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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 >> Lloyds PR Solicitors v The Lord Chancellor [2022] EWHC 1254 (SCCO) (17 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2022/1254.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1254 (SCCO) |
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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 :
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IN THE MATTER OF: REGINA |
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- v - |
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JAVAD ARABHALVAEI |
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Judgment on Appeal under Regulation 29 of the Criminal Legal Aid (Remuneration) Regulations 2013 |
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LLOYDS PR SOLICITORS |
Appellant |
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-and- |
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THE LORD CHANCELLOR |
Respondent |
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Crown Copyright ©
The appeal has been successful in part for the reasons set out below. I allow a further 96 pages of PPE. The appropriate additional payment should accordingly be made to the Applicant. There shall be no order as to the costs of the appeal.
Costs Judge Brown:
(2) For the purposes of this Schedule, the number of pages of prosecution evidence served on the court must be determined in accordance with sub-paragraphs (3) to (5).
(3) The number of pages of prosecution evidence includes all —
(a) witness statements.
(b) documentary and pictorial exhibits.
(c) records of interviews with the assisted person; and
(d) records of interviews with other Defendants,
which form part of the served prosecution documents or which are included in any notice of additional evidence.
(4) Subject to sub-paragraph (5), a document served by the prosecution in electronic form is included in the number of pages of prosecution evidence.
(5) A documentary or pictorial exhibit which —
(a) has been served by the prosecution in electronic form.
and
(b) has never existed in paper form,
is not included within the number of pages of prosecution evidence unless the appropriate officer decides that it would be appropriate to include it in the pages of prosecution evidence taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances."
"If an exhibit is served, but in electronic form and in circumstances which come within paragraph 1(5) of Schedule 2, the Determining Officer (or, on appeal, the Costs Judge) will have a discretion as to whether he or she considers it appropriate to include it in the PPE. As I have indicated above, the LAA's Crown Court Fee Guidance explains the factors which should be considered. This is an important and valuable control mechanism which ensures that public funds are not expended inappropriately.
If an exhibit is served in electronic form but the Determining Officer or Costs Judge considers it inappropriate to include it in the count of PPE, a claim for special preparation may be made by the solicitors in the limited circumstances defined by Paragraph 20 of Schedule 2".
"In relation to documentary or pictorial exhibits served in electronic form (i.e., those which may be the subject of the Determining Officer's discretion under paragraph 1(5) of the Schedule 2) the table indicates –
"The Determining Officer will take into account whether the document would have been printed by the prosecution and served in paper form prior to 1 April 2012. If so, then it will be counted as PPE. If the Determining Officer is unable to make that assessment, they will take into account 'any other relevant circumstances' such as the importance of the evidence to the case, the amount and the nature of the work that was required to be done, and by whom, and the extent to which the electronic evidence featured in the case against the Defendant." [my underlining]
"Raw phone data where a detailed schedule has been created by the prosecution which is served and relied on and is relevant to the Defendant's case.
Raw phone data if it is served without a schedule having been created by the prosecution, but the evidence nevertheless remains important to the prosecution case and is relevant to the Defendant's case, e.g., it can be shown that a careful analysis had to be carried out on the data to dispute the extent of the Defendant's involvement.
Raw phone data where the case is a conspiracy, and the electronic evidence relates to the Defendant and co-conspirators with whom the Defendant had direct contact.
"The Funding Order requires the Agency to consider whether it is appropriate to include evidence which has only ever existed electronically 'taking into account the nature of the document and any other relevant circumstances'. Had it been intended to limit those circumstances only to the issue of whether the evidence would previously have been served in paper format, the Funding Order could easily so have provided. It seems to me that the more obvious intention of the Funding Order is that documents which are served electronically and have never existed in paper form should be treated as pages of prosecution evidence if they require a similar degree of consideration to evidence served on paper. So, in a case where, for example, thousands of pages of raw telephone data have been served and the task of the Defence lawyers is simply to see whether their client's mobile phone number appears anywhere (a task more easily done by electronic search), it would be difficult to conclude that the pages should be treated as part of the page count. Where however the evidence served electronically is an important part of the prosecution case, it would be difficult to conclude that the pages should not be treated as part of the page count." [my underlining]
"In this particular case, the exercise of that discretion is not easy. On the one hand the prosecution chose to serve this evidence as an exhibit. The solicitors were under a professional obligation to consider it. Given the nature of the defence, that the phone was used by others, it is not difficult to conclude that the solicitors will have wished to look for photographs indicating that use. On the other hand, it is unlikely that the vast majority of those photographs will have been relevant to that task. It would seem unlikely that the solicitors will have looked in detail at each of the 20,608 images served on disc. Most will have required a glance or less.
In short, it is clear that the evidence on the phone was central to the case against Sereika and his assertion that others had used the phone was central to his defence. The solicitors were required to consider the phone evidence carefully. However, much of the evidence on the phone would not require consideration.
It seems to me that in these circumstances there is no reason why a Determining Officer (or costs judge on appeal) should not take a broad approach and conclude that as only a proportion of the images may be of real relevance to the case, only that proportion should be included in the page count. Inevitably that will be nothing more than "rough justice, in the sense of being compounded of much sensible approximation": per Russell LJ in In re Eastwood [1974] 3 WLR 454 at 458. But that is the nature of the assessment of costs".
"A line has to be drawn as to what evidence can be considered as PPE and what evidence we considered the subject of a special preparation claim. Each case depends on its own facts. The regulations do not state that every piece of electronically served evidence, whether relevant or not, should be remunerated as PPE. Quite the contrary, as electronically served exhibits can only be remunerated as PPE if the Determining Officer decides that it is appropriate to do so, taking into account the nature of the documentation and all the relevant circumstances."
Costs Judge Brown