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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Re Application for Wasted Costs [2003] EWHC 822 (TCC) (13 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2003/822.html Cite as: [2003] BLR 316, [2003] EWHC 822 (TCC) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
In the Matter of an Application for Wasted Costs BETWEEN: MOHAMMED AFZAL |
Claimant | |
AND | ||
CHUBB GUARDING SERVICES LIMITED FORMERLY CHUBB WARDENS LIMITED |
Defendant | |
AND ILLIFES BOOTH BENNETT |
Respondents |
____________________
For the respondent: Nicholas Baldock (Kennedys, solicitors)
Dates of hearing: 14 February, 6 March, 2003
Date of judgment: 13 March, 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The judgment of His Honour Judge Bowsher Q.C. is as follows:
(a) Did the claimant suffer any psychiatric and/or psychological injuries as a result of the alleged attack?
(b) If so, does he still suffer and to what extent?
(c) If so, what is the prognosis?
(d) Was the claimant at the date of the issue of the proceedings a person under a disability within the meaning of Part 21 of the Civil Procedure Rules?
(e) If so, is he currently a person under such disability?
"My husband was alone in his office on a day shift which started at 7.00 a.m., when he saw four men inside the site, although the gates were still padlocked. There were two white and two black men of West Indian origin. Afzal saw them entering the building next to his office. He tried to dial 999 which was what his employers, Chubb Wardens Limited, told the Security Guards to do. Before he could do so, two men walked into his office, one white and one black. One man was carrying a butcher's knife, and the other a baseball bat.
They started using abusive language to Afzal. They then said "The boss is calling you." He asked "Why? What have I done, and why are you swearing at me?" They took him to another part of the building and had already made a hole in the wall for him to climb through, and the two men followed him. The two other men who had entered the site originally were waiting on the other side of the wall, and had started two fires in the building. One man threw petrol over my husband, and one tied his feet with a wire. The man who was carrying the butcher's knife started taunting Afzal, and made cuts all over his upper thighs. One man turned around to get a wooden torch to set him alight. Afzal's shoelaces were undone, but he managed to start running, and one man threw a knife at him. Afzal raised his hand to stop the knife hitting him, and his three middle fingers on his left hand were severely cut. He ran to another part of the building, and hid. Someone from another building informed the police at about 12.30 p.m. to 1.00 p.m. The police came to let me know at about 1.45 p.m. to 2.00 p.m. that Afzal had been injured and taken to Wycombe General Hospital."
It was also alleged that the claimant was thrown off a roof 28 to 30 feet high, but he had no injuries consistent with such a fall.
Jurisdiction
"Any costs incurred by a party –
(a) as a result of any improper, unreasonable or negligent act or omission on the part of any legal or other representative or any employee of such a representative; or
(b) which in the light of any such act or omission occurring after they were incurred, the court considers it is unreasonable to expect that party to pay."
"It is appropriate for the court to make a wasted costs order against a legal representative only if –
(1) the legal representative has acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently;
(2) his conduct has caused a party to incur unnecessary costs, and
(3) it is just in all the circumstances to order him to compensate that party for the whole or part of those costs."
"The court will give directions about the procedure that will be followed in each case in order to ensure that the issues are dealt with in a way which is fair and as simple and summary as the circumstances permit."
"As a general rule the court will consider whether to make a wasted costs order in two stages –
(1) in the first stage the court must be satisfied –
(a) that it has before it evidence or other material which if unanswered would be likely to lead to a wasted costs order being made; and
(b) the wasted costs proceedings are justified notwithstanding the likely costs involved.
(2) at the second stage (even if the court is satisfied under paragraph (1) ) the court will consider, after giving the legal representative an opportunity to give reasons why the court should not make a wasted costs order, whether it is appropriate to make a wasted costs order in accordance with paragraph 53.4 above."
That Practice Direction is a Practice Direction, not a rule of law. It begins with the words, "As a general rule", and it is qualified by CPR 48 PD53.7:
"On an application for a wasted costs order under Part 23 the court may proceed to the second stage described in paragraph 53.6 without first adjourning the hearing if it is satisfied that the legal representative has already had a reasonable opportunity to give reasons why the court should not make a wasted costs order. In other cases the court will adjourn the hearing before proceeding to the second stage."
