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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Glaser & Anor v Atay [2023] EWHC 2539 (KB) (12 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/2539.html Cite as: [2024] PNLR 8, [2024] 1 WLR 1733, [2023] Costs LR 1847, [2023] EWHC 2539 (KB), [2024] WLR 1733, [2023] WLR(D) 417 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
BRISTOL APPEAL CENTRE
ON APPEAL FROM WINCHESTER COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Berkley
(Claim No: G74YJ072)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) MICHAEL GLASER KC (2) VICTORIA MILLER |
Claimants/Respondents |
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- and - |
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KATHARINE JANE ATAY |
Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
for the Claimants/Respondents
Jacqueline Perry KC and Alexander Bunzl (instructed by Direct Access)
for the Defendant/Appellant
Hearing date: 25 July 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
(i) the extent, if any, to which the provisions of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 ("the 2015 Act") operate so as to preclude the claimants from relying upon one of the central terms of their agreement relating to payment; and
(ii) the consequences which are to follow in the event that the 2015 Act so operates.
THE BACKGROUND
"I thought it would be helpful to set out the work that I will carry out for you and the fees that I will charge for this work.
The work I will carry out
The work you are instructing me to carry out is:
Preparation of and representation at the PTR hearing on the 10 July 2020, and the 10 [day] Final hearing commencing from the 21 September 2020, listed at the Central Family Court.
For the avoidance of doubt, the fee covers the above mentioned work and therefore if the hearing concludes early or is adjourned to another date or does not go ahead for any reason beyond our control, then the full fee is still payable and another fee will be payable for any adjourned hearing.
If subsequent work is needed on this matter, there will be another letter of agreement between us.
Because I carry out all my work personally and cannot predict what other professional responsibilities I may have in the future, I cannot at this stage confirm that I will be able to accept instructions for all subsequent work that may be required by your case.
My fees for this work
My fee for accepting the instruction to appear as an advocate on the occasions described above will be £90,000 plus VAT. You and I agree that I will not attend the hearing unless you have paid the fee in advance.
Total fees for my work as described above (exc. VAT): £90,000
VAT: £18,000
Total amount due: £108,000
The first payment of £12,550 is due by 6 July 2020
The second payment of £12,550 is due by the 10 July 2020
The third payment of £79,200 is due by the 31 August 2020
The final payment of £3,700 and any other fees due in respect of additional work is due 28 days after receiving the final order
Unless otherwise agreed failure to send payments on the aforementioned dates will mean that I will not be able to represent you at the hearings.
Any additional work will be billed at my hourly rate of £500 plus VAT."
[Emphasis not added]
THE BAR STANDARDS BOARD TEMPLATE
"13. The First Claimant's clerks sent the Defendant a contract (i.e., the First Contract) which follows the Bar Standards Board's:
"Model Client Care Letter (NoIntermediary)" (https://www.barstandardsboard.org.uk/resources/resource-library/public-access-model-client-care-letter-no-intermediary doc.html).
As permitted by the BSB Handbook, and following the model wording proposed by the BSB, the First Claimant and the Defendant agreed a fixed fee for the work the Defendant wished the First Claimant to undertake at the time it required to be undertaken. The practice of "rolling up" the refreshers into a fixed fee arises from the fact that, pursuant to the BSB Handbook, barristers are not permitted to hold client money. When they work for solicitors, of course the solicitor can hold the money required on account and release it as and when necessary; but that option is not open to barristers working on direct access. In order to have certainty regarding payment therefore, a fixed fee is sought which covers the work required to prepare the brief as well as the refreshers."
"Option 2: My fee for accepting the instruction to appear as an advocate on the occasion described above will be £XX plus VAT. You and I agree that I will not attend the hearing unless you have paid the fee in advance. If for any reason the case takes longer than one day, I will charge an extra fee of £XX per day plus VAT."
I observe:
(i) It as assumed that the services in question are likely to be limited to an attendance of one day only;
(ii) Refreshers are only to be paid in the event of the case lasting longer than one day and not in advance. N.B. The payment of refreshers does not have to be rolled up into a lump sum payable in advance in order to comply with the rule that a barrister is not permitted to hold client monies (see further the Bar Standards Board Guidance gC107 on this topic set out below).
(iii) The consequence of non-payment of the fee is that the advocate will be released from the obligation of attending the hearing; there is no express provision for payment or retention of fees in the event that the hearing does not go ahead.
THE DISPUTE ARISES
"For the avoidance of doubt, the fee covers the above mentioned work and therefore if the hearing concludes early or is adjourned to another date or does not go ahead for any reason beyond our control, then the full fee is still payable and another fee will be payable for any adjourned hearing."
