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 £1, 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!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Stewart v. Speed [2006] ScotSC 26 (28 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2006/26.html Cite as: [2006] ScotSC 26 |
[New search] [Help]
Case
Reference Number: |
A1517/05 |
SHERIFFDOM OF TAYSIDE, CENTRAL
AND
in the cause
DAVID STEWART, residing at
PURSUER
against
ARCHIBALD
SPEED, residing at
DEFENDER
ACT: Miss McKenzie; ALT:
Miss Henderson.
KIRKCALDY 28 March 2006. The
Sheriff, having resumed consideration of the cause, GRANTS DECREE against the
Defender for payment to the Pursuer of the sum of ONE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED
POUNDS (£1,400.00) STERLING, and DECERNS;
FINDS the Defender liable to the Pursuer in expenses in accordance with Chapter 10 of
the Table of Fees for General Business in force prior to January 2004; ALLOWS an account thereof to
be given in and Remits the same when lodged to the Auditor of Court to tax and
to report.
NOTE
This is an action of reparation
in which the Pursuer seeks damages arising out of a road traffic accident which
occurred on
The matter called before me on
the Pursuer's motion (No 7/1 of process) for decree in terms of a Minute of
Tender and Minute of Acceptance. The
issue between the parties concerns expenses.
For the Defender, Miss McKenzie
sought one of the following: expenses in
favour of the Defender; no expenses due
to or by either party; expenses in
favour of the Pursuer on the summary cause scale.
For the Pursuer, Miss Henderson
sought an award of expenses in favour of the Pursuer on the summary cause scale
failing which expenses by reference to the extra judicial scale in force either
at January 2004 or January 2006.
I do not understand the basic
factual position to be in dispute between the parties.
Miss McKenzie stated that the
principal sum in the tender (£1,400) had been offered before the action was
raised. I was told that an offer to
settle in the sum of £1,250 was made on or about 26 August 2005. That offer was initially rejected. The Pursuer wanted to recoup the amount of
excess on a policy of insurance amounting to £150. Settlement was agreed in the sum of £1,400.
The Defender's representative (and I do not think it matters whether that be
the Defender's insurers or agents) offered to pay to the Pursuer's agents the
sum of £350 plus VAT and outlays by way of expenses. That, I was told, was calculated by
reference to the extrajudicial scale in force prior to January 2004. That was rejected by the Pursuer's agent who
sought a sum calculated by reference to the extra judicial scale in force as at
January 2004. That would have brought
out a sum of £678.56 plus VAT and outlays.
The main difference between the two scales was the investigation fee. I will refer to these scales later.
In support of her motion, Miss
McKenzie referred me to the following authorities:- Gunn v
Hunter (1886) 13 R 573; Mavor and Coulson v Greerson (1892) 19 R
868; Crombie
v British Transport Commission 1961 SLT 115. These cases showed that, where an
extrajudicial offer had been made of a sum later accepted by the Pursuer then
the court had the power to order the Pursuer to bear the expenses of
process. In this case, the parties had
agreed the principal sum. That which
was tendered was the same sum as previously agreed and was the one accepted by
the Pursuer in terms of the Minute of Acceptance.
In opposition, Miss Henderson
said that the Pursuer had acted reasonably in refusing the expenses tendered in
the sum of £350 plus outlays. That
amount was not enough to cover the costs of the Pursuer's agents to their
client. Certain time costs were lodged
in process and reference was made thereto.
These time costs brought out sums in excess of £350. Miss Henderson referred me to the case of Calder v Rush 1970 SLT (
If I was against her in her primary
submission, Miss Henderson submitted that the Pursuer should be entitled to
expenses on an extrajudicial scale;
either that in force in January 2004 or January 2006. In support of that submission she referred
me to Neilson v Motion 1992 SLT 124 and
I should add that reference was
made in the course of the debate to McPhail on Sheriff Court Practice (Second
Edition) and, in particular, paragraph 14.38.
It was agreed that I could have regard to McPhail.
The Minute of Tender is in the
following terms:-
"Graham for the Defender stated and
hereby states to the court that without admission of liability and under
reservation of his/her/their(sic) whole rights and pleas the Defender tendered
and hereby tenders to the Pursuer the sum of ONE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED POUNDS
(£1,400.00) STERLING together with such expenses as the court deems appropriate
(under declaration that for the avoidance of doubt, the Defenders will in
addition to the foregoing sums be responsible for discharging any liability in
respect of recoverable benefits in terms of Section 6 of the Social Security
(Recovery of Benefits) Act 1997 or any amendment of re-enactment thereof)."
The Minute of Acceptance of
Tender is in the following terms:-
"Stead for the Pursuer stated and
hereby states to the court that he hereby accepts the Defender's Minute of
Tender No of Process."
The Initial Writ was warranted
on
I have set out the full terms of
the Minute of Tender. It is not in the
terms approved by the Inner House in the case of McKenzie v H D Fraser & Sons Limited 1990 SC 311, a point I did
comment upon in the debate before me.
Neither party argued that the Tender was invalid. Indeed, as in the case of Crombie, the Pursuer could hardly do so
having lodge a Minute of Acceptance.
