BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Pritchard Englefield (a firm) & Anor v Steinberg [2003] EWHC 9010 (Costs) (27 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2003/9010.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 9010 (Costs) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
SCCO Ref: 0209606 |
SUPREME COURTS COST OFFICE
Clifford Inn Fetter Lane London EC4A 1DQ |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) PRITCHARD ENGLEFIELD (A FIRM) (2) MICHAEL LESLIE COHN |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
|
|
JONATHAN ROGER STEINBERG |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Ian Torrance (a partner in Messrs Bernard Oberman & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing date : 13 February 2003
____________________
ON APPEAL FROM COSTS OFFICER
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Master Rogers
THE BACKGROUND
"The Claimants do pay to the Defendant one third of his costs of this application, such costs, unless agreed, to be the subject of a detailed assessment."
THE DECISION OF THE COSTS OFFICER
THE APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL OUT OF TIME
THE APPEAL
A LITIGANT IN PERSON'S ENTITLEMENT TO COSTS
"18. (1) Subject to the provisions of this rule, on any taxation of the costs of a litigant in person there may be allowed such costs as would have been allowed if the work and disbursements to which the costs relate had been done or made by a solicitor on the litigant's behalf together with any payments reasonably made by him for legal advice relating to the conduct of or the issues raised by the proceedings.(2) The amount allowed in respect of any item shall be such sum as the taxing officer thinks fit but not exceeding, except in the case of a disbursement, two-thirds of the sum which in the opinion of the taxing officer would have been allowed in respect of that item if the litigant had been represented by a solicitor.
(3) Where it appears to the taxing office that the litigant has not suffered any pecuniary loss in doing any item of work to which the costs relate, he shall be allowed in respect of the time reasonably spent by him on that item not more than £9.25 per hour.
(4) A litigant who is allowed costs in respect of attending court to conduct his case shall not be entitled to a witness allowance in addition.
(5) Nothing in Order 6, rule 2(1)(b), or in rule 17(3) of, or Appendix 3 to, this Order shall apply to the costs of a litigant in person.
(6) For the purposes of this rule a litigant in person does not include a litigant who is a practising solicitor."
"(1) This rule applies where the court orders (whether by summary assessment or detailed assessment) that the costs of a litigant in person are to be paid by any other person.
(2) The costs allowed under this rule must not exceed, except in the case of a disbursement two-thirds of the amount which would have been allowed if the litigant in person had been represented by a legal representative.
(3) Costs allowed to the litigant in person shall be –
a. such costs which would have been allowed if the work had been done or the disbursements made by a legal representative on the litigant in person's behalf;
b. the payments reasonably made by him for legal services relating to the conduct of the proceedings; and
c. the costs of obtaining expert assistance in connection with assessing the claim for costs.
(The costs practice direction deals with who may be an expert for the purpose of paragraph 3(c).)
(4) Subject to paragraph (2), the amount of costs to be allowed to the litigant in person for any item of work to which the costs relate shall, if he fails to prove financial loss, be an amount in respect of the time spent reasonably doing the work at the rate specified in the costs practice direction.
(5) A litigant who is allowed costs for attending at court to conduct his case is not entitled to a witness allowance in respect of such attendance in addition to those costs.
(6) For the purposes of this rule, a litigant in person includes –
d. a company or other corporation which is acting without a legal representative; and
e. a barrister, solicitor, solicitor's employee or other authorised litigator (as defined in the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 who is acting for himself"
"48.6 (3) The litigant in person shall be allowed –
(a) costs for the same categories of –
(i) work; and
(ii) disbursements,
which would have been allowed if the work had been done or the disbursements had been made by a legal representative on the litigant in person's behalf;
(b) the payments reasonably made by him for legal services relating to the conduct of the proceeding; and
(c) the costs of obtaining expert assistance in assessing the costs claim.
(4) The amount of costs to be allowed to the litigant in person for any item of work claimed shall be –
(a) where the litigant can prove financial loss, the amount that he can prove he has lost for time reasonably spent on doing the work; or
(b) where the litigant cannot prove financial loss, an amount for the time reasonably spent on doing the work at the rate set out in the practice direction."
