BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lord Advocate v. Jv & Ors [2006] ScotCS CSOH_50 (24 March 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_50.html
Cite as: [2006] CSOH 50, [2006] ScotCS CSOH_50

[New search] [Help]


 

 

OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 50

 

A2753/01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MACKAY OF DRUMADOON

 

in the cause

 

COLIN BOYD QC, THE LORD ADVOCATE

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

ASAU JV AND OTHERS

 

Defenders:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Act: C.M. Campbell, Q.C., Wolffe; Henderson Boyd Jackson

Alt: McNeill, Q.C., Bowen; Wright Johnston & Mackenzie

 

24 March 2006

 

Introduction

 

[1] On 4 August 1996 an accident occurred on the River Clyde. A steel fabrication, which was designed to form part of an oil rig, was being towed down river. The steel fabrication was being carried on a barge. As the barge was being towed under the Erskine Bridge the fabrication collided with the superstructure of the bridge, giving rise to loss and damage, which the pursuer seeks to recover from a total of five defenders.

[2] The fifth defenders are Bouygues Offshore-Uie Ltd. They, together with the second, third and fourth defenders, were parties to a joint venture, ASAU JV, who are the first defenders.

[3] In terms of a third party notice, which came before the court on 24 July 2001, the fifth defenders convened three third parties to the action. The third third party, Clydeport Operations Ltd, was one of those third parties. The case against the third third party proceeded on the basis that they had been involved in discussions relating to arrangements for towing the fabrication down the River Clyde, that they had imposed certain requirements on the tow and that they had provided pilotage services to the defenders, in connection with the tow. It was contended by the fifth defenders that fault and negligence on the part of the third third party had contributed to the occurrence of the accident and that, in any event, the third third party had assumed responsibility for the safe passage of the fabrication on its voyage down the River Clyde, entitling the fifth defenders to contribution from the third third party, under the provisions of section 3 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) (Scotland) Act 1940

[4] After sundry procedure the Record closed, of new, on 8 May 2002. The next interlocutor in the action was dated 29 February 2004, in terms of which Lord Clarke refused a motion by the second third party seeking to transfer the action to the commercial roll. On 23 May 2004 the action was sent to the procedure roll, on a variety of pleas-in-law, including the first, second, third and fourth pleas-in-law for the fifth defenders and the third and fourth pleas-in-law for the third third party. On the same date the parties were ordained to lodge notes of argument within 28 days. After further procedure a diet of procedure roll was fixed for 27 September 2005. When the case called before Lady Smith on 27 September 2005, the diet of procedure roll was discharged. Amongst other orders Lady Smith pronounced on that date was one in respect of a Minute of Abandonment, which had been tendered at the bar by the fifth defenders, in which they abandoned their third party notice against the third third party, under Rule 29.1(1)(b) of the Rules of the Court of Session, as applied by Rule of Court 26.7(5). Lady Smith found the fifth defenders liable to the third third party in the expenses of process. Before that order was pronounced, senior counsel for the third third party intimated to Lady Smith that the third third party intended to enrol a motion that the fifth defenders' liability in expenses should be on an agent and client basis. A note to that effect was included in the Minute of Proceedings. Subsequently a motion was enrolled on behalf of the third third party to find the fifth defenders liable to the third third party in the expenses of process on such a basis. That motion was opposed on the grounds that the motion was incompetent and that, in any event, there was no basis for awarding expenses on an agent and client basis. That motion came before me.

