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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Chaplair Ltd v Kumari [2015] EWCA Civ 798 (27 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/798.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 798, [2015] CP Rep 46, [2015] HLR 39 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Romford County Court
His Honour Judge Wulwik
8BT02390
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTIC PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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Chaplair Limited |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Kumari |
Appellant |
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WordWave International Limited
Trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Louise Worton (instructed by Alterman Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: Tuesday 18 May
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
Issues:
(1) Does the court have power to order a tenant to pay any costs to the landlord under the terms of the lease where the costs arose in related leasehold valuation tribunal proceedings?
(2) Does the court have power to order a tenant to pay costs to the landlord (with the amount to be assessed) under the terms of the lease where the case was allocated to the small claims track?
The Fourth Schedule…
12.
(a) To pay to the Landlord all costs charges and expenses (including legal costs and fees payable to a surveyor) which may be incurred by the Landlord in or in contemplation of any proceedings under Sections 146 and 147 of the Law of Property Act 1925 notwithstanding forfeiture may be avoided otherwise than by relief granted by the Court
(b) To pay all proper and reasonable expenses including solicitors' costs and surveyors' fees incurred by the Landlord of and incidental to the service of all notices and schedules relating to wants of repair to the Flat whether the same be served during or after the expiration or sooner determination of the term hereby granted ( but relating in all cases to such wants of repair that accrued not later than the expiration or sooner determination of the said term as aforesaid)
(c) To pay all reasonable expenses of the Landlords its Managing Agents or Solicitors in respect of any requests for information previously provided…
14
(a) To comply with all requirements whatsoever of any local or other competent authority corporation or others in relation to the demised Premises and to comply at the Tenant's own expense with any notices whatsoever served by any such authority or others whether on the Landlord or the Tenant in relation to the Demised Premises
(b) At all times hereafter to indemnify the Landlord from and against all actions proceedings costs losses expenses claims and demands arising out of any failure by the Tenant to observe or perform any of its obligations under this Lease in relation to any legislation for the time being in force and non-compliance with any of the provisions herein contained in general or any matters referred to in sub-clause (a) and (b) hereof in…
Judgment of the judge
2. The Defendant shall pay to the Claimant 90% of 10% of the costs of the proceedings before the Leasehold Valuation Tribunal, to be the subject of a Detailed Assessment if not agreed, such Detailed Assessment to be on an indemnity basis in accordance with the provision of the lease dated 17th December 2002.
3. The Defendant shall pay to the Claimant 90% of the costs of the County Court proceedings up to and including the hearing before Deputy District Judge Watson on the 29th July 2013 and 100% of the costs of the Appeal to be the subject of a Detailed Assessment, if not agreed, such Detailed Assessment to be on an indemnity basis in accordance with the provisions of the lease dated 17th December 2002 and to be subject to the very anxious scrutiny approach referred to by the Court of Appeal in O'Beirne v Hudson [2010] 1 WLR 1717.
Issue (1): Does the court have power to order a tenant to pay any costs to the landlord under the terms of the lease where the costs arose in related leasehold valuation tribunal proceedings?
A res judicata is a decision, pronounced by a judicial or other tribunal having jurisdiction over the cause of action and the parties, that disposes once and for all of all the fundamental matters decided, so that, except on appeal, they cannot be re-litigated between persons bound by the judgment. (Res Judicata, 4th edition, Spencer Bower & Handley, 2009, LexisNexis).
He submits that the costs of the proceedings (including the county court proceedings) had already been dealt with by the LVT because the tenants had applied under section 20C of the Housing Act 1985 for an order that the landlords' costs in the LVT should not be added to the service charge and Chaplair had conceded that was correct.
the Court requires the parties to that litigation to bring forward their whole case, and will not (except under special circumstances) permit the same parties to open the same subject of litigation in respect of a matter which might have been brought forward as part of the subject in contest, but which was not brought forward, only because they have, from negligence, inadvertence, or even accident, omitted part of their case.
a broad, merits-based judgment which takes account of the public and private interests involved and also takes account of all the facts of the case, focusing attention on the crucial question whether, in all the circumstances, a party is misusing or abusing the process of the court by seeking to raise before it the issue which could have been raised before.
