BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> O'Sullivan v Holmes and Hills LLP [2023] EWHC 508 (KB) (10 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/508.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 508 (KB), [2023] Costs LR 331, [2023] 4 WLR 50 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2023] 4 WLR 50] [Help]
KINGS BENCH DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court )
____________________
MR DANNY O'SULLIVAN |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
HOLMES AND HILLS LLP |
Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
Mr Ian Simpson (instructed by JG Solicitors Limited ) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 18th January 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Gosnell :
This appeal is brought by the Appellant against the decision of District Judge Batchelor sitting as a Regional Costs Judge on 6th May 2022 when at an oral hearing , she refused to vary the order she had made at a provisional assessment pursuant to CPR 47.15. The detailed assessment proceedings arose from the Respondent having applied for an assessment of his own solicitors' costs (the Appellant) under section 70 Solicitors Act 1974. Permission to appeal was granted by Mr Justice Lavender.
The Respondent was involved in an accident and instructed the Appellant Solicitors firm to represent him in a personal injury claim. The claim was successful and the Defendants in that claim paid the sum of £80,000 to the Appellant on the Respondent's behalf. The Appellant negotiated payment of their costs from the Defendant's insurers and accepted the sum of £45,000. They then sought to recover the sum of £17,082.09 from the Respondent pursuant to the terms of their retainer.
The obligation to file and serve Points of Dispute is found in CPR 47.9 but the requirements about the form of this document is in paragraph 8.2 of the Practice Direction to Part 47. It reads as follows:
"Points of dispute and consequences of not serving: rule 47.9
8.1 Time for service of points of dispute may be extended or shortened either by agreement (rule 2.11) or by the court (rule 3.1(2)(a)). Any application is to the appropriate office.
8.2 Points of dispute must be short and to the point. They must follow Precedent G in the Schedule of Costs Precedents annexed to this Practice Direction, so far as practicable. They must:
(a) identify any general points or matters of principle whichrequire decision before the individual items in the bill are addressed; and
(b) identify specific points, stating concisely the nature andgrounds of dispute.
Once a point has been made it should not be repeated but the item numbers where the point arises should be inserted in the left hand box as shown in Precedent G.
8.3 The paying party must state in an open letter accompanying the points of dispute what sum, if any, that party offers to pay in settlement of the total costs claimed. The paying party may also make an offer under Part 36."
Precedent G referred to above appears at the end of the judgment in Ainsworth v Stewarts Law LLP [2020] EWCA Civ 178.
"Basis of detailed assessment of solicitor and client costs
46.9
(1) This rule applies to every assessment of a solicitor's bill to a
client except a bill which is to be paid out of the Community Legal Service Fund under the Legal Aid Act 1984 or the Access to Justice Act 1995 or by the Lord Chancellor under Part 1 of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012.
(2) Section 74(3) of the Solicitors Act 1974 applies unless the solicitor and client have entered into a written agreement which expressly permits payment to the solicitor of an amount of costs greater than that which the client could have recovered from another party to the proceedings.
(3) Subject to paragraph (2), costs are to be assessed on the indemnity basis but are to be presumed –
(a) to have been reasonably incurred if they were incurred with the express or implied approval of the client;
(b) to be reasonable in amount if their amount was expressly or impliedly approved by the client;
(c) to have been unreasonably incurred if –
(i) they are of an unusual nature or amount; and
(j) (ii) the solicitor did not tell the client that as a result the costs might not be recovered from the other party."
The Bill of Costs submitted by the Appellant was prepared in traditional form. There were five different fee earners who had done the work at the Appellant firm and there were four different hourly rates to be applied. There were a total of 116 items on the bill and the only two items which were the subject of Points of Dispute 7.1 and 7.2 were items 75 and 107. These were the two items which dealt with work relating to documents. By way of example item 75 looked like this:
5.18 In respect of heads (2) to (10) in paragraph 5.12 above, if the number of attendances and communications other than routine communications is twenty or more, the claim for the costs of those items in that section of the bill of costs should be for the total only and should refer to a schedule in which the full record of dates and details is set out. If the bill of costs contains more than one schedule each schedule should be numbered consecutively.
