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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Amber Construction Services Ltd v London Interspace HG Ltd [2007] EWHC 3042 (TCC) (18 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2007/3042.html Cite as: [2008] 9 EG 202, [2007] EWHC 3042 (TCC), [2008] Bus LR D46, [2008] 1 EGLR 1, [2008] BLR 74 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AMBER CONSTRUCTION SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LONDON INTERSPACE HG LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mills & Co for the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice AKENHEAD:
Introduction
The facts
"In the decision dated 4 October 2007 Mr Price ordered that payment should be made by 11 October 2007. LIHGL has failed to make payment as directed. LIHGL is contractually bound to honour the Adjudicator's decision and has no defence to any claim for payment.
Should our client not be in receipt of cleared funds of £79,455.36 by 5 p.m. on Wednesday 24 October, then legal proceedings will be commenced in the High Court for enforcement of the Adjudicator's decision by Summary Judgment without further notice.
Our client will seek its legal costs on an indemnity basis and further interests in those proceedings. Our client will seek indemnity costs on the basis that LIHGL should be aware at this time that it has no arguable defence to the claim."
"You say that our client has no defence but clearly that is wrong. We attach a copy of our letter to your client dated 10 October 2007 setting out our client's defence to your client's claim.
You will note that in addition to our client's defence, our client also has a counterclaim against your client, details of which are also attached.
We can confirm that we are instructed to accept service."
The attached letter dated 10 October 2007 from Mills & Co stated that Mr Price had substantially reduced the Claimant's claim and that the Defendant had a counterclaim of £97,264.93 plus VAT and interest. It indicated that in any event the Adjudicator had no jurisdiction. It stated:
"Should you attempt to enforce Mr Price's decision in the courts, our client reserves its right to raise additional points or include additional evidence to defend any such claim."
"Should your client attempt to enforce the decision of Mr Price but fail in its attempt to do so, your client will be liable for our client's legal costs arising out of the enforcement proceedings as well as its own legal costs arising out of the failed attempt.
As this offer is being made in an attempt to save both our respective client's legal costs associated with court proceedings this offer will lapse on Friday 2 November 2007 or on the commencement of enforcement proceedings by your client, whichever is the sooner".
"that the Defendant pay the Claimant's costs of this claim on an indemnity basis".
In the Claim Form (which is standard) there is a box which identifies the "Amount Claimed", the "court fee" (said in this case to be £900), and Solicitor's costs. The latter box was filled in "TBA" (to be advised).
The Issue
Decision
"(1) This Section sets out the amounts which, unless the court orders otherwise, are to be allowed in respect of solicitors' charges in the cases to which this Section applies.
(2) This Section applies where –
(a) the only claims are claims for a specified sum of money where the value of the claim exceeds £25 and –
(i) judgment in default is obtained under rule 12.4(1);
(ii) judgment on admission is obtained under rule 14.4(3);
(iii) judgment on admission on part of the claim is obtained under rule 14.5(6);
(iv) summary judgment is given under Part 24;
(v) the court has made an order to strike out a defence under rule 3.4(2)(a) as disclosing no reasonable grounds for defending the claim; or
(vi) rule 45.3 applies; …"
"(1) where –
(i) the only claim is for a specified sum of money and;
(ii) the defendant pays the money claimed within 14 days after service of particulars of claim on him, together with the fixed commencement cost stated in the claim form,
(iii) the defendant is not liable for any further costs unless the court orders otherwise."
(i) This Court has recognised the importance of a summary and prompt procedure to secure enforcement of adjudicators' decisions properly reached.
(ii) In this case, some four weeks elapsed after the issue of the adjudicators' decisions before the enforcement proceedings were issued.
(iii) In their letter dated 17 October 2007, the Claimant's solicitors gave very clear warning that, unless the sum due under Mr Price's decision was paid promptly, proceedings would be commenced without further notice.
(iv) In correspondence, the Defendant's solicitors made it clear in effect that they would not pay primarily because, they argued, the adjudicator did not have jurisdiction. They were thus putting forward an apparently comprehensible defence to any enforcement proceedings
(v) Even in the "without prejudice save as to costs" letter, it was made clear that the offer did not recognise that the sum which Mr Price had decided was due was payable.
(vi) It can have come as no surprise that proceedings were issued. A party which makes a "without prejudice save as to costs" offer is not entitled in some way to have it responded to or to assume that threatened proceedings against it will or might be withheld. It would be different if the without prejudice correspondence had revealed some agreement by which the Claimant undertook, at least temporarily, not to issue proceedings. That is certainly not the case here.
(vii) The Defendant's argument that the Claimant has acted "secretively" in incurring substantial costs in preparing for its without notice application and its proceedings in general is without foundation. Glovers wrote in terms on 17 October 2007 that, if the amount due pursuant to Mr Price's decision was not paid promptly, proceedings would be commenced in the High Court without further notice. The Defendant obviously knew that Glovers were involved and they knew, because they had been so warned, that proceedings could be commenced at any time without further notice, particularly given that its solicitors had put forward a potential defence, and it must or should have appreciated that significant costs could be incurred if High Court proceedings were issued. They could have ascertained, as was likely, that, if the proceedings were commenced in the TCC, the TCC practice as contained in their Guide would or could be followed. That is exactly what happened.
(viii) The procedure, set out in paragraph 9.2 of the TCC Guide (Second Edition, First Revision, October 2007), appears to have been followed substantially by Glovers. The Part 7 Claim Form needed to be accompanied by Particulars of Claim and the Part 24 application needed to be accompanied by a witness statement which exhibited, at least, the construction contract and the relevant adjudication documents. This procedure is now the norm for adjudication enforcement proceedings.
(ix) It is inevitable in those circumstances that the costs will exceed by a very substantial amount the fixed costs called for in CPR 45.
(x) It would not be fair to limit a successful claimant which complied with the steps called for in the Rules and the Guide. The Claimant was justified in issuing proceedings and a Part 24 application following a threatened defence and an unqualified admission on the part of the Defendant after issue.
(i) Complaint is made that some 11 hours is attributed to the partner and a trainee solicitor attending on their client, and a sum of some £2,400 is claimed. I do not consider that it was unreasonable or anything other than reasonable for an experienced partner and trainee solicitor to attend upon their clients to find out in some detail what the dispute was about and in connection with potential proceedings. Neither the hours charged nor the rates are unreasonable.
(ii) Objection is made that some 3.8 hours was spent for attendance on the Defendant. There was correspondence between the parties and e-mail communication. It appears also that there were one or more telephone conversations. The amount claimed does not seem in any way excessive.
(iii) However, over £4,000 is claimed for some 31 hours of "work done on documents". The bulk of this is 29 hours for the trainee solicitor. The Defendant says, with some justification, that that is excessive and suggests that it should have taken no longer than three hours. I consider that, based on the amount of papers, the drafting of his witness statement and the need to form a view as to what papers should be exhibited to Mr Eyre's witness statement, two hours of partner's time at £310 per hour and 12 hours of trainee time at £120 is reasonable for the amount of work likely to have been involved on documents.
Thus, the total which I allow by way of summary assessment for the Claimant's costs is £6,162.00