Issue (2): Does the court have power to order a tenant to pay costs to the landlord (with the amount to be assessed) under the terms of the lease where the case was allocated to the small claims track?
35. In our opinion, the following principles emerge from the cases and dicta to which I have referred.
(i) An order for the payment of costs of proceedings by one party to another party is always a discretionary order: section 51 of the Act of 1981.
(ii) Where there is a contractual right to the costs, the discretion should ordinarily be exercised so as to reflect that contractual right.
(iii) The power of court to disallow a mortgagee's costs sought to be added to the mortgage security is a power that does not derive from section 51 but from the power of courts of equity to fix the terms on which redemption will be allowed.
(iv) A decision by a court to refuse costs, in whole or in part, to a mortgage litigant may be a decision in the exercise of the section 51 discretion or a decision in the exercise of the power to fix the terms on which redemption will be allowed or a decision as to the extent of a mortgagee's contractual right to add his costs to the security or a combination of two or more of these things. The pleadings in the case and the submissions made to the judge may indicate which of the decisions to which we have referred has been made.
(v) A mortgagee is not, in our judgment, to be deprived of a contractual or equitable right to add costs to the security merely by reason of an order for payment of costs made without reference to the mortgagee's contractual or equitable rights and without any adjudication as to whether or not the mortgagee should be deprived of those costs.
The recorder is, in my view, correct that parties to litigation cannot tie the hands of the court on the question of costs by agreement whether that agreement is one made after the commencement of proceedings or in the contract, breach of the terms of which gives rise to the proceedings. The court's power to decide by whom costs should be paid could probably not be fettered by a prior contract between the parties to the effect that a successful litigant should have to pay costs to an unsuccessful litigant. Clearly it would be contrary to the public interest that the court should be deprived of the powers given under section 51(6) to disallow wasted costs. Further, section 51(8) requires the person responsible for determining the amount of costs to take account of the factor there mentioned if it exists and that duty placed on that person cannot, in my view, be abrogated by a term in the contract. Whether the court's discretion to decide by whom the costs of proceedings should be paid could be fettered by a contractual agreement made before the litigation is started is a more difficult question which does not arise in this appeal.
The successful litigant's contractual rights to recover the costs of any proceedings to enforce his primary contractual rights is a highly relevant factor when it comes to making a costs order. He is not, in my view, to be deprived of his contractual rights to costs where he has claimed them unless there is good reason to do so and that applies both to the making of a costs order in his favour and to the extent that costs are to be paid to him. Indeed I would adopt the citation in the Gomba Holdings case from the judgment of Vinelott J which appears at p193A, namely:
If the parties have agreed the basis of taxation it would, I think, be an improper exercise of the court's discretion to direct the taxation on some other basis, unless satisfied that there had been some conduct on the part of the mortgagee disentitling him to costs or to costs on the agreed basis.
A good reason for depriving a successful litigant to part of the costs to which the contractual term would entitle him would be that that part of the costs came within the definition of wasted costs in section 51(7), that is to say they were costs incurred by him as a result of improper, unreasonable or negligent conduct on his part or that of his legal or other representatives. There may well be other sufficient reasons for interfering with the basis of taxation.
In my opinion, it is not a proper exercise of a judge's discretion to refuse to allow a successful litigant to recover his contractual entitlement to costs because the judge considers that a lessor has an unfairly strong bargaining position or it is desirable that the courts keep a careful control of costs in undefended possession claims. Of course a landlord cannot by contract provide that he should recover a greater sum by way of costs than the costs that he has actually and reasonably incurred.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Patten:
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke