Murphy v The Law society of Ireland [2019] IEHC 777 (13 November 2019)
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THE HIGH COURT
[2019] IEHC 777
[2004 No. 19212 P]
BETWEEN
COLM MURPHY
PLAINTIFF
AND
THE LAW SOCIETY OF IRELAND
DEFENDANT
EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice MacGrath delivered on the 13th day of
November, 2019.
1. The plaintiff, Mr. Murphy, sought damages for misfeasance in public office, negligence,
defamation and breach of confidence. For reasons expressed in the judgment of the court
delivered on 31st July, 2019, his claims were dismissed.
2. The principal claims made in misfeasance in public office and negligence were determined
to be a collateral challenge to valid, subsisting and unchallenged orders and were deemed
to be in impermissible attack on those orders. The court found, in the alternative, that
those claims have not been made out on the facts and/or on the law. Prior to and in the
course of submissions in the case, the court was requested by the parties to deal with all
issues, including alternative arguments of defence advanced on behalf of the defendant.
This was largely due to the procedural history of the case which has previously been
heard the High Court and, on appeal, in the Supreme Court. Mr. Murphy was successful
in the Supreme Court and the case was remitted to the High Court for further hearing. I
am informed by the parties that Mr. Murphy was successful in obtaining orders for costs in
respect of the previous hearings.
3. I now deal with the cost’s application made by the defendant, the successful party in
these proceedings. Mr. Murphy S.C. on behalf of the defendant submits that costs should
follow the event and that the society should be awarded its full cost. Mr. Craven S.C. on
behalf of the plaintiff submits that the court has a discretion in relation to costs and in the
exercise of that discretion it should take into account what he describes as the express
and implied criticisms of the defendant by the court in its judgment.
4. McKechnie J. observed in Godsil v. Ireland [2015] 4 IR 535, that it is essential in
furtherance of the high constitutional right of effective access to the courts on the one
hand and the high constitutional right to defend oneself, having been brought there, on
the other, that our legal system makes provision for costs orders. He described it as an
essential safeguarding tool to regulate litigation and the conduct and process thereof, by
ensuring that it is carried on fairly, reasonably and in proportion to the matters in issue.
Thus, as he observed, a party who institutes proceedings in order to establish rights or
entitlements, which are neither conceded nor compromised, is entitled to an expectation
that he will, if successful, not have to suffer costs in so doing. Describing the position of
the defendant, he observed that if the advanced claim is one of merit to which the
defendant has no answer, then the point should be conceded. In that way the defendant
has significant control over the legal process including participation and attendance. If the
defendant should contest an unmeritorious point, the consequences are the defendants to
Page 2 ⇓
suffer. On the other hand, if the defendant successfully defeats a claim and thereby has
been justified in the stance adopted, it would likewise be unjust for him or her to have to
suffer any financial burden by so doing. Therefore, the rule applies to a defendant as it
applies to plaintiff.
5. While O. 99, r.1(1) provides that the costs of and incidental to every proceeding in the
Superior Courts shall be in the discretion of those courts, it is also provided in O. 99, r.
1(3), that the cost of every action, question or issue tried (by a jury) should follow the
event unless the court, for special cause, to be mentioned in the order, shall otherwise
direct. In Godsil, McKechnie J. observed that although acknowledged as being
discretionary, a court which is minded not to apply this rule can only do so on a reasoned
basis, clearly explained and one rationally connected to the facts of the case to include
the conduct of the participants. Thus, the discretion so vested is not at large but must be
exercised judicially. He continued at p. 11 of the judgment:-
“..the overarching test in this regard, as described by Laffoy J in Fyffes plc v DCC and Ors
is justice related. It is only when justice demands, should the general rule be
departed from. On all occasions when such is asserted the onus is on the parties
who so claims.”
6. On the basis of the authorities, McKechnie J., suggested that it may be possible in certain
instances to loosely group together cases for the purposes of either the rule, or the
exceptions, but that nevertheless it remains the situation that one cannot rigidly define or
prescriptively describe the type, kind or category of case which by virtue of such
classification, will always fall within the rule or within the exception, as the case may be.
Cases may inevitably be borderline, some of which will sit either side of the rule.