A "PRACTISING" BARRISTER AND A "PRACTISING" SOLICITOR
"(2) At all material times, Mr Stockinger was working as a Company/Commercial Lawyer in the City of London. He was admitted as a solicitor in England and Wales in 1990 and is legally qualified in New Zealand, Victoria, Australia, and New York. Although he held practising certificates in overseas jurisdictions for the entire duration of the litigation his practising certificate from the Law Society is dated 8 May 1998."
"201 For the purposes of this Code:
(a) a barrister practises as a barrister if he supplies legal services and in connection with the supply of such services:
a. he holds himself out or allows himself to be held out as a barrister; or
b. he exercises a right which he has by reason of being a barrister.
(b) any reference to the supply of legal services includes an offer to supply such services.
202 Subject to the provisions of this Code a barrister may practise as a barrister provided that:
a. he has complied with any applicable training requirements imposed by the Consolidated Regulations which were in force at the date of his Call to the Bar;
b. he has complied with any applicable requirements of the Continuing Professional Development Regulations (reproduced in Annex C);
c. he has a current practising certificate issued by the Bar Council in accordance with the Practising Certificate Regulations (reproduced in Annex D);
d. he has provided in writing to the Bar Council details of the current address(es) with telephone number(s) of the chambers or office from which he supplies legal services and (if he is an employed barrister) the name address telephone number and nature of the business of his employer;
e. Not used.
f. A barrister who practises as a barrister in independent practice may not also practise as an employed barrister except as permitted by paragraph 806."
"The signature of the bill of costs under the rules is effectively the certificate by an officer of the court that the receiving party's solicitors are not seeking to recover in relation to any item more than they have agreed to charge their client under a contentious business agreement.The court can (and should unless there is evidence to the contrary) assume that his signature on the bill of costs shows that the indemnity principle has not been offended."
MALKINSON v TRIM
"19. At first sight, therefore, the effect of RSC Order 62 rule 18(6) – which excluded a litigant in person who was a practising solicitor from the ambit of that rule – has been reversed. Solicitors are now to be treated in the same way as other litigants in person. In particular, the costs to be allowed to a solicitor litigant in person are to be subject to the two thirds restriction. Attention is drawn to the change by a comment in Note 48.6.1 to Civil Procedure (Spring 2002):"The previous exemption for a solicitor acting on his own behalf has been removed …"But it is accepted that CPR 48.6(6)(b) must be read subject to section 52.5 of the Practice Direction about Costs (set out at 48PD.3 on page 1002 of Civil Procedure). The paragraph is in these terms:
"Attention is drawn to rule 48.6(6)(b). A solicitor who, instead of acting for himself, is represented in the proceedings by his firm or by himself in his firm name, is not, for the purposes of the Civil Procedure Rules, a litigant in person."20. That direction can, I think, apply only to a practising solicitor; in that it is difficult to see how a solicitor who is not in practice could represent himself in his firm name, or could be represented in proceedings by his firm. The effect of the direction, therefore, is that the position of a practising solicitor who chooses to represent himself in his firm name, or (where in partnership) to be represented by his firm remains unaltered by the provisions of CPR 48.6. his costs are allowed (or not, as the case may be) by virtue of, and in accordance with, the principle established in the London Scottish Benefit Society case.21. This, of course, is a case in which the respondent, a practising solicitor, was represented by his firm. It would follow, if CPR 48.6(6)(b) is to be read subject to section 52.5 of the Practice Direction, that the costs judge was right to decide that the principle in the London Scottish Benefit Society case was applicable. But it is submitted on behalf of the appellant that, once it is accepted that the respondent is not a litigant in person for the purposes of the Civil Procedure Rules, that principle becomes irrelevant. As it is put, at paragraph 4 of the revised skeleton argument prepared for this appeal:
