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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Optical Services and Ors -v- Carey Olsen and Ors [2015] JRC 099 (12 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2015/2015_099.html Cite as: [2015] JRC 99, [2015] JRC 099 |
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PETTY DEBTS COURT IN THE ISLAND OF JERSEY
Before : |
Advocate Matthew John Thompson, Relief Magistrate. |
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Between |
Optical Services (Jersey) Limited |
First Plaintiff |
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Ian Kenny |
Second Plaintiff |
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Julie Kenny |
Third Plaintiff |
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And |
Carey Olsen |
First Defendant |
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Christopher Duncan Philipott |
Second Defendant |
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Robin Leeuwenburg |
Third Defendant |
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The Second and Third Plaintiffs appeared in person and on behalf of the First Plaintiff.
Advocate I. C. Jones for the Defendants.
CONTENTS OF THE JUDGMENT
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Paras |
1. |
Introduction |
1-3 |
2. |
The position of the second and third defendants |
4 |
3. |
The representation of the first defendants |
5-6 |
4. |
Should the first defendant be awarded its costs |
7-12 |
5. |
Standard costs or indemnity costs |
13-22 |
6. |
What costs can the first defendant recover |
23 |
judgment
the master:
1. This judgment represents my decision in respect of the first defendant's application for costs on an indemnity basis, such costs to be taxed if not agreed, following on from my judgment dated 29th October, 2014, reported at Optical Services and Ors-v-Carey Olsen and Ors [2014] JRC 208A ("the preliminary issue judgment"). The preliminary issue judgment determined in the defendants' favour a preliminary issue as to whether or not the duty of care owed by a lawyer to his client could be extended to a third party and or whether the duties as enshrined in the Jersey Law Society Code of Conduct were duties of care owed to the plaintiffs.
2. For the reasons set out in the preliminary issue judgment I ruled against the plaintiffs that any duty of care was owed to them by the defendants as advisers to the plaintiffs' opponent in certain proceedings. I also ruled that a breach of the Jersey Law Society Code of Conduct, (assuming without deciding the point that such a breach of duty had occurred), did not give rise to any claim that the plaintiffs could bring against the defendants.
3. At paragraphs 17 to 29 of the judgment I also addressed the plaintiffs' argument that there was a lacuna which need to be filed because the plaintiffs were unable to recover their costs either from the plaintiffs in what I described in the preliminary issue judgment as the eviction proceedings or from the defendants personally on a wasted costs basis. At paragraph 25 of the preliminary issue judgment I noted in particular that the interpretation I considered should be placed on Article 3 of the Civil Proceedings (Jersey) Law 1956 was different to a view expressed by the second plaintiff to a greffier of the Petty Debts Court and the greffier's reply. In this judgment I shall refer to this as the 'lacuna issue'. In the preliminary issue judgment I determined both the lacuna issue and the issue of whether a duty of care was owed. The plaintiffs' claim was therefore dismissed against the defendants and it is on this basis that an application for costs is now made.
4. In respect of the application for costs there are three separate issues to consider:-
(i) Should costs be awarded in the defendants' favour;
(ii) If so, should costs be on the standard basis or the indemnity basis;
(iii) If costs are awarded in the defendants' favour whether on the standard or indemnity basis, what costs can the defendants claim?
5. Before proceeding further, it is right to record that the application for costs is only made by the first defendant. In affidavits filed by the second and third defendants for this application, both accepted that they did not pay or agree to pay any money to the first defendant in relation to these proceedings and they have not instructed any separate legal representation. Accordingly, they have not incurred any costs. The claim for costs is therefore limited to that of the first defendant.
6. I start by reference to noting that in this matter, that all three defendants including the first defendant, were represented in court by Advocate Jones, who is a senior associate employed by the first defendant. I address in more detail in relation to the third issue required to be decided the effect of this on the costs claimed by the first defendant.