Jurisprudence on the topic has developed more by reference to the exceptions than the
rule. McKechnie J. observed that courts have discussed this issue under a number of
headings such as the conduct of the parties, test cases, where the decision might have
significant knock-on effects or where the proceedings are said to involve public interest
challenges. That the conduct of a party may be taken into account is evident from the
decision in Mahon v. Kenna [2010] 1 IR 336, again cited by McKechnie J in Godsil.
7. Nevertheless, as recognised in both Godsil and in Veolia Water UK plc v. Fingal County
Council [2007] 1 I.R. 690 by Clarke J. (as he then was), the overriding starting position
remains that costs should follow the event.
8. It seems clear, that the defendant, the Law Society of Ireland, has been successful in the
defence of their proceedings and, therefore, this is the event which costs must normally
follow. It does not appear to me that it is open to the court, where the defendant has
achieved an outcome in its favour in respect of all claims made, that the more
sophisticated principles described in Veolia by Clarke J. are applicable. Thus, such
approach, which is considered by Delaney and McGrath on Civil Procedure, (4th ed.,
2018) at chapter 24, where complex cases might give rise to multiple issues having more
than one event, does not arise in this case.
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9. The principle which was identified by Clarke J. as being the starting position, that a party
who wins an event should get its full costs, must be acknowledged. Nevertheless, as was
stated by Murray C.J. in Dunne v. Minister for the Environment [2007] 1 IR 194, as a
counterpoint to the general rule, the court has a discretionary jurisdiction to vary or
depart from that rule if, in the special circumstances of the case, the interests of justice
require that it should do so. He observed that there was no predetermined category of
cases which fall outside the full ambit of that jurisdiction; and he acknowledged that
departure from the general rule is one which must be decided by a court in the
circumstances of each case. As Delaney and McGrath point out at para. 24-34 (Delaney
and McGrath on Civil Procedure, (4th ed., 2018) at p. 927), the factors identified as
justifying the departure from the general rule must relate to the facts of the particular
case including the conduct of the parties and not to any extraneous matters.
10. Applying the above principles to this case, it seems to me, as a matter of principle that
the defendant should be entitled to an order for costs but in determining whether it
should be entitled to an order for its full costs, the court is entitled to take into account its
observations on the defendant’s conduct as described in its judgment. These matters, to
which Mr. Craven S.C. refers, include the nature of the defendant’s response to queries
raised arising out of the O’Dowd investigation, that the taking of further reasonable and
simple steps such as making a phone call may have obviated the necessity for an order
for substituted service and may have had an effect on the timing of the s. 18 proceedings
and not unimportantly, although I have already found that the plaintiff contributed to this
state of affairs, the maintenance by the Society that an undertaking had been given to
court, when this was not reflected in the order of the court and is one which I have found
not to have existed on the facts.
11. Further, I must also bear in mind the court’s observations in relation to the manner in
which the [REDACTED] matter was introduced into the attachment and contempt
proceedings; and perhaps somewhat as a more subsidiary point, what the court described
as the combative approach adopted by the Society, who were not alone in this regard, as
evidenced in internal communications on certain issues.
Decision
12. For all of these reasons, I am satisfied that while the defendant is entitled to an order for
costs, in the interests of justice and for the reasons outlined above this is not an
appropriate case in which the defendant should be awarded an order for its full taxed
costs. I believe that this is an appropriate case in which to make a partial costs order.
13. Given that the defendant has succeeded in the defence of the various claims raised and
pursued by the plaintiff, it appears to me that the defendant should be entitled to
substantially the greater portion of its costs. Nevertheless, it also appears to me that
failure to make some deduction from, or to make some division in respect of costs is to
fail to reflect the court’s observations, as discussed above, and would not be in
accordance with the overall interests of justice.
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14. In the circumstances, therefore, I have come to the conclusion that the costs recoverable
by the defendant should not exceed 80% of those measured when taxed and ascertained.
Therefore, in the exercise of the court’s discretion on the basis of the principles outlined
above, I am satisfied that the defendant should be entitled to an order for costs to the
extent of 80% of its full costs when taxed and ascertained.
Result: 80% costs awarded in favour of the defendant
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