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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 >> Business Environment Bow Lane Ltd v Deanwater Estates Ltd (Rev 1) [2009] EWHC 2014 (Ch) (31 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/2014.html Cite as: [2009] 45 EG 106, [2009] EWHC 2014 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
with
MASTER CAMPBELL
MR SIMON KENNY
as assessors
____________________
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT BOW LANE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DEANWATER ESTATES LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
MR. J. FERRIS (instructed by Messrs. Michael Conn Goldsobel) for the Defendant.
Hearing date: 23rd July 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The facts
"I am not sure if you have recently re-visited the property or whether or not Donaldsons are overseeing the current work contract. However it is clear that your Clients are fully refurbishing the property (a point that you openly acknowledge in our conversation and within your letter of 12 September). These actions clearly nullify the entirety of your claim for alleged internal breaches (toilets, circulation doors, light fittings, perimeter skirting, trunking and radiators, etc etc, have been stripped out).
6. Clearly the external condition must be similar to that at the commencement of the lease in 2002, accordingly I am unclear of the basis for alleging such extensive breaches of clause 2(5)(a) requiring remedies that would restore the premises to a far better condition. In addition I could find very little evidence of external 'disrepair' "
The significance of that letter and those quotations is that Mr Copley plainly expressed the view that the claim was bad for the reasons stated. I am not aware of any retraction of that view. In due course, when the matter came to be pleaded, the claimant pleaded that it had done the repair works, and verified that pleading with a statement of truth signed by the solicitors. As one would expect, Deanwater made no admission as to that in its defence. I mention that because from time to time in arguing the appeal Mr Jonathan Ferris, who appeared for Deanwater, suggested that somehow his client believed that the claim was "good" in such a way as to suggest that their belief was that, subject to the preliminary issue point, the landlord had a good claim. The attitude demonstrated in the papers that I have seen was something different, and indeed what one would expect it was firmly disputing the claim on the grounds that Mr Copley entirely properly suggested. Mr Ferris said that his clients were "misled" into thinking the claim was good. That submission was never made good, and it would have been very surprising if, on facts such as this, it were true.
"In my view, nothing could be clearer. The Claimant was maintaining its large claim for dilapidations. The Defendant was saying in unequivocal terms that the Claimant was not entitled effectively to any substantial part of its claim."
At paragraph 87 he notes that:
"It was clear that the claim had been grossly exaggerated when the matter came before me on 16 November 2007. It was also clear that the Claimant was in a state of considerable confusion. In fact, the claim was reduced to a fraction of its former sum, namely £107,506.34, in the new Schedule of Dilapidations which was served on 7 December 2007.
88. It appears that when the experts Mr Copley and Mr Estrop finally met 'without prejudice' all that was left of the claim was a small sum which was in the event agreed at £1,073.50."
"109. In my view the Claimant both before and after the institution of proceedings acted in a way which took this case out of the norm. It represented to the Defendant both before and after the start of the litigation that it had a very substantial dilapidations claim. The Claimant knew what work it intended to carry out at the time when it made its initial claim for £500,000 for dilapidations. The scope of the work was no doubt refined in the summer of 2005 and during the tendering stage. This claim was persisted in at the time of the service of the Particulars of Claim. The Statement of Truth made on its behalf on the claim form and in the Statement of Claim attested to the fact that this was a genuine claim for dilapidations and that the work claimed for had been carried out. Any proper investigation of this claim both before the Particulars of Claim were served and afterwards, would have revealed (a) that the external works had not been carried out, and (b) that this was not indeed a genuine claim for dilapidations. Even in the Schedule of Dilapidations served on 7 December 2007 the Claimant persisted in a substantial claim which it knew or ought to have known was unsustainable. In these circumstances the appropriate order is that the Claimant pay the Defendant's costs other than those subject of the order of the Court of Appeal on an indemnity basis."
"Reasons
The jurisdiction to reopen a final appeal depends on the presence of the three conditions set out in CPR Rule 52.17. They are:
(a) It is necessary to do so in order to avoid real injustice;
(b) The circumstances are exceptional and make it appropriate to reopen the appeal; and
(c) There is no alternative effective remedy.
Deanwater claims that all those conditions are satisfied because:
(i) It was induced by Business Environment into believing that the value of the claim against it was greatly in excess of what it in fact was;
(ii) Had it known how small it was it would not have sought or pursued the preliminary issue;
(iii) In that event, it would not have been liable to Business Environment in respect of its costs in the sum of £62,986.82.
The documents show that by 1st October 2005:
(i) Deanwater believed that it had a good defence to the whole of the claim based on collateral contract or promissory estoppel.
(ii) Deanwater had been advised by its own surveyor that the claim against it was excessive because the refurbishment of the property by Business Environment nullified the internal dilapidations claim.
