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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 >> Greenwich Millennium Village Ltd & Ors v Essex Services Group Plc & Ors [2014] EWHC 1099 (TCC) (11 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2014/1099.html Cite as: [2014] TCLR 4, [2014] EWHC 1099 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
GREENWICH MILLENNIUM VILLAGE LIMITED - and - ESSEX SERVICES GROUP PLC (formerly known as ESSEX ELECTRICAL GROUP LIMITED) - and - HOARE LEA (a firm) |
Claimant 1st Defendant 2nd Defendant and 5th Party |
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- and - |
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HS ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES LIMITED (in administration) - and - W T PARTNERSHIP LIMITED - and - D G ROBSON MECHANICAL SERVICES LIMITED |
3rd Party 4th Party 6th Party |
____________________
(instructed by Greenwoods) for GMVL, the Claimant
Miss Fiona Sinclair QC (instructed by Kennedys)
for Essex, the 1st Defendant
Mr Alexander Hickey (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mawer)
for Hoare Lea, the 2nd Defendant and 5th Party
Mr Simon Hargreaves QC and Mr Karim Ghaly
(instructed by Clyde & Co) for HSE, the 3rd Party
Mr Roger ter Haar QC and Mr Alexander Macpherson
(instructed by Fox Hartley) for Robson, the 6th Party
Hearing dates: 4, 5 and 6 March 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. INTRODUCTION
2. ORDERS CONSEQUENTIAL ON MAIN JUDGMENT
(a) GMVL has judgment on its claims against Essex and HL.(b) Essex and HL are jointly and severally liable to GMVL for damages and statutory interest in the sum of £4,985,686.85, in respect of the Core 2 leak.
(c) In addition, Essex is further liable to GMVL for damages and statutory interest in the sum of £433,537.99 in respect of the Core 3 leak.
(d) Essex has judgment on its CPR Part 20 claim against HSE. HSE is liable to indemnify Essex in respect of Essex's liability to GMVL for damages, costs and interest.
(e) Essex has judgment on its CPR Part 20 claim against HL. HL is liable to make a contribution of 40% in respect of Essex's liability to GMVL in respect of the Core 2 leak, amounting to £1,994,274.74 in respect of damages and statutory interest.
(f) HL has judgment on its CPR Part 20 claim against Essex. Essex is liable to make a contribution of 60% in respect of HL's liability to GMVL in respect of the Core 2 leak, amounting to £2,991,412.11 in respect of damages and statutory interest.
(g) HSE has judgment on its CPR Part 20 claim against Robson. Robson is liable to indemnify HSE in respect of HSE's liability to Essex for damages, costs and interest.
3. THE COSTS MANAGEMENT ORDERS
Party | Approved Budget at CMC on 26 October 2012 [1/1/4] |
Approved increase at PTR on 5 June 2013 [1/4/16] | Increased Costs Budget |
Actual Costs |
GMV | £1,992,746.97 [1/6/19] |
£160,000 | £2,152,746.97 [1/7/28] |
£2,177,266.10 [1A/20/371] |
Essex |
£1,386,216.77 [1/8/37] |
£15,000 | £1,401,216.77 [1/9/63] |
£1,346,351.45 [1A/22/387D] |
Hoare Lea |
£852,711.70 [1/10/81] |
None | n/a | Unknown |
HSE |
£1,375,252.90 [1/9/72] |
£81,500 | £1,456,752.90 [1/9/77] |
£1,610,649.86 [1A/24/395] |
Robson |
£1,074,623.53 [1/11/90] |
£205,938.86 | £1,280,562.39 [1/11/99] |
Unknown |
4. COSTS AND INTEREST ISSUES AS BETWEEN GMVL AND ESSEX
(a) GMVL's claim for indemnity costs pursuant to Part 36;(b) GMVL's claim for interest on both damages and costs pursuant to Part 36;
(c) A discrete issue as to the costs of the trial bundle;
(d) An apportionment between the costs incurred on Cores 2 and 3;
(e) The amount of any interim payment on account of costs.
I deal with those issues in turn below.
"Costs consequences following judgment
36.14 – (1) This rule applies where upon judgment being entered –
(a) a claimant fails to obtain a judgment more advantageous than a defendant's Part 36 offer; or
(b) judgment against the defendant is at least as advantageous to the claimant as the proposals contained in a claimant's Part 36 offer.
