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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Hollybrook (Brighton Road) Management Company Ltd -v- All First Property Management Company Ltd & Anor [2011] IEHC 423 (16 November 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2011/H423.html Cite as: [2011] IEHC 423 |
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Judgment Title: Hollybrook [Brighton Road] Management Company Ltd -v- All First Property Management Company Ltd & Anor Composition of Court: Judgment by: Laffoy J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2011] IEHC 423 THE HIGH COURT 2006 5683 P BETWEEN HOLLYBROOK (BRIGHTON ROAD) MANAGEMENT COMPANY LIMITED PLAINTIFF AND
ALL FIRST PROPERTY MANAGEMENT COMPANY LMIITED AND GINA FARRELL (ALSO KNOWN AS EUGENIA PACELLI) TRADING AS GINA FARRELL CLEANING SERVICES DEFENDANTS Judgment of Miss Justice Laffoy delivered on 16th day of November, 2011. 1. This judgment is concerned with the issue of the costs of these proceedings in which I gave judgment on 5th October, 2011 ([2011] IEHC 375). The Court has had the benefit of comprehensive written and oral submissions from counsel on behalf of the plaintiff and counsel on behalf of the second named defendant, who was the only defendant in the proceedings when they came on for hearing. 2. The right to costs of proceedings in the High Court is governed by Order 99 of the Rules of the Superior Courts, 1986 (the Rules). While under rule 1(1) it is provided that the costs of and incidental to every proceeding shall be at the discretion of the Court, rule 1(4) provides that the costs of every issue of fact or law shall “follow the event” unless otherwise ordered. 3. However, s. 17 of the Courts Act 1981 (the Act of 1981), as amended by substitution by s. 14 of the Courts Act 1991, puts a limitation on the amount of a plaintiff’s costs in certain proceedings. Sub-section (1) of s. 17 provides as follows:
4. Sub-section (5) of s. 17 provides as follows:
. . . of an amount not exceeding whichever of the following the judge considers appropriate: (i) the amount, measured by the judge, of the additional costs as between party and party incurred in the proceedings by the defendant . . . by reason of the fact that the proceedings were not commenced and determined in the said lowest court, or (ii) an amount equal to the difference between –
(II) the amount of the costs as between party and party incurred in the proceedings by the defendant . . . as taxed by a Taxing Master of the High Court . . . on a scale that he considers would have been appropriate if the proceedings had been heard and determined in the said lowest court.” 5. As to the application of the foregoing provisions to this case, the position of counsel for the plaintiff may be summarised as follows:
(b) Having regard to s. 17(1) of the Act of 1981, it was acknowledged that the plaintiff was only entitled to Circuit Court costs. However, a certificate for senior counsel was applied for and the entitlement to such a certificate was not disputed by counsel for the second defendant. (c) It was submitted that no differential costs order should be made. In this regard, counsel for the plaintiff reminded the Court of the various adverse findings the Court had made as to the manner in which the second defendant had defended the action and, in particular, the finding that the second defendant had falsified the concierge logs at Hollybrook with the objective of misleading the plaintiff (para. 7.3 of the judgment).