7. However, at this stage, it is right to observe that where advocates or solicitors are pursued in court proceedings, generally it is the practice for a firm of advocates or solicitors not to represent themselves but to seek separate representation. The rationale for this is that an advocate who is a partner or an employee of a law firm that is being pursued may find him or herself in a position of conflict. That conflict may manifest itself in terms of a conflict between an advocate's duty to the court and a duty to the client. The conflict might also be between the duty to give independent advice and an advocate having a financial interest in the outcome of the litigation. In this case I did not take objection to Advocate Jones appearing for the first defendant because the issue that arose was a pure question of law where the first defendant wished to argue that no duty of care arose. It did not require any evidence to be adduced where a conflict might also arise between an advocate appearing in court and advancing evidence by that advocates' firm; if the application would have been unsuccessful the financial consequences would also have been clear namely there was a likelihood of the defendants having to pay costs because of an unsuccessful application. I have set out these matters because in future, where law firms are pursued for breach of duty or face a counterclaim to actions for unpaid fees based on allegations of breach of duty, the current general practice of the law firm seeking independent representation is one that should still be followed.
8. The first issue I have to consider is where the first defendant should be awarded its costs at all.
9. The power to award costs in the Petty Debts Court is set out in Article 3(1) of the Civil Proceedings (Jersey) Law 1956, the relevant part of which provides as follows:-
10. The basis upon which the Petty Debts Court awards costs is to follow the approach of the Royal Court. A convenient summary of the Royal Court's approach is found in Flynn v Reid [2012] 2 JLR 226 at paragraph 13 where the Court of Appeal set out and approved the decision of Page, Commissioner in Watkins v Egglishaw [2002] JLR 1. The relevant extract is as follows:-
11. In this case Advocate Jones contends that the first defendant was clearly successful and in this case a winner is readily apparent and so costs should follow the event.
12. Mr Kenny complained that for costs to follow the event was unfair because the effect of such an order would mean that the plaintiffs would have to pay costs to the defendants; yet it was the defendants' conduct which led to the present dispute because it was the defendants who issued proceedings in what I described in the preliminary issue judgment as the eviction proceedings in the wrong court. He pointed out that although the defendants in the present proceedings reserved their position as to whether the Petty Debts Court was right to dismiss the proceedings for want of jurisdiction, the decision of the Assistant Magistrate on 2nd October, 2011, to decline jurisdiction had never been challenged and was consistent with the criticisms the plaintiffs in the present proceedings made of the defendants.
13. In my judgment, I consider the fair result requires me to draw a distinction between then lacuna issue and the duty of care issue. In respect of the lacuna issue, having exchanged emails with a Greffier of the Petty Debts Court, referred to paragraph 7 and 8 of the preliminary issue judgment, the plaintiffs proceeded on the assumption that the response received from the Greffier meant that costs would not be awarded in their favour. While I ultimately disagreed with the effect of the Petty Debts Court declining jurisdiction and what costs orders might then be made, I also understand why the plaintiffs did not then ask for costs. It therefore took my judgment to clarify the position. In those circumstances, I do not think it appropriate to make a costs order against the plaintiffs in respect of the lacuna issue where I have expressed a different view to that expressed in the exchange of emails to which I have referred. In respect of this issue therefore I consider that each party should bear their own costs.
14. However, in respect of the duty of care issue I agree with Advocate Jones that the first defendant (and the other defendants) were the clear winners on the duty of care issue. The arguments they advanced prevailed in their entirety. The fact that the plaintiffs will consequently will end up paying the defendants' costs even though the plaintiffs say the defendants issued the eviction proceedings in the wrong court is not a factor to persuade me to exercise my discretion to deprive the first defendant of its costs. It was a matter for the plaintiffs whether they chose to pursue the defendants or not. They did not have to do so. By a letter dated 20th March, 2014, significantly in advance of the hearing before me, the defendants clearly set out that no duty of care was owed and that a claim for breach of the Law Society Code of Conduct did not give rise to a claim that could be pursued before the Petty Debts Court. The plaintiffs were therefore clearly on notice of the arguments the defendants were going to advance, which arguments ultimately prevailed, and yet the plaintiffs chose to continue with their claim. They were also aware of the risk of a costs order against them if they lost. They must therefore face the consequences of a costs order.
