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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Douglas & Ors v Hello! Ltd. & Ors [2004] EWHC 63 (Ch) (23 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/63.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 63 (Ch), [2004] EMLR 14, [2004] 2 Costs LR 304 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
MICHAEL DOUGLAS CATHERINE ZETA-JONES (3) NORTHERN & SHELL PLC |
Claimants | |
- and - |
| |
(1) HELLO! LTD. (2) HOLA, S.A. (3) EDUARDO SANCHEZ JUNCO (4) THE MARQUESA DE VARELA (5) NENETA OVERSEAS LTD. (6) PHILIP RAMEY |
Defendants
|
____________________
Mr J. Price and Mr G. Fernando (instructed by M
Law) for the 1st to 3rd Defendants
Miss H.T.M. Mulcahy (Solicitor Advocate of
Messrs Reed Smith) for the 4th and 5th Defendants
Hearing dates : Tuesday
13th January 2004 and Wednesday 14th January 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lindsay :
"Civil litigation is now developing into a system designed to enable the parties involved to know where they stand in reality at the earliest possible stage, and at the lowest practicable cost, so that they …. may make informed decisions about their prospects and the sensible conduct of their cases. Among other factors the judge exercising his discretion about costs should consider is whether one side or the other has, or has not, conducted litigation with those principles in mind."
"21. The principles applicable in the present case may, I think, be summarised as follows: (i) costs cannot be recovered except under an order of the court; (ii) the question whether to make any order as to costs – and, if so, what order - is a matter entrusted to the discretion of the trial judge; (iii) the starting point for the exercise of discretion is that costs should follow the event; nevertheless, (iv) the judge may make different orders for costs in relation to discrete issues – and, in particular, should consider doing so where a party has been successful on one issue but unsuccessful on another issue and, in that event, may make an order for costs against the party who has been generally successful in the litigation; and (v) the judge may deprive a party of costs on an issue on which he has been successful if satisfied that the party has acted unreasonably in relation to that issue; (vi) an appellate court should not interfere with the judge's exercise of discretion merely because it takes the view that it would have exercised that discretion differently."
(i) The Claimants' and the Defendants' costs of the Liability Hearing;
(ii) The Claimants' and the Defendants' costs of the Quantum Hearing;
(iii) Interest on damages awarded;
(iv) Interest on costs awarded;
(v) Whether the Court of Appeal's order for costs can be and should be set aside or varied and if so in what manner;
(vi) The costs of a hearing of the 11th December 2002;
(vii) Mr Ramey's position;
(viii) The Marquesa's costs against the Claimants;
(ix) The costs incurred by the Claimants in their unsuccessful claim against the Marquesa and her company, for both of whom Miss Mulcahy appears.
Issue (vi) It is not opposed but that the costs of all parties of and incidental to the hearing of the 11th December 2002 should be costs in cause.
Issue (vii) I have by consent ordered that Mr Ramey should forthwith pay the Claimants' costs of the action as against him down to the 14th January 2004, they to be assessed, if not agreed, on the standard basis
Issue (viii) I have by consent ordered that the Marquesa's and Neneta's application for costs against the Claimants should be dismissed.
I must now turn to the disputed issues.
Issue (i) – Costs of the Liability Hearing
"In my judgment it is appropriate to award the costs on an indemnity basis to mark this Court's disapproval of the conduct of [the Hello!] Defendants."
With that in mind, and also reflecting my reaction, as I shall come on to, as to the Claimants' costs before the Court of Appeal, I see the standard basis to be the appropriate basis.
Issue (ii) - Costs of the Quantum Hearing
Issue (iii) - Interest on Damages down to judgment
Issue (iv) - Interest on costs
"(6) The orders which the Court may make under this rule include an order that a party must pay –
…….
…….
(g) Interest on costs from or until a certain date, including a date before judgment."
"In any event in principle there seems no reason why the Court should not do so where a party has had to put up money paying its solicitors and been out of the use of that money in the meanwhile."
In Bim it was ordered that the award of interest should run as from the date or dates of solicitors' invoices but, in principle, it seems to me that the more appropriate dates, when one is seeking to measure the extent to which a party has been out pocket, would be the dates on which invoices were actually paid. As to when such interest should stop, it seems to me that the appropriate time would be when interest on costs is replaced by judgment interest. In my judgment it is right, in the light of Bim and of the rule, to award the Claimants interest on assessed costs but that the computation will need to reflect both that of each sum found to be within assessed costs on the standard basis only 75% will be payable and that interest is not to run on any sum unless and until it had been paid. The rate is to be base rate from time to time plus 1½%. If the parties cannot agree a computation the issue will need to be restored to me.
Issue (v) - Setting aside the Court of Appeal's Order as to costs
"The disparity between the perjured evidence and the new evidence would be material if it "entirely changed the nature of the case".
"…… It must be shown that the decision of [the] Court would, on the balance of probabilities, have been affected had the true position been revealed."
It must be shown – paragraph 26 – that the fraud materially contributed to the decision sought to be set aside. Mr Price also seemed, at any rate at one point, to be inviting me to consider the position as it would have been had the Court of Appeal known from the outset of the relevant misconduct; for example, that it had known all along that the Marquesa's letter was misleading and had been procured as evidence by Hello! notwithstanding that Hello! knew it to be untrue, that Mrs Cartwright's witness statement in the form seen by the Court of Appeal was misleading and that Sr. Sanchez Junco's statement also misled. That, as it seems to me, is not the correct basis on which the question should be considered; rather it should be that the Court of Appeal learned for the first time of the dishonesty and of Hello!'s other shortcomings just before it turned to the question of costs. Whilst I am not asked to decide whether such new knowledge would have affected whether the injunction should or should not be lifted, I have no doubt but that it would have had a very material effect on the award of costs. I would not think that the Court of Appeal would, in the postulated circumstances, have made any award in favour of Hello!. Would there, though, have been an award in the Claimants' favour? There would have been a strong argument, of the kind that persuaded the Vice-Chancellor later, that notwithstanding that Hello! had won the day (in the sense that the injunction was lifted) nonetheless, costs should be awarded against it to reflect its misconduct. Of course, the Court of Appeal could not have known of the later award of the Vice-Chancellor having been prompted as a mark of his disapproval of the conduct of the Hello! Defendants but I think I am entitled to have in mind, when considering what in all the circumstances would have been the appropriate order for the Court of Appeal to have made as to costs, that were I to suppose that that Court would have penalised Hello!, the end situation would be that it was being penalised more than once for the same offence. Taking that unusual feature into account, in my judgment the appropriate order in the Court of Appeal as to costs is that there should have been no order as to costs. I have not understood it to be significant whether I set aside the present order of the Court of Appeal as to costs and replace it by no order as to costs or whether I make an appropriate award of damages in the Claimants' favour but as the matter has chiefly been argued on the basis of setting-aside I shall adopt the setting-aside alternative.
Issue (ix) - The costs incurred by the Claimants in their unsuccessful claim against the Marquesa and her company
Conclusion