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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Utting v City College Norwich [2020] EWHC B20 (Costs) (22 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2020/B20.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC B20 (Costs) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
B e f o r e :
____________________
SOPHIE UTTING |
Claimant |
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- and |
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CITY COLLEGE NORWICH |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr. Thornsby, In-house Counsel at DWF Solicitors, for the Defendant
Hearing date: 13 May 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Master Brown:
In any case where a costs management order has been made, when assessing costs on the standard basis, the court will
(a) have regard to the receiving party's last approved or agreed budgeted costs for each phase of the proceedings;
(b) not depart from such approved or agreed budgeted costs unless satisfied that there is good reason to do so;
"..once a good reason has been established, and the court is given the right to depart from the budget, it will assess the costs of that phase in the usual way, and, in that respect, it is left to the good sense and expertise of the costs judge to undertake that assessment in an appropriate and insofar as possible practical way, whether line-by-line or in a more broad-brush way. The manner of undertaking that task is entirely a matter for the judge dealing with the assessment. It seems to me that the consequence of finding a good reason under 3.18(b) is that it opens this route to enable the costs judge to take this approach within the detailed assessment. The wording of 3.18(b) does not on its face dictate what course should then be taken by the learned costs judge, which, as I have already said, is a matter for the judge, him or herself, to determine in all the circumstances.
once the court has a right to depart from the budget, neither the receiving party nor the paying party needs to establish a further good reason within CPR 3.18 if they wish to persuade the costs judge to make a further or different adjustment to the bill. I take this from the wording of CPR 3.18(b) and the terms and reasoning of the judgment in Mr Justice Jacob in Yirenki. In my judgment this consequence applies whether it is sought to depart from the budget upwards, or, as in this case, further downwards, because the finding of a good reason opens the gateway for departure from the budget, and the rules do not stipulate that the good reason must determine the nature of the route to be followed thereafter.
"Insofar as HHJ Dight at paragraph 36 of his judgment in Salmon has concluded that if a party has not spent the totality of the budgeted figure for a phase that amounts to a good reason per se and the door is therefore open for the paying party to make further submissions on the appropriate figure for the phase, I respectfully disagree. If that approach was correct every case would go to Detailed Assessment and there would be a perverse incentive to a prospective receiving party to overspend and marginally exceed every phase in order to avoid a Detailed Assessment."
"...Where there is a proposed departure from budget - be it upwards or downwards - the court on a detailed assessment is empowered to sanction such a departure if it is satisfied that there is good reason for doing so. That of course is a significant fetter on the court having an unrestricted discretion: it is deliberately designed to be so. Costs judges should therefore be expected not to adopt a lax or over-indulgent approach to the need to find "good reason": if only because to do so would tend to subvert one of the principal purposes of costs budgeting and thence the overriding objective. Moreover, while the context and the wording of CPR 3.18 (b) is different from that of CPR 3.9 relating to relief from sanctions, the robustness and relative rigour of approach to be expected in that context (see Denton v TH White Limited [2014] EWCA Civ 906, [2014] 1 WLR 3926) can properly find at least some degree of reflection in the present context. Nevertheless, all that said, the existence of the "good reason" provision gives a valuable and important safeguard in order to prevent a real risk of injustice; and, as I see it, it goes a considerable way to meeting Mr Hutton's doomladen predictions of detailed assessments becoming mere rubber stamps of CMOs and of injustice for paying parties if the approach is to be that adopted in this present case. As to what will constitute "good reason" in any given case I think it much better not to seek to proffer any further, necessarily generalised, guidance or examples. The matter can safely be left to the individual appraisal and evaluation of costs judges by reference to the circumstances of each individual case."
"Were that not the case there will be a highly undesirable risk that arguments raised at a the cost management hearing could be reopened on assessment on the base the budget was too generous The Costs Judge could be invited to look at the constituent elements of the receiving party's Precedent H. Those constituent elements in Precedent H were only ever intended as a guide to the cost managing judge to show how the party arrived at the figure contended for. It would also lead to a reopening of the issue of proportionality that had already been determined in the budgeted figure subject only to the final proportionality crosscheck on assessment. Allowing such an approach would further undermine the budgeting process. It certainly could not be defended as exercising a safeguard against a real risk of injustice. In fact quite the reverse as it would lead to a risk of double jeopardy of issues already decided that the cost management hearing."
"[Counsel for the appellant] sought, however, to rely on the judgment of Moore-Bick LJ (with whom Aikens LJ and Black LJ agreed) in the case of Henry v Newsgroup Newspapers Limited [2013] EWCA Civ 19, [2013] 2 Costs LR 334." That was a case concerning the then Pilot Scheme on Costs Management. It was said (at paragraph 16) to be implicit in that scheme that the court should not normally allow costs in an amount which exceeded what has been budgeted in each section. However, Moore- Bick LJ was simply not concerned in that case with a position where the recoverable costs were said to be less than the budgeted amount (a point on which there had been no argument). It is true that later on in that paragraph Moore-Bick LJ, in dealing with costs reasonably and proportionately incurred, said:
"Thus, if costs incurred in respect of any stage fall short of the budget, to award no more than has been incurred does not involve a departure from the budget; it simply means that the budget was more generous than was necessary."
But those remarks were plainly obiter; and in any event it is most doubtful if they were directed at the situation which arises in the present case: they may well simply relate to costs actually incurred and the consequent application of the indemnity principle (which of course would be capable of being a good reason for departing from the approved budget)."