"Once it is accepted that the [respondent] was not a litigant in person then the authority in [the London Scottish Benefit Society case] has no application. A successful party, who is represented by a firm of solicitors, can only recover costs to the extent that he has incurred or is otherwise liable for the costs. A partner to a solicitor's firm enjoys no special status and is not an exception to this rule."22. That submission, as it seems to me, is founded on a misunderstanding of the reasoning in the London Scottish Benefit Society case. As I have sought to point out earlier in this judgment the basis of the principle that a solicitor who acts for himself in litigation is entitled to compensation, by way of costs, for his time and trouble is a recognition that he (in common with any other litigant) ought to be indemnified against the expense to which (on the hypothesis that he has been successful in the litigation) he has been unjustly put. The special position of a solicitor is that he does not need to employ others to provide professional skill and knowledge in the conduct of litigation. He can provide that skill and knowledge himself. Further, there is no difficulty in measuring what it costs him to do so; and there is a potential saving in costs if he is not discouraged from doing so. One effect of CPR 48.6(6)(b), read in conjunction with sections 52.5 of the Practice Direction, is that there is now more clearly recognised a distinction between the solicitor litigant who provides, in connection with his own litigation, professional skill and knowledge in the course of his practice as a solicitor – that is to say, who "is represented by himself in his firm name" – and the solicitor litigant who provides skill and knowledge in what might be described as "his own time" – that is to say outside the course of his practice as a solicitor and (typically) outside the office. The latter is treated as a litigant in person for the purposes of CPR 48.6; and so is subject to the restrictions imposed by that rule, including the two-thirds restriction imposed by sub-rule (2). The former is not. Nor is there any reason, consistent with the need to provide an indemnity, why he should be. Further, there is no reason, consistent with the need to provide an indemnity, why he should not recover the cost of providing professional skill and knowledge through employees of his practice."
KHAN v LORD CHANCELLOR
"Whether Mr Khan himself is entitled to payment under the section 16 order depends in part upon whether a barrister litigant acting on his own behalf in the proceedings to which a costs order in his favour relates is in the same position as a solicitor. In the case of a solicitor his entitlement and the principle to which it is anchored could not be clearer and, as I have said, was recently re-stated by Chadwick LJ in Malkinson v Trim. I have already cited the relevant passage in the judgment – it is worth repeating:"the basis of the principle that a solicitor who acts for himself in litigation is entitled to compensation, by way of costs, for his time and trouble is a recognition that he (in common with any other litigant) ought to be indemnified against the expense to which (on the hypothesis that he has been successful in the litigation) he has been unjustly put. The special position of a solicitor is that he does not need to employ others to provide professional skill and knowledge in the conduct of litigation. He can provide that skill and knowledge himself. Further, there is no difficulty in measuring what it costs him to do so; and there is a potential saving in costs if he is not discouraged from doing so."
That principle can be traced back to Chorley. In Boswell at p517 Leggatt J said:
"It reliance on [Chorley] counsel for [the barristers] has only to add the submission that the costs recoverable where one counsel instructs another must be the same as where one solicitor instructs another. In my judgment this submission is correct. Indisputably an appellant solicitor or counsel can conduct his own appeal. An attempt to equate such a professional person with a litigant in person is unhelpful because … such an appellant brings to bear professional skill and labour the value of which can as readily be assessed as if they were performed for him by another lawyer."
In my judgment the true basis of the decision in Boswell is that contended for in the submissions advanced on behalf of Mr Khan namely Leggatt J in Boswell extended the indemnity concept to the skill and labour of a barrister.
It is submitted in the alternative that even if the true ratio of Boswell does not incorporate the "Chorley" principle, that principle can properly be extended to a barrister in Mr Khan's position. It is rightly accepted that the fact of expenditure by him of his skill and labour in his own defence does not change the capacity in which either he appears in court or performs the preparatory work. Throughout he is and remains a defendant/appellant. Nonetheless, so it is submitted, his expenditure, subject to proof and reasonableness, is to be indemnified in accordance with the principle. If the true ratio of Boswell is narrower than that contended for on behalf of Mr Khan then in my judgment this alternative submission is sound. In short, in my judgment no provision in the Code of Conduct is an answer to Mr Khan's claim nor should his position be equated to that of a lay litigant in person.