15. I appreciate that from the plaintiffs' perspective this appears to leave them with an unjust result because they are now having to pay the costs of the defendants when they did not recover their costs in the eviction proceedings. This regrettable situation has come about however because the plaintiffs chose to pursue Messr. Carey Olsen. This choice is not a direct consequence of no costs order being made in the plaintiffs favour in the eviction proceedings. Rather it is a result of an independent voluntary act by the plaintiffs to seek to recover costs from an entity which was not a party to the previous proceedings. What the plaintiffs should have done is to have asked the Petty Debts Court to issue a ruling on costs and, if the defendants disagreed with that ruling, to appeal the same to the Royal Court. That was the remedy available to the plaintiffs to protect their position. By taking a different option, and one which was wrong in law, the plaintiffs have brought this unhappy state of affairs upon themselves.
16. The first defendant further seeks indemnity costs. In C v P-S [2010] JLR 645 the Court of Appeal at paragraph 12 of its decision stated succinctly as follows in relation to awarding indemnity costs:-
17. Advocate Jones contended that the first defendant should be awarded costs on the indemnity basis because of what had occurred at a mediation which took place on 18th February, 2014. The concerns he expressed were set out at paragraphs 46.2 to 46.5 of his skeleton argument.
18. In particular he asserted that the mediation was understood by all parties to have taken place on the basis that it was without prejudice save as to costs and accordingly what took place at the mediation was relevant to the issue of costs and could be referred to.
19. During the hearing, I refused to allow this submission to be developed. This was because I did not and do not accept that mediations that take place in the Petty Debts Court are on a without prejudice save as to costs basis. I express this view because my principal responsibility as relief magistrate is to conduct mediations in the Petty Debts Court which covers all claims below £10,000 that are disputed. I took over this role from Master Wheeler in April 2014. The mediations that I have conducted, and I believe Master Wheeler conducted before me, were always on a without prejudice basis. In other words what is said in any mediation is confidential at the time the mediation takes place and remains confidential. It cannot be referred to in any subsequent proceedings. The parties are therefore free to and are encouraged to make any statements, proposals or concessions they wish to make in the knowledge that if any such step does not lead to a settlement then the rights of that party to pursue or defend a claim through the Petty Debts Court are fully preserved. This is an important principle as well as being key to allowing the parties the best chance of an opportunity to resolve their differences. If what was said in the course of mediation could be referred to at a later costs hearing, the credibility of the mediation process in the Petty Debts Court will be seriously if not fatally damaged. I was not and am not willing to accept a submission that attempts to undermine a key part of the mediation process.
20. I have also seen no evidence to suggest that the mediation in the present dispute was conducted on any different basis. I was not therefore prepared to allow a skeleton argument to be referred to give evidence of what occurred at the mediation. Accordingly I discounted what occurred at the mediation as a basis for the application for ordering indemnity costs.
21. I should make it clear that following a mediation a party that wishes to make an offer, either in open correspondence or on a without prejudice save as to costs basis, is always free to do so. If such an offer is made and is not accepted, and the party making the offer is then successful at trial or at any subsequent hearing, the court can have regard to any offer that was made. However, any such offer does not mean that the confidentiality of the mediation process itself is disturbed.
22. The other basis of the application for indemnity costs advanced by Advocate Jones was that, by the letter dated 20th March, 2014 referred to above a Calderbank offer was made. The penultimate paragraph stated as follows:-
"In conclusion we would like you to consider the wisdom of continuing to pursue the claim. The defendants are no longer prepared to waive the costs they have incurred in their entirety. However, in the event you would like to withdraw the claim the defendants would be prepared to reach a compromise as to their outstanding costs, which would significantly limit any liability as to costs which you, your company, your wife might have in this regard. It is of course a matter for you as to whether or not you chose to take up this offer."
23. It does not appear from the papers produced to me that any offer as to what costs the first defendant might be prepared to accept was ever put to the plaintiffs. The letter of 20th March, 2014, was made the day after the defendants filed their answer. Previously I was informed by Advocate Jones that the defendants had been prepared to settle the claim on the basis of each side bearing their own costs. With hindsight, given the significant costs that have now been incurred, it is regrettable that their offer of drop hands was not repeated at this stage. In making this observation it was of course a matter for the defendants as to whether they wished to make such an offer. However, the failure to do so and the seeking of costs of recovering an answer increased the likelihood of the matter progressing to a hearing. I have set this out to put in context the argument now advanced by Advocate Jones namely that if the plaintiffs had accepted the offer advanced on 20th March, 2015, then the costs that were incurred since that date would not have been incurred and significant costs would have been saved.
