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TRUSCOTT v. TRUSCOTT WRAITH v. SHEFFIELD FORGEMASTERS LTD [1997] EWCA Civ 2285 (31st July, 1997)
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
No
CCRTI 96/1383/C
IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM ORDER OF HIS HONOUR JUDGE COLTART
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Thursday,
31st July 1997
B
e f o r e:
LORD
JUSTICE KENNEDY
LORD
JUSTICE WAITE
LORD
JUSTICE AULD
TRUSCOTT
-
v -
TRUSCOTT
WRAITH
-
v -
SHEFFIELD
FORGEMASTERS LTD
(Handed
down judgment prepared by
Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London
EC4A 2HD
Tel:
0171 831 3183
Official
Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS
E GUMBEL
(Instructed by Alison Trent of London) appeared on behalf of the Appellant
(Truscott v Truscott)
MR
G MANSFIELD
(Instructed by Marsh Ferriman & Cheale of Littlehampton, West Sussex)
appeared on behalf of the Respondent (Truscott v Truscott)
MR
J MORGAN
(Instructed by Nelson & Co of Leeds) appeared on behalf of the Appellant
(Wraith v Sheffield Forgemasters)
MR
G SANKEY QC
and
MR
P KILCOYNE
(Instructed by Russell Jones & Walker of Bristol) appeared on behalf of the
Respondents (Wraith v Sheffield Forgemasters Ltd)
J
U D G M E N T
(As
Approved by the Court
)
(Crown
Copyright)
LORD
JUSTICE KENNEDY:
1. General
These
two appeals, which we heard on the same day, raise the same important issue in
relation to taxation of costs, which it is easiest to formulate by reference to
the facts of the cases themselves.
2. Truscott
Mr
and Mrs Truscott were divorced in 1986. Custody of their two children was
awarded to Mrs Truscott, and there was an order for periodic payments in favour
of each child. In February 1989 that order was registered in the Crowborough
Magistrates’ Court. On 1
st
November 1990 Marsh, Ferriman and Cheale (MFC), solicitors acting for Mrs
Truscott, obtained in the Brighton County Court a charging order nisi in
relation to the house in which Mr Truscott was living with his second wife.
The sum claimed as arrears of maintenance was £5156.38, but it was not a
judgment debt, and Mr Truscott did not admit liability. It is now common
ground that the Crowborough Magistrates’ Court having been given the task
of enforcing the order for periodical payments Mrs Truscott was not entitled to
take enforcement proceedings in any other court (See section 3(4) of
Maintenance Order Act 1958 and the Charging Order Act 1979). The application
for a charging order nisi was therefore misconceived. That was at once drawn
to the attention of MFC by the Magistrates’ Court, but surprisingly MFC
went ahead and on 10
th
December 1990 the charging order was made absolute. Mr Truscott appeared in
person at the County Court, but not being a lawyer did not take the
jurisdictional point. On 5
th
August 1991 MFC applied for an order for sale, and Mr Truscott then consulted
Alison Trent & Co (ATC) solicitors of Fleet Street, London. He had
previously been represented by solicitors in East Grinstead with whom he had
become dissatisfied, and a friend who had been in similar difficulties had
recommended that he consult ATC. ATC obtained legal aid and wrote to MFC
explaining why the charging order should never have been sought. Neither to
that letter nor to either of two reminders was there a reply. ATC then on 29
th
November 1993 obtained an order striking out the order for sale, and on 10
th
August 1994 Judge Hammerton made a wasted costs order in favour of Mr Truscott.
The costs were taxed by District Judge Merrick on 15
th
December 1994, when he allowed ATC’s charges at the rate they claimed,
namely £95 per hour. It is accepted that it was an appropriate rate for a
firm of their size and standing practising from their address, but on behalf of
MFC it was contended that Mr Truscott should not have used London solicitors.
He should have gone to solicitors in the Brighton area as the charging order
had been obtained in the Brighton County Court, or he should have consulted
solicitors in Tunbridge Wells where he lived. On 5
th
June 1995 District Judge Merrick conducted a review, but he adhered to his
original decision. MFC, as they were entitled to do, appealed, and on 13
th
February 1996 Judge Coltart on this issue ruled in their favour. There were
two other issues which he was asked to consider, namely the basis of taxation
and the uplift. On the first of those issues he ruled in favour of MFC and on
the second issue in favour of ATC. Neither of those rulings have been
challenged before us, but they may be of some significance when we come to
consider the final order made by Judge Coltart, namely his order in relation to
costs.