"The procedure to be followed in determining applications for wasted costs must be laid down by courts so as to meet the requirements of the individual case before them. The overriding requirements are that any procedure must be fair and that it must be as simple and summary as fairness permits. Fairness requires that any respondent lawyer should be very clearly told what he is said to have done wrong and what is claimed. But the requirement of simplicity and summariness means that elaborate pleadings should in general be avoided. No formal process of discovery will be appropriate. We cannot imagine circumstances in which the applicant should be permitted to interrogate the respondent lawyer, or vice versa. Hearings should be measured in hours, and not in days or weeks. Judges must not reject a weapon which Parliament has intended to be used for the protection of those injured by the unjustifiable conduct of the other side's lawyers, but they must be astute to control what threatens to become a new and costly form of satellite litigation."
That authority was not cited to me on 22 March, 2002, but I am satisfied that I fulfilled the requirement of fairness (that did not require the citation of authority) by ordering the exchange of letters. Counsel now appearing for IBB (who did not appear at the trial) complained that there was unfairness in that there was some interrogation of IBB ordered by me. There was no interrogation ordered or authorised by me, and indeed none took place. In compliance with my order, the defendants' solicitors wrote on 25 March, 2002 first setting out what they regarded as the relevant background and then setting out four reasons why they said that IBB should personally bear the cost of the trial of the preliminary issues. That was a perfectly proper letter and there was no question of unfairness. IBB replied on 19 April, 2002. They first said that client privilege had not been waived and that therefore their response was to a degree hampered. They then set out their own version of the background within the limits of privilege. Then they answered the allegations made against them, again within the same limits. If they had thought that they were being required to answer a letter improperly drafted they could have made application to the court. They wisely did not do so. Having answered the letter, in the absence of any application by the defendants for directions, the claimants solicitors did not ask for any directions, perhaps thinking that it was better to let sleeping dogs lie.
Principles on which the jurisdiction should be exercised
"A legal representative is not to be held to have acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently simply because he acts for a party who pursues a claim or a defence which is plainly doomed to fail. As Lord Pearce observed in Rondel v. Worsley [1969] 1 A.C. 191, 275:
"It is easier, pleasanter and more advantageous professionally for barristers to advise, represent or defend those who are decent and reasonable and likely to succeed in their action or their defence than those who are unpleasant, unreasonable, disreputable, and have an apparently hopeless case. Yet it would be tragic if our legal system came to provide no reputable defenders, representatives or advisers for the latter."
The Court then cited the Bar Code of Conduct regarding the cab rank rule, and continued:
"As is also well known, solicitors are not subject to an equivalent cab-rank rule, but many solicitors would and do respect the public policy underlying it by affording representation to the unpopular and the unmeritorious. Legal representatives will, of course, whether barristers or solicitors, advise clients of the perceived weakness of their case and of the risk of failure. But clients are free to reject advice and insist that cases be litigated. It is rarely if ever safe for a court to assume that a hopeless case is being litigated on the advice of the lawyers involved. They are there to present the case; it is (as Samuel Johnson unforgettably pointed out) for the judge
and not the lawyers to judge it.
It is, however, one thing for a legal representative to present, on instructions, a case which he regards as bound to fail; it is quite another to lend his assistance to proceedings which are an abuse of the process of the court. Whether instructed or not, a legal representative is not entitled to use litigious procedures for purposes for which they were not intended, as by issuing or pursuing proceedings for reasons unconnected with success in the litigation or pursuing a case known to be dishonest, nor is he entitled to evade rules intended to safeguard the interests of justice, as by knowingly failing to make full disclosure on ex parte application or knowingly conniving at incomplete disclosure of documents. It is not entirely easy to distinguish by definition between the hopeless case and the case which amounts to an abuse of the process, but in practice it is not hard to say which is which and if there is doubt the legal representative is entitled to the benefit of it."
"The premise of the claim [against you] is that it should have been clear to you by January 2002 that the claimant had no prospect of succeeding at the Preliminary Issue Trial which followed in March 2002."
"Section 31 (1) of the Legal Aid Act 1988 provides that receipt of legal aid shall not, save as expressly provided, affect the relationship between or rights of a legal representative and client or any privilege arising out of the relationship nor the rights or liabilities of other parties to the proceedings or the principles on which any discretion is exercised. (The protection given to a legally-assisted party in relation to payment of costs is, of course, an obvious express exception.) This important principle has been recognised in the authorities. It is incumbent on courts to which applications for wasted costs orders are made to bear prominently in mind the peculiar vulnerability of legal representatives acting for assisted persons, to which Balcombe L.J. adverted in Symphony Group Plc. v. Hodgson [1994] Q.B. 179 and which recent experience abundantly confirms. It would subvert the benevolent purposes of this legislation if such representatives were subject to any unusual personal risk. They for their part must bear prominently in mind that their advice and their conduct should not be tempered by the knowledge that their client is not their paymaster and so not, in all probability, liable for the costs of the other side."