24. In considering whether or not there is something unusual to take the case out of the ordinary or degree of unreasonableness, I have also taken into account the fact that the second plaintiff wrote to Mr Mallett on 5th October, 2013, expressing his views as to whether or not a wasted costs order could be made against the third defendant as set out at paragraph 7 and 8 of the preliminary issue judgment. This meant that the plaintiffs did not seek any claim for costs because they believed there was a lacuna in the law, an issue which I addressed at paragraphs 17 to 29 of the preliminary issue judgment.
25. I have referred to this issue because in exercising my discretion as to the basis upon which to award costs, the overriding objective as noted in Watkins v Egglishaw and approved in Flynn v Reid is to do justice between the parties. In my judgment it would be a step too far to award indemnity costs having regard to the reasons why the present proceedings were commenced by the plaintiffs. In my judgment this is a case that was hard fought and where the plaintiffs failed. However, they brought their claim out of a sense of frustration and grievance even if they were mistaken in doing so. I do not therefore consider that hard fought litigation albeit mistaken is sufficient to take the case out of the ordinary and I am not satisfied that there is a degree of unreasonableness which justifies indemnity costs. As Mr Kenny simply put it, indemnity costs is the court in some way expressing displeasure in respect of a party's conduct. In my judgment there is no displeasure necessary for me to express in respect of a case that ultimately failed but was fairly argued. In the exercise of the discretion vested in me, the fair result is therefore to award costs on the standard basis for the duty of care issue.
26. I now turn to consider the most difficult aspect of the application for costs. This part of the application arises because when the defendants made an initial application for costs, when I gave my decision dismissing the plaintiffs' claim, I asked what costs the first defendant had incurred given that it was represented by Advocate Jones as an employee. In respect of this part of the argument, the plaintiffs did not play any part and did not put forward submissions as they were willing to abide by the Court's decision. It is right that I should also record therefore that the plaintiffs were not provided with any relevant financial records of the first defendant which I ordered to be produced because the plaintiffs were not willing to give an undertaking to keep such information confidential and because the plaintiffs were willing to abide by whatever decision I reached.
27. The contentions advised by Advocate Jones on behalf of the first defendant were in summary that the position in Jersey should be the same as that in England as set out in the case of London Scottish Benefits Society v Chorley [1884] 12 Q.B.D. 452; 13 Q.B.D. 872 as considered by the English Court of Appeal in Markinson v Trim [2002] EWCA Civ 1273. As part of this contention Advocate Jones advanced that Carey Olsen were not a litigant in person.
28. The starting point to consider this submission is practice direction PD05/6 issued by the Petty Debts Court which deals with orders for costs. Paragraph 5 of the practice direction provides as follows:-
29. The provisions of Rule 12/6 of the Royal Court Rules 2004 ("the Rules"), as amended, referred to in paragraph 5 of the Petty Debts Court practice direction read as follows:-
I refer to these provisions later in this judgment.
30. Advocate Jones firstly referred me to the case of The London Scottish Benefits Society v Chorley [1884] 13 QBD 872 and the following passages:-
31. The material parts of Markinson v Trim and its analysis of The London Scottish case are contained at paragraphs 9 to 15:-
32. The issue I have to decide is whether these principles should be followed in Jersey. As a starting point, I agree, as observed by Denman J. in The London Scottish case (page 469 of Markinson), that a lawyer's time including an advocate's time is valuable. Time is still one of the bases in contentious matters used by a Jersey advocate or solicitor to charge fees. However, as the Law Society Code of Conduct notes at section 5 in relation to terms of engagement, the level of fees may be affected by the complexity and novelty of the matter, the specialist legal knowledge required, the value of the matter, the amount of documentation, the urgency of the matter, the importance of the matter to the client and the time to be expended. The Law Society Code of Conduct also recognizes that in many cases what is charged is a fixed fee. Legal practices may also offer discounts to the charge out rate usually applied for a particular lawyer. Legal practices may also agree budgets with clients to perform certain work for a particular fee. All these mean that the amount of the bill may be lower or higher than the time spent working on the matter
33. How individual lawyers within a law firm spend their time in my judgment goes to looking at the profitability of that law firm. However, it is only one factor. As I have listed above fees may be charged on a different basis. It therefore does not always follow that simply because a lawyer has recorded time in respect of a particular matter that all that time is recoverable.
