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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Shaw & Shaw and Others v. J. & T. Boyd, Ltd [1907] ScotLR 460 (07 March 1907) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/44SLR0460.html Cite as: [1907] ScotLR 460, [1907] SLR 460 |
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Page: 460↓
Expenses — Taxation — Fees to Counsel — Proof and Consultation on Eve of Proof.
Expenses — Taxation — Fees to Witnesses — Skilled Witnesses.
Objection to the disallowance by the Auditor, in taxing an account of expenses between party and party, of a copy correspondence for the agent's use at a proof, repelled.
In a case of some complexity arising out of the rejection of a machine for twisting cotton yarn as disconform to contract, the proof lasted three days. The Auditor reduced a fee of five guineas, charged for junior counsel for a consultation on the eve of the proof, to one of three guineas, and also reduced fees of thirty and fifteen guineas a day, charged for senior and junior counsel respectively throughout the proof, to fees of twenty and fifteen guineas for the first day, and fifteen and twelve guineas for the other two days.
Objection having been taken to these reductions the Court repelled the objection.
Per the Lord President (as to the fees charged for the proof)—“I think that if I had myself been acting as Auditor here I should have allowed the larger fees. I say that for the guidance of the Auditor in future.”
In an action arising out of the rejection of a cotton-twisting machine, in
Page: 461↓
which the proof lasted three days, two expert witnesses of Manchester were employed for six and seven days respectively in connection with the case. They had to travel to Huddersfield and Glasgow and to attend the proof. The Auditor having reduced the sums of £72, 5s. and £84 paid them to sums of £30, 5s. and £29, 8s. respectively, leaving, as stated, in addition to out-of-pocket expenses only £21 and £18, 18s., objection was taken to the reduction. The Court repelled the objection, holding that the Auditor was entitled to exercise his discretion as to the fee to be allowed in addition to the two guineas a day for actual testimony and the out-of-pocket expenses.
Per Lord President—“I think the Auditor is entitled to exercise his discretion, and, although he has cut down the fees here pretty severely, I do not propose to interfere with what he has done.”
On 14th April 1905 Shaw & Shaw, cotton spinners, Britannia Mills, Huddersfield, and the individual partners thereof, raised an action against J. & T. Boyd, Limited, machine makers, Shettleston, Glasgow, in which they sued for £186, 2s. 6d. as damages for breach of contract. The pursuers agreed to purchase from the defenders a machine for twisting cotton yarn and it was duly delivered to them at their mills. The machine, however, proved unsatisfactory and was ultimately rejected. [A cross-action at the instance of Messrs Boyd for payment of £208, 9s. 1d., the balance of the price, was heard and disposed of at the same time, the defenders in it being assoilzied.] The Lord Ordinary ( Ardwall) after a proof which lasted three days awarded damages and found the pursuers entitled to expenses. The defenders reclaimed to the First Division but subsequently withdrew the reclaiming-note.
The case now appeared in the Single Bills on a Note of Objections by the pursuers to the Auditor's report on their account of expenses. [ Lord Ardwall, before whom the case was tried, was present in the Division at the hearing on the note, but did not take part in the advising.]
In his report the Auditor had (1) disallowed in toto the expense of a third copy of the correspondence for the use of the pursuers' agents at the proof; (2) he had reduced a fee of five guineas, charged for junior counsel for a consultation on the eve of the proof, to three guineas; and had also reduced the fees of thirty and fifteen guineas a day charged for senior and junior counsel respectively throughout the proof to fees of twenty and fifteen guineas for the first day, and fifteen and twelve guineas for the other two days; (3) he had reduced the sums of £72, 5s. and £84 paid to two skilled witnesses, Eli Hiles, engineer, and Joseph Shaw Gaunt, machinery expert, both of Manchester, to sums of £30, 5s. and £29, 8s. respectively. [These witnesses had been engaged in connection with the case six and seven days respectively, and in addition to attending the proof had had to travel to Huddersfield and Glasgow.]