(1A) For the purposes of paragraph (1), in relation to any money claim or money element of a claim, 'more advantageous' means better in money terms by any amount, however small, and 'at least as advantageous' shall be construed accordingly.
(2) Subject to paragraph (6), where rule 36.14(1)(a) applies, the court will, unless it considers it unjust to do so, order that the defendant is entitled to –
(a) his costs from the date on which the relevant period expired; and
(b) interest on those costs.
(3) Subject to paragraph (6), where rule 36.14(1)(b) applies, the court will, unless it considers it unjust to do so, order that the claimant is entitled to –
(a) interest on the whole or part of any sum of money (excluding interest) awarded at a rate not exceeding 10% above base rate for some or all of the period starting with the date on which the relevant period expired;
(b) his costs on the indemnity basis from the date on which the relevant period expired; and
(c) interest on those costs at a rate not exceeding 10% above base rate; and
(4) In considering whether it would be unjust to make the orders referred to in paragraphs (2) and (3) above, the court will take into account all the circumstances of the case including –
(a) the terms of any Part 36 offer;
(b) the stage in the proceedings when any Part 36 offer was made, including in particular how long before the trial started the offer was made;
(c) the information available to the parties at the time when the Part 36 offer was made; and
(d) the conduct of the parties with regard to the giving or refusing to give information for the purposes of enabling the offer to be made or evaluated.
(5) Where the court awards interest under this rule and also awards interest on the same sum and for the same period under any other power, the total rate of interest may not exceed 10% above base rate."
(a) The Justification
"63. The ability of the court to award costs on an indemnity basis and interest at an enhanced rate should not be regarded as penal because orders for costs, even when made on an indemnity basis, never actually compensate a claimant for having to come to court to bring proceedings. The very process of being involved in court proceedings inevitably has an impact on a claimant, whether he is a private individual or a multi-national corporation. A claimant would be better off had he not become involved in court proceedings. Part of the culture of the CPR is to encourage parties to avoid proceedings unless it is unreasonable for them to do otherwise. In the case of an individual proceedings necessarily involve inconvenience and frequently involve anxiety and distress. These are not taken into account when assessing costs on the normal basis. In the case of a corporation, corporation senior officials and other staff inevitably will be diverted from their normal duties as a consequence of the proceedings. The disruption this causes to a corporation is not recoverable under an order for costs.
64. The power to order indemnity costs or higher rate interest is a means of achieving a fairer result for a claimant. If a defendant involves a claimant in proceedings after an offer has been made, and in the event, the result is no more favourable to the defendant than that which would have been achieved if the claimant's offer had been accepted without the need for those proceedings, the message of Part 36.21 is that, prima facie, it is just to make an indemnity order for costs and for interest at an enhanced rate to be awarded. However, the indemnity order need not be for the entire proceedings nor, as I have already indicated, need the award of interest be for a particular period or at a particular rate. It must not however exceed the figure of 10 per cent referred to in Part 36.
65. There are circumstances where a just result is no order for costs or no interest even where the award exceeds an offer made by a claimant. Part 36.21 does no more than indicate the order which is to be made by the court unless it considers it is unjust to make that order. The general message of Part 36.21, when it applies, is that the court will usually order a higher rate of interest than the going rate…"
"…to address the element of perceived unfairness which arises from the fact that an award of costs on the standard basis will, almost invariably, lead to the successful claimant recovering less than the costs which he has to pay to his solicitor."
(b) The Correct Approach
"4. It can be seen from Part 36 as a whole, as well as from the extracts cited above, that it contains a carefully structured and highly prescriptive set of rules dealing with formal offers to settle proceedings which have specific consequences in relation to costs in those cases where the offer is not accepted and the offeree fails to do better after a trial… In seeking to settle the proceedings, therefore, parties are not bound to make use of the mechanism provided by Part 36, but if they wish to take advantage of the particular consequences for costs and other matters that flow from making a Part 36 offer, in relation to which the court's discretion is much more confined, they must follow its requirements.