Given then that in my judgment Mr Khan's circumstances fall four square within the Chorley principle (as explained in Malkinson v Trim) does that principle enable him to be indemnified having regard to the provisions of section 16(6) and regulation 7? In my judgment it plainly does. Under section 16(6) he is entitled to reasonably sufficient compensation for "any expenses properly incurred by him in the proceedings". The relevant head of expense (and "expenses" includes "expense" – Interpretation Act 1978, S6), is the work he performed – namely the professional skill and labour expended by him on his own defence to the allegation of criminal conduct and thereafter, having been convicted, in lawful pursuit of his various statutory rights relating to the challenging of the conviction. It is difficult to see how in principle this head of expense was not "properly incurred" because had the work being performed by another barrister on behalf of Mr Khan it is not suggested, not could it be, that such a barrister would not have been entitled to remuneration for it and that such remuneration would properly have been an item in a bill of costs submitted for taxation in pursuance of an order under section 16. The fact that here the necessary work involving the exercise of professional skill was performed by Mr Khan himself does not remove this work from the ambit of compensation provided for in the words "any expenses properly incurred by him in the proceedings". The argument that such work fall outside the ambit was advanced and rejected in ex p Robinson ...ante).
Finally, there is the question of policy. Is there any policy objection to extending the principle to a barrister in Mr Khan's position? On his behalf it is argued that no such objection can be advanced because of the potential saving of costs to "central funds". That claim is sound but perhaps is not a complete answer to the question. There is a further point which has the smack of a policy objection namely that there is something unsavoury about a barrister being remunerated at public expense for defending himself against an allegation of criminal conduct. To characterise Mr Khan's circumstances in that way in my judgment borders upon misrepresentation. First and foremost Mr Khan was an accused person charged with a criminal offence to which he had pleaded not guilty and in respect of which he had been acquitted. He happened to be a barrister with considerable and very relevant professional experience and skills. Providing he observed the provisions of the Code of Conduct of the Bar, which he did, I can see no basis for any objection on public policy grounds if he applied that skill and experience in his own case and, in the event of his acquittal, if he is remunerated for it within the ambit of compensation permitted by section 16. Almost certainly in such circumstances there will be a saving for the public purse. It should not be overlooked that under Article 6(3)(c) "Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the following minimum rights … (c) to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing …" Here Mr Khan defended himself through legal assistance of his own choosing which included a role for himself. That was a combination of choice to which he was entitled as a Convention Right. It was argued on behalf of Mr Khan that to deny him payment in relation to his role would be a violation of the right. This was not by any means a principal plank of Mr Khan's case. Although I am not impressed by the argument, given the conclusion I have reached, it is unnecessary for me to decide that particular point."
"My conclusion is that the arguments advanced on behalf of Mr Khan must succeed. What I am unable to do, (nor I am sure could a costs judge on the current information), is to assess Mr Khan's costs in accordance with the Act and the regulations. His appeal is allowed because I have upheld the principle for which he argued. The next step is to apply that principle by formulating a bill of costs which takes account of this judgment and the earlier cases. Clearly the work he performed falls into two general classes – work prior to a hearing and work during and for the purposes of the hearing. Bearing in mind regulation 7(2) and 7(3) Mr Khan will have to formulate his claims with very great care. If he decides to claim for work he performed during a hearing (the mere fact of his attendance is obviously insufficient to found a claim) then he may well find that the costs judge will require confirmation from leading counsel as to the need for the work for the purpose of the hearing and, more particularly, that it was work which ordinarily would have been carried out by junior counsel rather than by an intelligent lay client. I strongly suspect that the more fertile area so far on Mr Khan's claims are concerned is his preparatory work. For the reason just given it would be inappropriate for me merely to remit the claims to the costs judge for re-assessment. Mr Khan has leave therefore to begin again."
