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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 >> Masters v Charles Fussell & Co LLP [2021] EWHC B1 (Costs) (11 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2021/B1.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC B1 (Costs) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Zulfikar Masters |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Charles Fussell & Co LLP |
Defendant |
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Anthony Jones (instructed by Charles Fussell & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 15 October 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Rowley:
(a) The status of the bills referred to in the claim form, that is whether they are
(i) interim statute bills
(ii) one or more in a series of "on account bills" as per Chamberlain v Boodle and King, or
(iii) none of those
(b) In light of the court's finding on issue (a)
(i) whether or not and on what terms the claimant may be entitled to assessment and
(ii) if they are required, whether or not special circumstances exist so as to justify an assessment, or
(iii) if the bills are neither interim statute bills nor a Chamberlain series, whether an order for delivery of a statute bill ought to be made.
The first retainer
"Bills and paying us
We propose to send monthly invoices for our fees and disbursements incurred on this matter. We will address our invoices to you.
We will, upon request, provide you at any stage with an up-to-date statement of the costs incurred and our estimate of the likely costs up to any particular stage of the matter.
Payment of our invoices should be made in full within 14 days of receipt.
Payment on account of costs
In accordance with our usual practice we should be grateful if you would provide us with a payment on account of our future costs, including disbursements, of £10,000, and we will require that amount to be maintained in our client account for the duration of the engagement. Depending upon how the matter develops, you may need to increase the payment on account to a higher figure. We will discuss this with you if it becomes necessary."
"Bills and payment
Our bills will be rendered in arrears and will include all charges and out-of-pocket expenses incurred up to the date indicated on the bill. In all cases, bills will clearly specify the period to which they relate and what services they cover.
Timing of payment We request that our bills are paid no later than 14 days after the date they are issued. If in any particular case you anticipate payment will be delayed, please discuss this with us at the earliest opportunity.
Outstanding bills If you have not agreed with us any alternative arrangements and any bill owed to us remains outstanding for more than 14 days after it is issued, the firm reserves the right to charge interest on the outstanding amount (including VAT, disbursements and other expenses, at the statutory rate applicable to judgment debts from time to time in force.)
"If you are unhappy with our bills, you have certain rights.
(ii) In contentious matters, you have a right, subject to certain criteria, to apply for taxation of our bill by the Court. This is governed by section 70 of the Solicitors Act 1974.
We will be happy to explain these rights further to you, if you wish. If you would like to discuss any of our bills, you should in the first instance contact Charles Fussell."
"We operate a procedure to help address any issues which you would like to raise. To discuss any aspect of a matter we are handling or have handled on your behalf, please feel free to contact Charles Fussell at any time. If for any reason the firm is unable to resolve a problem, a complaints and redress scheme is provided by the Solicitors Regulation Authority, which regulates the firm.
You have certain rights if you disagree with any bill from the firm, provided that it does not relate to a matter in litigation. You have the right to ask the firm, within one month of receiving a bill, for a certificate from the Solicitors Regulation Authority stating that in its opinion the fees are fair and reasonable and, if not, what amount would be fair and reasonable. You also have the right to have the bill assessed by the courts, whether matters are in litigation or not."
The second retainer
3.2 We have agreed to discount our Basic Charges by 25% to £318.75 per hour for our Senior Partner, £281.25 per hour for other partners, £225 per hour for associates with 2 to 4 years' PQE, £150 per hour for associates with up to 2 years' PQE, £131.25 per hour for trainee solicitors and members of ILEX and £93.75 per hour for paralegals (the "Discounted Charges"). Again, VAT may be applicable in each case. These are the charges, together with disbursements, that we will invoice to you an ongoing basis throughout acting for you in this matter and which you are liable to pay irrespective of the outcome of the Claim.
4. DISBURSEMENTS
We will invoice you on a monthly basis for all disbursements (including, but not limited to, barristers' fees, Court fees, experts' fees, any fees payable to a mediator or other ADR organisation, courier and copying charges) which we incur in acting for you in the Claim and you are liable to pay all our disbursements on receipt of our invoice for same irrespective of the outcome of the Claim.
5. SUCCESS FEE
5.1 In the event that you are successful in your defence of the Claim, which occurs in the event you win a trial and at least some of your costs are ordered to be paid by Porter or Porter withdraws or otherwise discontinues its claim and agrees to pay at least some of your costs, we will charge you and you will be liable to pay a success fee, which will be an amount equivalent to the amount by which our Basic Charges have been discounted plus 25% of our Basic Charges (the "Success Fee"). This will amount to £212.50 per hour for our Senior Partner, £187.50 per hour for other partners, £150 per hour for associates with 2 to 4 years' PQE, £100 per hour for associates with up to 2 years' PQE, £100 per hour for trainee solicitors and members of ILEX and £62.50 per hour for paralegals, plus VAT (if applicable) in each case, in addition to our Discounted Charges.
