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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 >> Lewis v Tennants Distribution Ltd [2010] EWHC 90161 (Costs) (23 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2010/90161.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 90161 (Costs) |
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SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
London, EC4A 1DQ |
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B e f o r e :
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MURRAY LEWIS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TENNANTS DISTRIBUTION LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Miss Judith Ayling (instructed by RSA Legal North) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 19, 20 January 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Master O'Hare:
i) Is the Claimant's solicitor's retainer unenforceable for illegality at common law because of maintenance or champerty?
ii) Is the Claimant's solicitor's retainer illegal as constituting unlawful insurance contrary to the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000?
"IF YOU LOSE
In the unlikely event that you lose your claim, we will make no charge whatsoever for our legal work. Further, you will not have to repay us for any legal expenses (disbursements) we have incurred on your behalf and we will cover your opponent's charges. Therefore, you will have nothing to pay. If we have taken out an insurance policy on your behalf, we will make a claim under it to recover your legal expenses and opponent's charges …"
Other provisions in the CFA made clear that the Solicitors wished to avoid the cost of incurring after the event (ATE) insurance premiums, but, if they did later consider that expense to be appropriate, the Claimant would be obliged to sign the necessary insurance forms.
"It is sufficient to adopt the description of the policy underlying the former criminal and civil sanctions expressed by Fletcher Moulton LJ in British Cash & Parcel Conveyers Ltd v Lamson Store Service Co Ltd [1908] 1 KB 1006, 1014:
"It is directed against wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others in which the [maintainer] has no interest whatever, and where the assistance he renders to the one or the other party is without justification or excuse."
This was a description of maintenance, for champerty there must be added the notion of a division of the spoils."
"Maintenance was described by Lord Denning MR In The Trepca Mines Ltd (No.2) [1963] Ch 199, 219 as "improperly stirring up litigation and strife by giving aid to one party to bring or defend a claim without just cause or excuse.
Champerty was described by Scrutton LJ in Ellis v Torrington [1920] 1 KB 399, 412 as "only a particular form of maintenance, namely where the person who maintains takes as a reward a share in the property recovered". This last formulation does not assume that the maintenance is unlawful. There can be no champerty if there is no maintenance; but there can still be champerty even if the maintenance is not unlawful. The public policy which informs the two doctrines is different and allows for different exceptions. In examining the present scope of the doctrine, it must be remembered that public policy is not static. In recent times the roles of maintenance and champerty have been progressively redefined and narrowed in scope. The current position is as stated by the decision of the House of Lords in Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142, 161."
"Maintenance is the procurement, by direct or indirect financial assistance, of another person to institute, or carry on or defend civil proceedings without lawful justification."
"There is, I think, a clear requirement of public policy that officers of the court should be inhibited from putting themselves in a position where their only interests may conflict with their duty to the court by agreement, for instance, of so called "contingency fees"."
"In Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142 Lord Mustill applied the test of public policy identified by Fletcher Moulton LJ in the British Cash & Parcel Conveyers Ltd v Lamson Store Service Co Ltd [1901] 1 KB 1006 . That test is appropriate when considering those who, in one way or another, support litigation in which they are not concerned. It is not, however, really in point when considering agreements under which those who are playing a legitimate part in the process of litigation provide their services on a contingency fee basis. A solicitor who charges a contingency fee which does not satisfy the requirements of section 58, can hardly be said to be guilty of 'wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others …where the assistance he renders to the one or another party is without justification or excuse'. The public policy in play in the present case is that which weighs against a person who is in a position to influence the outcome of litigation having an interest in that outcome."
"It is in my judgment fanciful to suppose that a solicitor will be tempted to compromise his professional integrity because he will be unable to recover his ordinary profit costs in a small case if the case is lost. Solicitors are accustomed to withstand far greater incentives to impropriety than this. The solicitor who acts for a multi national company in a heavy commercial action knows that if he loses the case his client may take his business elsewhere. In the present case, Mr Taylor has more at stake than his profit costs if he lost. His client was his wife; desire for domestic harmony alone must have provided a powerful incentive to win. Current attitudes to these questions are exemplified by the passage into law of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990. This shows that the fear that lawyers may be tempted by having a financial incentive in the outcome of litigation to act improperly is exaggerated, and that there is a countervailing public policy in making justice readily accessible to persons of modest means. Legislation was needed to authorise the increase in the lawyer's reward over and above his ordinary profit costs. It by no means follows that it was needed to legitimise the longstanding practice of solicitors to act for meritorious clients without means and it is in the public interest that they should continue to do so."