3. Wraith
In
1985 Mr Wraith was employed by Sheffield Forgemasters Ltd at their premises in
Sheffield. He fell from the walkway of an overhead crane, and sustained very
serious injuries. He consulted his trade union, which instructed their
solicitors, Russell, Jones and Walker (RJW), a well-known London firm, to act
on the plaintiffs behalf. Proceedings were commenced in London, but by consent
they were transferred to Sheffield. In May 1993, on the third day of the
trial, the action was settled. The defendants submitted to judgment in the sum
of £350,000 and costs. RJW then submitted their bill of costs in which
they claimed remuneration at a normal rate for a firm of their size and
standing in London, but the rate was substantially more than the average
charged by Sheffield firms. The defendants’ solicitors - based in Leeds
- objected, contending in substance that the plaintiff’s solicitors
should only be entitled to recover what would have been charged by a Sheffield
firm. Neither before the District Judge nor before Potter J (sitting with
assessors) did the defendant’s solicitors prevail.
4. The
Issue
So
the issue which arose, both in the Brighton County Court and in the High Court
at Sheffield, was whether the liability of the unsuccessful party ordered to
pay costs should be restricted to what a reasonably competent solicitor
practising in the area of the court (or in the area where the successful party
lived) might have been expected to charge, or whether the successful party
should be entitled to recover the sums claimed by the solicitor who was in fact
instructed to act on his behalf.
5. The
Rule of Court and its history
In
both cases costs fell to be taxed on the standard basis, and Order 62 Rule 12
(1) of the Rules of the Supreme Court applies to actions both in the High Court
and in the County Court (see Order 38 Rule 1(3) of the County Court Rules). As
far as material Rule 12(1) provides :-
“On
a taxation of costs on the standard basis there shall be allowed a reasonable
amount in respect of all costs reasonably incurred and any doubts which the
taxing officer may have as to whether the costs were reasonably incurred or
were reasonable in amount shall be resolved in favour of the paying party.”
This
rule has only been in its present form since 1986, and authorities prior to
that date have to be read with due regard to the wording of the rule which was
in force at the relevant time. Rule 32 of Order 40 of the Consolidated General
Orders of the Court of Chancery, so far as material, provided that :-
“Where
costs are to be taxed as between party and party, the Taxing Master may allow
to the party entitled to receive such costs all such just and reasonable
expenses as appear to have been properly incurred in - "
various
steps in an action are then listed, and the rule continues :-
“but
in allowing such costs, the Taxing Master shall not allow to such party any
costs which do not appear to have been necessary or proper for the attainment
of justice or for defending his rights, or which appear to have been incurred
through over-caution, negligence or mistake or merely at the desire of the
party.”
So
the test seems to be an objective one, to be applied by the Taxing Master after
the event, allowing only costs he considers to have been “necessary or
proper for the attainment of justice”. That it has been urged upon us by
Mr Mansfield Q.C., for Mrs Truscott (in reality MFC) and by Mr Morgan for
Sheffield Forgemasters, is the approach which we should adopt, because it seeks
to safeguard the interests of both parties, and tends to keep down the costs of
litigation by limiting so far as possible the costs which a party even if
successful can recover.
In
the patent action of
Smith
v Buller
(1875) LR 19 EQ 473 Sir R. Malins V-C, said at 475 :-
“It
is of great importance to litigants who are unsuccessful that they should not
be oppressed by having to pay an excessive amount of costs.”
The
plaintiff in that case was held liable to pay the costs, and the
Vice-Chancellor continued :-
“I
think he ought to bear no more than the necessary costs. I adhere to the rule
which has ready been laid down, that the costs chargeable under a taxation as
between a party and party are all that are necessary to enable the adverse
party to conduct the litigation, and no more. Any charges merely for
conducting litigation more conveniently may be called luxuries and must be paid
by the party incurring them. The plaintiff is the attacking party, and has
failed, and he must therefore pay all charges necessary to the litigation. But
if the Defendants give greater facilities for the conduct of the case than are
strictly necessary, they ought not to be allowed to throw them upon the
plaintiff.”