This has been referred to both below and on appeal as "the payment term".
THE COMMON LAW
"There is an important distinction between a claim for payment of a debt and a claim for damages for breach of contract. A debt is a definite sum of money fixed by the agreement of the parties as payable by one party in return for the performance of a specified obligation by the other party or on the occurrence of some specified event or condition; whereas, damages may be claimed from a party who has broken his primary contractual obligation in some way other than by failure to pay such a debt. (It is also possible that, in addition to a claim for a debt, there may be a claim for damages in respect of consequential loss caused by the failure to pay the debt at the due date.) The relevance of this distinction is that rules on damages do not apply to a claim for a debt, e.g. the claimant who claims payment of a debt need not prove anything more than its performance or the occurrence of the event or condition; there is no need for it to prove any actual loss suffered by it as a result of the defendant's failure to pay; the whole concept of the remoteness of damage is therefore irrelevant; the law on penalties does not apply to the agreed sum; and the claimant's duty to mitigate its loss does not generally apply."
"…where an agreement provides for the payment of a sum of money, and does not make the performance of the thing which is the consideration for the payment a condition precedent to or concurrent with the payment, an action may be maintained for the recovery of the sum of money without such performance".
25. Thus, by the operation of the common law, the claimants, at least prima facie, became entitled to claim the full amount of their fees on 31 August regardless of the amount of work, if any, they had then done. I have rejected the argument raised on behalf of the defendant that the term relating to the level of the fee and that relating to the timing of payment related must stand or fall together. It is perfectly possible to delete all reference to the latter and to leave the rest of the agreement perfectly coherent. Indeed, section 67 of the 2015 Act provides:
"67 Effect of an unfair term on the rest of a contract
Where a term of a consumer contract is not binding on the consumer as a result of this Part, the contract continues, so far as practicable, to have effect in every other respect."
THE CONSUMER RIGHTS ACT 2015
TRADERS AND CUSTOMERS
PLEADINGS
"Duty of court to consider fairness of term
(1) Subsection (2) applies to proceedings before a court which relate to a term of a consumer contract.
(2) The court must consider whether the term is fair even if none of the parties to the proceedings has raised that issue or indicated that it intends to raise it.
(3) But subsection (2) does not apply unless the court considers that it has before it sufficient legal and factual material to enable it to consider the fairness of the term."
I conclude that, despite the opacity of some of the arguments articulated on behalf of the defendant, there was before me sufficient material to enable me to consider the fairness of the term. I do not, therefore, consider that it is necessary to grapple with the adequacy of the pleadings in so far as they relate to the operation of the 2015 Act. There was little or no dispute over the primary facts. The central issues thus relate to how the law is to be applied to such facts.
UNFAIR CONTRACT TERMS
"Requirement for contract terms … to be fair
(1) An unfair term of a consumer contract is not binding on the consumer…
(3) This does not prevent the consumer from relying on the term…if the consumer chooses to do so.
(4) A term is unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations under the contract to the detriment of the consumer.
(5) Whether a term is fair is to be determined—
(a) taking into account the nature of the subject matter of the contract, and
(b) by reference to all the circumstances existing when the term was agreed and to all of the other terms of the contract or of any other contract on which it depends.
"Exclusion from assessment of fairness
(1) A term of a consumer contract may not be assessed for fairness under section 62 to the extent that—
(a) it specifies the main subject matter of the contract, or
(b) the assessment is of the appropriateness of the price payable under the contract by comparison with the goods, digital content or services supplied under it."
These exceptions are said to provide a "safe harbour" for traders facing claims that their terms are unfair.
"This section does not apply to a term of a contract listed in Part 1 of Schedule 2."
"It is not disputed that a term appearing in the list need not necessarily be considered unfair and, conversely, a term that does not appear in the list may none the less be regarded as unfair... In so far as it does not limit the discretion of the national authorities to determine the unfairness of a term, the list contained in the annex to the Directive does not seek to give consumers rights going beyond those that result from Articles 3 to 7 of the Directive... Inasmuch as the list contained in the annex to the Directive is of indicative and illustrative value, it constitutes a source of information both for the national authorities responsible for applying the implementing measures and for individuals affected by those measures."
