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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Schwartz v Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court [2009] EWHC 1397 (Admin) (03 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/1397.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1397 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WILKIE
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LUKE SCHWARTZ | Claimant | |
v | ||
HIGHBURY CORNER MAGISTRATES' COURT | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 0207 404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
____________________
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"My hourly rate for dealing with this matter will be £200 plus VAT. There will be a fixed fee of £400 plus VAT for the hearing on 8 May. That will include all travel, waiting and hearing time."
"Please note that this firm charges a composite hourly rate in respect of all work undertaken on a file whether it be preparation, attendance and advocacy or travel and waiting. That approach has been approved by both the Administrative Court in the North Sefton Justices case and also by the Costs Judge in the case of Villiers."
"I have considered your application for costs alongside the current guideline rates for Solicitors from the area and am willing to grant a total sum of £200 per hour on the basis of a Grade B Fee Earner examining both the nature of the proceedings as well as your experience and locality of your practice in reference to the Guideline Rates for summary assessment of costs.
The amount claimed for travel and waiting has been reduced to £135 per hour, as these areas are not subject to the 50% uplift for care and conduct which has been added to the hourly rate allowed. Although you have claimed a composite rate I am not satisfied that it is reasonable to allow a similar amount for travel and waiting as it is for the time spent in preparation and advocacy and the amount allowed is appropriate in the circumstances given the nature of the work involved."
"As we stated in our letter of 25 February 2008, this firm charges a composite hourly rate. That approach has been approved by both the Administrative Court and the Costs Judge in the cases to which we referred. For that reason, there is no justification in reducing the hourly rate allowed in respect of travel and waiting.
You have purported to reduce the amount allowed in respect of travel and waiting 'as these areas are not subject to the 50% uplift for care and conduct'. With respect, that is to misapply the decisions to which reference has been made. As the Costs Judge made clear in Villiers, it is not unreasonable for a client to agree a composite rate which would include travel and waiting. When solicitors are claiming an enhanced hourly rate to take into account such matters as the complexity of the case, it is not reasonable for the solicitors to charge such enhanced rate for travelling time.
In that case as in this, the hourly rate was not enhanced. In fact, as your letter of 25 April 2008 makes clear, £200 is the guideline rate. On that basis, there is no justification for not paying the composite rate for all work undertaken on the file."
"I have fully considered your representations regarding the case of R v North Sefton Magistrates' Court ex parte Phillip Hale, regarding reductions in the amount allowed for travel time, however I am satisfied that the amount granted for travel and waiting is appropriate in the circumstances, given the nature of the work that this involves. I have had regard in this matter to the Justices' Clerks' Society Good Practice Guide: Taxation of Costs, August 2007 which at page 22 dealing with composite rates states: 'the composite rate incorporates any higher uplift ... The uplift will be deducted from the composite rate for travelling and waiting time. See Villiers above.'"
"(1) Where-
...
(c) a magistrates' court dealing summarily with an offence dismisses the information;
that court ... may make an order in favour of the accused for payment to be made out of central funds in respect of his costs (a 'defendant's costs order')."
"A defendant's costs order shall, subject to the following provisions of this section, be for the payment out of central funds, to the person in whose favour the order is made, of such amount as the court considers reasonably sufficient to compensate him for any expenses properly incurred by him in the proceedings."
"(1) The appropriate authority shall consider the claim, any further particulars, information or documents submitted by the applicant under regulation 6 and shall allow such costs in respect of-
(a) such work as appears to it to have been actually and reasonably done; and ...
as it considers reasonably sufficient to compensate the applicant for any expenses properly incurred by him in the proceedings.
(2) In determining costs under paragraph (1) the appropriate authority shall take into account all the relevant circumstances of the case including the nature, importance, complexity or difficulty of the work and the time involved.
(3) When determining costs for the purpose of this regulation, there shall be allowed a reasonable amount in respect of all costs reasonably incurred and any doubts which the appropriate authority may have as to whether the costs were reasonably incurred or were reasonable in amount shall be resolved against the applicant."
"13. They derived this method of calculation from paragraph 3.13 in the 1995 Notes for Guidance and from a document entitled 'Determining Officers Notes for Guidance', intended to encourage consistency in the taxation of costs awarded from central funds in the Crown Court and in Magistrates' Courts. Those sources indicated that for the purpose of assessment a solicitor's remuneration should be regarded as consisting of two factors, (a) and (b): (a) was the average hourly expense rate prevailing in the area for all work properly undertaken; (b) provided for profit and supervision and was likely to vary according to the professional skill and responsibility in the work involved.