Argued for pursuers—(1) The expense of a third copy correspondence was a necessary expense, for without it the agent would have been unable to follow the case properly. The process copy was for the use of and was in fact used by the Judge at the trial. (2) The Auditor was not entitled to cut down the fees sent to counsel unless they were clearly exorbitant — Rees v. Henderson, May 28, 1902, 4 F. 813, 39 S.L.R. 640. The agent was the best judge as to the proper fee to send, looking to the nature of the case. In any event they ought not to be lower than twenty-five and fifteen guineas for the first day, and twenty and fifteen for the remaining days, which were now asked for. (3) The Auditor had dealt much too strictly with the sums paid to the expert witnesses. The witness Hiles had travelled from Manchester to Huddersfield and Glasgow to inspect the machine, and had also attended the proof, and had been engaged for six days. He was entitled to ten guineas a day in addition to £9, 5s. for expenses, in all £72, 5s., the sum paid. The Auditor had only allowed him, in addition to his out-of-pocket expenses, twenty guineas. The witness Gaunt, also from Manchester, had been similarly engaged for seven days and was entitled to ten guineas a day in addition to his expenses (£10, 10s.), viz., £84. The Auditor, however, had only allowed him, in addition to his expenses, eighteen guineas. The sums allowed were much too small.
Argued for defenders—(1) It was the usual practice to allow, as against an opponent, the expense of two copies of the correspondence only. These were for the use of counsel. The agent was not entitled to a third copy. (2) The fees allowed to counsel were ample. The sum at stake was not more than £220. (3) Expert witnesses were entitled, in addition to the fee of two guineas a day for actual testimony allowed by the table of fees, to ( a) their “out-of-pocket” expenses, and ( b) a fee for their trouble, the amount of which was entirely in the discretion of the Auditor. Reference was made to Ebbw Vale Steel, &c. Company, Limited v. Wood's Trustee, June 2, 1898, 25 R 925, 35 S.L.R. 759; Burrell & Son v. Russell & Company, October 24, 1900, 3 F. 12, 38 S.L.R. 8.
As to the fee of three guineas allowed to junior counsel for consultation on the eve of the proof, it seems to me that where senior counsel for the same consultation gets a fee of five guineas, his junior must be content with three.
Page: 462↓
In regard to the fees allowed to counsel for the proof, I am bound to say that although there does not seem to be any normal fee, in the sense of a fee fixed by the Court, yet there must be in practice a recognised and more or less normal fee as between party and party, and I take it that the fee allowed by the Auditor here is such a fee. The onus of proving that it is not a proper fee lies on the party seeking to disturb the decision of the Auditor. Now there are two considerations which enter into the question of what amounts to a proper fee, viz., first, the trouble actually involved in preparation, and second, the amount at stake; and I assume that the Auditor, in arriving at the decision he has come to, has kept both of these considerations in view. The learned Judge who tried the case informs us that he considered it somewhat complicated, but even assuming it to be so, I do not think we should interfere with the Auditor unless we were of opinion that his decision was clearly wrong. I think that if I had myself been acting as Auditor here I should have allowed the larger fees. I say that for the guidance of the Auditor in future, but while that is so, I do not propose in this instance, and in a matter with which the Auditor is accustomed to deal, to substitute my judgment for his.
With reference to the fees allowed to the expert witnesses, I think such witnesses are entitled, in addition to the fee allowed for actual testimony by the table of fees, to a fee for their trouble, and also to their out-of-pocket expenses. Without such additional remuneration they would only be entitled to the fee of two guineas a day allowed by the table of fees. As to such additional remuneration, I think the Auditor is entitled to exercise his discretion, and, although he has cut down the fees given here pretty severely, I do not propose to interfere with what he has done.
The Court repelled the note of objections, approved of the Auditor's report, and decerned.
Counsel for Pursuers— C. D. Murray. Agents — Fyfe, Ireland, & Dangerfield, W.S.
Counsel for Defenders— W. Thomson. Agent— R. Ainslie Brown, S.S.C.