Deanwater elected to seek an order for the trial of the preliminary issue on its alleged collateral contract defence. The order was made on 12th June 2006. In June 2007 the preliminary issue was determined against Deanwater.
It was not suggested that the processes of the trial of the preliminary issue at first instance or on appeal were in any way 'corrupted', see Re Uddin [2005] 1 WLR 2398 paras 17-22. Nor is it suggested that the costs order made by the Court of Appeal was in any way wrong at the time it was made. Deanwater seeks to reopen the appeal in order to avoid the consequence of its own tactical decision.
The public interest in the finality of litigation is not to be overborne save in cases of real injustice and exceptional circumstances. In my view this is not such a case."
It should be noted that the Chancellor records that one of the requirements is that "there is no alternative effective remedy". The witness statement and written submissions in support of the application averred that that was the case. I confess to finding that averment surprising when Deanwater was taking its points in the assessment presumably it thought that its arguments (which have been advanced with vigour) were at least arguable, even if success would be a partial remedy only. Disclosure ought to have been made.
The decision appealed from
"19. It seems to me that it is simply not open to me, even if I were minded to, to reach different conclusions of fact. The most significant finding of fact is that the claim has been grossly exaggerated. It seems to me that finding is not nullified or affected in any way by the reasons of the learned Chancellor in refusing the defendant permission to reopen the appeal
20. On the basis that the claim was grossly exaggerated and that the course of the claim would probably have taken a different route if it had not been exaggerated, what should the court do on the assessment of the costs of the parties guilty of exaggeration?"
"24. That is relevant because the claimant in this case contends that the defendant should have pressed its case in relation to quantum insofar as a view was taken at the outset that the claim was misconceived or exaggerated, and should not have pressed for a trial of the preliminary issues which were only relevant to liability.
25. As I say, it seems to me that I am bound by the view of HHJ Toulmin that the defendant's course was reasonable, but in any event, it seems to me, having regard to the comments of Jonathan Parker LJ in Booth, that a lenient view should be taken of the defendant's approach in circumstances where the claimant is pursuing an exaggerated claim.
26. If the claimant had not exaggerated its claim, it seems to me likely that the parties would have been able to resolve the dispute between them, a dispute involving a very modest sum, without a trial of the preliminary issue, without an appeal to the Court of Appeal, and quite possibly without any proceedings at all. On that basis, applying paragraph 25 of Kennedy LJ's judgment in Booth, I have to disallow all those items which I consider to be unjustified. It seems to me that the unjustified items would, in the unusual circumstances of this case, be all of the costs of the preliminary issue and all of the costs in the Court of Appeal. None of those costs would have been incurred had the claim not been exaggerated.
27. In may appear on the face of it that in reaching that conclusion I am undermining the order of the Court of Appeal. I would say at the outset that that is not my intention. An unusual factor in this case is that the costs of the claim flow in the opposite way from the costs of the preliminary issue. Had it been the case that the claimant, whether by agreement or by order of the court, was entitled to its costs of the claim, the disallowance of the costs of the preliminary issue and the appeal flowing from it, on the basis that I have indicated, would not like quite so stark. However, because of the very careful consideration given by HHJ Toulmin, the claimant did not get its costs of the claim, so my disallowance of all the costs ordered by the Court of Appeal appeals all the more stark."
The basis of the appeal
The relevant legal provisions
"44.3(1) The court has a discretion as to
(a) where the costs are payable by one party to another;
(b) the amount of those costs; and
(c) when they are to be paid.
(2) If the court decides to make an order about costs
(a) the general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party; but
(b) the court may make a different order.
..
(4) In deciding what order (if any) to make about costs, the court must have regard to all the circumstances, including:
(a) the conduct of all the parties ."
"Factors to be taken into account in deciding the amount of costs
44.5(1) The court is to have regard to all the circumstances in deciding whether costs were:
(a) if it is assessing costs on a standard basis
(i) proportionately and reasonably incurred; or
(ii) were proportionate and reasonable in amount.
(2) In particular the court must give effect to any orders which have already been made.
(3) The Court must also have regard to
(a) the conduct of all the parties, including in particular
(i) conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings; and
(ii) the effort made, if any, before and during the proceedings in order to try to resolve the dispute;
(b) the amount or value of any money or property involved;
(c) the importance of the matter to all the parties."
The far-reaching nature of the defendant's case
The defendant's submissions
"33 What then is the position if a paying party has a finding of dishonesty of the winning party in his favour, and raises that factor as a ground for a reduction of the costs at the end of the trial? Clearly there is no problem if the judge's order makes "no order as to costs", but if the judge orders a reduction by say 20% without more, what would be the natural construction of that order? My view is that the natural construction of such an order, unless the contrary is expressly stated, is that the party guilty of dishonesty should not be entitled to say on assessment, "my costs incurred in seeking to make a dishonest case can be taken as reasonably incurred because the judge has made a reduction". If the dishonest party was entitled to succeed on such an argument, he will hardly suffer any penalty at all.