...
15. Mr Davies has submitted, in reliance on further affidavit evidence of Mr Learmonth, that since about April 1999, when the Civil Procedure Rules were introduced, solicitors have generally moved, in criminal as well as civil work, away from the system of broad average direct cost plus mark-up mode of billing their work to a flat hourly rate applicable to all types of work. The change came about, it seems, to secure the necessary simplicity required for summary assessment of costs under the new Civil Procedure Rules' regime, and for the benefit of lay clients who had found the old system confusing."
"22. If, as I would find, it was reasonable for the claimant in the circumstances of this case to instruct Mr Learmonth, it is necessary to consider whether it was reasonable to pay him on the then emerging general basis of a flat hourly rate instead of the old and diminishing practice of a broad average cost plus mark-up.
23. In my view, the information before the court, to which I have referred, shows that it was at least reasonable in the transitional period of 2000 for the claimant to incur costs in the proceedings at a flat hourly rate and to do so at the claimed hourly rate ..."
He then went on to deal with the specifics of that case.
"Throughout the bill, the Determining Officer allowed this time at one-half of the hourly rates allowed for the preparation and attendances. He maintained that it was not reasonable to expect the client to pay the same rate for travel and waiting as for preparation time, as such time does not involve the degree of responsibility upon the solicitors in terms of complexity, importance and difficulty, that there is when preparing the case or for attending on others.
11. The solicitors submit that the retainer with their client was that Mr Villiers should pay an hourly rate for their time and that included travel time. They further submitted that the application of an agreed 'across the board' rate is now standard practice within the Civil Procedure Rules ...
12. I agree with the solicitors' submissions. It is not unreasonable for the client to agree an "across the board" rate, which would include travel time. Furthermore, the Civil Procedure Rules no longer differentiate between reasonable travel time and time charged for other work. If the solicitors were claiming an enhanced hourly rate to take into account such matters as the complexity of the case, then, in my judgment, it would not be reasonable for the solicitors to charge such enhanced rate for travelling time. In this instance, having seen the hourly rates charged and heard the submissions from Mr Benson, I am satisfied that the hourly rates that have been claimed have not been enhanced and accordingly I allow travel time at the rates claimed in the bill. Accordingly, this part of the appeal succeeds."
"A claim has traditionally been made up of four elements:
• The broad average direct cost - the cost to the solicitor's firm of doing the case
• Care and conduct - the profit element
...
For the purpose of assessment, therefore, a solicitor's remuneration may be regarded as consisting of two elements:
(1) a rate per hour reflecting the Broad Average Direct Cost, that is, the average expense rate of undertaking the work (this is sometimes known as the A factor) to which should be added,
(2) a sum for Care and Conduct which reflects such items as supervision and commercial profit (this is sometimes known as the B factor).
In civil matters, the Practice Direction of the Senior Costs Judge PT Hurst 26.4.1999 stated that 'The Lord Chancellor has decided that this method of calculating charges is to be discouraged and solicitors will therefore be urged to claim costs at a single charging rate which will normally be the rate which they have agreed to charge their client'.
Either method - A and B factor or flat rate is acceptable. The A & B approach has been sanctioned [he then refers to certain authorities]. More recently in the case of R v (Hales) v North Sefton Justices (2002) EWHC 257, the flat rate has been approved in criminal matters and acknowledged in R v Villiers ...
Many solicitors do not now refer to Care and Conduct and use a composite fee instead. Where this happens the reasonableness of the rate can be checked by means of using a back calculation incorporating care and conduct. As the composite rate is meant to include a mark-up for care and conduct (normally 50%), this rate should not be applied to travel and waiting."
"As an alternative to a claim based on the broad average direct cost plus uplift for care and conduct, solicitors may make a claim based on a composite hourly rate. In determining the reasonableness of the composite rate, determining officers will take it to represent the appropriate rate of broad average direct cost plus an uplift of 50%. If the composite rate incorporates any higher uplift, this should be explained and justified when the claim is submitted. The uplift will be deducted from the composite rate for travelling and waiting time. See Villiers above."