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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Stuart v. Bulger [2008] ScotCS CSOH_102 (15 July 2008)
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Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_102, [2008] CSOH 102

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 102

 

A675/98

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MACKAY OF DRUMADOON

 

in the cause

 

DOUGLAS STUART

 

Pursuer

 

against

 

DOREEN BULGER

 

Defender

 

 

ннннннннннннннннн________________

 

 

Pursuer: Thomson; Gillespie MacandrewW.S.

Defender: not represented

MSM Solicitors and Anderson Strathearn W.S.: MacNeill; Blacklocks

 

15 July 2008

 

[1] This is an action for damages which arose out of a road accident on the Isle of Arran on 4 September 1996. The action was raised on 1 June 1998. After sundry procedure the action settled extra-judicially on 17 October 2000, the date of the proof. The defender agreed to pay damages to the pursuer, together with the judicial expenses of the action as taxed. A joint minute in appropriate terms was lodged on 16 January 2001 and given effect to by interlocutor dated 18 January 2001. In terms of that interlocutor, the defender was found liable to the pursuer in the expenses of the action. The pursuer's account of expenses was remitted to the Auditor of Court for taxation. The pursuer's application for an additional fee under the provisions Rule of Court 42.14(2) was also remitted to the Auditor for determination.

[2] The solicitors who raised the action for damages on behalf of the pursuer, and who acted for him until settlement of the action was reached and implemented, were Anderson Strathearn W.S., Edinburgh, who had been instructed by Scholarios, Solicitors, Paisley. The latter firm of solicitors is now known as MSM, Solicitors. For ease of reference, I will refer to those two firms of solicitors as the "pursuer's former solicitors". The pursuer is now represented by Gillespie Macandrew W.S.

[3] Following settlement of the action, the agreed damages were paid by the defender. A cheque in settlement of those damages was sent to the pursuer by his former solicitors, and was cashed by him. An account of the expenses incurred by the pursuer to Anderson Strathearn W.S. was prepared and subsequently lodged for taxation with the Auditor of Court (No. 23 of Process). The amount payable in terms of that account of expenses was subsequently agreed by Anderson Strathearn W.S. and the defender's solicitors, and was paid to Anderson Strathearn W.S. in August 2001.

[4] The pursuer's former solicitors then prepared a further account of expenses, which fell into two parts. This account of expenses (No. 25 of Process) was lodged in Court on 15 July 2005. Part 1 of the account of expenses related to the expenses incurred to pursuer's former solicitors in Paisley, now known as MSM, Solicitors, and Part 2 related to the expenses incurred to Anderson Strathearn W.S. By this stage a further firm of solicitors, Blacklock Thorley, was acting for the pursuer's former solicitors and Gillespie Macandrew W.S. were acting for the pursuer.

[5] By interlocutor dated 19 July 2005, the account of expenses (No. 25 of Process) was remitted to the Auditor of Court to tax and report in terms of Rule of Court 42.7(1)(a). That interlocutor was granted in response to a motion enrolled on behalf of the pursuer's former solicitors. According to the Minute Sheet the motion had been intimated. It was not opposed.

[6] The pursuer and his new solicitors were clearly aware of what was taking place. On 18 January 2006 Wilkie Law Accountants Limited, who had been instructed by Gillespie Macandrew W.S. to act on behalf of the pursuer, prepared and lodged with the Auditor of Court a document entitled "Points of Objection on behalf of Douglas Stuart to Accounts of Anderson Strathearn and MSM". The taxation of those accounts had been scheduled to take place the following day.

[7] The Points of Objection lodged on behalf of the pursuer were in the following terms:

"It is submitted on behalf of Mr. Stuart that up until the 16th October 2000, the day before Mr. Stuart's personal injury action brought against Doreen Bulger was due to come before the Court for Proof he had at no stage prior thereto been advised that there would be a requirement for him to meet any shortfall in expenses between those to be recovered judicially from Doreen Bulger and the actual costs incurred to Messrs MSM, Solicitors and Messrs. Anderson Strathearn, Solicitors. It was only at the Consultation on 16th October 2000 that Mr. Stuart was advised that a proportion of the legal costs were to be met by himself. Mr. Stuart had not been advised that a proportion of his legal costs would be irrecoverable from Doreen Bulger, the view of Mr. Stuart is that he had understood that all legal expenses would be borne by the Defender in his action and that there was never any mention made prior to 16th October 2000 of any potential liability for a shortfall in expenses.

