The Defendants have not taken any substantive step in this claim. Our only step to date has been to challenge jurisdiction. I make this application because I believe that the present claim relates to matters which either are already, or under the contract between Aaronson & Co and the LSC ought to be, referred to arbitration."
"Indeed it seems to me, for reasons which I shall explain, that those files will in any event be in evidence in the arbitrations."
"I note that the LSC's claim is also brought under certain Regulations. Since, for the reasons I have given, I believe that this claim overlaps with the issues in the arbitration, I do not believe that reliance on the Regulations adds anything to the claim. In any event, the only reason why there is a relationship between the LSC and Aaronson & Co is the contract between the parties."
"48. I believe that the LSC is not entitled to request delivery up of all unbilled files and that its request is in breach of contract and its statutory functions and duties. Aaronson & Co has sought internal review of the request to gain access and audit these files. That is a dispute which, unless otherwise resolved, should go to arbitration in accordance with the arbitration agreement between the parties. I believe that it is a breach of the arbitration agreement to bring a claim in Court.
49. Apart from the proposed arbitration resulting from the LSC's attempt, in breach of contract, to gain access to unbilled files, there are other arbitration proceedings on foot between Aaronson & Co and the LSC. The issues in those arbitrations concern the allegation that Aaronson & Co is indebted to the LSC and the question what value of unbilled files is outstanding. Since all these issues are before the Arbitrator, I believe that it is a breach of the arbitration agreement to bring this claim."
"That has remained its position. The intention behind this is no doubt to weaken the firm's case that the claim for delivery up should be stayed."
"UPON HEARING the First Second and Third Defendants' application notice dated 26 September 2006 applying for a stay of all proceedings against it under the Arbitration Act 1996 and/or the inherent jurisdiction of the court.
AND UPON HEARING Mr Rabinder Singh QC for the First Second and Third Defendants and Mr Mukhtiar Otwal for the Claimant.
IT IS ORDERED AND DECLARED THAT:
1. The Court does have jurisdiction to hear the Claimant's claim and is prepared to exercise such jurisdiction as it has.
2. If the Defendants choose to file an acknowledgment of service they must do so by 28 February 2006 and shall be treated as having accepted that the Court has jurisdiction to try the claim and by 28 March 2006 must file any further written evidence they wish to rely on and serve a copy on the Claimant.
3. The Claimant may if so advised by 14 April 2006 serve any further evidence in reply to the Defendants' evidence.
4. The Part 8 claim shall be treated as allocated to the multi track and trial is to take place in the trial window of April to May 2006.
5. The Claimant is by 4.00 pm on 3 March 2006 to attend upon the clerk of the lists to make a listing appointment to fix a trial period in the trial window and give notice of the appointment to the Defendants. Mode of trial: before judge alone: London: Category B with a time estimate of one day. Hearing to be expedited.
6. The parties agree an indexed and paginated trial bundle and exchange skeleton arguments not less than 7 days before the start of the trial. The trial bundle and skeleton arguments are to be lodged not more than 7 and not less than 3 working days before trial.
7. Liberty to apply.
8. The costs of and occasioned by the Defendants' application to stay be paid by the Defendants to the Claimant, such costs to be agreed and failing agreement to be subject to detailed assessment.
9. The costs of and occasioned by these directions be costs in the case.
Dated this 17 February 2006."
"Nature of hearing: Case Management.
Result of hearing: Part 8 Procedure adopted and directions given for trial.
Defendants' application for permission to appeal refused.
Brief reasons for decision to refuse appeal:
(1) There is no substantial dispute of fact on the issue to be tried.
(2) An expedited hearing procedure has been adopted for the claim.
(3) Disproportionate to appeal these case management decisions."
"The Applicants apply for permission to appeal:
(1) The judgment of Deputy Master Hoffman dated 14 February 2006 and handed down on 17 February 2006 that the court has jurisdiction to hear the Claimant's (henceforth "the Respondent's") Part 8 claim ("the Jurisdiction Issue"); and
(2) the Deputy Master's determination at the hearing on 17 February 2006 that the Part 8 procedure is appropriate for this claim ("the Appropriate Procedure Issue").
The Appropriate Procedure Issue will only fall for determination in the event that the Appellants are wrong on the Jurisdiction Issue.
The above definitions are for assistance only. For the avoidance of doubt, the whole order is appealed."
"The Appellants contend that the Deputy Master was wrong to determine that the Part 8 Procedure was appropriate and that there was "no substantial dispute of fact on the issue to be tried". As at 17 February 2006 the Appellants had not returned the Acknowledgment of Service in which the question of the appropriateness of Part 8 would have been raised, nor had they pleaded to the issue, nor put in evidence on that issue. The Deputy Master's determination was accordingly premature, contrary to the procedure envisaged by CPR Part 8 and/or unlawful and/or perverse and/or in breach of natural justice."
THE CLAIMANTS' SUBMISSIONS
"With that abbreviated summary of the disputes which have arisen and which are included in the arbitration …"
THE DEFENDANTS' SUBMISSIONS
"There are obvious complications in making the proper attributions of the various letters and other documents and all the telephone conversations and attendances and so on. Matrimonial disputes were being dealt with at the same time, and many matters call for some form of apportionment between what was the subject of the litigation and what was not. But in my judgment, subject to all proper attributions and apportionments, the Taxing Master was perfectly entitled to go back to December 31, 1974, the last date for compliance with the undertaking, and include in the costs to be taxed all costs that in his opinion were reasonably incurred for the purpose of the litigation as it came to be framed by the trustees."
"Nor would it be right to penalise the successful litigant for obtaining materials which appeared likely to be of use in the action but which, in the event, were never used because the other party did not contest the point."
She also referred to page 187 at H where it said:
"If a prospective litigant goes into a number of matters outside the immediate area of the dispute, but he then finds that those matters fall within the widely framed scope of his adversary's proceedings, it seems to me that those proceedings will almost of necessity make the costs of those matters part of the costs of the proceedings, subject always, of course, to the Taxing Master considering the costs to have been reasonably incurred."
CONCLUSION
"However reasonably incurred costs which are neither costs "of" the proceedings nor "incidental" to them cannot be awarded under the order for costs. It is thus important to identify the proceedings. This involves not only taking the correct stage of the proceedings, as is shown by Wright v Bennett [1948] 1 KB 601, but also determining the nature of those proceedings. Only when it is seen what is being claimed can it be seen what the proceedings are to which the costs relate."
"I can see that the matters I discuss may be highly contentious to the Defendants. However in this application I am not asking the Court to adjudicate on such matters. I merely set them before the Court so that the Court is able to grasp why the audit of the files is so important and necessary for the Claimant to discharge its public duties."
"The Commission intends to exercise its right to see all open and unbilled publicly funded files of your client without exception. Please ensure that all files are delivered to my office no later than 11 July 2005."