BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Sneddon v. Baton Collieries, Ltd [1921] ScotLR 147 (03 December 1921)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1921/59SLR0147.html
Cite as: [1921] ScotLR 147, [1921] SLR 147

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 147

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Saturday, December 3. 1921.

[ Lord Ormidale, Ordinary.

59 SLR 147

Sneddon

v.

Baton Collieries, Limited.

Subject_1Expenses
Subject_2Taxation
Subject_3Skilled Witness
Subject_4Preparations for Proof — Case Remitted to Expert by Joint Consent after Proof Allowed — C. A.S., K, iv (Table of Fees, V, 3 (2)).
Facts:

The Table of Fees annexed to the C.A.S., K, iv, under head v, 3 (2), provides—“In cases where it is found necessary to employ professional or scientific persons … to make investigations previous to a trial or proof in order to qualify them to give evidence thereat, such additional charges for the trouble and expenses of such persons shall be allowed as may be considered fair and reasonable, provided that the judge who tries the cause shall—on a motion made to him either at the trial or proof or within eight days thereafter if in Session …—certify that it was a fit case for such additional allowance.”

After a proof had been allowed a remit was made, in respect of a joint minute by the parties to the case, to an accountant and to a mining engineer to inquire into the matters in dispute and to report. The defenders having ultimately been awarded expenses the Auditor in taxing their account disallowed a fee to a firm of accountants who had been employed to prepare for the proof. Held that as the parties had in effect by their joint minute abandoned the proof, the fee, which fell to be regulated by the C.A.S., K, iv, and Table of Fees, was properly disallowed.

Headnote:

Robert Sneddon, Hillhouseridge, Shotts, pursuer, brought an action against the Baton Collieries, Limited, defenders, concluding for payment of certain sums representing amounts by which he alleged he had been underpaid by defenders in respect of lordships under a lease of coal and ironstone. The lease made provision for elaborate bookkeeping by which the amounts of the lordships due to the pursuer were to be ascertained.

On 11th December 1917 the Lord Ordinary allowed the parties a proof of their averments.

On 2nd October 1918 the Lord Ordinary on the Bills, in respect of a joint minute by the parties, remitted to a chartered accountant and to a mining engineer to inquire into and report to the Court on the matters in dispute.

On 20th July 1920 the Lord Ordinary having considered the reports submitted pronounced an interlocutor in which he, inter alia, found the defenders entitled to expenses.

The pursuer having reclaimed to the First Division, the Court refused the reclaiming note, found the defenders entitled to additional expenses since the date of the interlocutor reclaimed against, and remitted to the Auditor to tax and report.

In taxing the defenders' account of expenses the Auditor disallowed a fee to a firm of chartered accountants whom the defenders had employed to prepare detailed statements of the output of coal, to prepare notes for counsel, and to attend meetings with counsel.

The defenders lodged objections to the Auditor's report, contending that the fee to the firm of accountants should have been allowed.

Argued for defenders—Reasonable remuneration to experts was to be allowed although the case did not go to trial. The provision in the C.A.S., K, iv, that the witnesses should be certified by the Judge was applicable only to cases that proceeded to trial and did not apply here— Clements v. Magistrates of Edinburgh, 1905, 7 F. 651, 42 S.L.R. 536; Govan v. M'Killop, 1909 S. C. 562, 46 S. L. R. 416.

Counsel for the pursuer was not called upon.

Judgment:

Lord President—The objection taken in this case is to the disallowance of a fee to a firm of chartered accountants who were consulted by the defenders in the action. Mr Robertson endeavoured to bring himself within the principle of the case of Clements v. Corporation of Edinburgh, (1905) 7 F. 651. In that case the parties had come to a complete settlement of the litigation, as part of which it was agreed that one of the parties should accept liability to the other party for the expenses incurred by the latter; and a question arose on the taxation of those expenses with regard to charges somewhat similar to those which are the

Page: 148

subject of objection in this case. It was decided in the other Division that the Table of Fees, which limits the charge for expert assistance, did not apply in the circumstances of that settlement. But the situation presented by the present case is essentially different. What happened is that after a proof had been allowed and parties had commenced to make their preparations for that proof they came together and agreed, not that the case should be settled with expenses to one of them, but that the procedure which the Court had ordered, viz., by way of proof, should be abandoned by joint consent and a remit to an accountant substituted for it. In short, the parties mutually agreed to have no proof, and consequently to scrap their preparations for it, and to substitute procedure by way of remit. Remit to an expert dispensed with expert assistance; and it seems to me impossible in these circumstances that Mr Robertson's clients should be held.entitled to claim charges which were only justifiable upon the footing that procedure by proof before the Court had been adhered to. If they consented to that method of trying the case being abandoned and another method being substituted for it—for which other method the expenses incurred with a view to the first method could not be utilised—they cannot ask to be treated in the same way as they might have been entitled to be treated if the first method had been adhered to. I do not think therefore that the case of Clements has any application. The result is to leave the matter regulated by the Act of Sederunt, and the Act of Sederunt does not warrant the claim which the defenders make.

Lord Cullen—I concur.

Lord Ashmore—I concur.

Lord Mackenzie and Lord Skerrington were absent.

The Court approved the Auditor's report.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuer and Reclaimer— Jamieson. Agents— Drummond & Reid, W.S.

Counsel for the Defenders and Respondents— Graham Robertson. Agents— Morton, Smart, Macdonald, & Prosser, W.S.

1921


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1921/59SLR0147.html