This approach was met with approval in the Guidance Notes to the 2015 Act. I have, in addition, appended to this judgment a flow chart which I have taken, with gratitude, from the Competition and Markets Authority "Guidance on the unfair terms provisions in the Consumer Rights Act 2015". Not all of the steps therein set out are material to the issues which arise on this appeal but the order in which those issues are to be determined and the consequences of such determinations at each stage provide a useful route to judgment. It is to his credit that the Judge below was able to work out the correct order of resolution of these issues (contrary to the submissions of the parties) without, it would appear, his attention having been specifically drawn to this route. (In paragraph 61 of his judgment he records the fact that the parties had proceeded on the erroneous basis that the "safe harbour" provisions should be considered before rather than after the "grey list".)
"5 A term which has the object or effect of requiring that, where the consumer decides not to conclude or perform the contract, the consumer must pay the trader a disproportionately high sum in compensation or for services which have not been supplied.
6 A term which has the object or effect of requiring a consumer who fails to fulfil his obligations under the contract to pay a disproportionately high sum in compensation."
"5.13.3 Where customers bring the contract to an end without any justification, and the trader suffers loss as a result, they cannot expect a full refund of all prepayments. But a term under which they always lose everything they have paid in advance, regardless of the amount of any costs and losses caused by the termination, is at risk of being considered an unfair financial sanction – see paragraph 6 of the Grey List, discussed in paragraphs 5.14.1 of the guidance onwards…
5.13.5…Generally, where the contract comes to an end because of the fault of the consumer, the business is entitled to hold back from any refund of prepayments what is likely to be reasonably needed to cover either its net costs or the net loss of profit resulting directly from the default…There is no entitlement to any sum that could reasonably be saved by, for example, finding another customer.
5.13.6 Alternatively, there may be no objection to a prepayment which is set low enough that it merely reflects the ordinary expenses necessarily entailed for the trader. A genuine 'deposit'– which is a reservation fee not an advance payment – may legitimately be kept in full, as payment for the reservation. But such a deposit will not normally be more than a small percentage of the price. A larger prepayment is necessarily more likely to give rise to fairness issues, for instance being seen as a disguised penalty…
Paragraph 5 of the Grey List covers the related issue of requiring consumers to pay for services which are supplied. The CMA considers that there is a potential for unfairness where terms can have the effect of
committing consumers to pay for services for an unduly lengthy tie-in period following the consumer's cancellation (see paragraphs 5.15.4–5.15.7 below)…
Disproportionate financial sanctions
5.15.1 Terms are always at risk of being considered unfair if they have the effect of imposing disproportionate sanctions on the consumer who decides to end the contract early. Paragraph 5 illustrates two different kinds of terms which are calculated to have this effect – disproportionate termination fees, and requirements which can operate so as to force consumers to pay for services they have not received..."
5.15.4 Requiring consumers to pay for services not supplied.
The CMA considers that the final words of paragraph 5 are relevant to terms that effectively lock consumers into paying for services. Terms can operate to create a fixed or 'tie-in' minimum contract period if they:
- do not allow for cancellation within the 'tie-in' period, and thus bind the consumer who terminates to make all, or substantially all, the payments that would have been made had the contract remained in place; or
- allow for cancellation, but only on payment of a charge or fee equivalent to all, or substantially all, of the payments…
5.15.5 A service contract does not necessarily have to provide a formal right of cancellation without liability to be fair. In the CMA's view, however, it will be under suspicion of unfairness if the consumer who chooses to stop receiving the service is always required to pay in full or nearly in full, regardless of whether allowance could be made for savings or gains available as a result of the contracts' early termination…A saving may be available, for instance where there is scope to find other customers to take their place.
5.15.6 In some situations there may be less scope for the business to reduce its loss. In such cases, the focus of the fairness assessment will necessarily be on the length the period for which the consumer is tied in. In such cases, a minimum period for a service contract is, in the CMA's view, open to scrutiny, particularly if its effect is to give the trader an advantage arising from practical limitations to the consumer's ability to assess what their circumstances are likely to be in the longer term. In considering fairness, regard needs to be had to factors described above in part 2 of the guidance, under the 'Fairness test' heading."
"317 For example, if an individual contracts with a catering company to provide a buffet lunch, and the contract includes a term that the individual will pay £100 for a 3 course meal, the court cannot look at whether it is fair to pay £100 for 3 courses. It may, however, look at other things, such as the rights of the company and the individual to cancel the lunch, and when the price is due to be paid."
"5 A term which has the … effect of requiring that, where the consumer decides not to conclude or perform the contract, the consumer must pay the trader a disproportionately high sum…for services which have not been supplied."
WHAT IF THE TERM DOES NOT FALL WITHIN THE GREY LIST?