34. I am also sufficiently familiar with the practice of law firms based on my past experience to be aware that not all time spent by a lawyer whether the lawyer is a partner or an employee leads to income for the firm. The business of running a modern law firm is complex. A proportion of any lawyer's time is spent on running the practice. That may involve client relations, promoting the firm, looking to obtain new work, managing other employees, or complying with the firm's internal procedures including issuing and collecting bills. To the extent that the London Scottish Benefits Society case and Markinson v Trim suggest that time is money, in this day and age I do not agree. Time may be money but it does not necessarily equate to actual pecuniary loss. Rather time is invested in the business of a legal practice in many different ways with the aim of producing an income and a profit.
35. This means that a law firm, like any other business pursued through the courts, has a choice; either to appear itself or to instruct and pay an independent lawyer to do so. The latter approach will lead to the business having to pay fees to the law firm or individual lawyer retained under the contract with that lawyer. The former approach means that the particular business has taken a decision to appear itself. The business is therefore choosing to spend part of the time available to it to run its business, to appear in court rather than spend actual money out of the cash received by it, thus reducing its income and profit. The position of a lawyer is no different from any other person who is pursued.
36. I do not therefore agree that such a choice means that a lawyer pursued in the Courts will always retain another lawyer to act. Ultimately the lawyer pursued (subject to the limitations of professional conduct referred to above) has to make a choice as to whether he or she wishes to represent themselves or to retain a lawyer on a paid basis to do so. It should be remembered that if a lawyer is retained on a paid basis, if costs are recovered, the full rates of the lawyer are not recoverable and so the law firm client will always have to make some payment to the lawyer. Whether a law firm chooses to do so is a commercial decision for each business where a variety of factors, some financial, will come into play. If the decision is to appear personally, one set of rules applies in terms of recovery of costs; if an independent lawyer is retained on a paid basis, a different set of rules apply.
37. It also follows from the above reasoning, that I am not persuaded that lawyers should be treated any differently from any other profession or business which brings or faces a claim in the courts. The judgment a lawyer has to make, subject to constraints of professional conduct rules, is no different from the position of any other litigant. The fact that lawyer has the skills to appear in person in my judgment does not mean that a lawyer should be treated differently from any other litigant in respect of what costs can be recovered. The choice the lawyer faces remains the same as for anyone else, namely does the lawyer want to spend his or her own time dealing with the matter or does the lawyer wish to retain any independent adviser and pay money out of income earned to do so.
38. The fact that a lawyer has professional skills and to argue a case, subject to professional conduct limitations, in my judgment does not alter the fundamental choice that the lawyer is making. To decide otherwise and to follow the English approach would mean that lawyers were a special case. They and only they could recover all their fees whereas anyone else appearing for themselves is subject to Rule 12/6 of the Rules. Although the current and previous rules in England do treat practicing solicitors differently from litigants in person, Rule12/6 does not. I am not therefore bound to follow th English approach. With respect to the English Court of Appeal I therefore disagree with the English approach and am not persuaded that it is an approach that should be followed in Jersey. I also consider that the existence of special skills, that a lawyer appearing in person might use, simply means that a lawyer acting in person will not necessarily face the same challenges or fall into the traps that litigants in person sometimes do. In other words, the lawyer may be able to progress a matter more efficiently which itself may lead that lawyer to decide to act rather than pay someone else to do so.
39. I consider that the approach in England has come about because The London Scottish case was based on the assumption that litigants in person will not be indemnified for the time spent by the litigant conducting litigation. However, that is not l the position under Rule 12/6. If a litigant can show that the time he spent in relation to the case has caused actual pecuniary loss then he can recover the lower of the time reasonably spent doing the work or two thirds of the cost which an advocate would have incurred. If pecuniary loss is not established then an hourly rate is recoverable as some form of compensation for the litigant in person.
40. The fact that an assessment of such a loss may not be easy at times does not matter. Ordinary litigants are now entitled to recover their costs. One of the basis set out in The London Scottish and Markinson v Trim cases, namely that ordinary litigants are not compensated for their time and no longer applies and is therefore not a justification to treat lawyers differently from other litigants. I have already addressed above the other foundation for the decision namely that if lawyers could not recover the time spent they would inevitably instruct outside lawyers which is a view I do not accept.