34. It seems to me that a consideration of a party's conduct should normally take place both at the stage when the judge is considering what order for costs he should make, and then during assessment. But the court will want to ensure that dishonesty is penalised but that the party is not placed in double jeopardy. Ultimately, the question is one of the proper construction of the order made by the judge "
" 19. There is a real distinction between (a) carrying out an assessment and deciding as part of the assessment to reduce the bill by a percentage and (b) deciding in advance of the assessment that the receiving party will only receive a percentage of the assessed costs. The figure that results from (b) represents less than 100% of the assessed costs In deciding in advance of the assessment that the receiving party will only receive a percentage of the assessed costs, the costs judge is not giving effect to an order that the party is entitled to his costs, to be assessed if not agreed.
20. Rule 44.3 gives a judge a jurisdiction to make a type (b) order. There is no doubt that at the end of a hearing, a judge may make an order of the kind sought from the district judge in the present case. In such a case, the judge is not purporting to vary an order if he disallows the successful party a proportion of his costs. He is making the order. He does not have the advantage accorded to the costs judge of having a detailed bill of costs. He cannot, therefore, carry out a detailed assessment. But he usually has the benefit, denied to the costs judge, of knowing a good deal about the case, and is often in a good position to form a view about the reasonableness of the parties' conduct. When carrying out a detailed assessment, the costs judge is not making an order for costs. His position is quite different from that of a judge exercising the jurisdiction given by rule 44.3.
23. It is, in fact, quite unnecessary to give the costs judge the jurisdiction for which Miss Ayling contends. The premise on which her argument is based is that, without such a power, the costs judge cannot arrive at a fair result in certain situations. Mr Roussak concedes (rightly) that in an appropriate case, the costs judge can disallow entire sections of a bill of costs. If the costs judge considers that the claimant acted unreasonably in refusing an offer to settle made before proceedings were issued, he is entitled to disallow all the costs post-issue on the footing that they were costs "unreasonably incurred": rule 44.4(1). Similarly, where he decides that a party was unreasonable to raise and pursue an issue, the costs judge is entitled to disallow the costs relating to that issue on the grounds that they were unreasonably incurred."
"24. She had to ask herself what costs (ie what items of expenditure) were reasonably incurred and what would be a reasonable amount to allow in respect of each of those items in order to establish quantum against the background that, at the end of the day, the son accepted was £2500 and repayment of benefit to the CRU.
25. In the context of this case that, to my mind, means that the district judge should have started by going through the bill of costs and ruling out all of those items she considered to be unjustified (for example, almost all of the medical fees, cost of retaining leading counsel, etc). That would, no doubt, have left some items which were plainly reasonable as items, even if questionable in amount, and other items where it would be difficult if not impossible to disentangle what was reasonable from what was unreasonable even having regard to the way in which rule 12(1) required that doubts be resolved. At that stage, but not any earlier stage, it would, in my judgment, be appropriate for the discreet judge to consider awarding a percentage of the sum claimed, but the percentage awarded would have to be such that at the end of the exercise the total amount awarded by way of costs could be regarded as reasonable having regard to the amount of damages obtained. In other words, the district judge must give herself an opportunity to look at the result in the round before concluding her arithmetic. In the present case her approach was wrong because in particular it deprived her of that opportunity and resulted in a conclusion that it was reasonable for the claimant to expend about £57,000 in order to recover £2,500 and to require the defendants to pay 60 per cent of the sum expended. That, in my judgment, must be nonsense.
26. I accept of course that the district judge must work within the ambit of the order made in relation to costs, whether it be a consent order or an order made after a contested hearing ."
"32 . In my judgment, a claimant who pursues an exaggerated and inflated claim for damages must expect to bear the consequences when his costs come to be assessed."
The appellant's submissions
"Mr Hames agreed that the taxing master could not properly refuse to carry out an order for taxation, in whole or in part, because he considered it to be wrong or ultra vires, and the same applies to a court on review. With that proposition, I agree." (per Megaw LJ)
Booth was to be distinguished, because in that case the court was not considering a previous, self-contained order. Mr Hutton relied on various cases which held that costs orders could not normally be varied or reviewed, even if they are interim costs orders. That is what is said to have happened here. I shall refer below to one of those cases; the others do not assist because they deal with actual applications to vary orders, which is not what sought here.