As
Mr Sankey Q.C. for Mr Wraith pointed out, what was said by the Vice-Chancellor
cannot be applied directly to the rule with which we are concerned, because it
was said in relation to a rule which in significant respects was quite
differently worded.
In
the 1959 version of Rules of the Supreme Court Order 62 Rule 28 dealt with
Assessment of Costs and Rule 28(2) provided that :-
“Costs
to which this rule applies shall be taxed on the party and party basis, and on
a taxation on that basis there shall be allowed all such costs as were
necessary or proper for the attainment of justice or for enforcing or defending
the rights of the party whose costs are being taxed.”
The
ensuing sub-rules deal with the possibility of awarding costs on a common fund
basis, etc. In
Simpsons
Motor Sales (London) Ltd
v
Hendon
Corporation (no2)
(1965) 1 WLR 112, a case about fees for leading counsel, Pennycuick J said in
relation to Rule 28(2) at page 118B :-
“The
words ‘or proper for the attainment of justice or for enforcing or
defending the rights of the party whose costs are being taxed’ must, I
think, now be read in after the word ‘necessary’ in the statement
of principle made by Malins V-C”.
Miss
Gumbel for Mr Truscott submitted to us that even under the 1959 Rule objective
necessity was no longer the test for party and party costs, and where costs
were awarded on a common fund basis that was expressly stated by Rule 28(4) to
be “a more generous basis” which allowed “a reasonable amount
in respect of all costs reasonably incurred”. It was that common fund
basis which in 1986 became the standard basis, as can be seen from the current
wording of Order 62 Rule 12(1).
6. Authorities
In
R
v Dudley Magistrates’ Court ex parte Power City Stores Ltd
(1990) 154JP 654 the Divisional Court of the Queen’s Bench Division
considered an order of a Justices’ Clerk which disallowed the fees of
leading counsel when assessing the costs to be paid out of central funds
pursuant to the order of the court. Where such an order was made section 16(6)
of the Prosecution of Offenders Act 1985 provided that the costs recoverable
should be “ ... of such amount as the court considers reasonably
sufficient to compensate him for any expenses properly incurred by him in the
proceedings”. Section 16(7) then provides :-
“Where
a court makes a defendants costs order but is of the opinion that there are
circumstances which make it inappropriate that the person in whose favour the
order is made should recover the full amount mentioned in subsection (6) above,
the court shall -
(a) assess
what amount would, in its opinion, be just and reasonable; and
(b) specify
that amount in the order.”
Woolf
L.J. said at 657G that the effect of those two subsections, the wording of
which is reminiscent of the wording of RSC Order 62 Rule 12(1), is to require
the taxing officer to carry out a two stage test. First he must consider
whether the expenses claimed were properly incurred by the defendant. If so
what amount will be reasonably sufficient to compensate the defendant for those
costs? Only if there are untoward circumstances will section 16(7) come into
play.
Pursuant
to section 20(1) of the 1985 Act regulations were made by the Lord Chancellor
to assist those who had to implement the provisions of the Act, and regulation
7(3) of those regulations provides :-
“when
determining costs for the purposes of this regulation, there shall be allowed a
reasonable amount in respect of all costs reasonably incurred and any doubt
which the appropriate authority may have as to whether the costs are reasonably
incurred or were reasonable in amount shall be resolved against the
applicant.”
It
will be appreciated at once that those words are precisely the same as the
words used in Order 62 Rule 12(1). In the
Dudley
case
the Divisional Court held that in seeking to apply the statute and the
regulations the clerk to the justices was asking himself the wrong question.
He asked himself if a junior counsel or a senior solicitor could reasonably
have conducted the case on behalf of the applicants, and answered that question
in the affirmative. What he should have asked himself was “whether the
applicant acted reasonably in employing leading counsel”. If the answer
to that question was in the affirmative then the expenses were properly
incurred for the purposes of section 16.
