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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 >> Reeves v Pickton & Ors [2023] EWHC 2198 (SCCO) (30 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2023/2198.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2198 (SCCO) |
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SCCO Reference: SC-2022-BTP-000969 |
SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Doctor David William Reeves |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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(1) Jennifer Carol Pickton (2) Forsite Engineering Company Ltd (3) Charlotte Reeves (By her litigation friend Robert Bruce John Reeves) |
Respondents |
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The 3rd Respondent not Appearing
Hearing dates: 3 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Leonard:
The Section 994 Proceedings
The Petitioner's Bill of Costs
"(1) This rule applies where the court orders (whether by summary assessment or detailed assessment) that the costs of a litigant in person are to be paid by any other person…
(3) The litigant in person shall be allowed –
(a) costs for the same categories of –
(i) work; and
(ii) disbursements,
which would have been allowed if the work had been done or the disbursements had been made by a legal representative on the litigant in person's behalf;
(b) the payments reasonably made by the litigant in person for legal services relating to the conduct of the proceedings; and
(c) the costs of obtaining expert assistance in assessing the costs claim..."
The Berkeley Domecq Contract
"These Terms of Engagement apply to the work we are instructed to deal with on your behalf… Mike Matthews is our Principal Consultant who is a retired solicitor with over 35 years experience but as we are not a firm of solicitors, he may only advise you in his capacity as our Consultant…
We do not deal with litigation or Court representation but we can engage Counsel under the Direct Access Scheme on your behalf in this respect. In this case, our charges for administration, negotiation and mediation work may not be recoverable from the third party through a costs order made by the Court."
The Authorities
"(i) Where a litigant-in-person seeks to recover the costs of a consultant's assistance, the relevant question is whether, in the particular instance, the consultant's costs are recoverable as a disbursement.
(ii) That question is answered by posing and answering the question whether those costs would have been recoverable as a disbursement if it had been made by a solicitor.
(iii) Costs would be recoverable as a disbursement by solicitors if the work is such as would not normally be done by solicitors.
(iv) But there nonetheless may be specialist assistance the cost of which would be recoverable."
"If the expenditure is for work which a legal representative would normally have done himself, it is not a disbursement…
… the appellant is not entitled to recover costs as a disbursement in respect of work done by Tenon which would normally have been done by a solicitor who had been instructed to conduct the appeal. This means that the appellant is not entitled to recover for the cost of Tenon providing general assistance to counsel in the conduct of the appeals."
"… it does not necessarily follow that the appellant is not entitled to recover costs in respect of the ancillary assistance provided by Tenon in these appeals. Mr Mills is an accountant who has expertise in tax matters, especially in the kind of issues that arose in the present case. It may be appropriate to allow the appellant at least part of Tenon's fees as a disbursement. It may be possible to argue that the cost of discussing the issues with counsel, assisting with the preparation of the skeleton argument etc is allowable as a disbursement, because the provision of this kind of assistance in a specialist esoteric area is not the kind of work that would normally be done by the solicitor instructed to conduct the appeals. Another way of making the same point is that it may be possible to characterise these specialist services as those of an expert, and to say for that reason that the fees for these services are in principle recoverable as a disbursement…
It seems to us that the dividing line between legal services and the provision of expert advice in this area is a matter of some difficulty. Specialist accountants such as Mr Mills may well have far greater expertise in esoteric areas of tax law and practice than solicitors…"
Conclusions
Costs