However, in the intervening period, I have become aware of the decision
in Brackencroft Limited v Silvers Marine
Limited 2006 SLT 85. I have
considered whether I ought to put this matter out by order for parties to
address me further. I decided not to do
so. Although this may be a matter of
principle, the sums at stake are not large and do not warrant the expense of a further
hearing. Secondly, and more
importantly, for reasons I shall come to, I do not think it affects the
outcome. In the cases of McKenzie and Brackencroft the Inner House made it plain that, in order to be
classified as a judicial tender, a tender ought to be in a form which carries
with it an offer of expenses. In Brackencroft it did not and was
therefore not regarded by the court as a valid tender.
Unlike McKenzie and Brackencroft,
this is a case in which the Defender maintains the action should never have
been raised at all. In McPhail on
Sheriff Court Practice (Second Edition) at para 14.38, footnote 76, under
reference to Crombie, it is stated
that it is questionable whether an offer of expenses should be required where
an extrajudicial offer of the sums tendered had been made before the raising of
the action (the same text appears in the first edition at para 14.36, footnote 42, written before the
decision in McKenzie). As a simple matter of drafting, it does seem
odd that a Defender should state in a tender an offer to pay expenses in a
situation where he considers that not only are no expenses payable, but that he
should be entitled to seek expenses from the Pursuer. None of the authorities to which I was
referred seems to have addressed this issue fully and, in any event, those most
relevant pre-date McKenzie and Brackencroft. It could be said that the cases of McKenzie and Brackencroft were dealing with cases in which the action either
settled after sundry procedure or after proof and that cases such as the
present form an exception to the rule.
I have reached the conclusion that such an approach should not be
followed. Firstly, the Inner House made
very clear that tenders ought to follow a particular style, at least in so far
as expenses are concerned. If an
exception is introduced, almost inevitably, there will be scope for argument as
to when it does or does not apply.
Furthermore, although an offer of expenses by the Defender, in cases
such as this, may, as a matter of drafting seem odd, provided it is regarded as
being a trigger for the exercise of the court's overall discretion as to the
awarding of expenses, then there is nothing objectionable in principle. Accordingly, in my opinion, even where a
Defender disputes whether the action should have been raised at all, the
lodging of a tender in the form specified by the Inner House, permits the
Defender to seek, and the court to award, expenses against the party accepting
the tender.
If I am correct in that view,
then, following McKenzie and Brackencroft, I must conclude that the
tender was not a valid tender because it did not contain an offer to pay
expenses. However, as the Inner House
pointed out in Brackencroft, the
tender may be a relevant factor in determining the issue of expenses.
So far as the authorities to
which I was referred are concerned, neither Gunn
nor Mavor and Coulson involved a minute of tender. In both actions an averment was made on
record by the defender narrating a prior offer to settle, a practice which has
subsequently been viewed with some disfavour.
In Crombie it was accepted
that the pursuer had raised an action against the defenders without intimating
a claim beforehand. The defenders
averred that no intimation of the claim had been made beforehand and lodged a
minute of tender which was immediately accepted although the tender itself does
not seem to have featured greatly in the decision. In each of these three cases, the defender
was held entitled to an award of expenses against the pursuer. Calder
v Rush concerned an extrajudicial offer which proved to be less that the
sum awarded. Nelson v Motion concerned the premature and unreasonable raising of
an action. Paterson v The North of
Scotland Milk Marketing Board arose where a claim had been compromised but
the pursuer's agents alleged that the compromise was entered into in error, the
error relating to the pursuer's wage loss.
As a result, an action was raised, a tender was lodged and decree
granted in terms thereof. The Lord
Ordinary held that the action should not have been raised at all; any error arose because of the fault of the
pursuer's agent. I note that in both Neilson and Paterson
the disposal was that the pursuer should be entitled to his expenses in accordance
with Chapter 10 of the Table of Fees then in force ( the extra judicial
scale). In so doing, the court was
exercising its power to modify an award of expenses.
Chapter 10 of the Table of Fees
has, for some time, been a feature of practice. Chapter 10 is part of the Table of Fees
published by the Council of the Law Society of Scotland. As I read it, that concerns certain
recommended methods of how a solicitor should calculate a fee to his client. For example, the Table of Fees deals, not
only with negotiated settlements but also executries and conveyancing. The relevant part of Chapter 10 in force
immediately before January 2004 provided as follows:-
"Chapter 10. Negotiated settlements.
Negotiating and completing settlement
of claims for compensation or reparation on any ground whatever
Maximum fee: 20U
Up to £2,500 25 per cent
............. Notes:-
(i) This
fee may be charged where the settlement was effected on or after
Chapter 10 of the Table of Fees in force as at 2004
provided:-
"Chapter 10. Negotiated Settlements.
Negotiating and completing settlement
of claims for compensation or reparation on any ground whatever.
(1) Investigation
fee
Settlements
up to and including £1,500 25 U
............ Notes:-
(i) This
fee may be charged where the settlement was effected on or after
(ii) In
all cases the solicitor has the option of charging a detailed account against his
own client in accordance with Chapter 3, under deduction of fees recovered from
the other party or their insurer."
