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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 >> IBM United Kingdom Pensions Trust Ltd v Metcalfe & Ors [2012] EWHC 125 (Ch) (01 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/125.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 125 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IBM UNITED KINGDOM PENSIONS TRUST LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MR GEORGE METCALFE (2) IBM UNITED KINGDOM HOLDINGS LIMITED (3) IBM UNITED KINGDOM LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Michael Tennet QC and Nicolas Stallworthy QC (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the 1st Defendant
Andrew Simmonds QC and Joseph Goldsmith (instructed by Dickinson Dees LLP ) for the 2nd & 3rd Defendants
Hearing date: 21 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
The Beddoe application
a. Under Option 1 Mr Metcalfe would commence proceedings raising the Claims against IBM, joining the Trustee as a defendant and seeking representation orders to similar effect as those I have mentioned. Mr Metcalfe would have a costs indemnity out of the assets of the Scheme. The Trustee would be authorised to participate in the proceedings as a neutral party with its own costs indemnity.b. Under Option 2, the Trustees would itself bring and prosecute the Claims against IBM with a costs indemnity out of the fund. Nothing was said about participation by Mr Metcalfe.
c. Under Option 3, the Trustee would administer the Scheme under its apparent provisions ignoring the Claims unless and until they were established in separate proceedings brought by a member or members against IBM at their own expense.
a. Option 2 was first raised by the Trustee. This was on 15 September 2010.b. It was proposed as a possibility in the claim form in the Beddoe proceedings.
c. Mr Metcalfe indicated that the proposal was acceptable to him, subject to certain conditions which I will mention in a moment, in his witness statement dated 22 November 2010.
d. IBM, as a result of subsequent correspondence in and after December 2010, accepted that Option 2 was the way forward, agreeing to the proposals.
e. The first open letter is dated 18 February 2011 from Dickinson Dees (IBM's solicitors) to DLA Piper UK LLP (Mr Metcalfe's solicitors). In that letter, Dickinson Dees confirmed that IBM would be prepared to consent to the making of an order on the basis that the Trustee acted as Claimant in relation to the substantive issue and to agree to the case being heard together with the Project Waltz proceedings, with Mr Metcalfe being joined as a defendant. Nothing was said in the letter about his being appointed as a representative defendant. The only thing which was said about costs was that it was a further condition of IBM's consent that "agreement can be reached between the parties as to the counsel representation employed by each party, and particularly as it impacts upon the costs position". No such agreement was made about that at the time nor has any been made since then.
f. The reply to that letter came on 7 March 2011. I do not need to go into it in detail. It is enough to note that DLA Piper said, in relation to counsel representation at the trial, that a sensible and proportionate approach would be adopted but that it was not possible at that stage to say what the result would be. Doubt was expressed about whether not have leading counsel attend the trial would result in costs saving and concern was expressed about IBM "even attempting to dictate the level of representation for the representative beneficiary. Be that as it may, there is no desire on the part of the representative beneficiary to increase costs unnecessarily".
g. The final concord is to be found in the order of Newey J dated 12 April 2011 in the Beddoe proceedings ("the Consent Order").
a. He was to have a "watching brief" (his words in his witness statement) in order to assure himself that the interests of the members were being properly represented in what became the C Plan proceedings "which would include the opportunity to review the statements of case and evidence serviced…. to file evidence myself… and to attend the trial through my legal representatives".b. He was to have an appropriate prospective costs order, for his costs of fulfilling the watching brief.
c. Either the claims should be raised in the Project Waltz proceedings or they should be heard immediately before those proceedings before the same Judge.
The Consent Order
"(iii) [Mr Metcalfe's] costs so payable shall (in the absence of any further order) be limited to his costs of:
(a) monitoring the Part 7 Proceedings with a view to sharing information with and assisting the representative beneficiary Defendants in the related proceedings [the Project Waltz proceedings]… insofar as the Claims are relevant to those related proceedings; and/or
(b) supplementing (but not duplicating) the Trustee's case in the Part 7 Proceedings;"
The present application and the events leading up to it
Costs capping
"(a) monitoring [the C Plan proceedings] with a view to sharing information with and assisting the representative beneficiary Defendants in the related proceedings [the Project Waltz proceedings]… insofar as the Claims are relevant to those related proceedings; and/or(b) supplementing (but not duplicating) the Trustee's case in the [C Plan proceedings]"
In that context "the Claims" are the rectification and related claims which have now been raised by the Trustee in the C Plan proceedings.
a. First, if Mr Metcalfe is represented by a junior junior, cost will be incurred in him or her getting on top of the C Plan proceedings and, to a greater or lesser extent, the Project Waltz proceedings. As to the latter, the junior would not know how to fulfil the monitoring and assistance function unless he knew quite a bit about those proceedings. Mr Tennet and Mr Stallworthy are already on top of that. The junior's preparation is all the more important if he or she does not have the support of a solicitor already versed in the two actions.b. Secondly, if only a junior is present, both Mr Tennet and Mr Stallworthy, as part of the legal team representing the PW Defendants, will need to know what has been happening in the C Plan proceedings. They will need to read the daily transcripts of the hearing and they will probably need to be briefed also by the junior about what has been happening.
c. Thirdly, Mr Metcalfe would, I suggest, feel justifiably aggrieved if his main function in relation to the C Plan proceedings, had to be carried out by a very junior barrister with little experience of major pensions litigation who would be very likely to be unable actually to intervene in the hearing before me even if he or she appreciated the significance of some point which was being raised. Further, if an occasion arose for a witness to be cross-examined on behalf of Mr Metcalfe, it must be right that a more senior person should be there to do it.