In
KPMG
Peat Marwick McLintock v HLT Group Ltd
(1995) 2 All ER 180 the plaintiffs claimed for professional fees, and the
defendants counter-claimed alleging negligence. The plaintiffs obtained
summary judgment under Order 14 with an order for costs on the standard basis,
to be taxed if not agreed. The plaintiffs had instructed solicitors in the
City of London to represent them in the litigation and there was an issue as to
the amount charged by those solicitors for the work which they had undertaken.
The plaintiffs sought a review of the Taxing Master’s decision, and so
the matter came before Auld J and two assessors. At page 186a the Judge said :-
“If,
as I find, it was reasonable for the plaintiff to have instructed Travers Smith
Braithwaite in the litigation, then the firm’s costs on taxation should
be taxed by reference to the broad average direct costs for such a firm in that
area. The fact that the plaintiffs could have obtained the same services at a
much lower price than that average elsewhere is irrelevant.”
He
referred to the decision in the
Dudley
case as support for the approach which he adopted. Although Mr Mansfield and
Mr Morgan were at first disposed to take issue with the second sentence in the
passage which I have just quoted, on reflection they recognised that it takes
as its premise what appears in the preceding sentence. In other words
availability of services outside of the City of London at a lower price may
have been relevant in relation to the question of whether it was reasonable to
instruct those who were in fact instructed, but once it was concluded that it
was reasonable for them to be instructed that availability ceased to be
relevant. The focus then shifted to a comparison between the charges of the
solicitors actually instructed and the broad average of charges made by similar
firms practising in the same area.
In
L
v L
(1996) 1 FLR 873 Neill L.J. having considered recent authorities as to the
principles to be applied by the taxing officer, discerned five propositions
which at 877C he listed thus :-
(1)
the general principle of taxation is that a solicitor’s remuneration
should consist of two elements - first a sum computed on the basis of an hourly
rate which represents what is called the “broad average direct
cost” of undertaking the work; and secondly, a sum, usually expressed as
a percentage mark-up of the broad average direct cost for care and conduct:
(2)
the broad average direct cost is to be assessed by reference to an average firm
in the relevant area at the relevant time:
(3)
the relevant time means the time at which the work was done. No allowance
should be made for the consequences of later inflation:
(4)
the District Judge can draw on his own experience and on information which is
provided to him by local firms; the District Judge can also take account of
surveys.
(5)
an artificially inflated figure for uplift should not be used to correct or
compensate for inadequate hourly rates: accordingly the appropriate hourly
rates should be the rates which “represented the actual cost to the
solicitor at the relevant time doing the relevant work (assuming always that
the solicitor has acted reasonably and the costs are incurred at the
appropriate level).
Neill
L.J. then added two qualifications. First, he emphasised that the words of
Order 62 Rule 12(1) contain the key test “ a reasonable amount in respect
of all costs reasonably incurred” and, secondly, he said at 878C :-
“I
would also wish to leave open the question, which does not arise in this case,
as to whether it is always correct to consider only firms in the relevant area.
There may cases where it might be arguable that though the costs were
reasonable for the solicitor instructed, it was not reasonable to instruct a
solicitor practising in an expensive inner city area rather than one
practising, for example, in a suburb.”
That
second qualification is of course the issue in this case.
Aldous
L.J. said at page 884A :-
“The
task of the taxing officer under Order 62 Rule 12 is to allow ‘a
reasonable amount in respect of all costs reasonably incurred’. That
requires two decisions. First, whether costs were reasonably incurred and
secondly - what is the reasonable amount that should be allowed? We are not
concerned with the first matter, as there is no dispute before us as to whether
any particular work carried out should or should not have been carried out nor
whether it should have been carried out by a partner or some other employee.
The only issue before us is whether the reasonable amount should be calculated
using as the Part A figure £45 per hour for a partner and £30 per
hour for a legal executive.”
The
last sentence is important because that was the issue in the case. The
appellants were contending for £60 per hour for a partner and £50 per
hour for a legal executive on the basis that costs had risen and the figures
put forward by the respondents no longer represented the true cost of doing the
work. It is in that context that Aldous L.J. said at 885A :-
“The
reasonable amount is not necessarily the amount that a solicitor might charge,
but is the reasonable amount that a party ordered to pay costs should actually
pay. Thus the expense rate of certain solicitors may be totally irrelevant as
their overheads and therefore their expense rate far exceeds that which other
solicitors doing the relevant work would charge. A party ordered to pay costs
should not be liable for the particular choice of solicitor of the winning
party, but should pay the reasonable costs of the sort of solicitor that a
person would have instructed with a view of the proper conduct of his case and
minimising the costs of the litigation.”
