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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Newall & Anor v Lewis & Ors [2008] EWHC 910 (Ch) (30 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/910.html Cite as: [2008] 4 Costs LR 626, [2008] WTLR 1649, [2008] EWHC 910 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
With Assessors
MASTER ROGERS
and
MR DAVID HARRIS
____________________
LUCINDA NEWALL ALEXANDER NEWALL |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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JOHN NORTH LEWIS RICHARD MIDDLETON LORNA MILNE JOICEY |
Defendants |
____________________
for the Claimants
Mr Robert Marven (instructed by Robin Simon LLP, 2 St David's Court, David Street, Leeds LS11 5QA)
for the Defendants
Hearing date: 21st April 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs :
"BY CONSENT IT IS ORDERED THAT
1. The Defendants do pay the Claimants' costs of these proceedings to be assessed on the standard basis if not agreed
2. The issue as to whether the Defendants also pay the Claimants' costs incidental to these proceedings be reserved to be dealt with as follows:
a. On the assessment of the Claimants' costs of these proceedings, the costs judge also identifies any costs which he would have allowed if the order for costs had been that the Defendants do pay the Claimants' costs of and incidental to these proceedings, but which he is not allowing pursuant to paragraph 1 above ("the Incidental Costs")
b. The issue as to whether, and if so the extent to which, the Incidental Costs should be paid by the Defendants be referred to a single Judge of the Chancery Division for determination."
The Consent Order then made provision for an interim payment on account, and provided that the defendants should not be entitled to be reimbursed in respect of any costs liability, or in respect of their own costs, out of the settlements.
"If it appears clear that the continuance of the trustee would be detrimental to the execution of the trust, even if for no other reason than that human infirmity would prevent those beneficially interested, or those who act for them, from working in harmony with the trustee, and if there is no reason to the contrary from the intentions of the framer of the trust to give this trustee a benefit or otherwise, the trustee is always advised by his counsel to resign and does so. If, without any reasonable ground, he refused to do so, it seems to their Lordships that the Court might think it proper to remove him…."
"If the trustees wish to make an application to the court for the current Part 8 proceedings to continue as if commenced under Part 7 of the CPR which we would strongly oppose as inappropriate given that our clients' claim is based on loss of trust and confidence which is indisputable, then we expect such an application to be made imminently or not at all."
In the event, the defendant trustees undertook at the Case Management Conference not to make any such application.
"In the light of that little exchange of correspondence which amounts almost to a student-type problem question on offer and acceptance, it seems to me that there has been a mismatch in relation to what the parties were saying about costs, and unfortunate though it is… it seems to me that there is no binding agreement as to costs in relation to this matter… I understand that the next phase of the operation is not that the parties will be resiling from the compromise but I shall nonetheless be invited to decide what order for costs it is correct to make, in other words whether I should make an order that the costs to be paid should be costs of the proceedings or whether the order should be that the costs should be costs of and incidental to the proceedings."
CONSTRUCTION
"Subject to the provisions of this or any other enactment and to rules of court, the costs of and incidental to all proceedings in- …
(b) The High Court …
shall be in the discretion of the court."
"(3) The power to award "the costs of and incidental to all proceedings in the Supreme Court" is conferred by the Supreme Court of Judicature (Consolidation) Act 1925, section 50(1); and these words are echoed by R.S.C., Ord. 62, r 2 (4), which provides that the power is to be exercised "subject to and in accordance with this Order." By rule 28(2), on a party and party taxation there are to 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."
By rule 28(4), on a taxation on the common fund basis, "being a more generous basis than that provided for by paragraph (2)," there is to be allowed "a reasonable amount in respect of all costs reasonably incurred," and paragraph (2) does not apply. I think that from the setting in which this provision occurs, it is plain enough that the words "costs reasonably incurred" refer to "the costs of and incidental to" the proceedings in question.
"Having reviewed the correspondence and the skeleton arguments, in my opinion all that the parties meant by "incidental costs" were the investigative costs incurred pre-issue, no more, no less." (paragraph 44).