Further it is submitted that there is no written agreement entered into between the Solicitors and Mr. Stuart that advises him as to the nature and extent of his own liability in expenses. It is observed on the final page of both Messrs. Anderson Strathearn Solicitors and Messrs. MSM Solicitors Accounts that there is included a percentage representing a contingency fee. At no stage was Mr. Stuart advised that he would require to meet an uplift to the Solicitors' fees in respect of a contingency element. Reference is made to Messrs. MSM Solicitors letter dated 4th October 2002 to Messrs. Gillespie Macandrew Solicitors, (now representing Mr. Stuart) wherein they advise that no contingency fee agreement was entered into with Mr. Stuart, that there was no agreement that they would take a percentage of any sums recovered nor was there any "no win no fee" agreement. Accordingly there is no basis upon which a contingency fee can be included. In addition it is submitted that there was no agreement entered into that the case was undertaken on a speculative basis. Despite requests from Messrs. Gillespie Macandrew to Messrs. Anderson Strathearn for production of a copy of any signed speculative fee agreement this has not been produced. Reference is made to a letter dated 7th November 2005 from Messrs. Blacklocks to Messrs. Gillespie Macandrew advising that insofar as a speculative agreement is concerned Mr. Stuart did not sign one. In the absence of any written signed agreements it is not reasonable to include in the Accounts an uplift representing the litigation having been undertaken on a speculative basis. Further there appears to have been no agreement between the Solicitor and the client that the Solicitor's fee be increased on the basis the litigation had been undertaken on a speculative basis. Reference is made to the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980, Solicitor's Fees, Section 61A paragraph (3).

1. Without sight of the Solicitors' files a full and proper assessment of the Solicitors' Accounts is unable to take place. The representatives of Mr. Stuart are not in a position to properly assess the sums claimed in the absence of such information. In the circumstances the Auditor is respectfully requested, subject to submissions presented in support of the general point of objection to consider the Solicitors' files and to determine what is a reasonable fee for the work undertaken."

[8] The taxation proceeded on 19 January 2006. The Auditor taxed both parts of the account, taxing off various items including a claim on behalf of Anderson Strathearn W.S for a Contingency/Responsibility Fee (40%) amounting to г7,502.50 and a claim on behalf of MSM, Solicitors, for a Contingency Fee (50%) amounting to г12,540.66. The Report by the Auditor of Court on his taxation of the account of expenses (No. 25 of Process) was in the following terms:

"EDINBURGH. 11 July 2006. In terms of the Interlocutor of 19 July 20005 [sic.] the Auditor taxes at the sum of EIGHT [sic] SIX THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED AND NINETY NINE POUNDS AND TWENTY PENCE (г86,999.20) the expenses incurred by Messrs. Anderson Strathen [sic], Solicitors, Edinburgh, and Messrs. MSM, Solicitors, Paisley, as set out in the Accounts of Expenses No. 25 of Process for which the Pursuer has been found liable."

Neither the pursuer nor his former solicitors lodged a Note of Objections to the Auditor's Report.

[9] The motion enrolled on behalf of the pursuer's former solicitors, MSM Solicitors and Anderson Strathearn W.S., which came before me, was to approve the Report of the Auditor of Court dated 11 July 2006 and thereafter to grant decree in favour of the pursuer's former solicitors against the pursuer in terms thereof, subject to a payment to account by the pursuer of г58,617.28. I understand that payment to account to include the agreed sum for judicial expenses which had been settled by the defender. I also understand that the pursuer has refused to make any further payment towards the shortfall between the sum at which the Account of Expenses (No. 25 of Process) has been taxed and the judicial expenses recovered from the defender. In practical terms the pursuer's former solicitors now seek decree against the pursuer, their former client, for г28,381.91. The motion for decree is opposed on the basis that it would be incompetent for a Court to grant decree in the terms sought.

