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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 >> Walsh v Greystone Financial Services Ltd [2019] EWHC 2573 (Ch) (31 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2573.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2573 (Ch), [2019] Costs LR 1583 |
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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 :
BETWEEN:
____________________
VINCENT JAMES WALSH | Claimant | |
v | ||
GREYSTONE FINANCIAL SERVICES LIMITED | Defendant |
MR GUPTA (instructed by Coyle White Devine) appeared on behalf of Coyle White Devine.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE NUGEE:
"In all the circumstances, it is now abundantly clear that Coyle White Devine cannot continue to act for you in relation to the claim against Greystone Financial Services Limited or any other matters. Accordingly, and with regret, please treat this letter as notice of termination of your retainer with CWD. We are required to provide you with reasonable notice of termination which, in the circumstances, I consider to be seven days. Accordingly, your retainer will terminate on 20 June 2019. That said and as previously advised, we do not intend to carry out any further work on your matters pending termination. For completeness, I have enclosed a notice of change which I would invite you to complete, sign, and return by 4.00 p.m. on 14 June 2019 notwithstanding the termination period. To this end and where we are unable to carry out any further work, it is not appropriate for CWD to remain on the court record. If you have alternative legal representatives such as Crofts Solicitors, they can file and serve a notice of change on all of the parties. For the avoidance of doubt, should I not receive a notice of change by 4.00 p.m. on 14 June 2019, I will be obliged to make a formal application to be removed from the court record as acting for you the costs of which will be sought from you. I hope that this will not be necessary."
"Please find enclosed by way of service notice of change of legal representative... Our client's position in respect of your termination of retainer is fully reserved."
"As you have terminated the retainer with our client in a matter where there is a continuing litigation, the usual position would be for you to hand over the papers to us in return for a suitable undertaking to hold the same until resolution of the issue of costs. This is in order to avoid interference with the course of justice and to prevent prejudice to our client. We invite you to adopt that course of action."
"These circumstances leave me no alternative but to apply to the court for my firm to be removed from the record as solicitors 'and' my firm can no longer act for 'the personal defendants'."
Then they did write to each of the defendants on 3 July in which they said:
"We cannot continue to act either for you or any of the other defendants in regard to this action unless our position in respect of costs is secured."
Then they said they would issue a summons to come off the record.
"It seems to me that they [that is the former solicitors] have unequivocally intimated, both by taking out the summons on June 25 and then in their further letter of July 3 that they were not prepared to go on unless some arrangement was made as to their costs. That seems to me to be a clear case of the solicitor discharging himself."
That was despite the fact that they remained on the record.
"I agree that each case must depend upon its own facts but, in my judgment, Oliver J's view of the inference to be drawn from the facts in the present case was clearly right.
Mr Bueno said that all his clients were doing was to fire 'warning shots' across the defendants' 'bow' but after earlier warnings, they took up a categorical position by their letter of June 25 and by issuing and serving a summons forthwith and that under a rule which applies where a solicitor has ceased to act and, as Oliver J pointed out, they emphasised that position in their letters of July 3.
For my part, I do not think that they can complain and say, 'We did not discharge ourselves; you discharged us' because the defendants not being willing to meet the bill took the appellants at their word and instructed other solicitors and therefore I see nothing in the first suggested ground of distinction."
"(1) The jurisdiction of the High Court to make orders for the delivery by a solicitor of a bill of costs, and for the delivery up of, or otherwise in relation to, any documents in his possession, custody or power, is hereby declared to extend to cases in which no business has been done by him in the High Court."
"Where a client discharges a solicitor, the court has no power to call upon the solicitor to hand over documents because the solicitor's lien to retain those documents endures. However, where the solicitor discharges themselves in the course of an action, their possessory lien over the documents becomes subject to the practice of the court under which the court will ordinarily order the documents to be handed over to the new solicitor against an undertaking by the new solicitor to preserve the former solicitor's lien, though in exceptional circumstances, the court may be justified in imposing terms."
"Effect of change of solicitors
In the event of a change of solicitors in the course of an action, the former solicitor's retaining lien is not taken away but his rights in respect of it may be modified according to whether he discharges himself or is discharged by the client. If he is discharged by the client otherwise than for misconduct he cannot, so long as his costs are unpaid, be compelled to produce or hand over the papers even in a divorce case. If, on the other hand, he discharges himself, he may be ordered to hand over the papers to the new solicitor on the new solicitor's undertaking to hold them without prejudice to his lien, to return them intact after the action is over and to allow the former solicitor access to them in the meantime and if necessary to prosecute the proceedings in an active manner."
"...for the principles which apply in a case where the solicitors' retainer is terminated in the course of continuing litigation ... the normal response of the court, when faced with a solicitor who has discharged himself in the course of litigation, even where the solicitor is entitled to discharge himself, is to order the solicitor to hand over the client's papers to the client's new solicitors, subject to an undertaking from the new solicitors to preserve the lien of the original solicitor. This course is usually adopted 'in order to save the client's litigation from catastrophe'."
"But if the appellants [that is the solicitors] had reasonable cause to discharge themselves, and did so, they are, nevertheless, for the reasons given in Heslop v Metcalfe, to which I have already referred and which Goff LJ has read, bound to hand over the papers of the clients to their new solicitors against the undertaking of the new solicitors to preserve the lien, for what it is worth, unless there are exceptional circumstances which justify some modification of the usual practice."
"Undoubtedly, that doctrine may expose a solicitor to very great inconvenience and hardship if, after embarking in a cause, he finds that he cannot get the necessary funds wherewith to carry it on. But, on the other hand, extreme hardship might arise to a client if - to take the case which is not uncommon in the smaller practice in the country - a solicitor who finds a poor man having a good claim and having but a small sum of money at his command may go on until that fund is exhausted and then refusing to proceed further may hang up the cause by withholding the papers in his hands. That would be great grievance and means of oppression to a poor client who, with the clearest right in the world, might still be without the means of employing another solicitor. The rule of the court must be adapted to every case that may occur, and be calculated to protect suitors against such conduct... I then take the law as laid down by Lord Eldon, and, adopting that law, must hold that Mr Blunt is not to be permitted to impose upon the plaintiff a necessity for carrying on his cause in an expensive, inconvenient, and disadvantageous manner. I think the principle should be, that the solicitor claiming the lien, should have every security not inconsistent with the progress of the cause."
"Where the solicitor has himself discharged his retainer, the court then will normally make a mandatory order obliging the original solicitor to hand over the client's papers to a new solicitor against an undertaking by the new solicitor to preserve the lien of the original solicitor."
"For example, if the papers are valueless after the litigation has ended and if the client accepts that he is indebted to the original solicitor for an agreed sum and has no counterclaim, or accepts that the solicitor has admittedly paid out reasonable and proper disbursements, which must be repaid, the court might make an order which would only compel the original solicitor to hand over the papers to a new solicitor providing that in the first place the client pays to the original solicitor a sum, fixed by the court, representing the whole or part of the monies admittedly due from the client to the original solicitor. Much would depend on the nature of the case and the stage which the litigation had reached, the conduct of the solicitor and the client respectively, and the balance of hardship which might result from the order the court is asked to make."
Transcribed by Opus 2 International Limited Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers 5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737 [email protected] |