[5] Before I deal with the submissions I heard in relation to the motion, I should refer briefly to the case of Ewos Ltd v Mainland 2005 SLT 1227. The case was reported after I heard submissions in the present case. In Ewos Ltd an issue arose as to the competency of a Lord Ordinary dealing, on a date subsequent to the dates on which awards of expenses had been made by him, with the question of whether those awards of expenses should be taxed on an agent and client basis. The motions arose in the context of Rule of Court 4.15(6), which allows an interlocutor to be corrected or altered, on cause shown. At earlier stages in the case, Lord Drummond Young had pronounced a number of awards of expenses in favour of the defenders. The defenders sought to have those interlocutors rectified so that each award of expenses should be taxed on an agent and client basis. In respect of two of the earlier interlocutors, Lord Drummond Young had intended, on the date the particular interlocutor had been pronounced, that the award of expenses concerned should be without prejudice to the question of whether that award should ultimately be on an agent and client basis. On each of those occasions, a reservation to that effect had been included in the minute of proceedings. In respect of other interlocutors Lord Drummond Young had not held such an intention on the dates the interlocutors had been pronounced and no such reservations had been minuted. In paragraph [21] of his Opinion, Lord Drummond Young expressed the view that when an award of expenses is made it is possible for the basis of taxation to be reserved, but that any such reservation should be recorded in the court's interlocutor, rather than in the minute of proceedings. In those circumstances, he was prepared to rectify those interlocutors, which had been accompanied by a reservation in the minute of proceedings. He did so by including in the interlocutors being rectified a reservation of the question as to whether the award of expenses in favour of the defenders should be on an agent and client or a party and party basis. That having been done, it was then open to the defenders to argue before Lord Drummond Young that the awards of expenses covered by those rectified interlocutors should be taxed on an agent and client basis. As far as the motion before me is concerned, no point was raised on behalf of the fifth defenders that the motion was incompetent because the reservation of the question as to whether the award of expenses should be taxed on an agent and client basis had been included in the minute of proceedings rather than in Lady Smith's interlocutor of 27 September 2005. Accordingly, following the approach taken by Lord Drummond Young in Ewos I intend to rectify the interlocutor of 27 September 2005, in terms of Rule of Court 4.15(6), to include reservation of the question as to whether the award of expenses made by Lady Smith should be taxed on an agent and client or a party and party basis.

Submissions

[6] As far as the motion before me is concerned the submissions as to the competency of my granting the motion related to the provisions of Rule of Court 29(1). That rule is in the following terms:

"29.1 - (1) A pursuer may abandon an action by lodging a minute of abandonment in process and - (a) consenting to decree of absolvitor; or (b) seeking decree of dismissal.

(2) The court shall not grant decree of dismissal under paragraph (1)(b) unless -

(a) full judicial expenses have been paid to the defender and to any third party against whom the pursuer has directed conclusions, within 28 days after the date of intimation of the report of the auditor and the taxation of the account of expenses of that party; and

(b) where abandonment is made in a proof or jury trial, the Minute of Abandonment is lodged before avizandum is made in the proof or the charge to the jury by the presiding judge has begun in the jury trial, as the case may be.

(3) If the pursuer fails to pay the expenses referred to in sub-paragraph (a) of paragraph (2) to the party to whom they are due within the period specified in that sub-paragraph, that party shall be entitled to decree of absolvitor with expenses."

Rule 26.7.(5) applies the provisions of Rule 29.1., as between a defender and a third party, as they apply to an action between a pursuer and a defender.

[7] It was argued on behalf of the third third party that it was competent for the court to award expenses in their favour, which would be taxed on an agent and client basis. I was invited to hold that the term "full judicial expenses" falls to be construed as including an award of expenses providing for taxation on such a basis. Reference was made to the provisions of Section 10 of the Judicature Act 1825 ("the 1825 Act"), the terms of which were considered in Mica Insulator v Bruce Peebles & Co 1907 SC 1293 and P. v P. 1940 SC 389. It was submitted that it would be surprising if it was competent for the court to make a finding of expenses on an agent and client basis in favour of a defender, or a third party, in the event of decree of absolvitor in their favour being pronounced, but incompetent to do in the event that the action (or the third party notice) directed against them was being abandoned.

[8] On the basis that the court had a discretion to make such an award of expenses, I was invited to take account of the fact that the matter was one of importance to the third third party. All the facts upon which the action was based had been known to the pursuer when the action commenced and to the fifth defenders when they had convened the third third party into the action. This was not a case in which the fifth defenders had brought the third third party into the action, whilst they had been unaware of the facts relating to the accident.