[10] In moving the motion, counsel for the pursuer's former solicitors explained that, after the Auditor of Court issued his Report of 11 July 2006, discussions had taken place between Anderson Strathearn W.S. and officials within the General Department of the Court as to the procedure that should be followed. Those discussions had concluded that the procedure that the pursuer's former solicitors required to follow was that of submitting a Note to the Extractor of the Court of Session seeking an extract decree. Such a Note had been lodged with Extractor, although never intimated to the pursuer or to Gillespie Macandrew W.S. Subsequently an extract decree dated 20 December 2006 had been issued by the Extractor. Counsel for the pursuer explained that the pursuer's former solicitors now accepted that the extract decree was a nullity. Against that background, the pursuer's former solicitors now sought a decree from the Court for the balance they claimed was due by the pursuer, together with interest on that sum at the judicial rate from the date of decree until payment.

[11] Counsel for the pursuer submitted that it was competent for the Court to grant a decree of the nature sought by the present motion. That could be implied from the provisions of Rule of Court 42.7. Indeed, that was why Rule of Court 42.7 existed. The Rule provided for the Auditor of Court to tax an account of expenses which had been submitted by a solicitor to his own client, for work the solicitor had done in respect of an action before the Court of Session. It was contended that ever since the founding of the office of Auditor of the Court of Session in 1806 a procedure had existed under which a solicitor acting for a party in an action before the Court of Session could obtain, as part of the proceedings of that action, a decree against his own client in respect of the fees and outlays incurred the client had occurred. Whilst the procedure for obtaining such a decree had varied from time to time since 1806 it had been competent for a solicitor to obtain a decree for expenses against his own client, within the same action as that in which he had acted for the client. Reference was made to The Law of Scotland relating to Law Agents: Begg, pp.171-2; Expenses in the Supreme and Sheriff Courts of Scotland: Maclaren, p. 514; The Practice of the Court of Session: Maxwell, pp. 32-33; Expenses in the Supreme and Sheriff Courts of Scotland: Hastings, p. 126 and various Acts of Sederunt commencing with the Act of Sederunt of 6 February 1806, to which I shall refer in detail later.

[12] In opposing the motion, counsel for the pursuer advanced two propositions. Firstly he argued that the procedure being adopted by the pursuer's former solicitors in seeking decree in terms of the Auditor's Report was incompetent. Secondly, and in the alternative, he argued that even it was competent to grant decree against the pursuer in terms of the Auditor's Report, without further procedure, in the particular circumstances of this case the Court should not do so.

[14] In introducing his propositions to me, counsel for the pursuer drew my attention to the fact that the Auditor's Report contains a number of errors. The instance is incorrect. More importantly the body of the Report is in error when it purports to record that the pursuer has been found liable for the expenses incurred by his former solicitors as set out in the account of expenses (No. 25 of Process).

[15] In developing his first proposition, counsel for the pursuer did not seek to challenge the competency of the procedure that the pursuer's former solicitors had followed in having the account of expenses (No. 25 of Process) remitted to the Auditor for taxation in terms of Rule of Court 42.7(1)(a), nor that adopted by the Auditor prior to, during and subsequent to his taxation of the account. However, it was submitted that the purpose of Rule 42.7(1)(a) was to allow the Auditor to assess the reasonableness of the sums being claimed by a solicitor from his client, when the solicitor's account of expenses related to items of work undertaken and outlays incurred by the solicitor in relation to Court of Session proceedings. That procedure of having an account remitted to the Auditor could be followed within the process of the Court of Session action in which the solicitor had been instructed. Rule 42.7 laid down the procedure by which, and the criteria against which, the taxation of the account should take place. It did not grant the Auditor any power to determine any primary issues between the solicitor and his client, relating to the existence, basis or extent of the liability of the client to the solicitor. Such issues might include, for example, questions of personal bar, prescription and mismanagement of the cause. On the contrary the Auditor required to tax the account in isolation of such issues and determine whether, if the client was liable to meet the solicitor's account of expenses, the fees and outlays, which the solicitor sought to recover, were reasonable. Moreover there was no reference within the terms of Rule 47.2 to the Court to having any power to grant a summary decree against a party to a Court of Session action and in favour of his solicitor for the sum brought out following upon the taxation of the account of expenses of the solicitor of that party.

