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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Goodwins, Jardine & Co., Ltd v. Charles Brand & Son [1907] ScotLR 553 (15 March 1907)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/44SLR0553.html
Cite as: [1907] SLR 553, [1907] ScotLR 553

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 553

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Bannatyne, Kirkwood, France & Company, Minuters.

Friday, March 15. 1907.

44 SLR 553

Goodwins, Jardine & Company, Limited

v.

Charles Brand & Son.

(Reported ante, July 19, 1905, 7 F. 995, 42 S.L.R. 806.)


Subject_1Expenses
Subject_2Taxation
Subject_3Agent and Client
Subject_4Attendance in Court of Session of Local Law Agents.

Expenses — Agent and Client — Charging Order — “Law Agent Employed to Pursue or Defend an Action” — Local Agent Attending Case in Court of Session — Law Agents and Notaries Public (Scotland) Act 1891 (54 and 55 Vict. cap. 30), sec,. 6.
Facts:

The liquidator of a company which was being wound up under the supervision of the English Court raised an action in the Court of Session for a balance alleged to be due by the defenders on a settlement of accounts, and obtained decree for certain sums. The questions at issue had involved inquiry over a series of years, and there had been a great deal of procedure. The law agents in the liquidation, a Glasgow firm, had attended in the Court of Session. In taxing their account of expenses as between agent and client, on a remit from the registrar in London, the Auditor disallowed the charges for these attendances on the ground that they were unnecessary, the Edinburgh agents having been in attendance and their charges having been allowed.

An application for a charge under the Law Agents and Notaries Public (Scotland) Act 1891, section 6, having been made, held that as the proper conduct of the cause had necessitated the attendance of the local agents, the charges should have been allowed, and application granted.

Where the conduct of a litigation in the Court of Session requires the attendance of the local agent as well as that of the Edinburgh agent, the former equally with the latter is “an agent employed to pursue or defend an action” within the meaning of section 6 of the Law Agents and Notaries Public (Scotland) Act 1891, and entitled to apply under that section for a charging order.

Headnote:

(The case is reported, at a preliminary stage, ante ut supra.)

The Law Agents and Notaries Public (Scotland) Act 1891 (54 and 55 Vict. cap. 30), section 6, provides:—“ Payment of law agent's costs out of property recovered or preserved.—In every case in which a law agent shall be employed to pursue or defend any action or proceeding in any court, it shall be lawful for the court or judge before whom any such action or proceeding has been heard or shall be depending to declare such law agent entitled to a charge upon and against, and a right to payment out of, the property, of whatsoever nature, tenure, or kind the same may be, which shall have been recovered or preserved on behalf of his client by such law agent in such action or proceeding, for the taxed expenses of or in reference to such action or proceeding, and it shall be lawful for such court or judge to make such order or orders for taxation of, and for raising and payment of, such expenses out of the said property as to such court or judge shall appear just and proper; and all acts done or deeds granted by the client after the date of the declaration, except acts or deeds in favour of a bona fide purchaser, shall be absolutely void and of no effect as against such charge or right.”

On 24th October 1902 Goodwins, Jardine, & Company, Limited, 19 St Swithin's Lane, London, in liquidation, and James Watson Stewart, C.A., Glasgow, the liquidator thereof, raised an action against Charles Brand & Son, contractors, 172 Buchanan Street, Glasgow, in which they sued for a balance alleged to be due by the defenders on a settlement of accounts relating to the supply of material for certain contracts incidental to the formation of the Glasgow Central Railway. On 26th March 1906 the Lord Ordinary ( Dundas) after a proof pronounced findings, and on a reclaiming note the Division adhered, varying one finding.

Messrs Bannatyne, Kirkwood, France, & Company, writers, Glasgow, now (15th March 1907) presented a minute in the cause, — it being in the roll for the adjustment of the sum found due—seeking a charging order for their expenses as law agents.

The cause had been one of considerable magnitude, involving a great deal of procedure, there being two reclaiming notes, a proof before one of the Judges of the First Division, and an extensive proof on the merits before the Lord Ordinary, the questions at issue being mainly as to the rates which the pursuers were entitled to charge, and as to whether the work done was or was not to be paid for as extra work. The inquiry had extended over a series of years. The liquidation of Goodwins, Jardine, & Company had been placed under the supervision of the High Court of Justice in England. The accounts of the liquidator therefore had had to be submitted to the registrar in London. These accounts included the business accounts of the minuters as law agents in the liquidation.