The principal difference between
the 2004 table and the 2003 table was the investigation fee. I was told by Miss McKenzie and Miss Henderson
that it was this which proved the difficulty in the current case. The question of the investigation fee was
not generally resolved until the introduction of a Pre action Protocol being,
as I was told, a document agreed between the Council of the Law Society of
Scotland and a number of insurers. The
Pre action Protocol allows for an investigation fee on settlements up to and
including £1,500 in the sum of £300 rather than by reference to a number of
units.
As I was also told, the matter
was yet further complicated by the fact that in February 2005, the Council of
the Law Society withdrew the Table of Fees altogether (see the Journal of the
Law Society (2005) page 45).
The issue in this case is the entitlement, if
any, of either party to an award of expenses in the current process. As I understand it, and although it might be
a trite observation to make, there is no absolute entitlement to an award of
expenses. An award of expenses is a
matter for the discretion of the court.
As Lord Milligan said in Crombie,
referring to Mavor and Coulson v Greerson, when considering the
question of expenses, the court will attach importance to the reasonableness of
the conduct of the parties (at page 116).
Later on in the course of his opinion (at page 117), Lord Milligan also
referred to the importance of "the attitude of the parties" and "whether the
action was really necessary". The
general rule in relation to expenses is set out in McPhail at paragraph 19.07 in
which the learned author quotes from the opinion of Lord President Cooper in
the case of Howitt v Alexander and Sons 1948
SC 154 at page 157. In turn, Lord
Cooper quoted from McLaren on Expenses at page 21. As Lord Cooper observed, the conditions upon
which judicial discretion as to expenses should be exercised have never been
fixed within a framework of rigid and unalterable rules. As the passage quoted by McPhail makes
clear, if a party is put to expense in vindicating his rights he is entitled to
recover such expense from the person by whom it was created unless there is
something in his own conduct that gives him the character of an improper
litigant in insisting on things which his title does not warrant. When it is said that expenses follow success,
that is really an application of the principle in the sense that the rights of
the parties are taken to have been all along such as the ultimate decree
declares them to me and whoever unsuccessfully resisted the vindication of
those rights is prima facie to
blame.
As I understand it, the parties
agreed the principal sum. They could
not agree the question of expenses.
Much of the disagreement appears to have centred around the application
or otherwise of the Table of Fees in force immediately prior to January 2004
and that which was said to be in force as at January 2004. The immediate difficulty that I have is
that, it seems to me that Chapter 10 of the Table of Fees constituted a
statement by the Council of the Law Society as to what might be a reasonable
fee which a solicitor was entitled to charge his client. In other words, Chapter 10 had no direct
bearing between pursuer and defender.
So much appears to be acknowledged in Note (ii) to the January 2004
Table. It was not suggested to me, nor
am I aware of any authority for the proposition, that Chapter 10 of the Table
of Fees was an enforceable right as between pursuer and defender. It was not
suggested to me that the Pursuer had a right to expenses. As a matter of general principle, legal
expenses may, or may not, be recoverable as a head of damages, depending upon
the Pursuer's cause of action or as part of the expenses of process in the
litigation itself. The former was not
advanced before me and, in relation to the latter, the expenses being sought
have occasioned the commencement of the action, the principal sum having been
agreed already.
Therefore, on a strict analysis,
the Pursuer was litigating for something to which there appears to have been no
legal entitlement. However, I do not
think matters are quite as clear cut as that.
In Neilson Lord Osborne was faced with a similar
issue. Although no agreement had been
reached on the principal sum, the defender's insurers had intimate a
willingness to settle the claim, given a reasonable time to investigate it. The Pursuer had acted unreasonably by
litigating when he did. Lord Osborne held that, had no proceedings been raised,
the Pursuer could have expected to be offered expenses in accordance with the
Table of Fees then in force. As I read
the opinion, it appears to have been accepted that expenses would have been
paid on this basis had the claim settled before proceedings commenced. The obvious complication here is that
parties do not agree which Table of Fees ought to apply.
In my opinion, I do not think
the Pursuer is entitled to an award of expenses on a judicial scale. The
Defender offered to pay a sum which, I was told, the Defender had previously
offered to pay and which, as a principal sum, the Pursuer was willing to
accept. The litigation had as its
purpose recovery of an award of damages which amounts, in effect, to the
principal sum. On the other hand, to
award expenses against the Pursuer does not seem wholly fair as it seems to me
that both parties had, to use Lord Osborne's phrase, an expectation that
something would be payable by way of extra judicial expenses and that
expectation characterised their actings. I cannot identify any basis upon which I can
determine the correctness, or otherwise, as to a choice between the differing
Tables of Fees. As I have said, there
is no legal entitlement thereto, as between Pursuer and Defender; at best it
was an expectation, based upon practice in dealing with such cases. On the basis of what I was told, there was no
shared expectation as to the January 2004 Table of Fees, certainly not until
agreement of the Pre action Protocol in force as at January 2006. If there had been, this issue would not have
arisen. In my view the most appropriate
disposal is to make an award of expenses in favour of the Pursuer but limited
to Chapter 10 of the Table of Fees in force prior to January 2004.