"It is incumbent on courts to which applications for wasted costs orders are made to bear prominently in mind the peculiar vulnerability of legal representatives acting for assisted persons, to which Balcombe L.J. adverted in Symphony Group Plc. v. Hodgson [1994] Q.B. 179 and which recent experience abundantly confirms. It would subvert the benevolent purposes of this legislation if such representatives were subject to any unusual personal risk."
Legal Aid work is badly paid and legally aided clients are more often than not difficult to deal with and reluctant to take good advice. To make the lawyer liable for the costs of failure in litigation when the client calculates normally that he will be liable for no costs even if he loses is something that should be done only on strict proof of fault on the part of the lawyer – otherwise the diminishing number of lawyers willing to undertake Legal Aid work will be reduced even further.
"My view was that the key contest was between Dr. Bhatti-Ali, together with the evidence of Mrs. Afzal and the lay witnesses; against Dr. Gaind, Dr. Powell and the video evidence."
I not only find that view reasonable, I agree with it. I add that there was a conflict of evidence and it was not for the claimant's lawyers to decide that conflict of evidence before trial, though their duty with regard to Legal Aid was another matter.
"If at any time Dr. Bhatti-Ali had wavered in her views I would have felt obliged to advise the Legal Services Commission to cease funding the case. This was because I regarded Dr. Bhatti-Ali's evidence as being of crucial importance."
The criticisms of the Respondents
In that report, Dr. Sumners, having seen the video evidence, reversed his original report and commented adversely on Dr. Bhatti-Ali's report.
In answer to this criticism, the respondents say, rightly, that they had no duty to disclose that report to the Legal Services Commission, and when requested, they provided to the Legal Services Commission the advice of counsel that was made in the full knowledge of that later report, though he did summarise its effect inaccurately. In oral submissions, it was said that as the videos were disclosed at the end of 2000 they ought to have been shown to Dr. Sumners in January, 2001 and not as late as autumn 2001. That may be right, though the respondents have put forward some explanation. But as a matter of causation, I do not find that it has been shown that any fault in this regard has led to loss on the part of the defendants. After the videos had been sent to Dr. Sumners, it (understandably) took him a little while to view them and write a second report but I do not see that those delays had any effect on the Opinion of Mr. Sharpe that resulted in Legal Aid being extended to cover the trial.
Since Dr. Capildeo had already decided that there was no neurological injury, any view that he might have taken on the videos would have been outside his sphere of medical competence and I do not see that there was any duty to put the videos before him. No one suggests that seeing the videos might have caused him to revise his view that there was no neurological injury. The question at that point was whether there was any psychological injury as to which Dr. Capildeo was not qualified to express a view. In his report of 22 September, 1999, he agreed with the conclusion of the Maudsley Hospital that a large component of the claimant's current difficulties was as a result of psychological reaction to the assault. However, that view was the only explanation for the claimant's odd behaviour that he could see in the absence of neurological injury. In his second report dated 1 November, 2001, Dr. Capildeo stated that the main question put to him was for a consultant psychiatrist. The chargeable time taken to view those videos would have been considerable, and it is strongly arguable that the videos should not have been given to Dr. Capildeo at all. They seem to have been put before him at the request of the solicitors to the defendants.
(a) the report of Dr. Graham Powell until 5 March, 2002:
(b) the report of Dr. Sumners dated 19 November, 2001 until 'very late on'."