LLP [2020] EWCA Civ 178. The Appellant sought to argue that the Points of Dispute
were inadequately pleaded and did not enable the parties and the court to determine precisely what is in dispute and why. As far as Point 5 of the Points of Dispute was concerned the District Judge at the provisional assessment dismissed the Point of Dispute because she found it was inadequately formulated to enable the court to address it. She formed the same conclusion about Point 7.
" Contrary to the totally non-specific dispute set out in 5 & 7 above this dispute is confined to documents time and referenced by individual grades of fee-earner and the disputed documents schedule is available to the court. As such the court is of the view that it can properly decide the point of dispute. The time claimed is unnecessarily incurred and / or unreasonable in amount considering all relevant items both at item 74 and 106. Time allowed as annotated"
It is accepted that she was mistaken in the item number and it should have read 75 and 107. In relation to Point of Dispute 7.1 the District Judge allowed exactly what was offered in relation to the first three fee earners with a compromise figure in relation to the fourth. In relation to Point of Dispute 7.2 she allowed exactly what was offered.
The Judgment of District Judge Batchelor
10. "Paragraph 39 in Ainsworth sets out the nub of this. "The complaint should be short, to the point and focused" and is repeated. "In the case of a solicitor and own client assessment … in order to specify the nature and grounds of the dispute it is necessary to formulate specific points by reference to the presumptions contained in CPR 46.9(3) which would otherwise apply." It seems to me the solicitors have done that. They have said that the time was either unreasonably incurred or unnecessarily incurred or was not reasonable in amount. They have to specify the specific items in the bill to which they relate. The items in this bill are items 74 and 106 (or 75 and 107 using the correct numbering) and that is the item to which we are referred. "And they must make it clear in each case why the item is disputed." Well they have done that, they have set out their objection and by reference to category of fee earner and by what extent. When undertaking the assessment I then had available to me the very detailed item by item schedule attached to the bill which told me what work each fee earner had done. It cannot be said that the receiving party did not know what was in issue between them. But importantly, in paragraph 39 of Ainsworth it says: "This need not be a lengthy process" and this refers back, in my view, to comments made in paragraph 33 where they set out Sir Rupert Jackson's Review of Civil Litigation Costs and his conclusions: the points of dispute had become overlong, expensive to read and expensive to reply to and that points of reply were similarly prolix. That approach was not something that the court wanted to go back to. That is not something that found favour with the court, it did not assist either party in narrowing the issues and it certainly did not assist the parties in dealing with matters in a proportionate manner, and I do not accept that Ainsworth was attempting to go back to that position either.
11. I believe that in the case before me the paying party had appropriately engaged with 46.9(3); they had specified the specific item in the bill. I do not accept this reference that "items" meant "entries" in Ainsworth. To adopt that would mean that each and every timed entry would have to be specifically addressed, and that is going back to what I will describe as the "bad old days" that Sir Rupert Jackson was so keen we move away from. I do not accept that in Ainsworth the Court of Appeal would have said "this need not be a lengthy process" if they were seriously suggesting that each and every timed entry under the documents item in a bill would need to be objected to.
12. In this case I believe that I did have sufficient information to consider the objection being raised in a proper manner, in a proper form, and that the receiving party had had an opportunity to know what the point being raised was and an opportunity to respond before I carried out the assessment. I believe that my decision does not conflict with the decision reached by the Court of Appeal in Ainsworth. I do not accept that there was not enough to go on to reach the decision that I did and I stand by my decision. Therefore, the application made by the defendants is dismissed."
The Appellant relies on six grounds of appeal which are set out below:
"1. The District Judge was wrong in law to find that the Claimant's objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2 of the Points of Dispute complied with PD 47 8.2. Accordingly, the District Judge was wrong to dismiss the Defendant's application. The District Judge should have dismissed the Claimant's objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2.