5. Part 36 is drafted as a self-contained code. It prescribes in some detail the manner in which an offer may be made and the consequences that flow from accepting or failing to accept it. In some respects those consequences reflect broadly the approach the court might be expected to take in relation to costs; in others they do not; for example, rule 36.14(3) allows the court to award a claimant who has obtained a judgment at least as advantageous as his offer interest on the sum for which he has obtained judgment at an enhanced rate of up to 10% over base rate, costs on the indemnity basis and interest on those costs at an enhanced rate as well."
(c) Contractual Chain Cases
"…it was and must have been obvious to both Defendants, once they had the letter of 1 September 2010, that Linklaters was willing to settle at the net figure of £2.28m plus costs to be assessed. There is no good reason why that offer could not have been accepted; it was How which in effect would have to accept it given the fact that it was obliged to indemnify McAlpine. It follows that by applying CPR Part 36.14(3) the general rules should follow but from a reasonable time in the circumstances after the letter of 1 September 2010 was received by the Defendants. How (and McAlpine) should pay Linklaters' costs on an indemnity basis from and including 7 September 2010 and on a standard basis prior to that date."
(a) The terms of the Part 36 offer in this case were very clear and it is not suggested otherwise.(b) The offer was made at the start of proceedings so that, if it had been accepted, it would have obviated large swathes of the costs that were incurred.
(c) As set out in paragraphs 16-21 above, full information was available to Essex, both as to the nature of the GMVL claims and what the sub-contractors down the line were saying about those claims. In addition, Essex's insurers had been involved from the outset and had appointed their own expert. He inspected the relevant areas of the building just one week after the flooding, on 8 August 2007. I find that Essex had more than enough information on which to reach a considered view of the GMVL offer.
(d) GMVL provided all the information that they were asked for. It is not suggested that there were any difficulties with the information provided to Essex by GMVL.
For all those reasons, it would not be unjust to order Essex to pay indemnity costs. The matters of fact which arose in Dunlop Haywards that led to a different result do not apply to the position as between GMVL and Essex (for the position as between Essex and HSE, see further at paragraph 133 below).
(a) When the agreement was announced in open court, Mr Stansfield QC made express reference to the settlement of the claim for statutory interest;(b) The exchanges of emails refer to various authorities, including the decision of Ramsey J in Persimmon Homes (South Coast) Ltd v Hall Aggregates (South Coast) Ltd. & Anor [2012] EWHC 2429 (TCC), which were concerned with statutory interest; and
(c) The emails make clear that, if agreement was not reached, the parties would have to deal with interest in their closing submissions. The closing submissions could only have dealt with the claim for statutory interest.
"77. The amount of the claim is also a relevant factor. If a claim is small, enhanced interest has to be at a higher rate than if the claim is large, otherwise the additional advantage for the claimant will not be achieved. In this case the sum involved was neither particularly large nor particularly modest (it was about £125,000). The conclusion that I would come to is that, if the matter was one for my discretion at first instance, I would award in the region of 4 per cent above base rate for the appropriate period."
Lord Woolf went on to say that it was wrong in principle to take 10% as a starting point.
"It is well recognised that in dealing with these costs issues it is necessary to take a broad brush approach and the exercise is not one which is susceptible of precision. It is recognised that it is generally better for the court to do its best to arrive at a percentage figure rather than to put the parties to the costs of a detailed assessment."
"…there is no simple formula for establishing the percentage based on the number of issues, pages of evidence or paragraphs of submissions or judgments. The decision must to some extent be impressionistic based on my knowledge of the case."
"If the detailed assessment were carried out instantly he would get the order instantly. So the successful party is entitled to the money. In principle he ought to get it as soon as possible. It does not seem to me to be a good reason for keeping him out of some of his costs that you need time to work out the total amount. A payment of some lesser amount which he will almost certainly collect is a closer approximation to justice. So I hold that where a party is successful the court should on a rough and ready basis also normally order an amount to be paid on account, the amount being a lesser sum than the likely full amount."
5. COSTS AND INTEREST ISSUES AS BETWEEN GMVL AND HL
6. COSTS AS BETWEEN ESSEX AND HL
7. COSTS AS BETWEEN ESSEX AND HSE
(a) HSE's liability for Essex's share of GMVL's costs;(b) HSE's liability for Essex's defence costs; and
(c) HSE's liability for Essex's costs of the Part 20 claim.
The claim at (a) is claimed pursuant to the contractual indemnity between Essex and HSE. The claim at (b) and (c) is made either pursuant to the indemnity, or by way of the CPR.