From this he deduced under the heading "What is this effect of this interpretation of the Order?" as follows:
"First, I consider that for the pre-issue period, the terms of the Order require me to distinguish "incidental costs", by which is meant investigative costs of the type identified in Withers' letters dated 17th March and 11th April 2006, from the costs of removing the trustees and applying for an injunction. The incidental or investigative costs – I use the description interchangeably - fall to be identified and quantified on detailed assessment and thereafter referred to a Judge of the Chancery Division who will decide whether or not the Defendants should pay them.
Second, I consider that all costs claimed by the Claimants post-issue, including any incidental costs, are potentially recoverable, subject to being reasonable and proportionate in amount and reasonably incurred, since they would not include any investigative costs, the investigative stage now being over. Moreover, there is no requirement for any of these costs to be referred to the Chancery Judge." (paragraphs 51 and 52)
THE DECISIONS ON 2ND AND 3RD MAY 2007
"It is obvious that the matters disputed before a writ or originating summons is issued, and the matters raised by the writ or originating summons, and by any pleadings and affidavits, may differ considerably from each other. A wide-ranging series of disputed matters may be followed by a writ or originating summons which raises only a few of the issues; or a narrow dispute may be followed by proceedings which seek to resolve wider issues as well. How far does the ambit of the litigation extend or restrict the matters occurring before the issue of the writ or originating summons which may be included in the taxed costs on the common fund basis?
If the proceedings are framed narrowly, then I cannot see how antecedent disputes which bear no real relation to the subject of the litigation could be regarded as being part of the costs of the proceedings. On the other hand, if these disputes are in some degree relevant to the proceedings as ultimately constituted, and the other party's attitude made it reasonable to apprehend that the litigation would include them, then I cannot see why the taxing master should not be able to include these costs among those which he considers to have been "reasonably incurred."
"For the receiving Claimants Mrs Goodman has submitted that before her clients, the Claimants and beneficiaries under the relevant trusts, could advance any claim for the removal of the trustees they had to show that they had a well-founded belief that something had gone seriously wrong in the administration of those trusts. To do this, she and her colleagues at Withers had been compelled to investigate what had actually happened and it had taken some 18 months for her firm to discover that the trustees had undertaken various transactions affecting the trust property, in particular the Mansion House at Blenkinsopp Hall, its stable block, some woodlands and sporting rights. As a result of those investigations, Mrs Goodman and Withers concluded that her clients were justified in taking matters further and calling for the trustees to retire and that if they refused that there was sufficient material to justify an application to the Court for their removal.
To my mind, before the Claimants could call for the removal or retirement of the trustees they needed to have material to support their case. That material necessarily begged the question have the trustees exceeded their powers in accordance with their duties and responsibilities as trustees under the terms of the trust or have they abused those powers? The investigations which Withers undertook suggested that the latter was the case. Without having undertaken those investigations into whether the trustees had or had not acted in breach of trust, Withers, in my opinion, would not have been in a position to advise their clients how to proceed and whether they had a remedy.
Accordingly, I am not persuaded that the costs in relation to the investigation of whether the trustees were in breach of trust can be separated out of the Bill as being work for which the Defendants are not liable to pay. In my judgment, the material unearthed was needed to demonstrate to the Court that the Claimants' belief that the trustees should be removed was well-founded. Accordingly, I decide against the Paying Defendants on this point."
"That material necessarily begged the question have the trustees exceeded their powers … or have they abused those powers?"
he might for completeness have added that the true question was whether there was a prima facie case to that effect, sufficient to justify a loss of confidence in the minds of the beneficiaries as to the discharge of their obligations by their trustees. But Master Campbell clearly had that test in mind, by his reference to the need for the beneficiaries to show that they had "a well-founded belief that something had gone seriously wrong in the administration of those trusts". In my judgment that slight qualification to the precise correctness of the Master's reasoning detracts in no significant way from the force of his analysis.