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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Select Car Rentals (North West) Ltd v Esure Services Ltd [2017] EWHC 1434 (QB) (19 June 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/1434.html Cite as: [2017] WLR 4426, [2017] 1 WLR 4426, [2017] WLR(D) 408, [2017] EWHC 1434 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LIVERPOOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT SITTING AT LIVERPOOL
Liverpool Civil & Family Court 35 Vernon Street Liverpool L2 2BX |
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B e f o r e :
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Select Car Rentals (North West) Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Esure Services Limited |
Respondent |
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Brian McCluggage (instructed by Horwich Farrelly Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 17th May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
"32 In our legal system, if a judge finds it more likely than not that something did take place, then it is treated as having taken place. If he finds it more likely than not that it did not take place, then it is treated as not having taken place. He is not allowed to sit on the fence. He has to find for one side or the other. Sometimes the burden of proof will come to his rescue: the party with the burden of showing that something took place will not have satisfied him that it did. But generally speaking a judge is able to make up his mind where the truth lies without needing to rely upon the burden of proof."
THE RULES
"(2) Without prejudice to any general power to make rules of court, such rules may make provision for regulating matters relating to the costs of those proceedings…
(3)The court shall have full power to determine by whom and to what extent the costs are to be paid."
"46.2 – (1) Where the court is considering whether to exercise its discretion under section 51 of the Senior Courts Act 1981 (costs are in the discretion of the court) to make a costs order in favour of or against a person who is not a party to the proceedings –
a) That person must be added as a party to the proceedings for the purposes of costs only; and
b) He must be given a reasonable opportunity to attend a hearing at which the court will consider the matter further."
"Exceptions to qualified one-way costs shifting where permission required
44.16 …(2) Orders for costs made against the claimant may be enforced up to the full extent of such orders with the permission of the court, and to the extent that it considers just, where –
(a) the proceedings include a claim which is made for the financial benefit of a person other than the claimant or a dependant within the meaning of section 1(3) of the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 (other than a claim in respect of the gratuitous provision of care, earnings paid by an employer or medical expenses)…
(3) Where paragraph (2)(a) applies, the court may, subject to rule 46.2, make an order for costs against a person, other than the claimant, for whose financial benefit the whole or part of the claim was made."
"Section 2—Qualified One-Way Costs Shifting
12.1 This subsection applies to proceedings to which Section II of Part 44 applies.
12.2 Examples of claims made for the financial benefit of a person other than the claimant or a dependant within the meaning of section 1(3) of the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 within the meaning of rule 44.16(2) are subrogated claims and claims for credit hire…
12.5 The court has power to make an order for costs against a person other than the claimant under section 51(3) of the Senior Courts Act 1981 and rule 46.2. In a case to which rule 44.16(2)(a) applies (claims for the benefit of others)
(a) the court will usually order any person other than the claimant for whose financial benefit such a claim was made to pay all the costs of the proceedings or the costs attributable to the issues to which rule 44.16(2)(a) applies, or may exceptionally make such an order permitting the enforcement of such an order for costs against the claimant;
(b) the court may, as it thinks fair and just, determine the costs attributable to claims for the financial benefit of persons other than the claimant.
12.6 In proceedings to which rule 44.16 applies, the court will normally order the claimant or, as the case may be, the person for whose benefit a claim was made to pay costs notwithstanding that the aggregate amount in money terms of such orders exceeds the aggregate amount in money terms of any orders for damages, interest and costs made in favour of the claimant.
12.7 Assessments of costs may be on a standard or indemnity basis and may be subject to a summary or detailed assessment."
THE CASE LAW
"17 A number of points emerge from that case. First, we think it is clear that all three members of the court assumed that the procedure to be adopted for deciding whether a third party should bear all or part of the costs of the litigation should be summary in nature, in the sense that the judge would make an order based on the evidence given and the facts found at trial, together with his assessment of the behaviour of those involved in the proceedings. Second, in order to justify the adoption of a summary procedure the third party must have had a close connection of some kind with the proceedings. Staughton and Balcombe LJJ both emphasised that the court should not make an order for costs against a third party unless it is just and fair that he should be bound by the evidence given at trial and the judge's findings of fact. Whether that is so in any given case will depend on the nature and degree of his connection with the proceedings.
18 Third, we do not think that the court was seeking to do more than provide an indication of the kind of factors that judges should take into account, as appropriate in the particular cases before them, when asked to make an order of this kind. Factors such as failing to join the person concerned as a party to the proceedings or failing to warn him that an application for costs may be made against him may in some cases weigh heavily against adopting a summary procedure, but each case has to be considered on its own merits in order to ascertain whether the third party will suffer an injustice if he is held bound by the evidence and findings at the trial. Decisions made on applications of this kind since Symphony, to many of which we were referred, only serve to illustrate the wide range of circumstances in which orders for costs have been sought and made against third parties."