The resolution of this appeal
i) The modern practice is to be much more willing to make adverse orders for costs in interim matters as the case progresses rather than leaving them to be made later. The purpose of this is to fix liabilities and to allocate costs to the activities to which they relate. Summary assessments of those costs by the court making them, leading to immediate payment, are now common. It is consistent with this that such orders for assessment should be dealt with on a self-contained basis. Otherwise part of the purpose of the orders is lost.
ii) If the court wishes to make an order which is affected by the fate of the action, or by what subsequently transpires, then it has the weapons available to it in the form of orders for costs in the case, or costs reserved. If the Court of Appeal had wanted to make orders which catered for the fact that the claim might be lost (whether lost badly or not) it could have made one of those orders. But it did not, and indeed was not asked to (as I understand it).
iii) It would not be open to the defendant to run its present argument if the Court of Appeal had summarily assessed the costs. The ability to take the points that the defendant has taken ought not to depend on a slightly arbitrary matter such as that.
iv) My analysis is to some extent supported by the Costs Practice Direction paragraph 8.5 when it describes orders for "Costs" or "Costs in any event":
'The party in whose favour the order is made is entitled to the costs in respect of the part of the proceedings to which the order relates, whatever other costs orders are made in the proceedings.'
The thrust of this tends to support the claimant's case. I accept that this is not a strong point, because to some extent it does not address the point that has arisen in this case. The defendant's case is not that the prior order is affected by subsequent costs orders; it is that its assessment should be affected by what has subsequently transpired about the action and its genesis. But I still consider that the idea behind the practice direction is properly reflected by the "self-containment" for which Mr Hutton argues.
"An unusual factor in this case is that the costs of the claim follow in the opposite way to the costs of the preliminary issue"
I disagree. It is not unusual at all. It happens all the time that a party who is successful in the action, and who ends up getting his costs, has to pay some interim costs orders picked up along the way. If he says that they would not have happened if the unsuccessful action had not been brought, or if the unsuccessful defence had not been run, the answer is that they would not have happened if the interim application had not been fought (or defended, as the case may be) either, so it is right that the costs liability, in a real sense, should remain.
" The unusual feature of the case is that a successful defendant seeks, after final judgment in the action, to set aside and reverse on appeal an interlocutory order made before trial. I do not say that this is impossible in principle, but it is certainly a most unusual form of appeal in practice. In most cases interlocutory orders made in the course of proceedings cease to have any independent practical significance after the proceedings have been tried and final judgment entered. A court would not normally entertain an appeal after final judgment, attempting to reopen a costs order made inter partes at an interlocutory stage on the ground that the facts as found by the trial judge were different from what they were alleged to be at the date of the interlocutory order."
" 18. I have reached the conclusion that the appeal should be dismissed, though with some hesitation, as I do not regard the result as entirely fair or satisfactory.
19. I start from the position that this is in substance an attempt, after the trial is over and in the light of the results of the trial and the findings made at it, to re-litigate an interlocutory costs order. No court, whether on an application to set aside at first instance or by way of appeal, is receptive to such an application. It is bound to be a difficult exercise for the court to review the exercise of a discretion made at an early stage where not all the evidence is available or all the facts known or even all the issues identified. As for the parties, more time will be taken up and additional costs incurred.
21. Harman J had exercised his discretion on the costs of the hearing to set aside the freezing orders by taking into account all the circumstances of the applications. The court would not normally interfere with his discretion on costs unless it could be demonstrated that he had taken a wrong approach to the exercise of his discretion or had made an order which was plainly wrong.
22. This court is being asked to interfere with the exercise of his discretion on a very different basis. It is not being asked to look at all the circumstances in which he exercised his discretion or at his approach or at the result at the time of the order, but at one circumstance only: namely a comparison between (a) the affidavit evidence placed before Harman J. on the ex parte application for the freezing orders and the applications to set them aside on the issue of DEG obtaining knowledge about the profits made by Lasco and Mr Koshy; and (b) the findings of Rimer J. on that issue at the trial.
23 What this court is being asked to do is to cancel an order for costs, which was made in the exercise of the discretion by having regard to all the circumstances at that time, solely on the basis of what has transpired at the trial on an issue of disputed fact. in my judgment, it would be wrong and potentially unfair to DEG in these circumstances for the court to set aside the costs order made by Harman J. If the exercise of discretion is to be reviewed in circumstances of an alleged material non-disclosure with a view to making a different order for costs, it can only be fairly and satisfactorily done in this case by an application at first instance, in which the issues of fact are defined and on which evidence can be adduced by both sides about the circumstances in which the orders were made, including orders for costs."
"A power of the court under these Rules to make an order includes a power to vary or revoke the order."
"It seems to me that, for the High Court to revisit one of its earlier orders, the Applicant must either show some material change of circumstances or that the judge who made the earlier order was misled in some way, whether innocently or otherwise, as to the correct factual position before him. The latter type of case would include, for example, a case of material non-disclosure on an application for an injunction." (para 7)
Conclusions