THE DEFENDANT'S LACK OF EVIDENCE OF FINANCIAL LOSS
"The second review: Miss Mainwaring's pecuniary lossThat brings me to the other point on the second review. On 27 July 1992 Miss Mainwaring commenced proceedings for taxation of her costs under the master's order of 20 September 1991 mentioned at the beginning of this judgment. Her bill amounted to £87,250 (plus VAT), reached by charging Miss Mainwaring's time at a basic rate of £75 an hour, uplifted to £125 in respect of research and inquiries, and to £200 an hour in respect of preparation and advocacy. The bill claimed not less than 30 hours for travelling and waiting, not less than 200 hours for research and inquiries, and not less than 300 hours for preparation and advocacy. Disbursements and overheads were included within this charge.
On 15 December 1992 the master directed Miss Mainwaring to lodge a chronology and a detailed breakdown of her bill, together with affidavit evidence of her pecuniary loss. She complied with this direction on 10 May 1993, but under protest at least so far as the affidavit was concerned. On 9 December 1994 Lipkin Gorman took out a summons for an order that Miss Mainwaring should provide further evidence of pecuniary loss. That summons was dismissed on the basis that her evidence was what she regarded as sufficient for her purposes. Miss Mainwaring has taken the view, both before the master and on this review, that the burden of proof is on Lipkin Gorman, and that in the absence of any affidavit evidence in answer from Lipkin Gorman the master was not merely entitled but was bound to conclude that she has suffered pecuniary loss in relation to all, or at any rate the bulk of the items of work set out in her detailed breakdown (which covers the period from September 1989 to June 1992, together with one further isolated item, her affidavit sworn at the master's direction in May 1993).
I do not think that Miss Mainwaring's contention as to the burden of proof can be right, either as a matter of common sense or as a matter of legal principle. In principle, the 1975 Act and the rules of court (Ord 62, r 18) made pursuant to it are intended to remedy the grievance (which was a real grievance) that a successful litigant in person could recover no more than out-of-pocket expenses even if he or she had suffered significant loss of earnings as a result of the litigation. But (subject to the minimum rate fixed by r 18(3)) there is no reason why the indemnity principle should not apply here too. Whether a litigant in person has suffered significant loss of earnings is a matter peculiarly within his or her own knowledge. Sometimes the position will be obvious and each side will accept it without the need for any affidavit evidence: at one extreme, for instance, a self-employed tradesman in a small but profitable way of business, who has more customers than he can cope with and can fill every working hour to advantage; at the other extreme, a retired civil servant with an index-linked pension who finds the conduct of litigation a more interesting pastime than bowls or crossword puzzles.
To my mind the formula 'where it appears' in r 18(3) (which appears elsewhere in Ord 62, for instance r 28(1) and is indeed a common expression in statutes and statutory instruments) says nothing, or almost nothing, about the burden of proof. It would be most unusual for the paying party to have to undertake the burden of proving a negative on a matter peculiarly within the receiving party's knowledge, and probably outside the paying party's own knowledge. In any case in informal—and not wholly adversarial—proceedings such as a taxation the burden of proof is something that can shift very readily. Miss Mainwaring had been appearing in person before the master intermittently over a period of many months. He must therefore have observed, because it is obvious, that she is intelligent, articulate, well-educated and under pensionable age; but he may not have known much more than that. He may have gleaned a little more about her background from the documents lodged with him, but that information would have been random and not directed to the issue in hand. Once it was known that Lipkin Gorman was challenging her bill, it was sensible, and well within the master's powers, for him to direct her to make an affidavit of pecuniary loss in support of a bill which, with VAT, amounted to well over £100,000. The fact that the bill charged VAT (but seems to have left blank Miss Mainwaring's VAT registration number) was by itself a matter of some interest.
I must therefore consider Miss Mainwaring's affidavit dated 7 May 1993, which she made under protest. A good deal of the affidavit is concerned with criticisms of the current treatment of litigants in person. Those criticisms may have force, and so far as they do it is to be hoped that changes following on the Woolf report will ameliorate the position; but the criticisms do not really help to establish that the deponent has suffered pecuniary loss. What Miss Mainwaring deposed to as regards her pecuniary loss amounted to this.
(a) The litigation started in March 1988 and she had devoted herself to it full-time 'ever since' [she made the affidavit in May 1993].
