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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 >> Healys LLP v Partridge & Anor [2019] EWHC 2471 (Ch) (23 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2471.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2471 (Ch), [2019] Costs LR 1515 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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HEALYS LLP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MICHAEL DENNIS PARTRIDGE (2) SUZETTE ANNE PARTRIDGE |
Defendants |
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William Edwards (instructed by Berryman Lace Mawer LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 10–11 September 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Kelyn Bacon QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court):
Introduction
i) I directed that Healys' claim should continue as if it had been commenced under CPR Part 8;ii) I discharged the freezing injunction, and in its place I granted a proprietary injunction, with permission to withdraw funds for certain specified purposes and subject to certain conditions;
iii) I made no order on the Partridges' application to withdraw further funds for medical or veterinary expenses.
Background
"Success in this case will be if/when your claim for damages is decided in your favour whether by a Court decision or an agreement to pay you damages and whether or not the amount of any award or payment is equal to the full value of your claim."
"Success in this case will be if/when your claim for damages against any one or more of Francis Evans QC and/or Charles Gomez & Co and/or Charles Gomez and/or Andrew McGuire is decided in your favour whether by a Court decision or an agreement to pay you damages and whether or not the amount of any award or payment is equal to the full value of your claim."
i) the Partridges made an urgent application seeking, in essence, an order that the freezing injunction should be construed and/or varied to permit reasonable expenditure on legal advice and representation in relation to the 2017 Claim, and expenditure on private medical treatment for Mrs Partridge and veterinary treatment for their dog;ii) Healys sought to amend its claim to include a claim to a lien over the proceeds of the settlement agreement with Mr Evans, and on that basis applied for a proprietary injunction for the detention and preservation of the settlement monies; in the alternative it applied for the original freezing order to be continued;
iii) the Partridges contended that the CFA was a contentious business agreement within the meaning of section 59 of the Solicitors Act 1974, and could therefore not properly have been brought as a Part 7 claim; they therefore sought an order that the claim should continue as if commenced as a Part 8 claim.
i) the Partridges' procedural application for continuation of the claim as a Part 8 claim;ii) the question of whether a proprietary injunction should be granted or the original freezing injunction continued;
iii) specific items of expenditure from the settlement monies sought by the Partridges.
The procedural application
Enforcing a contentious business agreement
"were … viewed with great jealousy by the Courts, because they were agreements between a man and his legal adviser as to terms of the latter's remuneration, and there was so great an opportunity for the exercise of undue influence, that the Courts were very slow to enforce such agreements where they were favourable to the solicitor unless they were satisfied that they were made under circumstances that precluded any suspicion of an improper attempt on the solicitor's part to benefit himself at his client's expense."
"(1) Subject to subsection (2), a solicitor may make an agreement in writing with his client as to his remuneration in respect of any contentious business done, or to be done, by him … providing that he shall be remunerated by a gross sum or by reference to an hourly rate, or by a salary, or otherwise, and whether at a higher or lower rate than that at which he would otherwise have been entitled to be remunerated."
"(b) any agreement by which a solicitor retained or employed to prosecute any action, suit or other contentious proceeding, stipulates for payment only in the event of success in that action, suit or proceeding".
"(1) No action shall be bought on any contentious business agreement, but on the application of any person who –
(a) is a party to the agreement or the representative of such a party; or
(b) is or is alleged to be liable to pay, or is or claims to be entitled to be paid, the costs due or alleged to be due in respect of the business to which the agreement relates,
the court may enforce or set aside the agreement and determine every question as to its validity or effect.
(2) On any application under subsection (1), the court –
(a) if it is of the opinion that the agreement is in all respects fair and reasonable, may enforce it;
(b) if it is of the opinion that the agreement is in any respect unfair or unreasonable, may set it aside and order the costs covered by it to be assessed as if it had never been made."
"A claim for an order under Part III of the [Solicitors Act 1974] must be made –
(a) by Part 8 claim form; or
(b) if the claim is made in existing proceedings, by application notice in accordance with Part 23."
"The agreement itself does not give a cause of action and before a solicitor can rely on it, he must apply to the court for leave to enforce the agreement. Equally, the client may apply to the court to set it aside. Both applications are made under CPR Part 8. The outcome will depend on whether or not the court is of the opinion that the agreement is fair and reasonable …"
Whether the CFA is a contentious business agreement
Conclusion on the procedural application
The proprietary injunction/freezing injunction applications
Proprietary injunction
Freezing injunction
Specific expenditure requests
Conclusion