[9] Complicated issues of economic loss were involved in the action. The four days that had been set down for the procedure roll hearing in November 2005 would not have been sufficient. Furthermore little had happened in the action between November 2002 and November 2005. In November 2002 the solicitors acting for the third third party had sought to initiate discussions with the solicitors acting for the fifth defenders, with a view to persuading the fifth defenders not to insist upon their claim against the third third party. No response had been received to that approach. In these circumstances, the conduct of the fifth defenders has been such as to warrant the Court making an award of expenses on the basis sought.

[10] Senior counsel for the fifth defenders submitted that it would not be competent for expenses to be awarded on an agent and client basis. That was because the words "full judicial expenses", when they appear in Rule of Court 29.1(2)(a), should be construed as meaning expenses taxed on the normal party and party scale. It was argued that there was logic in adopting such an approach to the construction of the term "full judicial expenses". The court had no power to modify an award of expenses against a party lodging a minute of abandonment, whether that be a pursuer abandoning an action against the defender or a defender abandoning a third party notice against a third party. For lawyers to advise on the abandonment of a case was never an easy exercise. Issues were rarely clear cut. If the giving of such advice had to take account of the possibility that an award of expenses might be taxed on an agent and client basis, the penal consequences of that occurring might discourage parties from abandoning claims. That would encourage parties to proceed with litigation, which they might otherwise have brought to an end. For that reason there was good sense in having a fixed tariff for awards of expenses upon abandonment, namely a tariff referable to party and party expenses.

[11] Reference was made to the cases to which I have already mentioned. It was also submitted that the decision in the case of P. v P. had been influenced by the fact that the action had been a matrimonial cause.

[12] In the alternative it was argued that there were no circumstances which would warrant ordering that the award of expenses against the fifth defenders should be taxed on an agent and client basis.

 

Discussion

[13] A rule of court dealing with abandonment was introduced in 1965, when the provisions of Section 10 of the 1825 Act, as extended by Section 39 of the Court of Session Act 1868, were replaced by Rule 91A of the Rules of the Court of Session 1965. Rule 91A was inserted into the Rules of Court by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of Court Amendment No.2) (Miscellaneous) 1984. Its terms allowed the Lord Ordinary to grant a pursuer leave to abandon an action "subject to payment by the pursuer of the defender's expenses". Section 10 of the 1825 Act, as extended by section 39 of the Court of Session Act 1868, was repealed by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of Court Amendment No.8) (Miscellaneous) 1986.

[14] After the hearing of the motion, enquiry was made of the Lord President's Private Office to ascertain whether any light could be shed on the background as to why Rule of Court 29.1. is framed in the terms it is. Despite considerable researches having been carried out by the Lord President's Legal Secretary and his colleagues, very little light has been shed on that issue.

[15] All that has been ascertained is that the terms of the Rule of Court 29.1., which replaced Rule 91A of the Rules of Court 1965, were based, in part, upon a Review of the Rules of Court 1965 dated February 1987. The review was carried out by a Working Group, prior to the enactment of the Rules of Court 1994, by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of Session 1994) 1994. When originally enacted, Rule of Court 29.1.(2)(a) was in its present terms, apart from a minor amendment substituting the words "the pursuer" for "he", that was made by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of Session Amendment No.4) (Miscellaneous) 2001.

[16] Having considered the various authorities placed before me, I have reached the view that under the provisions of Rule of Court 29.1.(2)(a), as applied by Rule of Court 26.7.(5), it would be competent for me to pronounce an interlocutor that the award of expenses against the fifth defenders and in favour of the third third party, which was made by Lady Smith, should be taxed on an agent and client basis.

[17] Before turning to the provisions of Rule of Court 29.1., it is appropriate to consider briefly the provisions of Section 10 of the 1825 Act (sometimes referred to as the Court of Session Act 1825). Section 10 provided that "the pursuer (had) it in his power ... to abandon the cause on paying full expenses or costs to the defender ...". In a number of cases, the term "full expenses" was construed as meaning expenses as between party and party, as opposed to expenses as between agent and client (see Lockhart v Lockhart (1845) 7 D 1045 and Mica Insulator Co. v Bruce Peebles & Co. 1907 S.C.1293). The views of Lord President Dunedin in Mica Insulator Co., Ltd v Bruce Peebles & Co., Ltd (at p. 1299), as to the construction of section 10 of the 1825 Act, were approved of and followed in Nobel's Explosives Co. v British Dominions General Insurance Co. 1919 S.C 455 (see Lord Justice Clerk Scott Dickson, p. 460, and Lord Dundas, pp. 461 - 462).

