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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 >> Blue Manchester Ltd v Howard Kennedy LLP [2024] EWHC 2823 (SCCO) (22 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2024/2823.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2823 (SCCO) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Blue Manchester Limited |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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Howard Kennedy LLP |
Defendant |
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Dan Stacey (instructed by Howard Kennedy LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 07/03/2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Nagalingam:
"..whether Section 70(3)(a) of the Solicitors Act 1974 is engaged in relation to [bills 1 to 15] and if it is whether special circumstances exist that require that provision to be disapplied".
Claim Form Numbering Original Bill Number Date of Bill 1 415819 29/01/2021 2 417072 26/02/2021 3 420387 30/04/2021 4 421306 27/05/2021 5 424942 29/07/2021 6 424096 26/07/2021 7 426607 26/08/2021 8 428702 29/09/2021 9 430902 28/10/2021 10 432630 29/11/2021 11 433481 20/12/2021 12 435274 28/01/2022 13 436935 25/02/2022 14 438475 30/03/2022 15 443586 30/06/2022
Background
Summary of the Claimant's case
Mr Wibberley's submissions
- How can a statute bill also purportedly not be a final bill;
- As a matter of contract, that's what the Defendant has permitted for and done;
- Even if the terms and conditions permit that, is that in fact what the invoices do?
The case law
"Slade J considered that "application of the principle explained in Bari v Rosen leads to a requirement that to constitute a statute bill it must contain all costs relating to a defined period" (paragraph 53 of the judgment). To my mind, however, that is to attribute to the words "complete self-contained bill of costs" a significance that they do not have. Bari v Rosen was not concerned with whether a statute bill had to extend to both profit costs and disbursements, and no such issue arose either in Davidsons v Jones-Fenleigh or Adams v Al Malik. The point being made in Davidsons v Jones-Fenleigh, echoes of which can be found in the later authorities, was essentially that, for a bill to be treated as a statute bill, it must be apparent that it is not merely seeking a payment on account but is intended to be complete and final as regards its subject matter. The cases do not appear to me to assist with whether a statute bill has to include everything (profit costs and disbursements) attributable to the period covered by the bill."
"11.1 The Client has the right to an assessment by the court of the amount of the fees, Success Fee and/or Disbursements which are payable by the Client under this Agreement, by making an application under section 70 of the Solicitors Act 1974. There are time limits for such an application, including the absolute right to assessment if the Client applies to the court within one month of delivery to the Client of the bill of costs, and a gradual reduction of the right the longer it is left thereafter, which Rawli[n]son Butler LLP will inform the client about if asked. The Client is, of course, welcome to seek advice from another law firm about this but would have to pay for such advice."
"22. I do not agree with the Master's reading of clauses 4.3 and 11.1 and his conclusion that the CFA permitted the Respondent firm to render monthly statute bills. In my judgment, clause 4.3 is neutral as to whether the 40% invoices were statute bills or not. The agreement to pay at the 40% rate is equally consistent with the Appellant making payments on account at that rate. I am satisfied, however, clause 11.1 gives a clear indication that the 40% invoices submitted by the Respondent were not statute bills. Clause 11.1 informed the Appellant that he had the right to challenge the bills rendered by the Respondent firm under s.70 Solicitors Act 1974. This was described as the "right to an assessment by the court of the amount of the fees, Success Fee and/or Disbursements which are payable by the Client under this Agreement."
"23. The Success Fee could only by payable in the event of success (i.e. at the conclusion of the case, whether or not the CFA had been brought to an end at an earlier point). Unless the three billable items referred to in this clause are read disjunctively, the right to challenge those items arose only at the end of the case. That would mean that the interim bills were not statute bills but requests for payment on account or (more likely in the circumstances) Chamberlain bills."
"28. 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 that the Appellant make payments on account under the express terms of the Client Care Letter."