"The Sub-Sub-Contractor shall:
…
5.1.2 Indemnify and save harmless the Sub-Contactor against and from:
…
5.1.2.3 Any claim, damage, loss or expense due to or resulting from any negligence or breach of duty on the part of the Sub-Sub-Contractor, his servants or agents…"
In addition, at clause 6.3, there was this provision;
"The Sub-Sub-Contractor shall be liable for, and shall indemnify the Sub-Contractor against any expense, liability, loss claim or proceedings in respect of any loss, injury or damage whatsoever to any property real or personal in so far as loss, injury or damage arises out of or in the course of or by reason of the carrying out of the Sub-Contract Works and to the extent that the same is due any negligence, breach of statutory duty, permission or default of the Sub-Sub-Contractor…"
"44.5
(1) Subject to paragraphs (2) to (4), where the court assesses (whether by summary or detailed assessment) costs which are payable by the paying party to the receiving party under the terms of a contract, the costs payable under those terms are, unless the contract expressly provides otherwise, to be presumed to be costs which –
(a) have been reasonably incurred; and
(b) are reasonable in amount,
and the court will assess them accordingly.
(2) The presumptions in paragraph (1) are rebuttable. Practice Direction 44 – General rules about costs sets out circumstances where the court may order otherwise.
(3) Paragraph (1) does not apply where the contract is between a solicitor and client."
"45. As a result, my conclusion as to the basis on which costs are to be assessed in this case derives, first, from the fact that the parties have agreed, by Clauses 89.4 and 89.5 of the MSA, to indemnify the other party for costs incurred by that party in connection with any Dispute in which judgment is given in favour of that other party and have agreed that the basis of assessment should be the equivalent of an indemnity basis under the provisions of CPR 44.4(3). Secondly, that basis would, in any event, be the same or substantially the same as the default basis for a contractual claim to costs as set out in CPR 48.3 and paragraph 50.1 of the Costs Practice Direction.
46. Accordingly, in exercising my discretion as to costs, I consider that where the parties have agreed the basis upon which costs are to be assessed, the court should ordinarily exercise its discretion so as to reflect those contractual rights and, in this case, should award costs on an indemnity basis."
"In remitting it, I think that I should make these observations about the way in which costs should be dealt with where third, fourth, fifth or sixth parties have been brought in in these string contract cases which are very common. In doing so, however, I want to make it clear that I am not seeking to substitute my discretion for that of the arbitrator, or to suggest that there may not be reasons in some circumstances for making a different order. But, in the ordinary way, where damages are claimed for breach of contract on one contract in a string of contracts, and the seller brings in his immediate seller as a third party, and that party brings in his immediate seller as a fourth party, then, provided that the contracts are the same, or substantially the same, so that the issue as to whether the goods comply with a description is the same, in the normal way the defendant - though in this case it was the plaintiffs, because it was a counterclaim - if successful should recover against the plaintiffs not only his costs but any costs of the third party which he has been ordered to pay; the third party in like manner should recover from the defendant his own costs and any costs of the fourth party which he has been compelled to pay, and so on down the string. That is the normal way in which costs should be dealt with in this kind of action where there is a string of contracts in substantially the same terms. In saying that I am not excluding the possibility that there may be special reasons for departing from that normal practice. Whether it was reasonable for the defendant to bring in a third party at all is always a question to be considered."
"Generally, we think it will be found, and certainly so in this case, that the defendant and the third party stand in relation to one another as if the defendant had brought a separate action against the third party…"
"Any litigant has to form a view of the likelihood of a range of remedies. Where damages (or any other issue) depend on judgmental factors, a party is expected to take a view on what is likely to happen. If he or she gets it wrong then they pay the price in terms of liabilities in the litigation, and it is one of the judgments that has to be made in making or assessing Part 36 offers. The litigant takes the risk of his/her own judgment differing from the judge's. Logically, were it otherwise, and since every disputed case involves an element of judgment, every litigant could assert that he/she could not tell which way the case would go, so litigation (and the rejection of Part 36 offers) was reasonable and should be free of costs consequences. That cannot be the case."
"(1) Although an evidential burden rests on the defendant insofar as it contends that there was a break in the chain of causation, the legal burden of proof rests throughout on the claimant to prove that the defendant's breach of contract caused its loss.