41. I also regard a partnership as appearing through either one of its partners or as an employee as falling within the definition of a litigant in person. I am not aware of any Jersey or English authority on this point despite asking for the same to be considered. I have reached this view by reference to what is said in Markinson v Trim at page 473 (e) to (h) about a partnership. While this is in the context of the English Court of Appeal considering that lawyers can recover their time in full for their own professional skill, a view with which I disagree, I do adopt the following analysis of a partnership:-
42. For the first defendant to retain its own employee to appear for the firm would be the firm contracting with itself to direct its employee to represent it. Accordingly, as Carey Olsen cannot contract with itself to retain Advocate Jones, (and to be fair to it did not contend that it had done so) I consider that the correct analysis is that Carey Olsen was appearing in person through Advocate Jones as its agent. The position would be no different if one of the partners had appeared. He or she would be there in their own capacity and for their fellow partners as their agent. He or she would and could not however be a lawyer retained to represent that partnership.
43. In Allscot Limited v A C Mauger and Sons Limited [2012 JCA 103, prior to a change to Rule 12/6 of the Rules the Court of Appeal that a company was not a litigant in person. In Allscot, the Court of Appeal confirmed the observations it had made in Leeds United Football Club v Admatch [2009] JLR 186, that a company was not a litigant in person, because to do so would be to ignore the corporate personality of the company, and a company was not a natural person. Beloff J A as President stated at paragraph 27 "a litigant in person is someone who appears without representation at all, not simply someone who appears without a lawyer. The words "in person" must be given weight." He also agreed with Bennett J.A., that a litigant in person was a natural person.
44. The difficulty I face is that I am not aware of any authority which is considered whether or not a partnership is a natural person and a litigant in person I therefore return to first principles. A partnership is different from a company because it is a collection of natural persons carrying on business together. The partnership is bound by the acts of those natural persons. If a sole practitioner is a natural person, why is a group of natural persons any different? In my view there is no difference. I also consider that a partnership is without representation where it has not contracted with someone to represent it. Sending one partner or an employee to appear, merely because they happen to be advocates, is still in my judgment the partnership appearing itself rather than through someone retained on its behalf.
45. I also do not agree that a partner appearing for his partnership or an employee so authorised is in the same position as a lawyer retained under a contract for services. Firstly, there is no contract. Secondly, the confidentiality of discussions between the partner and fellow partners is governed solely by litigation privilege where the confidentiality of communications between the retained lawyer and the law firm client is governed both by litigation privilege and legal advice privilege. The position is not the same.
46. For all these reasons I therefore conclude that Carey Olsen appeared as a litigant in person and the basis upon which they can recover costs is that set out in Rule 12/6(2)(a) namely:-
(i) if Carey Olsen can prove actual pecuniary loss the lower of:-
(a) the amount it can prove it has lost for the time spent during the work, or
(b) up to ⅔ of the sum which, in the opinion of the Greffier would have been allowed if the litigant had been represented by an advocate;
(ii) if no pecuniary loss is proved, the amount recoverable is the amount the Greffier shall determine.
47. I now turn to consider what amount is it that the first defendant has proved it has lost for the time reasonably spent on doing the work. To consider this I ordered the first defendant to provide me certain financial information relating to the time spent on this matter, the chargeable time recorded by Advocate Jones and another employee for the current year and the previous years, how they have used their non-chargeable time generally and information about the profitability of the dispute resolution and litigation group of Carey Olsen. I requested all this information ultimately to form a view if actual pecuniary loss has been established and to what value should be placed on the time spent by the first defendant in defending the plaintiffs' claim and whether the sum is likely lower or higher than ⅔ of the sum that would be allowed on a taxation.
48. The conclusion I have reached in relation to this is as follows. I am satisfied that up to 30th June, 2014, (which is the financial year end for the first defendant), that actual pecuniary loss has been established to enable the first defendant to recover reasonable time spent during this financial year. However, for the period after 30th June, 2014, the first defendant is required to provide further information to satisfy me that actual pecuniary loss has been suffered for the current financial year. As the information provided by Carey Olsen is private, I do not in this judgment set out my reasons for reaching this conclusion, which reasons have been provided to the defendants to this dispute only, as the plaintiff agreed to accept the Court's decision without seeing the information provided.