Mr
Mansfield and Mr Morgan naturally invite our attention to the last sentence,
but, as I have made clear, Aldous L.J. was not in fact addressing the issue
with which we are concerned.
Other
than the two decisions under appeal the only other case cited to us is a recent
decision of Buckley J. in
Jones
v Secretary of State for Wales
(1997) 1 WLR 1008. There the facts were very different and nothing was said
which seems to me to be relevant in relation to these appeals.
7. Back
to Truscott
It
is accepted on all sides that Judge Coltart in
Truscott
and Potter J. in
Wraith
were in no way fettered by the taxing officer’s decision. Their
obligation was to determine the rights of the parties as though the matter came
before them without any determination having already been made (see
Kawarindrasingh
v White
(1997) 1 WLR 785). There can therefore, in my judgment, be no real criticism
of Judge Coltart’s assertion that once the issue is raised the burden of
establishing the reasonableness of instructing ATC lay upon Mr Truscott. The
words of Order 62 Rule 12(1) show that the court can only allow a reasonable
amount in respect of costs reasonably incurred, and that any doubts must be
resolved in favour of the paying party. However, then, as it seems to me,
Judge Coltart fell into error because he said:-
“I am not satisfied that it can be regarded as reasonable for the First
Defendant to have instructed Alison Trent and Company on this matter if their
rates are higher than would be found locally.”
So
that was the sole reason for concluding that the burden of proof had not been
discharged. As Mr Mansfield pointed out, other matters were canvassed in the
judgment, but they were only canvassed as submissions advanced by counsel, and,
as Miss Gumbel submitted, Judge Coltart made the same error that was made by
the Clerk to the Justices in the
Dudley
case. Instead of asking himself whether Mr Truscott had acted reasonably when
he instructed ATC and seeking to answer that question having regard to all
relevant considerations the judge answered it by applying one simple and in my
judgment inappropriate test, namely a comparison between the rates charged by
ATC and the rates charged by firms in the locality of the court and the
locality in which Mr Truscott lived. The following are matters which, as it
seems to me, the judge should have regarded as relevant when considering the
reasonableness of Mr Truscott’s decision to instruct ATC :-
“(1)
the importance of the matter to him. It was obviously of great importance. It
threatened his home.
(2)
the legal and factual complexities, in so far as he might reasonably be
expected to understand them. Due to the incompetence of MFC the matter had
taken on an appearance of some complexity.
(3)
the location of his home, his place of work and the location of the court in
which the relevant proceedings had been commenced.
(4)
Mr Truscott’s possibly well-founded dissatisfaction with the solicitors
he had originally instructed, which may well have resulted in a natural desire
to instruct solicitors further afield, who would not be inhibited in
representing his interests.
(5)
The fact that he had sought advice as to who to consult, and had been
recommended to consult ATC.
(6)
The location of ATC, including their accessibility to him, and their readiness
to attend at the relevant court.
(7)
What, if anything, he might reasonably be expected to know of the fees likely
to be charged by ATC as compared with the fees of other solicitors whom he
might reasonably be expected to have considered.”
If
ATC have some particular experience in relation to professional negligence that
I accept would not be relevant, because that was not why Mr Truscott consulted
them. The advice he received was simply that they would be able to handle his
case.
If
the judge had taken account of the matters which I have listed it seems to me
to be obvious that he would have reached a different conclusion, namely that it
was reasonable for Mr Truscott to instruct ATC. This is not a question of
discretion, it is a question of the proper approach to be adopted to the matter
under consideration. There being no issue as to the reasonableness of the
charges of ATC once it is accepted Mr Truscott was acting reasonably in
instructing that firm it follows that in my judgment his appeal must be
allowed. I would therefore in his case set aside the decision of Judge Coltart
and restore the order of the District Judge.