(2) Secondly, in order to comprise a novus actus interveniens, so breaking the chain of causation, the conduct of the claimant "must constitute an event of such impact that it 'obliterates' the wrongdoing" of the defendant: Clerk & Lindsell on Torts (19th ed.), at para. 2-78.
(3) For there to be a break in the chain of causation, the true cause of the loss must be the conduct of the claimant rather than the breach of contract on the part of the defendant; if the breach of contract by the defendant and the claimant's subsequent conduct are concurrent causes, it must be unlikely that the chain of causation will be broken. In circumstances where the defendant's breach of contract remains an effective cause of the loss, at least ordinarily, the chain of causation will not be broken: County Ltd v Girozentrale [1996] 3 All ER 834.
(4) It is difficult to conceive that anything less than unreasonable conduct on the part of the claimant would be capable of breaking the chain of causation. It is, however, also plain that mere unreasonable conduct on a claimant's part will not necessarily do so. By its nature, reckless conduct by the claimant would or would ordinarily break the chain of causation, though there is no rule of law that only recklessness on the part of the claimant will do so: Lambert v Lewis [1982] AC 225.
(5) Fourthly, the claimant's state of knowledge at the time of and following the defendant's breach of contract is likely to be a factor of very great significance. For the chain of causation to be broken, the claimant need not have knowledge of the legal niceties of the breach of contract; nor, as it seems to me, will the chain of causation only be broken if the claimant has actual knowledge that a breach of contract has occurred – otherwise there would be a premium on ignorance."
This decision was recently approved by the Court of Appeal in Flanagan & Anor v Greenbanks Ltd (t/a Lazenby Insulation) & Anor [2013] EWCA Civ 1702.
(a) Contract
(b) Contributory Negligence
(c) Design Issues
(d) The Closure Of The IV
(e) Costs Of Causation/Core 2
(f) Core 3
- denied that any of its employees would have used a metal tool,
- denied that its operatives would have had any such tool available to them,
- said that the use of such a tool had not occurred,
- said that if such tools had been used, this had occurred after practical completion, during maintenance,
- put HSE to proof that the nut which failed was installed before practical completion,
- refused to accept that the nut was over-tightened,
- refused to accept that over-tightening was the cause of the Core 3 failure: in this regard they were alone in maintaining such a case,
- identified a whole raft of other potential causes of the failure, including the design of the entire hot water system,
- denied that metallic debris had been deposited during their works and suggested that the debris had either been deposited at the factory where the valve was made or after practical completion during the maintenance work,
- denied that, if the debris had been installed during their work, it was a breach of contract,
- suggested that it would have been impossible, when the valve was taken out of its packaging and installed, to keep it entirely free from debris,
- denied that it was obliged to clean the nut,
- denied that metallic debris was the cause of the Core 3 failure.
(g) Summary
8. COSTS AS BETWEEN HSE AND ROBSON
(a) HSE's liability (through Essex) for GMVL's costs;(b) HSE's share of Essex's defence costs and Part 20 costs;
(c) HSE's own costs of defending the Essex claim; and
(d) HSE's costs of their own Part 20 claim against Robson.
(a) and (b) are claimed by way of indemnity or damages, not the CPR. (c) is claimed by way of indemnity, damages or the CPR. (d) is claimed by way of an indemnity or the CPR.
"The Subcontractor hereby agrees to indemnify [HSE] against each and every liability which [HSE] may incur to any other person or persons and further to indemnify [HSE] in respect of any liability, loss, claim or proceedings of whatsoever nature such as shall arise by virtue of the breach or breaches of this Subcontract Agreement by, or at, default or negligence of the Subcontractor."
- they denied that they installed the IV,
- they denied that they were obliged to ensure that the IV was left open when they left the site,
- they denied that they had had any cause to close the IV,
- they did not admit that they would have left the IV open,
- they denied that the IV was closed at practical completion,
- they maintained that the IV was closed subsequently, either in the course of maintenance or in some other inadvertent way which was not their responsibility and was therefore the responsibility of GMVL.