"33. "… Here, the weight that might normally be attached to the fact that the 40% invoices were expressed to be "final", were submitted in precise sums, were to be paid immediately and were for defined work that had been carried out in the relevant period has to be assessed in the context of the CFA. It was obvious to the parties that, under the CFA, come what may, the Appellant was going to be liable to pay the Respondent firm's fees at the Discounted Rate. However, the nature of the CFA meant that sums paid in purported settlement of the 40% invoices were necessarily payments on account and the bills themselves Chamberlain bills. In my judgment, the behaviour of the parties cannot, in this case, alter the express agreement that they had reached in the CFA as to the status of the bills that were rendered."
"15. Mr Dunne described the requirements of an interim statute bill as requiring it to be a self-contained bill which is complete in respect of both the period which it covers and in its subject matter. The Court of Appeal decision of Richard John Slade (trading as Richard Slade and Company) v Boodia & Anor [2018] EWCA Civ 2667 clarified that an interim statute bill could relate simply to solicitors' charges or counsel's fees or disbursements without having to contain all three elements to the extent that they existed for a particular period. However, other than this, the sum claimed must be complete and not subject to any subsequent adjustment."
"17. The Draconian nature of the time periods in limiting a client's ability to obtain an assessment of a solicitor's statute bill has led the courts to require solicitors to "make it plain" to their clients if they intend each bill rendered to be a self-contained bill for a period and for which the time limit for challenge begins to run immediately. The alternative approach for solicitors is to render a series of requests for payments on account with a final statute bill provided at the end of the matter. The time for challenging the solicitors' fees would then only begin to run once the final invoice had been delivered."
"18. Mr Dunne relied specifically on the words of Fulford J (as he then was) at paragraph 48 in the case of Adams v Al-Malik [2003] EWHC 3232 (QB) where he said:"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…""
"Save that the percentages were different in Sprey, I cannot see that there is any difference between that case and this one in the nature of the arrangement between the solicitor and the client. Whatever percentage is charged as the case goes along, the balancing charge paid at the end will be treated, based on the authority of Sprey, as adjusting the earlier invoice in respect of the work done for a particular period and as such is inconsistent with a self-contained bill having been rendered."
"57. In arguing that none of the Defendant's invoices, as rendered to date, have been final the Claimant has put much emphasis upon the fact that they only represent a part of the Defendant's potential fees for the work done during the period specified by each invoice. Accordingly, on the Claimant's case, none of them have the finality that is an essential characteristic of an interim statutory bill.58. Mr Williams submits that where an agreement provides for payment A to be made on a specified date, but also for payment B to be made at a later date, depending upon outcome, then an invoice for payment A is nonetheless the final invoice for payment A.
59. The difficulty with that argument is that it goes directly against the concept of finality explained by Spencer J in Bari v Rosen and Simon Brown LJ in Abedi v Penningtons, as quoted above.
60. The test is not whether a given invoice is final for the charges it represents, but whether it incorporates a final charge for the work it represents. Bills may be described as final for the period they cover, but that amounts to the same thing: they are final and complete for any work performed during that period."
"It might be possible for a solicitor and client to agree some arrangement to the contrary. Assuming however that it is possible to limit the Claimant's statutory rights by agreement, then one would at the very least expect such an agreement to be in very clear terms. There is no such agreement in this case. The premise that the Claimant's statutory rights would be limited in respect of any future bills seems rather to represent an attempt by the Defendant to overcome some of the difficulties raised by the proposition that invoices representing only a part of the potential full charge for its work are nonetheless final."
"That aside, it is difficult to see how paragraph 6.4(a) could work. Paragraph 6.1 (as in the June 2016 Terms) provides that the Defendant's monthly invoices will cover all work undertaken during the relevant period. Paragraph 6.4 (a), on its face, provides for those monthly invoices to be final bills but at the same time not final, conferring upon the Defendant the right to render an unlimited number of purportedly final bills for the same work. This is the antithesis of completeness and finality, as they are understood for the purposes of identifying a statutory bill."
"118. My conclusion is that paragraph 6.4(a) of the May 2021 Terms lacks the necessary clarity to confer upon the Defendant's monthly invoices from 19 September 2021 the status of interim statutory bills."
"119. As a further point I refer back to Spencer J's confirmation, in Bari v Rosen, that it does not follow from the fact that a contract of retainer confers upon a solicitor the right to render interim statutory bills, that a given bill is in fact an interim statutory bill."