2. The District Judge was wrong in law to find that the Claimant's objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2 followed the guidance of the Court of Appeal in Ainsworth v Stewarts Law LLP [2020] Civ 178. Ainsworth was binding on the District Judge and accordingly the District Judge was wrong to dismiss the Defendant's application. The District Judge should have dismissed the Claimant's objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2.
3. The District Judge was wrong in law to hold that the Claimant's objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2 adequately set out the nature and grounds of the dispute such that the Defendant was in a position to reply to the objection in order to justify the time claimed.
4. The District Judge was wrong in law to hold that the Claimant's objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2 were formulated by specific reference to the presumptions in CPR 46.9(3).
5. The District Judge was wrong in law to find that the approach suggested by the Defendant would lead to disproportionate Points of Dispute and/or Points of Dispute which required the Claimant to object to each and every document entry.
6. The District Judge was wrong in law to fail to consider the requirements that Points of Dispute should be drawn in such a way so as to enable the court to deal with issues raised in a fair, just and proportionate manner. The District Judge emphasised proportionality, over the requirements of fairness and justice.
In order to understand the detailed submissions made by both counsel it is necessary to record the salient parts of the judgment of Lady Justice Asplin in the above case. The facts of the case were quite similar. This was also a challenge by a client to his own Solicitor's Bill of Costs for acting on his behalf. He had instructed new solicitors who had examined the previous solicitor's file and had issued proceedings under s.70 Solicitors Act 1974. A Bill of Costs was served and again in this case the focus was on the work done on documents by various fee earners during a particular period of time. The work in the Bill was separated into six different items each representing work done by a particular fee earner and then details of the work actually done were set out in a Schedule containing 32 times entries. The Bill read as follows:
"Work done on Documents
See attached Schedule 1
40. Engaged 1 hr 12 mins (SF)
41. Engaged 2 hours 54 mins (DC)
42. Engaged 2 hrs 24 mins (TA)
43. Engaged 20 hrs 6 mins (LG)
44. Engaged 11 hrs 42 mins (HF)
45. Engaged 8 hrs 30 mins (Paralegals)"
"The Claimant requests the court to note that over a period of 11 working days the Defendant seeks to claim 46.8 hours of work which is equivalent to approximately 4.3 hours of time every single day. It is the clear opinion of the Claimant that under any stretch of the imagination, the level of time expended can in no way be justified and against the relevant test, the time expended, and its subsequent cost must be deemed to be unusual in nature and amount.
As with the timed attendances upon the Claimant, the Claimant is mindful of the requirements of the Civil Procedure Rules as to the need to keep Points of Dispute brief and succinct. It must therefore be stated that all entries are disputed. By way of general indication however, the Claimant can confirm the main issues with the document time are as follows:
1. Significant duplication between fee earners
2. Wholly excessive time expended by fee earners reviewing documentation provided by the Claimant
3. Too much time claimed generally in relation to preparation4. An excessive level of time claimed in relation to drafting of communications
5. Unnecessary inter-fee earner discussions arising due to the duplication
6. Excessive time spent collating documentation
7. Significant preparation time claimed in relation to meetings with the Claimant.
It can be confirmed that the above stated list is not exhaustive of the issues but provide a general overview as to the reason why the time claimed is unusual in nature and/or amount. The Claimant reserved their position generally."
"The defendant cannot provide any meaningful reply to this general point. In the absence of itemised points of dispute being served (permission to rely on the same being a matter for the court and the Defendant's position will be reserved), the Court will be asked to dismiss this point"
Nothing further was served by Mr Ainsworth in response.
"8. In oral submissions, Mr Poole on behalf of the claimant seeks to take a broad brush approach to the document schedule and indicated that what he would like to do is to identify some particular items and explain why those are unreasonable, with a view to persuading the court that the time overall should be reduced on a broad brush approach and he candidly accepted, as one might expect, that the items which he would be relying on in particular would be the biggest items in terms of the time spent.
