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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Hodges v Trenouth-Wood [2021] JRC 179 (30 June 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2021/2021_179.html Cite as: [2021] JRC 179 |
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30 June 2021
Before : |
R. J. MacRae Esq., Deputy Bailiff, sitting alone |
Between |
(1) Darren Paul Hodges (2) Mary Hodges |
Plaintiff |
And |
Roger Brian Trenouth-Wood |
Defendant |
Advocate O. A. Blakeley for the Plaintiffs.
Mr Trenouth-Wood in person.
DECISION ON COSTS
the deputy bailiff:
1. The Court's judgment in this matter was finalised on 21st May 2021.
2. The trial of this action occurred on 16th March 2021 and was followed by a view on 19th March 2021 and a hearing on damages and costs on 21st April 2021. The Court's findings on the Plaintiffs' claim and the arguments in respect of damages are set out in the 21st May 2021 judgment (Hodges v Trenouth-Wood [2021] JRC 146).
3. The Plaintiffs claim costs on the indemnity basis. The Defendant argues that there should be no order as to costs.
4. It is appropriate to set out the principles before considering the competing arguments in a little more detail.
5. In the recent case of Financial Technology Ventures and others -v- ETFS Capital Limited and Tuckwell [2021] JRC 118, the Court said:
6. In respect of indemnity costs, generally they should only be awarded in circumstances where a party has conducted the litigation in an unreasonable fashion. It is necessary for a party seeking an order for indemnity costs in its favour to identify something in the conduct of the action of the other party or the circumstance of the case which takes the case out of the norm, recognising that there will nearly always need to be a clear demonstration of a degree of unreasonableness on the part of the other party. It is evidence of unreasonableness which is the hallmark of an award on the indemnity basis.
7. The Plaintiffs succeeded on their principal argument. They did not succeed in establishing that the posts erected along the right of way impeded them or infringed their rights - as found by the Court subsequent to the view which took place on 19th March 2021.
8. The Defendant's arguments in relation to the construction and effect of the terms of the relevant contracts were unsustainable but were pursued in good faith.
9. The Defendant's counterclaim was unsustainable, but the costs incurred in respect of it were de minimus.
10. The Plaintiffs say the Defendant should have sought legal advice and his reason for not doing so, namely that it was too expensive was, with hindsight, an error as the costs of fighting and losing this litigation are far higher than early legal advice would have been. However, the Defendant's decision not to take legal advice is not relevant to the incidence of costs.
11. Various criticisms of the Defendant's conduct in the litigation were made by the Plaintiffs but, in my view, they are not of substance and, in any event, do not amount to unreasonable conduct. The Court imposed a tight timetable on the parties which both parties managed to keep to ensure that this matter was determined quickly as a cause de brievété. The Defendant more or less complied with the Court's directions even though he was unrepresented. As to the correspondence between the parties prior to litigation, which was pointed to by both parties as evidence of unreasonableness on the part of the other, the contents of the same were unremarkable in the context of this sort of dispute. In any event, the criticisms made by the parties regarding each other in this regard do not have any impact on the costs incurred.
12. It is a great pity that this matter was not the subject of neighbourly communication by way of a direct meeting between the parties prior to proceedings being commenced and both parties share some responsibility for that.
13. Taking all the circumstances of this case in the round, I order that the Defendant pay 80% of the Plaintiffs' costs to be taxed if not agreed on the standard basis.