"120. It seems to me that the true position is that (as Mr Mallalieu suggests) the Defendant, from 19 September 2021, rendered interim non-statutory bills in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 6.4(b) of the May 2021 Terms, but omitted to label them as such. That conclusion appears to me to be consistent with the evidence of Mr Huntley to the effect that he had always understood the Defendant's monthly invoices to be "final". Under those circumstances it would not have occurred to him to consider whether paragraph 6.4(b) imposed upon the Defendant an obligation to identify its monthly invoices as "payment on account" invoices."
The Hearing Bundle
"The contents of this letter and our Terms of Business are subject to the attached Conditional Fee Agreement dated 4 May 2021 and should be read subject to that agreement which take precedence over the terms of this letter insofar as they differ."
"4.3 We will bill you at the discounted rates, together with any disbursements, on a monthly basis. The amounts billed in this way will be payable by you regardless of the outcome of the Arbitration."
"5.1 If you Win the Arbitration (as defined in paragraph 1 above), you will be liable for our fees at the normal rates (up to a maximum of the sum of our discounted rates and the Capped Balance), together with disbursements. We will invoice you for the balance of our normal rates (up to the Capped Balance over and above the discounted rates) which will be due for immediate payment."
"You have the right to an assessment by the court of the amount of the fees and/ or disbursements which are payable by you under this agreement, by making an application under section 70 of the Solicitors Act 1974. But there are time limits for that application, including an absolute right to assessment if you apply to the court within one month of delivery to you of the bill of costs, and a gradual reduction of the right the longer it is left thereafter, which we will inform you about if asked. You are of course welcome to seek advice from another law firm about this but would have to pay for that."
"Unless otherwise stated, each bill issued to you is a final bill covering the total charge for the work carried out within the stated period. Further, unless otherwise stated, each bill has the status of a statute bill which means that in the event of non-payment we are entitled to issue proceedings for recovery through the courts after the expiration of one month from the date of delivery of the bill. A statute bill also gives you certain rights to have the bill assessed by the court under the Solicitors Act 1974 if you consider that you have been incorrectly charged. The rights to have a bill assessed are however subject to time limits and lost if action is not taken by you promptly. You should note that your right to have a bill assessed is separate from your right to complain as set out in Section 31 of these terms of business. If the 'value' or 'importance' element is achieved only as a result of the completion or final settlement of the case, and has not been taken into account in earlier bills, we reserve the right to take it into account in our concluding bill. We may also include in a later bill any specific expenses or disbursements incurred in an earlier period but not previously billed."
"Unless otherwise stated, each of our bills has the status of a statute bill (but is not necessarily a final bill in the matter) which means that in the event of non-payment we are entitled to issue proceedings for recovery through the courts after the expiration of one month from the date of delivery of the bill."
Re Special circumstances:
"2.1.1 In respect of invoices numbered 415819, 417072, 420387 and 421306 dated 29 January 2021, 26 February 2021, 30 April 2021 and 27 May 2021, respectively, you were inadvertently overcharged in relation to our fees only in the sum of £40,250.54 plus VAT; and2.1.2 In respect of subsequent invoices, in relation to our fees only, you were undercharged by a total of £918.43."
Costs estimates
Mr Stacey's submissions:
- Is there an arrangement to deliver statute bills;
- Address the case law to demonstrate that the cases relied on by the Claimant are not on point;
- Deal with the conceptual point re CFA interim bills;
- Are the bills delivered in fact statute bills;
- If yes, do special circumstances arise.
"The basic principle is that a solicitor's retainer is normally an entire contract under which the solicitor is entitled to claim remuneration only when all the work has been completed or the retainer has been terminated. A solicitor is not entitled generally to any payment on account of his costs other than disbursements. However, a solicitor may contract with his client for the right to issue statute bills from time to time during the currency of the retainer. Such bills are known as "interim statute bills". They are nevertheless final bills in respect of the work they cover, in that there can be no subsequent adjustment in the light of the outcome of the business. They are complete self-contained bills of costs to date."