7. The position adopted on behalf of the second defendant as regards costs, as I understand it, may be summarised as follows:
(b) alternatively, the plaintiff’s entitlement to costs should be confined to the pursuit of the elements of the claim on which it was successful; and (c) the second defendant should be entitled to costs against the plaintiff for defending the elements of the claim on which the plaintiff did not succeed; and (d) the second defendant should be entitled to an order against the plaintiff under s. 17(5) of the Act of 1981, presumably as regards the elements of the claim on which the plaintiff succeeded. 9. It is convenient at this juncture to summarise the various elements of the plaintiff’s claim and the outcome of the proceedings in relation to each element. The position is as follows:
(b) The plaintiff claimed sums aggregating €23,675 in respect of overcharging on the basis that the second defendant did not have the contracted number of cleaners present in Hollybrook for the contracted hours. The plaintiff was almost entirely successful on that claim, having been awarded the sum of €22,518.40 (para. 9.8 of the judgment). (c) A claim for €4,104 in respect of auditors’ fees incurred in relation to reconstituting the books and records of the plaintiff, was eventually dropped on the sixth day of the hearing (para. 3.2 of the judgment). That claim should not have been pursued against the second defendant, but, in reality, no time was devoted to it at the hearing. (d) A claim for recoupment of alleged payment in excess of the contract price to the second defendant in the amount of €29,926, which was introduced on the seventh day of the hearing, failed (para. 9.1 of the judgment). (e) The plaintiff’s claims for pre-judgment interest and aggravated damages also failed. 11. The authority primarily relied on by counsel for the second defendant in support of his contention that the Court should exercise its discretion under s. 17(5) of the Act of 1981 in favour of the second defendant was the decision of the Supreme Court in O’Connor v. Bus Átha Cliath [2003] 4 IR 459. In that case the majority (Murray J. and Hardiman J.) held that the trial judge had erred in exercising his discretion under s. 17(5) not to make an order in favour of the defendant, where the plaintiff’s claim for future loss of earnings should not have been made and his claim should more appropriately have been brought in the Circuit Court, rather than in the High Court. The claim in that case concerned personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff in a road traffic accident. The High Court hearing concerned the assessment of damages, liability not being an issue. The claim for future loss of earnings was abandoned at the trial after the plaintiff’s direct evidence. The application of s. 17(5) on the facts of that case was, I venture to suggest, a lot less complex than its application to the facts of this case. Nonetheless it is instructive to consider the underlying rationale of the decision of the Supreme Court. 12. Having considered the policy considerations which underlie the provisions of s. 17 of the Act of 1981 – that they facilitate the efficient administration of justice, and are of convenience to all the parties in bringing their cases, where appropriate, before the courts of local and limited jurisdiction, and usually mean that lower costs are incurred by both the plaintiff and the defendant than if the proceedings had been brought to the higher court – Murray J. continued (at p. 493):
In my view, when the order made by a court in favour of a plaintiff falls well within the jurisdiction of a court lower than that making the award, it is incumbent on the trial judge to have specific regard to the nature of the claim and all the reasons for which the plaintiff’s claim fell within the lower jurisdiction or as the section puts it, all the circumstances of the case. An unsuccessful defendant should not be wantonly burdened with the costs of defending a claim in the higher court when it could reasonably have been brought in the lower court.”
15. I have come to the conclusion that the proper exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction would be to allow the plaintiff its costs against the second defendant on the Circuit Court scale, with certificate for senior counsel, on the basis of what I consider would be a fair estimate of the length of time the hearing of the action would have taken in the Circuit Court, if it had been limited to the element of the plaintiff’s claim on which it succeeded, but was defended in the manner in which it was defended in the High Court until the second defendant gave evidence and admitted that she had altered the concierge logs. I estimate that the hearing, to include the evidence of Dr. Audrey Giles, would have taken three days. I come to that conclusion on the basis that Dr. Giles’s evidence took up a full day of the hearing in the High Court (para. 7.4 of the judgment). For the avoidance of doubt, the plaintiff is entitled to the costs of obtaining expert advice from, and calling, Dr. Giles to give evidence. 16. I have come to the conclusion that it would not be a proper exercise of the Court’s jurisdiction to make an order in favour of the second defendant under s. 17(5) of the Act of 1981, notwithstanding that the elements of the claim referred to at (a), (c), and (d) at para. 8 above should not have been pursued against the second defendant by the plaintiff. Obviously, on the basis of my experience of having had to spend seventeen days of High Court time during what is probably the busiest period of the year on this case, I am acutely conscious of what Hardiman J. referred to in O’Connor v. Bus Átha Cliath as “the mischief of litigation which is more elaborate and more expensive than it should be” and the necessity of the Court to impose a price with a view to deterring such conduct. However, as Murray J. emphasised in the same case, the Court must have regard to all of the circumstances of the case. In this case, I cannot overlook the finding of dishonesty on the part of the second defendant both before her joinder in these proceedings and in her conduct of the proceedings. Nor can I make an order under s. 17(5) which, in reality, would condone such conduct. 17. Accordingly, there will be an order for costs in favour of the plaintiff against the second defendant on the Circuit Court scale, to include a certificate for senior counsel, on the basis of a hearing that would have taken three days in the Circuit Court.
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