8. Back
to Wraith
When
giving judgment in
Wraith
Potter J said at (1996) 1 WLR 624D :-
“In
relation to the first question ‘Were the costs reasonably
incurred?’ it is in principle open to the paying party, on a taxation of
costs on the standard basis, to contend that the successful party’s costs
have not been ‘reasonably incurred’ to the extent that they had
been augmented by employment of a solicitor who, by reason of his calibre,
normal area of practice, status or location, amounts to an unsuitable or
‘luxury’ choice, made on grounds other than grounds which would be
taken into account by an ordinary reasonable litigant concerned to obtain
skilful competent and efficient representation in the type of litigation
concerned.......... However, in deciding whether such an objection is
sustainable in practice the focus is primarily upon the reasonable interests of
the plaintiff in the litigation so that, in relation to broad categories of
costs, such as those generated by the decision of a plaintiff to employ a
particular status or type of solicitor or counsel, or one located in a
particular area, one looks to see whether, having regard to the extent and
importance of the litigation to a reasonably minded plaintiff, a reasonable
choice or decision has been made. If satisfied that the choice or decision was
reasonable, it is the second question ‘what is a reasonable amount to be
allowed?’ which imports consideration of the appropriate rate or fee for
a solicitor or counsel of the status and type retained. If not satisfied the
choice or decision was reasonable, then the question of ‘reasonable
amount’ will fall to be assessed on the notional basis of the costs
reasonably to be allowed in respect of a solicitor or counsel of the status or
type which should have been retained.
In
either case, solicitors’ hourly rates will be assessed, not on the basis
of the solicitor’s actual charging rates, but (in a case where the
decision to retain was reasonable) on the basis of the broad costs of
litigation in the area of the solicitor retained or (in a case where the choice
made was not reasonable) of the type or class of solicitor who ought to have
been retained.”
That
in my judgement is right. I do however take issue with the way in which the
principle was applied to the facts of the case. I accept that it was
reasonable for Mr Wraith to consult his trade union, but the trade union knew
or ought to have known what sort of legal fees it would have to expend to
obtain competent services for Mr Wraith, who lived in Sheffield and had
sustained a serious accident there. Once Mr Wraith consulted his union that
knowledge must be imputed to him. As Potter J accepted “no doubt there
were firms of solicitors in Sheffield or Leeds well qualified to do the
work” and in reality the only reason why the work went to London
solicitors was that the union had adopted the practice of sending all their
work to those solicitors. That connection seems to me to be of limited
relevance on taxation in an individual case. It means of course that, like
competent solicitors in Sheffield or Leeds, the solicitors actually instructed
were well qualified to do the work, and that the union, as advisers to Mr
Wraith, knew the solicitors to be competent and trusted them to exercise the
necessary expertise, but that is all.
None
of what I have just said is intended to put pressure on trade unions or
insurers to change their policy and parcel out work so that different
solicitors act for them in different areas. Some insurers and some unions
already operate in that way. Others use one solicitor who has local branches,
as is now the case with RJW, but whatever approach is adopted it seems to me
that it is the duty of unions and insurers in each individual case to keep down
the costs of litigation, and that may well mean that if they go to London
solicitors who charge London rates for a case which has no obvious connection
with London, and which does not require expertise only to be found there, they
will, even if successful, recover less than the solicitors have charged.
In
the case of
Wraith
I would therefore allow the appeal and in default of agreement remit the matter
for further consideration by the Deputy District Judge. His conclusion may be
that it was reasonable for Mr Wraith to get his union to instruct RJW, but only
on the basis that they would charge fees appropriate to their Leeds office.
That however is only a tentative suggestion which goes somewhat further than
for present purposes it is necessary to go.
LORD
JUSTICE WAITE: I agree.
LORD
JUSTICE AULD: I also agree.
Order:
Appeals allowed. In the case of Truscott v Truscott order of District Judge
restored. The costs of application on 7th May 1996 recoverable by March
Ferriman & Cheale. Legal aid taxation. In the case of Wraith v Sheffield
Forgemasters remitted to the Deputy District Judge for further consideration.
Costs of appeal at hearing below will follow the event. Costs before the judge
hereafter to be a matter for that judge. Leave to appeal was refused in Wraith
v Wraith.
© 1997 Crown Copyright
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