"We may at any time require you to pay us a reasonable sum on account to cover the likely cost of work to be done and specific expenses and disbursements which we expect to be incurred, plus VAT on those costs and other items. We will, where time permits, allow 14 days for payments on account to be made, but sometimes this may not be possible. Please send such monies to our client account detailed at paragraph 6."
"81. Mr Williams submits that although that judgment is widely cited as authority for the proposition that it is not possible for a solicitor acting under a Conditional Fee Agreement to render an interim statutory bill, Nicklin J's judgment did not go that far. His findings were based upon his conclusion that the terms of the CFA did not permit the delivery of interim statutory bills."
"The contents of this letter and our Terms of Business are subject to the attached Conditional Fee Agreement dated 4 May 2021 and should be read subject to that agreement which take precedence over the terms of this letter insofar as they differ."
CFA
"5.1 If you Win the Arbitration (as defined in paragraph 1 above), you will be liable for our fees at the normal rates (up to a maximum of the sum of our discounted rates and the Capped Balance), together with disbursements. We will invoice you for the balance of our normal rates (up to the Capped Balance over and above the discounted rates) which will be due for immediate payment."
The case law
"25. It was also at that point that the Appellant's right of assessment arose under clause 11.1. This is also consistent with my construction of the CFA as a whole. At the heart of an assessment is whether the sum charged by the solicitors to the client is reasonable. The charge for work done at 40% of the normal rates might well be reasonable, but at 100% not reasonable. A client would not know until the end of the claim (or earlier termination) at which rate he was being charged. On Mr Marven's construction of the CFA, the Appellant progressively lost the right to challenge the bills as the claim went on."
"106. Paragraph 6.4(a) of the May 2021 Terms provides that "generally" the Defendant's monthly invoices will be interim statutory bills and that they should be taken to be interim statutory bills unless stated otherwise. Paragraph 6.4(b) provides, as an alternative, interim "payment on account" invoices, to be identified as such. Paragraph 6.4(d) offers a partial explanation of the time limits appropriate to applications for the assessment of statutory bills.107. Paragraph 6.4(b) makes specific reference to the delivery of "payment on account" invoices for charges rendered under CFAs or in contingency fee cases. Mr Williams submits that this is an entirely neutral clause which deals generally with payments on account, and that there is nothing in it to suggest that it is intended to have particular application to arrangements such as the June 2016 Retainer."
"110. That aside, it is difficult to see how paragraph 6.4(a) could work. Paragraph 6.1 (as in the June 2016 Terms) provides that the Defendant's monthly invoices will cover all work undertaken during the relevant period. Paragraph 6.4 (a), on its face, provides for those monthly invoices to be final bills but at the same time not final, conferring upon the Defendant the right to render an unlimited number of purportedly final bills for the same work. This is the antithesis of completeness and finality, as they are understood for the purposes of identifying a statutory bill."
Are these interim statute bills?
Special Circumstances
Estimates
"27. There is also an issue with the extent to which HK's fees have exceeded, by some margin, the initial estimate that was provided to BML. HK prepared, in/around November 2020, a budget for the Arbitration which is at pages 32-33 of CC1. The Court will see that this was a comprehensive budget which covered experts' fees, counsels' fees, HK's fees and a sum for unknown contingencies and totalled of £909,357.20 exclusive of VAT. However, as can be seen from the breakdown at page 34 of exhibit CC1, the fees in fact billed by HK to BML under the invoices covered under this Part 8 Claim total £1,586,008.51 exclusive VAT. This figure does not take into account invoices delivered before January 2021 and it can be seen from the costs award at page 10 of exhibit CC1 that the total costs claimed by BML (and therefore incurred with HK) in the Arbitration were in fact over £2.3m."
"28. In the May 2020 terms of business (at DB1 page 29 ) at clause 4, HK stated "We aim to give you the best possible costs information, both at the outset and when appropriate as the matter progresses, about the likely overall cost of the work we are doing for you." I do not consider that HK complied with this provision."
