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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> Proposals for Reform of the Law Relating to Maintenance and Champerty (Report) [1966] EWLC 7 (1 January 1966) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/1966/7.html Cite as: [1966] EWLC 7 |
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LAW COMMSSION
PROPOSALS FOR REFORM OF THE LAW
RELATING TO
MAINTENANCE AND CHAMPERTY
Laid before Parliament by the Lord High Chancellor pursuant to section 3(2) of the Law Commissions Act 1965
The Law Commission was set up by section 1 of the Law Commissions Act 1965 for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law. The Commissioners are-
The Honourable Mr. Justice Scarman, O.B.E., Chairman.
Mr. L. C . B. Gower, M.B.E.
Mr. Neil Lawson, Q.C.
Mr. N. S. Marsh.
Mr. Andrew Martin, Q.C.
Mr. Arthur Stapleton Cotton is a special consultant to the Commission.
The Secretary of the Commission is Mr. H. Boggis-Rolfe, C.B.E., and its offices are at Lacon House, Theobald's Road, London, W.C.l.
LAW COMMISSION
Item XV(6) of First Programme
PROPOSALS FOR REFORM OF THE LAW RELATING TO
MAINTENANCE AND CHAMPERTY
To the Right Honourable The Lord Gardiner , the Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain
My Lord,
Introduction
Maintenance and Champerty as Indictable Misdemeanours
Maintenance and Champerty as Torts
Public Policy and Champerty
"(a) any purchase by a solicitor of the interest, or any part of the interest, of his client in any action, suit or other contentious proceeding ; or
(b) any agreement by which a solicitor retained or employed to prosecute any action, suit or other contentious proceeding stipulates for payment only in the event of success in that action, suit or proceeding."
And it is clear that a client can apply pursuant to section 61 of the Act to set aside a champertous agreement made with his solicitor for the conduct of litigation.
(i) "Contingency fee" agreements are unlawful: see, e.g. In re a Solicitor [1912] 1 KB 302.
(ii) A solicitor cannot recover from professional indemnity insurers loss arising from his having entered into an agreement in fact champertous : Haseldine v. Hosken [1933] 1 K.B. 822.
(iii) A solicitor who has made, or knowingly participates in the furtherance of, a champertous agreement is not entitled to enforce a claim for costs: re Trepan Mines Ltd. (No. 2) [1963] Ch. 199-in which the earlier authorities are referred to. This aspect is important to an English solicitor asked to act for parties resident in a jurisdiction where litigation on a contingency fee basis is 1awful-e.g. the United States of America or some of the Common Market countries.
(iv) A solicitor who is conducting his client's litigation on a champertous basis may find himself ordered by the court to pay the other side's costs: Danzey v. Metropolitan Bank of England and Wales (1912) 28 T.L.R. 327.
Consultation
(i) where solicitors should be permitted to arrange for their remuneration in contentious matters upon a " contingency fee " basis-i.e. no win, no pay: but win, and the solicitor takes an agreed percentage of the moneys recovered :
(ii) whether the law, criminal as well as civil, should be strengthened to offer protection against unscrupulous " claims agencies".
These are big questions upon which the professional bodies as well as the public must have further time for reflection before any solutions can or should be formulated. Suffice it to say that the ancient and unused misdemeanours and the ancient and virtually useless torts with which we are at present concerned can be consigned to the museum of legal history without prejudice to further discussion of such questions and with advantage to the form and clarity of our law.
Law Commission's Proposals
(1) The common law and statutory misdemeanours of maintenance and champerty should be abolished.
(2) Maintenance and champedy as actionable wrongs should cease to exist.
(3) Champertous agreements (including "contingency fee" arrangements between solicitor and client) should, for the present, continue to remain unlawful as contrary to public policy. Meanwhile, further study, in consultation with the Law Society, should be given to the question of " contingency fee " arrangements.
LESLIE SCARMAN, Chairman.
L. C . B. GOWER.
NEIL LAWSON.
NORMAN S . MARSH.
ANDREW MARTIN.
HUME BOGGIS-ROLFE, Secretary.
25th October, 1966.
APPENDIX
DRAFT CLAUSE
Maintenance and Champerty as crimes and torts, at common law. |
A.-(1) The offences of maintenance and champerty under the common law of England and Wales are hereby abolished; but embracery of jurors is to be treated as an offence distinct from maintenance and as unaffected by this section. (2) No person shall, under the law of England and Wales, be liable in tort for any conduct on account of its being maintenance or champerty as known to the common law, except in the case of a cause of action accruing before this section has effect. (3) Nothing in this section affects any rule of law as to the cases in which a contract is to be treated as contrary to public policy or otherwise illegal. |
ISBN 010520269X
Crown copyright 1966
S.O. Code No. 39-91
1st January 1966
Note 2 For the history of maintenance and champerty, see Winfield, History of Conspiracy and Abuse of Legal Procedure, Cambridge (1921), particularly chapter VI. [Back] Note 3 Alabaster w. Harness [1895] 1 QB 339
Oram v. Hutt [I9141 1 Ch. 98
Baker Y. Jones 119541 1 W.L.R. 1005
Martell v. Consett Iron Co. [1955] Ch. 363 and cited cases therein. [Back]