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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> SM v BA (Legal Services Payment Order) [2025] EWFC 7 (16 January 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2025/7.html Cite as: [2025] EWFC 7 |
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SITTING AT THE ROYAL COURTS OF JUSTICE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Between:
- and -
(Legal Services Payment Order)
____________________
SM | Applicant |
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- and - |
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BA | Respondent |
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(Legal Services Payment Order) |
____________________
Miss Sarah Phipps KC and Miss Jessica O'Driscoll-Breen (instructed by Levison Meltzer Pigott) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10th January 2025
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Nicholas Allen KC:
a. unpaid invoices: £241,269;
b. financial remedy upto and including the PFDR Appointment: £651,288;
c. MPS: £46,668; and
d. FLA 1996: £181,542.
The law
(ii) Without derogating from that requirement [i.e. the court is required to have regard to all the matters mentioned in s 22ZB(1)–(3)], the ability of the respondent to pay should be judged by reference to the principles summarised in TL v ML (Ancillary Relief: Claim Against Assets of Extended Family) [2006] 1 FLR 1263, at para [124](iv) and (v), where it was stated:
'(iv) Where the affidavit or Form E disclosure by the payer is obviously deficient the court should not hesitate to make robust assumptions about his ability to pay. The court is not confined to the mere say-so of the payer as to the extent of his income or resources. In such a situation the court should err in favour of the payee.
(v) Where the paying party has historically been supported through the bounty of an outsider, and where the payer is asserting that the bounty had been curtailed but where the position of the outsider is ambiguous or unclear, then the court is justified in assuming that the third party will continue to supply the bounty, at least until final trial.'
Historic costs – £241,269
[13] (iv) The court cannot make an order unless it is satisfied that without the payment the applicant would not reasonably be able to obtain appropriate legal services for the proceedings. Therefore, the exercise essentially looks to the future. It is important that the jurisdiction is not used to outflank or supplant the powers and principles governing an award of costs in CPR Part 44. It is not a surrogate inter partes costs jurisdiction. Thus a LSPO should only be awarded to cover historic unpaid costs where the court is satisfied that without such a payment the applicant will not reasonably be able to obtain in the future appropriate legal services for the proceedings.
[16] In both applications the wife seeks to recover costs which have already been incurred in circumstances where there will be no further substantive litigation here whether about the children or about money. In my judgment, in both applications she falls foul of principle (iv). This is not a case where her lawyers are saying that they will down tools unless they are paid outstanding costs as well as being funded for the future. Were her application to be granted it would represent a very dangerous subversion of the exclusivity of the inter partes costs powers and principles in CPR Part 44. A shadow or surrogate jurisdiction would emerge. Such a development must be stopped in its tracks.
[28] A question sometimes arises as to payment of costs already incurred prior to issue of the LSPO application. The authorities on this topic are neatly summarised by MacDonald J at paras 33-37 of DH v RH [2023] EWFC 111. They are examples of how to exercise the judicial discretion. There is no dispute that in principle an award for past costs can be made. Where, as noted for example in Re Z [2020] EWFC 80, the historic costs sought related to sums due to firms no longer instructed by the applicant, Cobb J declined to encompass those costs within the LSPO. Costs in connection with proceedings already concluded may similarly not be readily recoverable, but costs reasonably and legitimately incurred by the present legal team in ongoing proceedings may, by contrast, be justifiably brought within the LSPO application because, as Cobb J said in BC v DE [2016] EWHC 1806 at para 22: "It is neither fair nor reasonable to expect solicitors and the Bar to offer unsecured interest free credit in order to undertake their work…".
[29] Ultimately, it seems to me, this aspect of the LSPO jurisdiction should be viewed as part of the broad discretion available to judges when determining what LSPO award, if any, should be made, applying the statute and the factors summarised in Rubin. The essential question, as MacDonald J put it in DH v RH at para 34 is whether "… the court is satisfied that without such a payment the applicant will not reasonably be able to obtain in the future appropriate legal services for the proceedings".
[28] … Mostyn J said in Rubin at 13 (iv) that the LSPO jurisdiction should not be used to "outflank or supplant" the costs' jurisdiction in CPR Part 44, however there is varied practice in the Family Division on this point. I made a deduction of 15% in BC v DE; a deduction of 30% in Re Z (Schedule 1: Legal Costs Funding Order; Interim Financial Provision) [2021] 2 FLR 727 and in Re Z (No 2) (Schedule 1: Further Legal Costs Funding Order; Further Interim Financial Provision) [2021] EWFC 72) (ditto). Peel J adopted the same approach in the financial remedy case of MG v GM [2023] 1 FLR 253 and likewise in Xanthopoulos v Rakshina [2023] EWFC 158, making a deduction of 25%. However in HAT v LAT [2023] EWFC 162 Peel J took a different view stating that applying a notional reduction would be wrong as an LSPO is not an inter partes costs order, but a solicitor/client sum sought by the applicant to enable her to litigate. Francis J in DR v ES [2022] EWFC 62 made no deduction from the award, but in adopting that approach did not appear to consider directly the contrary case law. I return to this point later.