"Exclusion from assessment of fairness
(1) A term of a consumer contract may not be assessed for fairness under section 62 to the extent that—
(a) it specifies the main subject matter of the contract, or
(b) the assessment is of the appropriateness of the price payable under the contract by comparison with the goods, digital content or services supplied under it."
"The exclusion is narrow and must be strictly interpreted, restricted only to the 'essential obligations' of contracts. These could otherwise be referred to as the 'substance of the bargain', 'of central and indispensable importance' to the contract, as distinct from the ancillary 'incidental (if important) terms which surround them'. They represent what, objectively, both parties would view as the core bargain, and what in fact is the substance of the bargain. The exclusion does not apply to terms which set out secondary obligations, which apply only on breach of a primary obligation. It is important to look at the substance and reality of the transaction, not at the form. Although the language of the contract is important in this regard, it is not conclusive. The court must also look at the surrounding circumstances or contractual matrix, such as the market generally, the actual negotiation between the parties, and their assumptions, together with the actual package the consumer received, and what he pays for this."
"The object of the regulations is not price control nor are the regulations intended to interfere with the parties' freedom of contract as to the essential features of their bargain. But, that said, regulation 6(2) must be given a restrictive interpretation; otherwise a coach and horses could be driven through the regulations. So, while it is not for the court to re-write the parties' bargain as to the fairness or adequacy of the price itself, regulation 6(2) may be unlikely to shield terms as to price escalation or default provisions from scrutiny under the fairness requirement contained in regulation 5(1)."
It is to be noted that his observations reflected, in turn, the approach of Lord Bingham in Director General of Fair Trading v First National Bank Plc [2002] 1 A.C. 48.
IS THE TERM FAIR?
"gC107
If you have decided in principle to take a particular case you may request an 'upfront' fixed fee from your prospective client before finally agreeing to work on their behalf. This should only be done having regard to the following principles:
- You should take care to estimate accurately the likely time commitment and only take payment when you are satisfied that:
– it is a reasonable payment for the work being done; and
– in the case of public access work, that it is suitable for you to undertake.
- If the amount of work required is unclear, you should consider staged payments rather than a fixed fee in advance.
- You should never accept an upfront fee in advance of considering whether it is appropriate for you to take the case and considering whether you will be able to undertake the work within a reasonable timescale.
- If the client can reasonably be expected to understand such an arrangement, you may agree that when the work has been done, you will pay the client any difference between that fixed fee and (if lower) the fee which has actually been earned based on the time spent, provided that it is clear that you will not hold the difference between the fixed fee and the fee which has been earned on trust for the client. That difference will not be client money if you can demonstrate that this was expressly agreed in writing, on clear terms understood by the client, and before payment of the fixed fee. You should also consider carefully whether such an arrangement is in the client's interest, taking into account the nature of the instructions, the client and whether the client fully understands the implications. Any abuse of an agreement to pay a fixed fee subject to reimbursement, the effect of which is that you receive more money than is reasonable for the case at the outset, will be considered to be holding client money and a breach of rC73. For this reason, you should take extreme care if contracting with a client in this way.
- In any case, rC22 requires you to confirm in writing the acceptance of any instructions and the terms or basis on which you are acting, including the basis of charging."
"A term is unfair if, contrary to the requirement of good faith, it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations under the contract to the detriment of the consumer."
"A term falling within the scope of the Regulations is unfair if it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations under the contract to the detriment of the consumer in a manner or to an extent which is contrary to the requirement of good faith. The requirement of significant imbalance is met if a term is so weighted in favour of the supplier as to tilt the parties' rights and obligations under the contract significantly in his favour. This may be by the granting to the supplier of a beneficial option or discretion or power, or by the imposing on the consumer of a disadvantageous burden or risk or duty. The illustrative terms set out in Schedule 3 to the Regulations provide very good examples of terms which may be regarded as unfair; whether a given term is or is not to be so regarded depends on whether it causes a significant imbalance in the parties' rights and obligations under the contract. This involves looking at the contract as a whole. But the imbalance must be to the detriment of the consumer; a significant imbalance to the detriment of the supplier, assumed to be the stronger party, is not a mischief which the Regulations seek to address. The requirement of good faith in this context is one of fair and open dealing. Openness requires that the terms should be expressed fully, clearly and legibly, containing no concealed pitfalls or traps. Appropriate prominence should be given to terms which might operate disadvantageously to the customer. Fair dealing requires that a supplier should not, whether deliberately or unconsciously, take advantage of the consumer's necessity, indigence, lack of experience, unfamiliarity with the subject matter of the contract, weak bargaining position or any other factor listed in or analogous to those listed in Schedule 2 to the Regulations. Good faith in this context is not an artificial or technical concept; nor, since Lord Mansfield was its champion, is it a concept wholly unfamiliar to British lawyers. It looks to good standards of commercial morality and practice. Regulation 4(1) lays down a composite test, covering both the making and the substance of the contract, and must be applied bearing clearly in mind the objective which the Regulations are designed to promote."