"29. I also understand that HK was subject to the following provision of the Solicitors' Code of Conduct:
"You ensure that clients receive the best possible information about how their matter will be priced and, both at the time of engagement and when appropriate as the matter progresses, about the likely overall cost of the matter and any cost incurred.""
"30. I do not consider that BML was provided with information about the costs of this matter as the case developed so that informed choices could be taken. I also do not consider that appropriate updates were provided about the likely overall costs of the matter."
"As at November 2020, we therefore had not appreciated the full complexity of the case, considering the number and nature of issues raised, and the evidence deployed in support of them by Hilton. Furthermore, the November 2020 Estimate was based on certain provisions and assumptions which turned out not to apply, due to the Claimant's instructions to us. For example, it was assumed that the documents in the case would run to no more than 3000 pages. We also underestimated the time which would be required to be spent by counsel. However, upon receipt and review of the Memorial, it became clear that to ensure that the case was sufficiently resourced, due to the complex issues and sheer volume of documents, and to ensure that simple or voluminous work was not being done at higher rates, we would require three barristers. As such, later in the proceedings, and on the instructions of the claimant, we engaged a third barrister, in order to have counsel available at a range of fee rates to do different levels and types of work."
"As the matter progressed, and we confirmed the issues that the Claimant would want to raise in its defence to the claim and in its counter claim, the complexity of the matter increased. To illustrate this complexity, it is worth noting that the trial bundle for the arbitration consisted of double-sided volumes from A-Q with many of the sub-volumes being over 20 lever-arch files. Without manually going through all of the volumes, which would be disproportionate exercise, I anticipate that the bundles comprised of at least 20,000 pages. To give some examples of what we did which went beyond the anticipated work included in my original estimate (which work was done on the Claimant's instructions and with their understanding that this would cause an increase in fees): …"
"Probably the most important of these discussions occurred on 25 March 2021 when I had a call with Mr John Christodoulou and Mr Christou in which we had a discussion about costs. I explained to Mr Christodoulou and Mr Christou that the fees incurred to date were in the region of £750,000, of which £360,000 was outstanding for unpaid bills. I also informed them that the fees "to complete the case" would be "something like" £1,100,000 (a total of over £1.8 million). At that point, we had recently, on 12 March 2021, submitted the Claimant's first Memorial in the arbitration. The Memorial was accompanied by factual evidence, including the 120-page witness statement of Ms Brown, and two expert reports. The Memorial itself was 123 pages long and which, in addition to responding to the Claimant's claim for approximately £20 million, also made counterclaims valued at approximately £17 million."
Mr Wibberley's response:
Special circumstances
Errors
The absence of a balancing payment
Decision
Bills 1 to 15
Agreement to raise interim statute bills
"We will send you bills (at the Discounted Rates set out in the Conditional Fee Agreement) on a monthly basis. We will send you bills for any additional fees which become due under the Conditional Fee Agreement when they become due.We may bill you at any time for disbursements or specific expenses incurred already, or shortly to be incurred.
The status of our bills is explained in paragraph 5 of our Terms of Business."
"You have the right to an assessment by the court of the amount of the fees and/ or disbursements which are payable by you under this agreement, by making an application under section 70 of the Solicitors Act 1974. But there are time limits for that application, including an absolute right to assessment if you apply to the court within one month of delivery to you of the bill of costs, and a gradual reduction of the right the longer it is left thereafter, which we will inform you about if asked. You are of course welcome to seek advice from another law firm about this but would have to pay for that."
Status of the bills
"Unless otherwise stated, each of our bills has the status of a statute bill (but is not necessarily a final bill in the matter)…"
Ability to raise statute bills in a discounted CFA setting
"82. I agree, but at paragraphs 25 and 40 of his judgment Nicklin J highlighted the difficulties of reconciling the necessary qualities of completeness and finality in an interim statutory bill, with the fact that under a CFA, a solicitor's charges are not finalised until its conclusion..:"At the heart of an assessment is whether the sum charged by the solicitors to the client is reasonable. The charge for work done at 40% of the normal rates might well be reasonable, but at 100% not reasonable. A client would not know until the end of the claim… at which rate he was being charged…"
Special circumstances:
Overcharging
Estimates
Next steps