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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Hakendorf v Vivian [2004] EWHC 2821 (QB) (14 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/2821.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2821 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Mary Elizabeth
Hakendorf |
Claimant | |
- and - |
||
Colette Vivian Countess of
Rosenborg |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr. Dale Martin (instructed by Messrs. Hannah
& Mould Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 24 November 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Tugendhat:
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, no action shall be brought to recover any costs due to a solicitor before the expiration of one month from the date on which a bill of those costs is delivered in accordance with the requirements mentioned in Subsection (2); but if there is probable cause for believing that the party chargeable with the costs – (a) is about to quit England and Wales, to become bankrupt or to compound with his creditors, or (b) is about to do any other act which would tend to prevent or delay the solicitor obtaining payment, the High Court may, notwithstanding that one month has not expired from the delivery of the bill, order that the solicitor be at liberty to commence an action to recover his costs and may order that those cost be taxed…"
12. The order of 27 July 2004 includes the following:
"Upon the Wife undertakings to the court to pay to her solicitors towards the discharge of her legal fees all sums received under paragraph 11 below…
11. The husband do pay to the Wife the sum of £16,000, in monthly instalments of £4,000 on her undertakings recited above, payable monthly in arrears with effect from 27 July 2004 and on the 27th day of each month thereafter".
"22. … I have asked the Defendant for it; I warned her that I would institute legal proceedings against her if she did not pay it; my bill to the Defendant specifically incorporated the dates of and amount of all time spent personally on her (whether in person or by telephone) since the said Order of 27 July 2004 was made, and the costs incurred on that aspect alone well exceeded the £8,000 which should have been paid to my firm, if the Defendant had honoured her undertaking to the court to pass the second instalment of £4,000 to me.
23. The time spent personally on the Defendant from 27 July 2004 was, however, only one aspect of the costs incurred from that time. As will be seen from the Order, there was other work to be done prior to the hearing of the Financial Dispute Resolution on 7 December 2004 (that, incidentally, was why the A v A Costs Order was only payable for a period of 4 months, the last payment being due ten days before that hearing).
24. Pursuant to that Order, I prepared two very substantial documents on behalf of the Defendant (namely the Scott Schedule re: house contents and her Replies to Questionnaire, so that the only work remaining, prior to preparation for the FDR, was to prepare a concise narrative, which would largely have been an amalgamation of evidence already before the Court). The preparation of the said two documents was exceedingly time consuming, and the Defendant was aware of that as well as the time spent on her personally…
25. As will be apparent, no sooner had I finished the preparation of the second of those two lengthy documents, than the Defendant terminated my firm's retainer. She was thus in possession of the important documentation required for the FDR. I was aware that the Defendant appeared to have stepped up the amount of my time that she was taking. Since the hearing on 27 July, 60.5 hours were spent in this matter, being £17,771.88 inclusive of VAT for that period alone, of which more than half the time was spent personally on the Defendant (and the rest on preparation of documents and dealing with the matter generally).
26. After termination of my firm's retainer I delivered a bill to the Defendant for the outstanding costs for work done on her behalf, which was faxed to her on 22 October 2004, and posted the following day. (Although an amended bill had just been sent, that did not affect any of the figures in the bill other than that the balance due and owing was £212 less than shown in the original bill.) The bill comprised legal fees totalling £64,350, plus VAT, disbursements and Counsel's fees making a total of £88,859.40. After taking account of sums paid or held on account the sum owing is £78,582.74. … The covering letter and amended bill are at … (I have redacted part of the paragraph of the letter enclosing the original bill)".
"9. The order will cease to have effect if the Respondent provides security by (a) paying the sum of £78,582.74, into court, to be held to the joint order of the parties or the order of the Court: or (b) makes provision for security in that sum by another method agreed in writing with the Applicant".
1. That there is no real risk of dissipation of assets
2. That the cause of action is flawed
3. That the Solicitor has put before the court matters which are in breach of legal privilege
4 That there has been material non-disclosure by the Solicitor.
It is noted that other disputed matters also exist which cannot be resolved by me in these proceedings.
IS A FREEZING ORDER THE APPROPRIATE RELIEF?
"(1) Subject to subsection (2), any court in which a solicitor has been employed to prosecute or defend any suit, matter or proceedings may at any time (a) declare the solicitor entitled to a charge on any property recovered or preserved through his instrumentality for his taxed costs in relation to that suit, matter or proceeding; and (b) make such orders for the taxation of those costs and for raising money to pay or for paying them out of the property recovered or preserved as the court thinks fit; and all conveyances and acts done to defeat, or operating to defeat, that charge shall, except in the case of a conveyance to a bona fide purchaser for value without notice, be void as against the solicitor".
"… if you were to (1) remove the ex-parte Freezing Injunction immediately (2) pay our client's costs incurred to the time of your acceptance of this offer on an indemnity basis within 14 days of today's date, then our client is prepared to register a Charge in your favour over her share of the matrimonial property for an unquantified sum. The charge would be worded so as to secure any sum which is found by a court to be ultimately due to you, if any, or that that sum which our client agrees to pay to you (and you agree to accept) in respect of your invoice dated 20 October 2004 and received by our client on 22 October 2004".