"Whether a term is fair is to be determined—
(a) taking into account the nature of the subject matter of the contract, and
(b) by reference to all the circumstances existing when the term was agreed and to all of the other terms of the contract or of any other contract on which it depends."
CONSEQUENCES
"It is arguable that both the issues of principle and their application to the facts should have been more fully explored than they were…"
"32-077 In a contract for work to be done, if no scale of remuneration is fixed, the law imposes an obligation to pay a reasonable sum (quantum meruit). The circumstances must clearly show that the work is not to be done gratuitously before the court will, in the absence of an express contract, infer that there was a valid contract with an implied term that a reasonable remuneration would be paid. The court may infer from the facts a contract to pay for services to be rendered, even though this entails disregarding the actual intention of the parties at the time; as, for instance, where both parties, under a mistake of fact, assumed that the defendant was entitled to claim, without charge, the services of the particular fire brigade he had summoned."
"Where a party has performed only part of an entire obligation it can normally recover nothing, neither the agreed price, since it is not due under the terms of the contract, nor any smaller sum for the value of its partial performance, since the court has no power to apportion the consideration. The refusal of pro rata payment is based on the inability of the court, as a matter of construction, to add such a provision to the contract, and also upon the rule that the mere acceptance of acts of part performance under an express contract cannot, taken alone, justify the imposition of a restitutionary obligation to pay on a quantum meruit basis. Thus where an employee is engaged for a fixed period for a lump sum, but fails to complete the term for a reason other than breach of contract by the employer, e.g. frustration, the common law rule is that he can recover nothing. In the famous case of Cutter v Powell, to which reference has already been made, a seaman was to be paid a lump sum when he completed the voyage; he died before completion of the voyage and it was held that his executor could not recover pro tanto wages because it was an "entire contract"."
"57 Secondly, it should be recalled that Article 6(1) of Directive 93/13 provides that unfair terms are not binding on the consumer and must, therefore, be deemed never to have existed."
"64 The Court has held that if it were open to the national court to revise the content of unfair terms included in such a contract, such a power would be liable to compromise attainment of the long-term objective of Article 7 of Directive 93/13. That power would contribute to eliminating the dissuasive effect on sellers or suppliers of the straightforward non-application with regard to the consumer of those terms, in so far as those sellers or suppliers would still be tempted to use those terms in the knowledge that, even if they were declared invalid, the contract could nevertheless be modified, to the extent necessary, by the national court in such a way as to safeguard the interest of those sellers or suppliers…"
"I conclude that the termination of the retainer when there was no good reason…does amount to a breach of contract by Mrs Atay. She unilaterally decided to remove the prospect of the claimants acting further for her."
In the absence of any contractual obligation to instruct the claimants to do any such further work, she cannot be held to have been in breach.
"It is also relevant that they also lost the opportunity of securing a substantial payment for Mrs Atay from Mr Atay in respect of the adjourned trial, which would have taken a large part of the sting out of this dispute had they been successful."
CONCLUSION
(i) The payment term was one which fell within the parameters of paragraph 5 of the so-called "grey list" to be found in Part 1 Schedule 2 of the 2015 Act;
(ii) Even if it had not fallen within the grey list, it did not, in any event, fall within either of the categories excluded from assessment under section 64 of the 2015 Act;
(iii) The payment term was unfair under the provisions of section 62 of the 2015 Act;
(iv) The effect of this finding was that the contract fell to be treated as if the entirety of the payment term had never existed;
(v) The consequence of this was that there was an entire obligation upon the claimants which included attendance at the trial which, once the trial had been adjourned, was incapable of being fulfilled;
(vi) It followed that the claimants had no contractual right to payment of the agreed price at any time;
(vii) There was no legal basis upon which a non-contractual assessment by way of quantum meruit was appropriate;
(viii) Even if a claim by way of quantum meruit were theoretically available, the Judge below took into account impermissible factors in his approach to assessment and so his evaluation of 70% could not stand;
(ix) The Judge was probably wrong, in any event, to evaluate the assessment in the proportion of 70% based on the cost to the claimants rather than to any benefit to the defendant.