[16] Counsel for the pursuer informed me that he had been unable to find any modern text book or other authority which vouched the competency of the procedure which the pursuer's former solicitors wished to pursue. In particular he had not found any authority which was dated subsequently to the amendment of Rule 347 of the Rules of Court 1965 by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of Session Amendment No. 3) (Taxation of Accounts) 1992. That amendment took effect from 29 July 1992. Rule 347 of the Rules of Court 1965 was the statutory predecessor of Rule 42.7 and was framed in virtually identical terms to those of Rule of Court 47.2.

[17] Counsel for the pursuer referred me to a number of authorities, which were primarily those that had been mentioned by counsel for the pursuer's former solicitors. However, he also referred to Burness v Morris (1849) 2 D 1258 and Court of Session Practice, Macfadyen. Counsel for the pursuer explained that enquiries, which he and his instructing solicitors had carried out had not identified any examples or experience of the Court granting a decree of the nature sought by the pursuer's former solicitors, purely in the basis of a Report by Auditor of a taxation carried out following a remit under the provisions of Rule of Court 42.7-(1)(a). Nor was there any equivalent procedure in the sheriff court.

[18] As far as his second proposition was concerned, counsel for the pursuer submitted that even it was competent for the Court to grant the decree sought by the pursuer's former solicitors purely on the basis of the Court's approval of the Report of the Auditor of Court, I should not do so in the present case. In addition to the matters raised on behalf of the pursuer in the Note of Objections lodged with the Auditor, the pursuer wished to argue that any claim by his former solicitors had prescribed. In these circumstances, I was invited to put the case out By Order to discuss further procedure.

 

Discussion
[19]
This motion gives rise to an interesting question of competency, which has requires researching a number of Acts of Sederunt relating to the Rules of Court. I begin with the Act of Sederunt of 6 February 1806, which established the office of Auditor of the Court of Session and introduced a summary procedure by a law agent might recover from his client the taxed amount of an account of expenses incurred by the law agent in conducting proceedings on behalf of their client in the Court of Session. That Act of Sederunt included the following provisions:-

"and for the purposes of preventing abuses of the foregoing regulations, and in order to provide an easy method by which the accounts of practitioners as between agent and client in this Court may be checked and liquidated, the Lords do further ordain that it shall be competent either to the client or to the agent to make a summary application to the Court, or to the Lord Ordinary before whom the case may depend, or has formerly depended, to get the amount claimed by the agent remitted to the Auditor of the Court, in order to be examined and taxed according to these regulations; which remit shall, on the application having been served upon the opposing party and produced in Court with a written intimation, be forthwith granted; and the Auditor shall thereafter enquire and report upon the said account to the Court or the Lord Ordinary; and the party shall have it in their power to state objections to the report, all in manner above mentioned. And the sum so to be ascertained as the amount shall alone form a charge against the client. And a precept a decree and a charge of fifteen days may issue accordingly. ... And it is hereby enacted that these proceedings may take place either during the dependence of a process, or after it is out of Court by an extracted decree".

[20] The Rules of Court of the Court of Session were consolidated by an Act of Sederunt dated 4 June 1913. Book K - Fees and Expenses. Chapter 1. - Taxation of Accounts of the Consolidated Act of Sederunt provided:-

"...

2. Summary Applications for Taxation of Agents' Accounts

(a)   It shall be competent, either to the client or the agent, to make a summary application to the Court, or to the Lord Ordinary before whom the cause may depend, or has formerly depended, to get the account claimed by the agent remitted to the auditor of Court, in order to be examined and taxed according to these regulations; which remit shall, on the application having been served on the opposite party, and produced to the Court, with a written intimation, be forthwith granted; and the auditor shall thereafter inquire and report upon the said account to the Court, or to the Lord Ordinary, and the parties shall have it in their power to state objections to the report; and the sum so ascertained, as to the amount of the account, shall alone form a charge against the client; and a precept or decree, on a charge of fifteen days, may issue accordingly, in which only the application, remit, report and interlocutor of modification shall be inserted.