9. The difficulty with that, it seems to me, is that the claimant has not set out in his points of dispute which items he wishes to challenge and why and that does cause, as the defendant has indicated in its reply, a difficulty insofar as – in respect of items which have not yet been identified – they would need to look at the attendance notes to see what work was done and why and the context in which it was done in order to seek to explain why the time claimed is reasonable, if indeed that is the objection, or why a particular fee earner was engaged in doing it and why possibly more than one fee earner was engaged in doing it.
10. The purpose of points of dispute is really to prevent that work being done on the hoof in the course of a hearing. The solicitors are entitled to know specifically which items are challenged and the reasons for the challenge. Insofar as the claimant states that all entries are disputed, it seems to me that it would be beholden on him to explain why each particular entry is challenged and whether he is asserting that no time should be allowed or reduced time should be allowed or whether the work should have been done by a different grade of fee earner. But, as pleaded, the points of dispute, it seems to me, do not raise a proper challenge to the documents items and certainly do not raise a challenge which can be properly answered by the defendant without a considerable amount of time being spent in looking at the papers to reply to that challenge and that, it seems to me, is a process, which if it is to be done, should be done in advance of the hearing rather than at the hearing.
11. One can well understand why Mr Poole is seeking to adopt the approach that he is of encouraging the court to take a broad brush but the difficulty with that approach is that we are not going to be looking at every item, we will only be looking at particular items and presently, apart from Mr Poole, none of us knows which items those are going to be. It seems to me that that does put the defendant in a difficult position. It also puts the court in a difficult position. I read the papers in the light of the Judgment Approved by the court for handing down. Ainsworth v Stewarts Law LLP points of dispute as they are pleaded and I was not able to identify which particular items are challenged or why.
12. In the circumstances, I think the only fair course is to dismiss that point of dispute 10 on the basis that it has not been properly pleaded."
"2.7 Points of dispute and points of reply. Points of dispute are said to be overlong, therefore expensive to read and expensive to reply to. Points of reply are similarly prolix. Both of these pleadings are in large measure formulaic and are built up from standard passages held by solicitors on their databases. In addition, there are lengthy passages in the points of dispute and points of reply dealing with time spent on documents. It would be better if the points of dispute…concentrated on the reasoning of the bill, not the detailed items… . . .
5.11 Points of dispute and points of reply. Both points of dispute and points of reply need to be shorter and more focused. The practice of quoting passages from well know judgments should be abandoned. The practice of repeatedly using familiar formulae, in Homeric style, should also be abandoned. The pleaders on both sides should set out their contentions relevant to the instant cases clearly and concisely. There should be no need to plead to every individual item in a bill of costs, nor to reply to every paragraph in the points of dispute."
In response to this report the requirements in the Practice Direction in respect of Points of Dispute were changed , in April 2013, to omit the requirement to "identify each item in the Bill of Costs which is disputed".
"37. Accordingly, 47PD.8 para 8.2 is directly relevant. It makes it absolutely clear that points of dispute should be short and to the point and, therefore, focussed. Furthermore, subparagraphs (a) and (b) leave no doubt about the way in which the draftsman should proceed. General points and matters of principle which require consideration before individual items in the bill or bills are addressed, should be identified, and then specific points should be made "stating concisely the nature and grounds of dispute." Such an approach is entirely consistent with the recommendations and observations made in the Review of Civil Litigation Costs: Final Report, 2009 to which we were referred.
38. Common sense dictates that the points of dispute must be drafted in a way which enables the parties and the court to determine precisely what is in dispute and why. That is the very purposes of such a document. It is necessary in order to enable the receiving party, the solicitor in this case, to be able to reply to the complaints. It is also necessary in order to enable the court to deal with the issues raised in a manner which is fair, just and proportionate.