[18] However, in P. v P. 1940 S.C. 389 it is possible to identify a different approach to the construction of the term "full expenses". In an action of divorce, after the wife defender had reclaimed against a decree of divorce pronounced in favour of the husband pursuer, the husband pursuer lodged a minute abandoning the action "in terms of the statute". The defender having moved for expenses, as between solicitor and client, the pursuer contended that 'full expenses' within the meaning of section 10 of the 1825 Act meant expenses only as between party and party. The Second Division found the defender entitled to the whole expenses of the case, taxed as between solicitor and client. In considering the views of Lord President Dunedin in Mica Insulator Co. v Bruce Peebles & Co.( at p.1299), Lord Justice Clerk Aitchison identified the question that had been before the court for decision in the earlier case as having been whether the court could modify an award of expenses in favour of the defender, following upon the lodging of a minute of abandonment by the pursuer. Whilst not questioning the court's ruling on that question, Lord Justice Clerk Aitchison stated that he was not prepared to take the view that had Lord President Dunedin been considering the construction of section 10 of the 1825 Act in a matrimonial cause, he would have laid down that under no circumstances could the court award expenses as between solicitor and client. The Lord Justice Clerk's view was that the court had such a power and that it should be exercised in favour of the defender. The other members of the court agreed.

[19] Were my decision in the present case to have depended on construing the provisions of section 10 of the 1825 Act, I would consider that the decision in P. v P. was binding on me. In any event, it would appear from the opinions in Lockhart v Lockhart that the court in that case may have proceeded on the basis that even if a defender has been granted absolvitor, and the pursuer has been acting in male fide, the defender could only have been awarded expenses taxed on a party and party basis. Such an approach would not accord with current practice. Although it may not happen very frequently, defenders are awarded expenses taxed on an agent and client basis when the pursuer has been acting in bad faith.

[20] As Lord Justice Clerk Aitchison pointed out in P. v P. the question as to the correct construction of the term "full expenses" was not one that was central to the court's decision in Mica Insulator Co. v Bruce Peebles & Co. In the latter case, Lord President Dunedin's views on that question are to be found on page 1299. They are couched in brief and slightly tentative terms:

"But, then, 'full expenses' means, I think, expenses as between party and party, and does not admit any other form of taxation, such as, exempli gratia, between agent and client."

No further explanation is provided for that construction of section 10. In Mica Insulator Co. v Bruce Peebles & Co. the opinion of Lord President Dunedin was one with which the other three members of the Court concurred. Having regard to the reasoning in P. v P., I see no reason why, as a matter of principle, the defender in an action, which had been abandoned under section 10 of the 1825 Act, should not have been entitled to seek an award of expenses taxed on an agent and client basis.

[21] In my opinion, there was nothing in the terms of Rule of Court 91A that required, or even, supported such a construction being placed on what the Rules of Court then provided, namely that the Lord Ordinary could grant leave "subject to payment by the pursuer of the defender's expenses". Turning to the provisions of Rule of Court 29.1., I do not see any reason why, as a matter of principle, it should not be competent for the court to make an award of expenses, on an agent and client basis, against a party who abandons an action, a counterclaim or a claim directed against a third party.