It was said that this offer would be put before me, as it was. I enquired whether it was now the Wife's position that she accepted that an order for a charge should be made, so that the only question for me to decide would then be costs. However it was made clear to me that was not the position. The Wife does not accept that any charge or Freezing Order should be made, and is only prepared to agree to a charge if at the same time an indemnity costs order is agreed or made in her favour.
RISK OF DISSIPATION OF ASSETS
"£4,000 on her undertaking that she will pay it punctually to her solicitors on account of her costs of and incidental to these proceedings, to be credited against any ultimate liability of the husband to or pay to her costs (but not otherwise to be refundable by her to him)".
IS THERE A CAUSE OF ACTION?
"There is clearly jurisdiction for the court in special circumstances to allow solicitors to withdraw the bill. It is for the court to decide whether special circumstances arise. If the solicitors have acted honestly then maybe they should be allowed to have their original bills withdrawn. In this case the Defendant has alleged that the solicitors acted negligently and they tried to deceive the court, for which there is not a shred of evidence. In fact the evidence goes all the other way. From first to last they revealed to the court at all stages what the situation was".
The Defendant in that case had taken up the attitude that as the solicitors had already presented bills and the master had made an order that those bills should be taxed, the Plaintiffs had no right to deliver any other bills. The Judge in Chambers in that case ordered that the solicitors should deliver a new bill and that it should be taxed within 28 days. The appeal against his order failed.
"Further to my letter to you of 20 October 2004 (faxed 22 October 2004), enclosing a note of my firm's charges, my bookkeeper has pointed out that some of the disbursements referred to in that bill (namely £120 court fee, £21 swearing fees, £60 Court fee and £11 courier [the latter included in petty disbursements] equals £212), although met from Office Account had in fact been covered by a subsequent transfer from Clients Account. Thus, although the total of the costs in the bill was correct, the figure for the balance due and owing should, in fact, have been £212 less. I have therefore, redrawn the bill accordingly, which I enclose, together with the Narrative and the Statement of Disbursements met from Clients Account which was sent to you previously".
She enclosed a credit note in respect of the previous bill.
"1.1 (1) These Rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly.
(2) Dealing with a case justly includes, so far as is practicable –
(a) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
(b) saving expense;
(c) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate –
(i) to the amount of money involved;
(ii) to the importance of the case;
(iii) to the complexity of the issues; and
(iv) to the financial position of each party;
(d) ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly; and
(e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases.
USE OF PRIVILEGED MATERIAL
"I also do not seek to waive privilege by serving and relying upon this affidavit as I do it purely in defence to the Claimant's unlawful reliance on matters which are the subject of legal privilege".
"When a client sues a solicitor who has formerly acted for him, complaining that the solicitor has acted negligently, he invites the court to adjudicate on questions directly arising from the confidential relationship which formerly subsisted between them. Since court proceedings are public, the client brings that formerly confidential relationship into the public domain. He thereby waives any right to claim the protection of legal professional privilege in relation to any communication between them so far as necessary for the just determination of his claim: or, putting the same proposition in different terms, he releases the solicitor to that extent from the obligation of confidence by which he was formerly bound. This is an implication of law, the rationale of which is plain. A party cannot deliberately subject a relationship to public scrutiny and at the same time seek to preserve its confidentiality. He cannot pick and choose, disclosing such incidence of the relationship that strengthen his claim for damages and concealing from forensic scrutiny such incidence as weaken it. He cannot attack his former solicitor and deny this solicitor the use of materials relevant to his defence".
"Before proceeding further in this affidavit I wish to draw certain circumstances to the attention of the court. In making this application without notice I am aware that I am under a duty to the court to make full and frank disclosure of all relevant matters. As against that I am aware of two rules of practice, namely, that communications between solicitor and client are normally privileged, and that documents obtained by compulsion in one legal proceeding may not normally be used in another legal proceeding without the permission of the court. As to the first of those rules (privilege) I have taken the view that it cannot as a general rule apply to proceedings brought by the solicitor with a view to obtaining payment of her bill or else no solicitor could ever prove her fees were properly incurred. Even so, I have chosen in my discretion to preserve certain of my former client`s secrets but I reserve my rights in case the Defendant wishes to open up those matters. As to compliance with the second of those rules (use of documents in other proceedings) I have sought to refrain from using information supplied by the former husband under compulsion unless those matters were disclosed in open court".
NON-DISCLOSURE
"It cannot be emphasised too strongly that at an urgent without notice hearing for a Freezing Order … there is a high duty to make full, fair and accurate disclosure of material information to the court and to draw the courts attention to significant factual, legal and procedural aspects of the case."
At page 1455E, in relation to a breach of that duty, Robert Walker LJ (now Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe) said:
"It will however always be necessary for the court, in deciding what should be the consequences of a breach of duty, to take account of all the relevant circumstances including the gravity of the breach, the excuse or explanation offered and the severity and duration of the prejudice occasioned to the Defendant (which will include the question whether the consequences of the breach are remediable and have been remedied). Above all the court must bear in mind the overriding objective and the need for proportionality. As Balcombe LJ said in Brink's Mat limited v Elcombe [1988] 1 WLR 1350, 1358, "this judge – made rule cannot itself be allowed to become an instrument of injustice".