There are some inconsistencies in the account of the respondents, but the respondents say that they sent a copy of that second report of Dr. Sumners to Dr. Bhatti-Ali under cover of a letter of 15 February, 2002, and she did not qualify her evidence as a result of seeing that report. The letter clearly states that the latest report of Dr. Powell dated 28 January, 2002 and Dr. Sumners' second report dated 21 November, 2001 were enclosed. The statement of Mrs. Jeffries of IBB affirms that those documents were enclosed. The respondents accept that Dr. Bhatti-Ali should have been sent Dr. Sumners' report earlier. In a statement dated 3 March, 2003, Mr. Mark Bush, a solicitor acting for the defendants, said that he spoke to Dr. Bhatti-Ali on 28 February, 2003 and she said that she received that letter of 15 February, 2003 but there were no enclosures with it. Why she did not telephone to ask for the enclosures is not explained, but she did say that she had received neither the first nor the second reports of Dr. Powell when he rang her to discuss the joint statement on 5 March, 2003. However, she did receive those reports the next day from IBB and was able to rearrange the discussion with Dr. Powell thereafter, just before the trial began. That statement attributed to Dr. Bhatti-Ali does not hang well together with Mr. Sharpe's statement that on the second time he spoke with her she had been provided with a copy of Dr. Powell's report, bearing in mind that Mr. Sharpe faxed his manuscript Opinion to IBB on Monday 4 March, 2002. Of course, one cannot readily decide disputed issues of fact on paper evidence, but on the balance of probabilities I find that on the paper evidence the likelihood is that the reports that were said to be enclosed with the letter of 15 February, 2002 (the reports of Dr. Powell and Dr. Sumners) were in fact enclosed. It should be remembered that that letter was written on the day after counsel advised that Dr. Sumners' second report should be disclosed. It was therefore vital, even on the basis of the narrowest self-interest, that Dr. Bhatti-Ali should be forewarned of a report that was certain to be used in her cross-examination. Having regard to the summary nature of these proceedings, if there were any doubt in my mind (and there is not), I would think it right to give the benefit of the doubt to IBB. If the defendants cannot prove their case to a high level of probability on paper, they fail. I do not think it right to pursue any further examination of that issue of fact by oral evidence or by examination of further documents. Dr. Bhatti-Ali was certainly sent a bundle containing all the medical reports on 7 March, 2002, the Thursday before the trial but I find that she had previously been sent the important reports under cover of the letter of 15 February, 2002.
"During the run up to the trial of the preliminary issue which was to commence on 11 March, 2002, I asked my instructing solicitors to arrange a conference with Dr. Bhatti-Ali.
It was not possible to arrange a face to face meeting and so I was given a telephone number on which I could call her. It is my best recollection that I spoke with her on 3 occasions.
On the first occasion I spoke with her I ascertained that she had not seen Dr. Powell's report. I asked my instructing solicitors to supply her with a copy. The second time I spoke with her she had been provided with a copy of Dr. Powell's report.
On the third occasion I spoke with her she was firm in her opinion that Mr. Afzal had suffered a psychological injury as a result of the attack on him. Her view was not altered by anything contained in the report of Dr. Powell. She had seen the video evidence which had been provided by the defendant at a late stage.
Dr. Bhatti-Ali spoke calmly and moderately on the telephone to me. I was impressed by the fact that her conclusions were moderate and therefore more compelling. She did not rule out deliberate malingering but she came to the conclusion that this was not the case and gave credible reasons for this view. I thought that her conclusions were similar to the conclusions reached by the Lishman Unit at the Maudsley Hospital where Mr. Afzal had spent a lengthy period as an inpatient."
[The Maudsley Hospital reports, not supported by any oral evidence at the trial suggested that the claimant had suffered a "hysterical reaction with dissociative components as part of a post-traumatic stress disorder". There was also a suggestion that he behaved better with other patients when perhaps he thought he was not under observation than when he was being specifically examined.]
I am in no doubt that the respondents ought to have done all of those things apart from the involvement of Dr. Capildeo (I have already explained my views about the involvement of Dr. Capildeo). However, the most important evidence was that of Dr. Gaind and I accept the evidence of Mrs. Jeffries that his evidence was sent to Dr. Bhatti-Ali when she was first instructed. She now, apparently says that she was overwhelmed by the distinction of the experts called to give contrary evidence to hers, but she did not say that at the outset, and if she had said that at the outset, no doubt IBB would have reviewed the prospects of success. However, I am reluctant to stigmatise any failings as negligence because:
(1) In these summary proceedings it is difficult to form a view as to when things were actually done and it would be wrong to find a solicitor guilty of professional misconduct on the basis of uncertain evidence, particularly when some of it comes from hearsay evidence of what is alleged to have been said by a psychologist whose evidence I rejected at the trial. What she now says may well be coloured by a desire to excuse herself for the rejection of her evidence at the trial.
(2) I have no evidence that the ordinary competent solicitor would have done better. In any event, if the respondents had done better, it is unlikely to have made any difference. It is possible that if she had been given more time to think about it, Dr. Bhatti-Ali might have changed her mind, but (apart from the self justifying statements recorded by Mr. Bush in his statement of 13 March, 2003) there is no evidence that that is so because, after receiving the material she did not change her mind. Given more time, Dr. Bhatti-Ali might have arranged to see the claimant again. But Dr. Bhatti-Ali was not deprived of the opportunity of seeing the claimant again. He was present in court in the early stages of the trial and she could have arranged to see him after court sittings in the evening. For all I know, she did so. She certainly sat side by side with Mrs. Afzal during much of the trial. If as a result of the late disclosure of those reports Dr. Bhatti-Ali had changed her mind the trial would have in all probability have been aborted but that did not happen.
Conclusion