[22] As far as the terms of Rule of Court 29.1.(2)(a) are concerned, I do not consider that they fall to be construed in the manner argued for by senior counsel for the fifth defenders. I find nothing in the terms of the rule that requires that such a construction be adopted. The reasons why Rule of Court 29.1.(2)(a) were enacted (and amended) into their current terms remain slightly unclear. However, the Court's power to award expenses to a successful party on an agent and client basis is well established (e.g. Plasticisers Ltd v William R. Stewart & Sons (Hacklemakers) Ltd 1973 SLT 58 and British Railways Board v Ross & Cromarty County Council 1974 SC 27). If it had been intended that Rule 29.1.(2)(a) should not permit the making of awards of expenses on an agent and client basis, the Rule could have explicitly provided for that. In my opinion, the inclusion of the words "full judicial expenses" does not carry with it, as a necessary implication, that the making of an award of expenses, subject to taxation on an agent and client basis, should be excluded as being incompetent. In the absence of a definition of that term in the Rules of Court, I see no reason why the term should involve any more than that the award of expenses should be made by the court, that the court has no power to modify the award against the abandoning party and that the account of expenses should be subject to taxation, if necessary, by the Auditor of Court, on the basis provided for by the court. Nor am I persuaded by the argument that construing Rule of Court 29.1.(2)(a) so as to allow the court to make an award of expenses on an agent and client basis would dissuade litigants, who were otherwise minded to abandon their claims, from doing so.

[23] For these reasons, I am satisfied that it would be competent for me to make an award of the nature sought by the third third party. However, it is only in exceptional circumstances that such awards are made. Such awards lie within the discretion of the court. They have been made in circumstances in which the court has deemed it appropriate to mark its disapproval of the conduct of a party. Such circumstances have included where the party being found liable in expenses has acted unreasonably or displayed a degree of irresponsibility or in a manner that amounts to an abuse of process. The submissions advanced on behalf of the third third party have not persuaded me that I should take such a view of the conduct of the fifth defenders.

[24] The accident giving rise to this action may on one view be a comparatively simple one. The fabrication was too large to be towed under the Erskine Bridge, when the state of the tide was such as prevailed when the tow was being undertaken. The facts relating to what happened, and how it happened, may have been known before the action was raised. However, reading through the Closed Record it is clear that certain of the legal issues involved in the action are complex, particularly those relating to the recoverability of economic loss. That may be one reason why, almost five years after the action was first raised, it remains before the court. The third third party was convened as a party to the action shortly after the action was raised. Thereafter the pleadings were adjusted and amended up until November 2002. I was informed that, in November 2002, the solicitors acting for the third third party had sought to discuss the case with the solicitors acting for the fifth defenders. However, their efforts to do so had come to nothing. Indeed, senior counsel for the third third party acknowledged that between November 2002 and the abortive procedural roll hearing, before Lady Smith on 27 September 2005, very little happened in the action.

[25] Senior counsel for the fifth defenders outlined to me why the fifth defenders had reached their decision to abandon their case against the third third party. That explanation involved referring, in general terms, to when expert evidence had become available to the fifth defenders and to when legal advice had been tendered by senior and junior counsel acting for the fifth defenders. In particular, reference was made to an expert's report, which had become available in draft form during 2003, but had not been finalised until August 2005. Thereafter, whilst the pleadings had been in the process of being amended further, during the weeks leading up to the diet of procedure roll, advice had been tendered that although the fifth defenders' case against the third third party would probably not be dismissed at procedure roll, it should nevertheless be abandoned in the light of the expert advice now available. It was submitted that the fifth defenders had acted responsibly in seeking leave to abandon their claim against the third third party, at the time when they did.

[26] Having regard to the facts of the present case, I am not persuaded that I should make an award of expenses against the fifth defenders on an agent and client basis. I accordingly refuse the motion on behalf of the third third party. I am not satisfied that there is anything exceptional about the circumstances in which the fifth defenders have conducted themselves in seeking to convene the third third party as a party to the action and then seeking to abandon their claim against them. On the basis of the information before me, I do not consider that it would be appropriate for me to take the view that the fifth defenders were primarily, let alone solely, responsible for the delay there undoubtedly has been in making progress in the action. The fifth defenders may have failed to respond to approaches which their solicitors had received from the solicitors acting for the third third party. However, these approaches do not appear to have been pressed very hard and in any event, between the time when they were first made and the lodging of the minute of abandonment, very little appears to have happened in the case, other than preparations for the procedure roll. In my opinion, on the basis of the information placed before me, it cannot be said that the fifth defenders acted unreasonably or recklessly, let alone in bad faith, in deciding to convene the third third party or in their conduct after the third third party was convened. In these circumstances I refuse the motion.

 

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_50.html