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England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Layass v DWFM Beckman (A Firm) [2009] EWHC 90150 (Costs) (24 August 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2009/90150.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 90150 (Costs) |
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SUPREME COURT COSTS OFFICE
IN THE MATTER OF THE SOLICITORS ACT 1974
AND
IN THE MATTER OF DWFM BECKMAN SOLICITORS
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
FATHI LAYASS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DWFM BECKMAN (A FIRM) |
Defendant |
____________________
Miss Judith Ayling (instructed by DWFM Beckman) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 23 July 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Master Wright :
Date of invoice | Period covered | Amount |
4/7/2007 | 1/6/2007 to 30/6/2007 | £3,889.41 |
3/8/2007 | 1/7/2007 to 31/7/2007 | £20,406.23 |
3/9/1007 | 1/8/2007 to 31/8/2007 | £10,518.55 |
All paid before 24/9/2007 by transfer
3/10/2007 | 1/9/2007 to 31/9/2007 | £10,330.24 |
5/11/2007 | 1/10/2007 to 31/10/2007 | £22.869.44 |
27/11/2007 | 1/11/2007 to 26/11/2007 | £45,376.38 |
4/1/2008 | 27/11/2007 to 31/12/2007 | £36,641.32 |
All paid by transfer
1/2/2008 | 1/1/2008 to 31/1/2008 | £21,908.35 |
(£2,844.00 paid) | ||
6/3/2008 | 1/2/2008 to 29/2/2008 | £2,026.44 (unpaid) |
2/4/2008 | 1/3/2008 to 31/3/2008 | £9,159.06 (unpaid) |
2/5/2008 | 1/4/2008 to 30/4/2008 | £13,074.66 (unpaid) |
2/6/2008 | 1/5/2008 to 31/5/2008 | £46.604.61 (unpaid) |
2/7/2008 | 1/6/2008 to 30/6/2008 | £758.36 (unpaid) |
"26. The Claimant was issued with invoices on a monthly basis so that he could be kept up to date with the costs he was spending. The invoices would very occasionally be sent to him but our usual practice was to hand them to him personally and we would go through them together. There is now shown and produced to me at exhibit "SDM15" a true copy of attendance note of the claimant being presented with an invoice and discussing future fees. The claimant was also handed copies of our client ledger. The claimant was given copies of the Bank of Ireland statements on a monthly basis when they were received by the Defendant. The Claimant was always assisted by a translator and the claimant assisted us when the costs schedule was prepared to serve on the wife. The claimant was also kept informed of counsel's fees. There is now produced and shown to me at exhibit "SDM16" true copies of the attendance notes."
"DB [Diana Bastow, an assistant] attending client in office with Sofia and Mr Harb [Translator]. Discussing issues on agenda and the issue of costs. Present outstanding bill and do rough calculations of expected fees for hearing re costs and injunctions. Estimate a further £50,000 on top of the outstanding bill."
"The Claimant was fully aware that the invoices had been paid and money transferred from client account. It is clear from the invoices that money had been transferred across and the indication that there was nil owed to our firm was further evidence that the invoice had been paid. The invoices also indicate the period of time that the invoice covered. The invoices were mostly presented to the client either by hand and only occasionally by post and would have come to his attention within 7 days of being issued. There is now shown and produced to me at exhibit "SDM4" a true copy of the bundle of documents that the Claimant would have received each month."
"Please find enclosed our invoice and running costs schedule for your attention. Should you have any queries concerning your account or generally please do not hesitate to contact us. Thank you for your continued instructions."
"Acting on your behalf, in connection with ancillary relief proceedings in accordance with the attached schedule £1807.50."
"NB Your attention is drawn to the Notice on the reverse".
"Court Assessment
You may be entitled to have your charges assessed by the Court but you should get independent legal advice before you pursue this option. Court assessment of your bill is a Court proceedings and it is likely you will pay the Court costs. Even if the Court reduces your bill you may be ordered by the Court to pay your own Court costs and ours. There are strict time limits on applications to the Court for assessment and more information can be obtained from the Supreme Court Costs Office either by telephone or by visiting their website".
"As regards paragraph 10 of Sofia Moussaoui's statement, she states that I was fully aware of the fact that the invoices had been paid and the money transferred from client account. I accept that of the first 7 bills dated between 4th July 2007 and 4th January 2008 the first 4 were sent to me showing a nil balance owing, the 5th was paid by way of transfer 10 days after the date of the invoice, and the 6th and 7th were also issued showing a nil balance. Notwithstanding this, however, at no time did the Defendant ever explain the Solicitors Remuneration Order 1994 certificate to me, or inform me of my right to challenge its invoices pursuant to Section 70 Solicitors Act 1974, and the difference in my rights if those bills were paid or unpaid at the time of the challenge. As a foreigner with limited English, how was I to know my rights to challenge the bills and the time limits for doing so if they were not expressly pointed out and explained to me by the Defendant?"
"Payment on account by a client in respect of the separate bills is not conclusive to show that each of them was a separate bill of costs under the Act; it may be consistent with a clear understanding between the parties that the ultimate bill sent in should be the ultimate bill of costs, and that the payments were to be considered as made against that bill. It must always be a question of fact whether a document is a separate bill of costs or, so to speak, a chapter in a volume. In determining whether a document has been delivered as a bill of costs, it must not be forgotten that the onus of showing that it has been lies with the solicitor."
"My only other observation is that it remains pretty startling that in the circumstances in which the present solicitors were retained by Mrs Abedi, the terms of payment were not expressly agreed from the outset. The desirability of such arrangements is likely to be reinforced by the increasing impact of the Civil Justice Reforms on a client's entitlement to be kept properly informed of his escalating financial obligations at each stage of the proceedings. As clients should know exactly where they stand throughout the process, it is reasonable to anticipate that questions of their own costs, and payment, should be arranged at an early stage in the process."
"24. Furthermore, when we transferred the Claimant's files from Messrs Goodwins the Claimant initially instructed us that he wished to challenge Goodwins bills and that he claimed that unauthorised deductions had been made ."
"These Regulations do not apply to contractual terms which reflect-
(a) mandatory statutory or regulatory provisions "
Miss Ayling submitted that the Notice "Court Assessment" to which attention was drawn on each bill and which appeared on its reverse (see paragraphs 15 and 16 above) were contractual terms which reflect statutory provisions, there being no requirement that the actual time limits have to be spelt out.
"special circumstances, I think, are those which appear to the judge so special and exceptional as to justify taxation".
"I was appalled to learn that the overall costs are estimated at some £300,000. That is an astonishing amount for what is essentially a preliminary issue".
"The judge did indeed comment about the costs of the case however those included costs over and above his legal costs. In any event the Claimant had been advised on a number of occasions that his constant need for meetings and telephone calls were driving up his costs and that those would ultimately be unrecoverable by him if successful at court."