8.1 You acknowledge that, prior to signing this Agreement, we have verbally explained to you the effect of this Agreement and in particular the following:
8.1.2 the circumstances in which you may seek assessment of our charges and disbursements and the procedure for doing so;
The third retainer
"I understand from Charles that you and he have agreed that there is no longer any prospect of any real victory or recovering costs from Porter and so we should no longer apply the 25% CFA discount and revert to our usual rates on this case. Our usual rates have in fact increased quite substantially since we entered into the CFA in 2013 my rate (for example) is now £425 per hour rather than £375 but, in light of your long-standing relationship with the firm, we have decided to hold those rates at the levels given in the CFA for now."
"The Claimant further relies on the fact that my firm acted jointly for him and for his wife in the final set of proceedings but we did not send her a separate engagement letter. This was an oversight on my firm's part: we promised her an engagement letter but overlooked dealing with it in circumstances where the Claimant and his wife had been subject to a proprietary freezing injunction which required urgent attention."
The law
"In particular the party must know what rights are being negotiated and dispensed with in the sense that the solicitor must make it plain to the client that the purpose of sending the bill at that time is that it is to be treated as a complete self-contained bill of costs to date "
Submissions on the first retainer
Decision on the first retainer
"That causes difficulty when you have litigation which is ongoing. The client is called upon by these provisions to challenge an interim bill within one month, if he wants to do it as of right; and if he does not challenge it within 12 months then he has to show "special circumstances" to challenge his solicitors bill. That puts him in an impossible position. Either he challenges his solicitors' bill the very solicitor who is now acting for him and continues using that solicitor at the same time; or he has to change solicitor, all in the middle of litigation when he is facing another enemy."
Submissions on the second retainer
Decision on the second retainer
"8. The CFA provided that the Appellant would be liable to pay the Respondent at discounted rates (40% of the normal rates) if he lost the claim. If he won, he was liable to pay the Respondent at normal rates plus a success fee of 50%.
9. The Respondent billed the Appellant monthly, at the full rate during the conventional retainer, and at the 40% discounted rate during the period covered by the CFA ("the 40% invoices"). In October 2015, the Respondent billed the Appellant the balance between the normal rate and the discounted rate ("the balancing invoice") and, in January 2016, the success fee. The Appellant paid all of the bills apart from (a) the last four of the 40% invoices, (b) the balancing invoice and (c) the success fee."
"A statute bill cannot subsequently be amended without the consent of the parties or an order of the court, which will be granted only in exceptional circumstances: Polak v Marchioness of Winchester [1956] 1 WLR 819. Statute bills are final bills in respect of the work that they cover, in that there can be no subsequent adjustment "in light of the outcome of the business". They are complete self-contained bills of costs to date: Bari v Rosen [2012] EWHC 1782 (QB)."
"Finally, this construction of the CFA is consistent with the principle that a statute bill cannot subsequently be amended (see paragraph 5 above). The effect of the clauses I have identified was that the 40% invoices were liable to be later changed. What was ultimately to be paid for the work that was the subject of any 40% invoice would not be known until the Appellant won or lost the claim or terminated the CFA. Mr Marven submits that this construction would mean that the Respondent was not entitled to be paid. If by that he means that the Respondent lacked an enforceable right to payment of its fees (under s.69 Solicitors Act 1974), then that is right. But the consequences of that principle are not as harsh as they might appear. It does not mean that the Respondent was not entitled to some form of payment. The Respondent could always insist the Appellant made payments on account under the express terms of the Client Care Letter."
The third retainer
Chamberlain bill(s)?
"The next point in the case is whether the bills were four separate bills or whether they were one. If they were four separate bills, the client would have to demand taxation of each within a month of receipt. If they were one bill, divided into separate parts, as long as he demands taxation within a month of the final account, then he has a right to taxation."
"When the bills were delivered, they were delivered each time as part of the running account "account rendered" being carried on in each to the next. I agree with the judge on this point too that this should be regarded as one bill although divided into parts. As this is one bill, and the client demanded taxation within the month, he is entitled to have the whole of it taxed."
"If the Court should find that there were not interim statute bills but interim bills, I submit that the Court should construe all such bills as a "Chamberlain" series which became complete when the last such bill was rendered. That bill covered work in December 2017 and was rendered on 8 January 2018 As the client account ledger shows, that bill was paid in full on 21 March 2018."
The terms of the Claimant's entitlement to assessment
"Morgan Walker argue that the fact that there are large sums involved is not a special circumstance and rely for that proposition on the decision of Mr John Martin QC in Winchester Commodities Group Ltd v RD Black and Co [2000] BCC 310. However, in that case Mr Martin held that the stark level of the fees in issue was "at first sight a good point"; but that for seven particular reasons on the facts of that case the point turned out to be of little substance. That case is not authority for the proposition that the amount of fees in issue is irrelevant to the question whether there are special circumstances. In Re Robinson (1867 68) LR 3 Ex 4 the Court of Exchequer held that a large charge calling for explanation was a special circumstance. In my judgment Master Simons was entitled to take it into account."