(b) She had to spend more time reading documents and authorities than if the issues had been identified in good time by the professionals on the other side.
(c) She worked for Encyclopaedia Britannica International Ltd for eight years until 1986, earning over £100,000 in the last year.
(d) She and Mr Lisle jointly obtained judgment (on the inquiry as to damages on Goldtech's undertaking) for over $2·8m for lost earnings for a period of little more than a year, ending in May 1989. This was presumably on an unopposed inquiry held when it was obvious that Goldtech could not pay damages.
(e) On 2 October 1991 Hoffmann J expressed regret that she should be devoting her whole life to litigation 'when you could, I am sure, have a much more rewarding existence in other ways'.
I accept Miss Mainwaring's evidence on points (b) to (e) above, but point (a) calls for some further examination. Miss Mainwaring's bill of costs covered a period of 34 months, from September 1989 to June 1992 (together with the isolated item of her most recent affidavit). During that period the only times of intense activity, so far as the taxation is concerned, were August 1990 (when she spent an unspecified number of hours on her ninth affidavit) and March to July 1991 (culminating in a three-day hearing before the master). Almost all the substantive first instance hearings were over by the end of 1989. The two hearings in the Court of Appeal were at the end of 1990 and at the beginning of 1991. I understood Miss Mainwaring to make some reference during the hearing to other litigation involving quite different parties (and it is mentioned in the master's reasons), but I have no clear picture of the history or significance of any other litigation.
I have to say that I find Miss Mainwaring's affidavit provides only the most tenuous evidence of what (if any) pecuniary loss she has suffered, either in lost salary or in lost profits of some self-employed activity, between September 1989 and June 1992. Among the matters which Miss Mainwaring does not cover in the affidavit are her training and qualifications; what work she did for Encyclopaedia Britannica; why she stopped working for that company; what paid employment she might have taken, but for the litigation, and at what remuneration, and what job offers she may have received and refused; alternatively what trade or profession she might have followed, with what likely customer or client base and with what prospects of profits; and finally, the significance of the blank VAT number on the first page of her detailed breakdown of costs.
The Chief Taxing Master discussed Miss Mainwaring's affidavit and concluded:
'Even if I accept, as I do, that Ms Mainwaring is a witness of truth, and that she is capable of earning a substantial salary, I am still without any evidence of her actual loss. The fact that she elected to devote herself full-time to this litigation is not sufficient. Ms Mainwaring states that it would have been a waste of everybody's time for her to apply for jobs which she had no intention of taking up, but I do not have any evidence of what employment was available to her during the relevant period. The employment market is constantly changing, and I cannot infer from the fact that Ms Mainwaring is employable that she would in fact have been employed had this litigation not taken place. Mr Sheridan complains that Ms Mainwaring does not explain what she does or how she supports herself. Mr Sheridan also points out that r 18 in its present form refers to pecuniary loss in doing any item of work. In other words, it would be necessary to look at each item of work and to see whether a pecuniary loss had been incurred in respect of it. In short, I have quite simply insufficient information to enable me to reach the conclusion that Ms Mainwaring has suffered pecuniary loss. She has gone part way to showing that she is in a situation where a pecuniary loss might arise, but has failed to produce evidence of what that pecuniary loss might be. In those circumstances I have no alternative but to allow the rate prescribed by the rule in respect of the work done by Mrs Mainwaring.'
I find myself in complete agreement with the master's conclusion on this point."
"The claimants invite the court firstly to determine that the defendant is a litigant in person and that the rate applicable to the bill should be no more than £9.25 per hour. In the alternative, in the event that the defendant provides written evidence of financial loss which the court finds acceptable, the claimants will submit the hourly rate is excessive and offer £275 per hour being the rate which is claimed for the claimants in their own schedule of costs for the application where work should properly have been carried out by a grade A fee earner, with reduced rates for elements of work which should have been delegated to lower (grade D) fee earners of £100 per hour.For the avoidance of doubt the offers of £275 and £100 per hour are only effective if the court is satisfied that the defendant's costs should paid on the basis of proven financial loss."
CONCLUSION