Moreover, in respect of the NRV, which was a completely pointless piece of installation not shown on any design drawing, Robson were particularly difficult. Thus:
- they did not admit that the NRV had been installed at the time of practical completion,
- they denied that they installed the NRV,
- they alleged that other subcontractors, who were not responsible for the BMCWS, had somehow installed this particular NRV,
- they denied that the installation of the NRV was a breach of contract for a variety of reasons,
- they denied that the NRV was an effective cause of the Core 2 failure.
9. ROBSON'S APPLICATION FOR A STAY
"52.7 Unless –
(a) the appeal court or the lower court orders otherwise;…
an appeal shall not operate as a stay of any order or decision of the lower court."
As the notes in the White Book make plain, the general rule is that a successful litigant should not be deprived of the fruits of their litigation pending appeal, unless there was some good reason for this course "The normal rule is for no stay": see Potter LJ in Leicester Circuits Ltd v Coates Brothers Plc [2002] EWCA Civ 474 at paragraph 13. Sullivan LJ noted in DEFRA v Downs [2009] EWCA Civ. 257 that, in order to displace the normal rule, solid grounds had to be put forward. He said that such grounds would normally be "some form of irremediable harm if no stay is granted".
(a) In Linotype-Hell Finance Ltd v Baker [1993] 1 WLR 321, Staughton LJ said that "if a defendant can say without a stay of execution he will be ruined and that he has an appeal which has some prospect of success, that is a legitimate ground for granting a stay of execution."(b) In Hammond Suddard Solicitors v Agrichem International Holdings Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 2065, Clarke LJ (as he then was) said:
"Whether the court should exercise its discretion to grant a stay will depend upon all the circumstances of the case, but the essential question is whether there is a risk of injustice to one or other or both parties if it grants or refuses a stay. In particular, if a stay is refused what are the risks of the appeal being stifled? If a stay is granted and the appeal fails, what are the risks that the respondent will be unable to enforce the judgment? On the other hand, if a stay is refused and the appeal succeeds, and the judgment is enforced in the meantime, what are the risks of the appellant being able to recover any monies paid from the respondent?"
(a) Are there grounds for departing from the usual rule that there will not be a stay?(b) "Where there is a risk of harm to one party or another, whichever order is made, the court has to balance the alternatives to decide which is less likely to cause injustice" (see Potter LJ in Leicester Circuits).
(a) Robson were entirely owned by T Clarke PLC;(b) The most recent accounts, up to 31 December 2012, showed a profit of just over £1 million on achieved turnover of £21 million odd.
(c) The net current assets were £1.86 million.
(d) Robson had a very poor year in 2013 due to the tough economic trading circumstances which was likely to lead to a small loss for the year of around £100,000.
(e) "The position at the moment is precarious, with DGR operating on a hand to mouth basis in the hope of an upturn in performance. If DGR was required to pay a significant sum in relation to costs in the near future then I consider it likely that the company would be forced into an insolvency situation."
(f) The trading prospects for the next year were not good.
(g) If Robson were obliged to meet any significant sum in excess of its insurance cover they would have no alternative but to liquidate the business, making all staff and operatives redundant.
10. ESSEX'S APPLICATION UNDER SECTION 51
(a) Payment in satisfaction of those liabilities was to be made by Robson to GMVL (to the full extent of Essex's liabilities to GMVL) and by Robson to Essex (to the full extent of HSE's liabilities to Essex);(b) If and to the extent that Robson fail to make any payment required under (a), then HSE will do so;
(c) If and to the extent that HSE fail to make any payment required under (b) then Essex will do so;
(d) GMVL will accept payments made by Robson under (a) by HSE under (b) in full or partial (as the case may be) satisfaction of Essex's liabilities to GMVL;
(e) Essex will accept payments made by Robson under (a) and by HSE under (b) in full or partial (as the case may be) satisfaction of HSE's liabilities to Essex.
"Thus, the question resolves itself in our view into this, namely, is there on the facts of this case anything which should lead the court in exercising its discretion to depart from the normal principle that costs follow the event? We can see nothing. On the contrary, in our judgment, the facts call strongly for it to be observed.
Apart from the impact of legal aid the consideration of which, as we have already observed, is excluded by the Act itself, we can see nothing which the defendants can call in aid except the impecuniosity of the plaintiff, but it cannot be right to deprive a third party of an order for costs to which he is otherwise entitled against the defendant, because the defendant when looking to the plaintiff for reimbursement finds a person not worth powder and shot."