39. As I have already mentioned, the complaint should be short to the point and focussed. As para 8.2(b) of 47PD.8 indicates, that requires the draftsman not only to identify general points and matters of principle but to identify specific points stating concisely the "nature and grounds of the dispute". In the case of a solicitor and own client assessment, it seems to me, therefore, that in order to specify the nature and grounds of the dispute it is necessary to formulate specific points by reference to the presumptions contained CPR 46.9(3) which would otherwise apply, to specify the specific items in the bill to which they relate and to make clear in each case why the item is disputed. This need not be a lengthy process. Having explained the nature and grounds of dispute succinctly, the draftsman should insert the numbers of the items disputed on that ground in the relevant box. The principle is very simple. In order to deal with matters of this kind fairly, justly and proportionately, it is necessary that both the recipient and the court can tell why an item is disputed. The recipient must be placed in a position in which it can seek to justify the items which are in dispute.
40. It follows that in my judgment, the sample wording which appears in the hypothetical example at Precedent G is of no assistance to Mr Munro. Para 8.2 itself provides that Precedent G should be followed "as far as practicable". It is only an example and is premised upon a party and party detailed assessment in which the paying party will not have had sight of the relevant documentation and the presumptions in CPR 46.9(3) do not apply. Nevertheless, it seems to me that points of dispute in a solicitor and own client assessment should adopt the format of Precedent G to the extent practicable and that the numbers attributed to the individual items to which a complaint relates should be set out in the appropriate box.
42……..Points of Dispute 10 was general in nature and stated that all items were disputed, that the list provided was not exhaustive of the issues but provided a general overview and that Mr Ainsworth reserved his position generally. It did not contain cross references to the numbers of the items disputed on particular grounds. In fact, it was accepted that it did not state why any item in the bill was disputed. In my judgment, therefore, it did not comply with 47PD.8 para 8.2, nor, for that matter, did it take the form of Precedent G.
The Judge also found that the Costs Judge was not wrong to dismiss the assessment in relation to Points of Dispute 10 rather than take a less draconian course.
The Appellant relies on the fact that although there were two disputed items numbered 75 and 107 with completely different figures and schedules the objections at Points 7.1 and 7.2 are drafted in identical terms:
"The time claimed in respect of documents is disputed as being either unnecessarily incurred and/or unreasonable in amount."
entry. The fact that the Respondent has referred to individual fee earners was merely a means to group his offers as the Bill broke down the costs by fee earner as can be seen above.
The first point the Respondent makes is that District Judge Batchelor is an experienced District Judge and Regional Costs Judge who is used to dealing with detailed assessments and her view as to the sufficiency of the Points of Dispute should be preferred over the subjective views of the Appellant. It is submitted that she was exercising a discretion which was wide in nature and it cannot be said that she exceeded the generous ambit within which a reasonable disagreement is possible.
"It would be better if the points of dispute…concentrated on the reasoning of the bill, not the detailed items… . . . and
There should be no need to plead to every individual item in a bill of costs, nor to reply to every paragraph in the points of dispute."
As this is an appeal the court is bound by CPR 52.21 which reads as follows:
Hearing of appeals
52.21
(1) Every appeal will be limited to a review of the decision of the lower court unless—
(a) a practice direction makes different provision for a particular category of appeal; or
(b) the court considers that in the circumstances of an individual appeal it would be in the interests of justice to hold a re-hearing.
(2) Unless it orders otherwise, the appeal court will not receive—
(a) oral evidence; or
(b) evidence which was not before the lower court.
(3) The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was—
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court.
"8. In oral submissions, Mr Poole on behalf of the claimant seeks to take a broad brush approach to the document schedule and indicated that what he would like to do is to identify some particular items and explain why those are unreasonable……
It is obvious here that the Costs Judge is referring to entries on the schedule but describing them as items.
The difficulty with that, it seems to me, is that the claimant has not set out in his points of dispute which items he wishes to challenge and why and that does cause, as the defendant has indicated in its reply, a difficulty insofar as – in respect of items which have not yet been identified – they would need to look at the attendance notes to see what work was done and why and the context in which it was done in order to seek to explain why the time claimed is reasonable, if indeed that is the objection, or why a particular fee earner was engaged in doing it and why possibly more than one fee earner was engaged in doing it.
