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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 >> Harlequin Property (SVG) Ltd & Anor v Wilkins Kennedy (a firm) [2016] EWHC 3233 (TCC) (21 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2016/3233.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3233 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Harlequin Property (SVG) Limited Harlequin Hotels and Resorts Limited |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Wilkins Kennedy (a Firm) |
Defendant |
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(instructed by ELS Legal LLP) for the Claimants
Mr Justin Fenwick QC, Mr George Spalton and Mr Peter Morcos
(instructed by Kennedys Law LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. INTRODUCTION
(a) The correct currency in which the Judgment Sum was to be expressed;
(b) The appropriate mechanics of payment of the Judgment Sum;
(c) A series of related issues concerned with interest;
(d) Liability for costs;
(e) The amount of any payment on account of costs;
(f) Two discreet issues of costs;
(g) The defendant's application for permission to appeal.
2. ISSUE 1: CURRENCY
"If the court does express its judgment for the payment of money in a foreign currency, the judgment will be entered in that currency or its sterling equivalent at the time of payment.
…
It would seem that the court retains a residual discretion to determine whether the judgment should be expressed in sterling or in a foreign currency and that it will exercise this discretion having regard to all the circumstances including the position of the parties and the fluctuations in the rates of exchange between the currency of the contract and sterling during the period between the date when the cause of action whether in contract or tort arose and the date of judgment."
In my discretion, therefore, I can express the Judgment Sum in sterling and can, if it is appropriate, make it subject to the exchange rates set out in the claimant's evidence rather than the current rates.
"…in the currency in which the loss was felt by the plaintiff or 'which most truly expresses his loss.' This is not limited to that in which it first and immediately arose. In ascertaining which this currency is, the court must ask what is the currency, payment in which will as nearly as possible compensate the plaintiff in accordance with the principle of restitution, and whether the parties must be taken reasonably to have had this in contemplation."
3. ISSUE 2: THE MECHANICS OF PAYMENT
4. ISSUE 3: INTEREST
"…the object of an award of interest is to compensate a claimant for being kept out of the money that should have been paid to him as damages[2]."
(a) This is not a case in which interest is claimed as special damages. The claimant did not borrow any money so it did not incur any interest charges or suffer any actual loss in consequence of the overpayments.
(b) The attempt to claim interest as general damages at the rates set out, first in Mr Khemraj's report, and now in the document from Mazar's, is an unsubtle attempt to create a windfall for the claimant by recovering interest at a rate which it never incurred and would never have incurred, even if there had been no overpayments to ICE.
(c) The claimant did not borrow money and, on the balance of probabilities, I find that it would never have been lent any money because of its complete lack of financial security and credit-worthiness. Moreover, these difficulties arose because the claimant was operating a questionable, and even potentially criminal, business enterprise. It would be wholly wrong in principle for the claimant now to take advantage of their own sub-sub-prime status to increase the recoverable interest rate.
(d) For these reasons, any comparison with a hypothetical company who may have been able to borrow money is artificial and unhelpful.
(e) As Rix LJ noted in Jaura, the rate of interest should reflect "the real cost of borrowing incurred". The real cost of borrowing at the relevant period was low. Whilst I am not prepared to use the rate of 0.15% that was payable by way of interest on the HMSSE accounts – that seems to me to be a different matter; the argument occurred to the defendant as an afterthought; and the rate does not reflect the real cost of borrowing – I can only reiterate the view I expressed at the hearing on 12 December that the right approach is to award a percentage over the base rate in accordance with the authorities. As recent events have shown, I accept that LIBOR is discredited as a reliable measure.
(f) The claimant suggests that the award of a percentage over the base rate is somehow a default position. For the reasons that I have given, I disagree, but even if it is, it might be said that it is one that produces a result that is generous to this particular claimant.
5. LIABILITY FOR COSTS
(a) The general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party (r.44.2(2)(a)).
(b) In deciding liability for costs, the court must take into account whether a party has succeeded (even if it has not been wholly successful); the conduct of the parties; and any admissible offers to settle (r.44.2(4)).
(c) Conduct covers anything relevant before or during the proceedings (r.44(5)).
(d) The court can make any manner of order as to costs including awarding costs of particular issues or a proportion of the costs otherwise due (r.44.2(6)).
"If the successful claimant has lost out on a number of issues it may be inappropriate to make separate orders for costs in respect of issues upon which he has failed, unless the points were unreasonably taken. It is a fortunate litigant who wins on every point."
In Fox Jackson LJ noted that there had been a growing and unwelcome tendency to depart from the general rule "too far and too often".
6. ISSUE 5: INTERIM PAYMENT ON ACCOUNT OF COSTS
Note 1 I shall hereafter call the first claimant ‘the claimant’. [Back] Note 2 Geraldine Andrews QC, as she then was, inRamzan. [Back]