Page: 554

The minute was in these terms—“Black for the above-named minuters stated that they had been employed by the pursuers and by the liquidator as law agents throughout the whole course of the liquidation which commenced in the year 1891; that they had advised the liquidator in regard to the carrying out of the contract which was the subject of dispute in the present action; that upon the liquidator's express instructions and by reason of the special knowledge and information they had acquired in relation to the matters in dispute, which involved numerous details, they had attended the proof which was allowed by your Lordships' interlocutor of 2nd July 1904 and subsequent hearing before your Lordships, and also the proof and hearing on evidence before the Lord Ordinary and the recent hearing before your Lordships; that the Auditor of the Court of Session, to whom the registrar in London had recently remitted the business accounts of the minuters for taxation as between agent and client, had disallowed the charges for the minuters' attendances at the proof and hearing before your Lordships, and also at the proof and hearing before the Lord Ordinary, and, the minuters were apprehensive, would also disallow their charges for attendance at the hearing before your Lordships, and he accordingly craved the Court to declare the minuters entitled to a charge upon and against and a right of payment out of the sum decerned for in the action for their taxed expenses of or in reference to the action, including their attendances at the two separate diets of proof before mentioned and subsequent hearings in the Outer House and before your Lordships, as well as the hearing upon the reclaiming note which has just been disposed of by your Lordships.…”

There was no opposition to the minute.

Argued for the minuters—(1) The Auditor was clearly wrong in disallowing the expense of the local agent's attendance. This was not a question between party and party but between agent and client. The attendance of the local agent was absolutely necessary for the proper conduct of the case. The decision of the Auditor could not be brought up directly, as he was taxing accounts in an English liquidation, and the minuters had accordingly made this application under section 6 of the Law Agents and Notaries Public (Scotland) Act 1891. (2) Under the Law Agents Acts the position of the local agents and the Edinburgh agents was practically the same. The statute was equally applicable to both.

Judgment:

Lord President—This application is a novel one under the 6th section of the Law Agents Act 1891 (54 and 55 Vict. c. 30). In the conduct of this litigation, which was by the liquidator of this company to recover money from Messrs Brand & Company, and in which he has been successful, the liquidator was quite entitled to be assisted by the agent in Glasgow, who really was the person who in ordinary parlance “got up the case.” When the case came here of course there had to be an Edinburgh agent as well. But looking to the magnitude of the proof and the frequent occasion that there must have been during the conduct of such a proof to ask questions about things that had happened during the period of years over which this inquiry extended, I do not hesitate to say that it would have been utterly impossible to conduct the proof without the presence of the Glasgow agent, who knew all about it. Therefore I am bound to say that I am entirely at a loss to understand how in a question as between agent and client the Auditor has disallowed the expenses of the Glasgow agent as he seems to have done. He seems to have made an entire mistake. In a question between party and party it might have been otherwise, but as between agent and client the ordinary course should be followed. However, that mistake has been made. It was impossible of course in the circumstances, as the Auditor was taxing accounts in an English liquidation, to bring up the matter directly to us, and accordingly the agent has now made an application under the 6th section of the Act of 1891.

The only doubt that lay in my mind was whether the country agent could come under the provisions of this section, but on further consideration I think he may well be able to do so, because after all it is only one litigation, and he is just as much agent in it as the Edinburgh agent. The section of course must be capable of construction, because the words read absolutely strictly are not applicable to law agents at all. The words of the section are—“In every case in which a law agent shall be employed to pursue or defend any action.” In the strict sense a law agent does not pursue—it is the pursuer—nor does he defend—it is the defender. It really means “in conducting any litigation that is going on for the pursuer or the defender.” I think the Glasgow agent here was in every proper sense of the word employed in the conduct of the litigation, no doubt along with an Edinburgh agent. Therefore I think your Lordships should grant this motion.

Lord M'Laren, Lord Kinnear, and Lord Pearson concurred.

The Court pronounced this interlocutor—

[ After decerning for the sums found due to the pursuers].… “Upon considering the minute for Messrs Bannatyne, Kirkwood, France, & Company, writers, Glasgow, find and declare the minuters entitled to a charge upon and against and a right of payment out of the sums above decerned for, for their taxed expenses of or in reference to the action, including their attendances at the two separate diets of proof in the case and the subsequent hearings in the Outer House and Inner House, as well as the hearing upon the reclaiming note, and direct the Auditor to tax the same accordingly.” …

Page: 555

Counsel:

Counsel for the Minuters and the Liquidator— Scott-Dickson, K.C.— Morison, K.C.— Black. Agents— Webster, Will, & Company, S.S.C.

Counsel for the Defenders — Dean of Faculty (Campbell, K.C.)—Solicitor-General (Ure, K.C.)— C. D. Murray. Agents — Alexander Morison & Company, W.S.

1907


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/44SLR0553.html