[40] … I propose to make a deduction of 15% across the board of the legal services payment order to reflect a modest notional detailed assessment; this was the discount which I applied in BC v DE and is at the lowest end of the reported discount rates. As to the principle of this deduction I recognise the variety of views expressed by the judges of the Family Division to which I have earlier referred; I take the view in this case, as in others, that the mother's solicitors should not be entitled at this stage to benefit from what would essentially be an indemnity against all their costs incurred which would be an unusual outcome.
[32] To apply a standard basis of assessment discount may be a useful approach or cross check against the reasonable overall figure in some cases, but I do not read any judge in the reported cases as saying that it should be a formula of universal and automatic application. In some cases, it would have the effect of leaving a payee to fund the shortfall out of his/her own resources which may not be possible, or may not be fair to the payee. It may also be unfair to the lawyers who find themselves having to provide legal services at a significant discount. On balance I prefer to look at the sums sought in the round, taking account of all relevant factors and assess an overall reasonable figure, rather than to adopt a standard assessment discount other than as a cross check.
43. However, these CPR provisions do not apply to LSPOs as they are not costs orders. As Nicholas Mostyn QC (as he then was) said in TL v ML (Ancillary Relief: Claim Against Assets of Extended Family) [2006] 1 FLR 1263 at [127] "[i]t is clear that a costs allowance is not a costs order. It is a maintenance order that enables a party to fund the costs of her case." In Currey v Currey (No. 2) [2007] 1 FLR 946 Wilson LJ (as he then was) expressly agreed with this stating at [32] "a costs allowance within a maintenance order is not an order for costs". Similarly in DR v ES [2022] EWFC 62 Francis J said at [58] "my job … is not assessing costs in that sense of somebody being made to pay an order for costs, it is dealing with debt". Likewise in HAT v LAT [2024] 1 FLR 755 Peel J said at [35] "[t]his is not an inter partes costs order".
Future costs - £651,288
a. solicitors' fees £321,288 inclusive of VAT (the equivalent estimate for H's solicitors' fees is £181,554);
b. counsel's fees £132,000 inclusive of VAT (the equivalent estimate for H's counsel's fees is £68,700); and
c. disbursements £198,000 inclusive of VAT. This is for shadow experts and private investigators.
MPS - £46,668
FLA 1996 - £181,542
73. It is clear from the guidance as to the approach to quantum given in HAT v LAT by Peel J at [36] (cited above) I can take into account (and do) that this is W's third application for an occupation order. In this context Miss Bangay has, however, previously referred me to paragraph 5 of the President's Practice Guidance: Non-Molestation Injunctions (July 2023) under the FLA 1996 which states when considering the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 that such an order might be appropriate "where the initial evidence suggests a pattern of coercive or controlling behaviour, and the court considers it is likely that the applicant could be further coerced or controlled into withdrawing the application …". Miss Bangay has said (and I accept) that although this guidance was given in the context of ex parte applications, it is pertinent to inter partes applications and occupation order applications more generally. W makes allegations of such behaviour in this case. All are denied by H.
Generally speaking, the court should not fund the applicant beyond the family dispute resolution (FDR), but the court should readily grant a hearing date for further funding to be fixed shortly after the FDR. This is a better course than ordering a sum for the whole proceedings of which part is deferred under s 22ZA(7). The court will be better placed to assess accurately the true costs of taking the matter to trial after a failed FDR when the final hearing is relatively imminent, and the issues to be tried are more clearly defined.
Summary
A level playing field may not be achieved where, on the one side, the solicitor and client are 'beholden' to each other by significant debt, whereas on the other there is an abundance of litigation funding.
Conclusion
93. As Francis J observed WG v HG [2018] EWFC 84 at [91] "people cannot litigate on the basis that they are bound to be reimbursed their costs … no one enters litigation simply expecting a blank cheque."
Addendum
If the application for a LSPO seeks an award including the costs of that very application, the court should bear in mind s22ZA(9), whereby a party's bill of costs in assessment proceedings is treated as reduced by the amount of any LSPO made in his or her favour. Thus, if a LSPO is made in an amount which includes the anticipated costs of that very application for the LSPO, then an order for the costs of that application will not bite save to the extent that the actual costs of the application may exceed such part of the LSPO as is referable thereto.
NICHOLAS ALLEN KC
16th January 2025