"When an order for costs is sought against a third party, the critical factor in each case is the nature and degree of his connection with the proceedings…"
"…the exercise of the discretion is in danger of becoming over-complicated by authority. The decision of the Privy Council in Dymocks, which contains an authoritative statement of the modern law, explains and interprets the Symphony guidelines in a way which reflects the variety of circumstances in which the court is likely to be called upon to exercise the discretion. Thus, the Privy Council has explained that an order of this kind is "exceptional" only in the sense that it is outside the ordinary run of cases where parties pursue or defend claims for their own benefit and at their own expense...We think it important to emphasise that the only immutable principle is that the discretion must be exercised justly. It should also be recognised that, since the decision involves an exercise of discretion, limited assistance is likely to be gained from the citation of other decisions at first instance in which judges have or have not granted an order of this kind."
THE DECISION OF THE RECORDER
"Essentially, the case put on behalf of Esure Services Limited was that Select Car Rentals were a person other than the claimant, that the claim which they had fought includes a claim made for the financial benefit of Select Car Rentals and that, therefore, rule 44.16(2)(a) entitled them to an order for costs to the extent that the court considered it just to make one and that, in the circumstances of this case, it would be just."
"(1) in order to come to a conclusion about whether I ought to grant the application, I must first decide whether Select Car Rentals (North-West) Limited were a person for whose financial benefit a claim was included in the proceedings; and
(2) if they were, whether it will be just in all the circumstances of this case to make a costs order against them and, if I so conclude, a third question is how much or how it should be quantified."
"I have come to the conclusion that I can answer the first question clearly enough without reference to particular authorities and that, although there are statements of principle in the authorities to which I have been referred, the results in those cases appear to me to turn very largely on their facts."
i) Select had actually retained solicitors, Samuels Law, to act on their behalf in the claim. It was no coincidence that these solicitors were also instructed by the claimants. Select's retainer eventually was terminated by letter dated 9 July 2015, nearly two years after the accident;
ii) Select was in direct email contact with Esure concerning the progress of the claim saying that Samuels Law was acting on their behalf and expressly inviting Esure to comment to them on the issue of liability;
iii) There was a close association between Select and a company by the name of Roy Lloyd Limited. They shared a common director, Mr Justin Lloyd, who was the author of the witness statement relied upon by Select in resisting Esure's claim for costs. In a written agreement between Miss Mee and Roy Lloyd Limited in respect of credit storage, recovery and repair Miss Mee was contractually obliged to cooperate in the appointment of a solicitor nominated by the company in pressing a claim for damages. In the event that Miss were to choose another solicitor her credit would automatically be terminated;
iv) Under her rental agreement with Select, Miss Mee gave Select the power to deduct directly from any monies she may recover in respect of her personal injury claim to pay for any shortfall in damages relating to Selects own claims against her;
v) Miss Mee gave an irrevocable authority to her solicitors to provide any engineering report in respect of her vehicle and further updates relating to that vehicle to Select;
vi) Miss Mee further granted Select the right to pursue an action in her name; and
vii) Select were not merely providing Miss Mee with a hire car on credit, they were operating as de facto claims managers as is evidenced by their pro forma letter heading which states: "Revolutionising the way your claims are managed".
ONE DISCRETION OR TWO?
"Whether the working of CPR 44.16(3) (and CPR 44 PD 12.5) is intended to and does in any way relax the established common law as to the circumstances in which a third party costs order is available is a moot point and will no doubt be argued in due course."
Having thus raised the question, however, the authors, perhaps counter-intuitively given the name of their publication, declined thereafter to venture an answer.
"The question that inevitably arises is whether the jurisdiction under CPR 44.16(3) adds anything to the existing provisions for costs against non-parties. The fact that the rule makers have chosen to include this separate provision, suggests that the answer is yes, otherwise why include anything at all? However, the express references to CPR 46.2 in CPR 44.16(3) itself and to s 51(3) and CPR 46.2 in the PD, the overarching statutory jurisdiction in respect of costs in s 51(3) and the absence of any other defined criteria by which the court may determine applications under CPR 44.16(3), suggest that the rule is superfluous, other than a) by way of identifying specific categories of non-party in the firing line and b) as a reminder to parties and the court of the availability of a non-party costs order. As attention seems to be turning to the QOCS provisions, it may be that authority on this provision will emerge."
THE PRACTICE DIRECTION
WAS THE RECORDER RIGHT?
"Although costs orders against non-parties are to be regarded as "exceptional", exceptional in this context means no more than outside the ordinary run of cases where parties pursue or defend claims for their own benefit and at their own expense. The ultimate question in any such "exceptional" case is whether in all the circumstances it is just to make the order. It must be recognised that this is inevitably to some extent a fact-specific jurisdiction and that there will often be a number of different considerations in play, some militating in favour of an order, some against."
CONCLUSIONS
i) CPR Part 44.16 does not introduce a bespoke and distinct type of discretion to be exercised in cases falling within the QOCS regime as it applies to non-parties.
ii) The wording of CPR Part 44.16 is entirely consistent with the way in which the proper approach to the discretion to order costs against a non-party has developed in recent case law.
iii) PD para 12.2 in so far as it provides that claims for credit hire are made for the financial benefit of a person other than the claimant is uncontroversial and requires no artificial interpretation to save it from the fate of being found to be ultra vires.
iv) The fact that any given credit hire organisation's connection with a claim is no greater than is commonly the case does not, without more, provide it with an automatic immunity from a non-party costs order. There is no room for the argument that it is a prerequisite to the making of such an order that such involvement be exceptional.