The point made in the last sentence can only refer to "entries" as he speaks of "doing it" which would be an individual task, not the total sum of work done by one fee earner for a whole specified period, which is all that was set out in the six items in Ainsworth.
10. The purpose of points of dispute is really to prevent that work being done on the hoof in the course of a hearing. The solicitors are entitled to know specifically which items are challenged and the reasons for the challenge. Insofar as the claimant states that all entries are disputed, it seems to me that it would be beholden on him to explain why each particular entry is challenged and whether he is asserting that no time should be allowed or reduced time should be allowed or whether the work should have been done by a different grade of fee earner. But, as pleaded, the points of dispute, it seems to me, do not raise a proper challenge to the documents items and certainly do not raise a challenge which can be properly answered by the defendant without a considerable amount of time being spent in looking at the papers to reply to that challenge and that, it seems to me, is a process, which if it is to be done, should be done in advance of the hearing rather than at the hearing.
" In order to deal with matters of this kind fairly, justly and proportionately , it is necessary that both the recipient and the court can tell why an item is disputed. The recipient must be placed in a position in which it can seek to justify the items which are in dispute"
If she was referring to items then, for example the disputed item at paragraph 43 reads:" Engaged 20 hrs 6 mins (LG)" . The corresponding objection to that item is set out in paragraph 16 above which containing a significant amount of detail about the objections and it was clear which item it related to (as it related to all six items). What was not clear was which entries were challenged and on what grounds. There were seven grounds listed but also it was said that they were not exclusive and so other objections could be raised at the detailed assessment hearing. In this example the receiving party could tell why the overall item was disputed but had no way of knowing which entries were disputed, and if they were on what grounds.
" It did not contain cross-references to the numbers of the items disputed on particular grounds. In fact, it was accepted that it did not state why any item in the bill was disputed"
In my view she is referring to entries on the schedule rather than actual items on the Bill. It could perhaps have been fairly argued that the Points of Dispute did identify why a particular item was disputed but it could not be argued that there was any cross referencing to any particular entry on the schedule.
Points of Dispute did not sufficiently identify which item was in dispute (irrespective of whether the entry could be identified) she would obviously have explained the distinction and why she came to that conclusion.
" The points of dispute did not challenge any specific entries to those items notwithstanding that the solicitors file had been inspected by the former client's costs lawyer. The replies indicated that the solicitors could not prepare to deal with such a challenge"
It is notable that they refer to the failure to challenge any specific entries, rather than items and I have confidence that the editors do know the difference between the two.
"In fact , some paying parties have used the reforms as an opportunity to keep the points of dispute brief, and not deal with the objections in detail. Whilst this means the end of long repetitive comments about the documents item in particular, it does take the parties back to a trial by ambush.
The introduction of provisional assessments militates against brevity and selectivity. The Points of Dispute are the only opportunity the paying party is going to have to influence a judge carrying out a provisional assessment. On that basis, the kitchen sink is almost bound to be pleaded along with everything else."
" unreasonable amount of time spent preparing witness statements – entries dated 1.1.18, 3.1.18, 4.5.18 and 7.7.18."
2.3.18, 4.5.18 and 6.6.18"
This would give the Solicitor a reasonable opportunity to consider the objection and either concede the same or prepare a reasoned response. It is therefore possible to prepare Points of Dispute which are concise and state the nature and grounds of dispute. How many items are challenged however determines how concise the Points of Dispute can be and this is very much in the hands of the paying party.
" It seems to me that the solicitors have done that. They have said that the time was either unreasonably incurred or unnecessarily incurred or was not reasonable in amount"
Note 1 Collins English Dictionary [Back] Note 2 Cook on Costs ( 2023) p 592 Middleton and Rowley [Back]