(b)   These proceedings may take place either during the dependence of a process or after it has been taken out of court by an extracted decree.

(c)    Wherever an agent or his representatives shall rather choose to raise a summons for payment of an account, the Lord Ordinary before whom the process may come shall remit the account to the auditor of Court, and no decree shall be pronounced, either in absence or after having heard parties, without a report having been made by the auditor.

..."

[21] The Rules of Court of 1913 were superseded by an Act of Sederunt of 19 July 1934, which together with subsequent Acts of Sederunt were consolidated by an Act of Sederunt dated 18 March 1936. The consolidated Rules of Court 1936 came into effect on 1 May 1936. Rule 17 of Chapter VII of those Rules was in the following terms:

"(a) It shall be competent to either a client or a solicitor to make application to the Court, by enrolment in the motion sheet, to have the account of the solicitor remitted to the Auditor of the Court for taxation, which remit shall, on intimation of the said motion having been made to the opposing party, be forthwith granted. The Auditor shall thereafter report upon the said account to the Court, and the parties shall be entitled to state objections to the said report in accordance with Rule 359. The amount of the account as taxed or altered by the Court shall alone form a charge against the client, and a precept or decree, on a charge of fifteen days, may issue accordingly, in which only this report and interlocutor shall be inserted.

(b) The procedure referred to in paragraph (a) of this Rule may take place either during the dependence of a process in Court or following upon an extracted decree of Court.

(c) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) and (b) of this Rule, a solicitor or his representatives may sue by summons payment of an account of expenses due by a client, in which case the Court shall remit the account to the Auditor of Court, and no decree shall be pronounced, either in absence or after hearing parties, without a report having been made by the Auditor."

[22] The Rules of Court 1936, as subsequently amended, were consolidated by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of Court, Consolidation and Amendment) of 1 July 1948. Rule 360 of the Rules of Court 1948 was in identical terms to Rule 17 of the Rules of Court 1936.

[23] The Rules of Court 1948, as subsequently amended, were consolidated by the Act of Sederunt (Rules of Court, Consolidation and Amendment)1965. Rule 350 of the Rules of Court 1965 was in the following terms:

"(a) It shall be competent to either a client or a solicitor to make application to the Court, by enrolment, to have the account of the solicitor remitted to the Auditor of Court for taxation, which remit shall, on intimation of the said motion having been made to the opposing party, be forthwith granted; said Account shall be fee-funded in accordance with the scale laid down in the Table of Fees. The Auditor shall thereafter report upon the said account to the Court, and the parties shall be entitled to state objections to the said report in accordance with Rule 349.

(b) The procedure referred to in paragraph (a) of this Rule may take place either during the dependence of a process in Court or following upon an extracted decree of Court.

(c) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) and (b) of this Rule, a solicitor or his representatives may sue by summons for payment of an account of expenses due by a client, in which case the Court shall remit the account to the Auditor of Court, and no decree shall be pronounced, either in absence or after hearing parties, without a report having been made by this Auditor."

[24] It will be noted that the terms of Rule 350 of the Rules of Court 1965 are similar but not identical to those of Rule 360 of the Rules of Court 1948. In particular, the last sentence in paragraph (a) of Rule 360, relating to the amount of the account, as taxed or altered by the Court, forming a charge against the client and the issuing of a precept or decree, on a charge of fifteen days, had been deleted. It must be presumed that those responsible for drafting and approving the amended rule, which constituted Rule 350 of the Rules of Court, Rule 350 deliberately intended to effect a change in procedure. However, enquiry of and research carried out by the Lord President's Private Office has failed to disclose any information as to the background to or reasons for the change that was made.

[25] Rule of Court 350 of the Rules of Court 1965, as originally enacted, was replaced by a differently drafted rule by virtue of Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of Session Amendment No. 3) (Taxation of Accounts) 1992. The new Rule came into force on 20 July 1992. The revised Rule 350 was in the following terms:

"(1) Subject to section 61A(a) of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980, the court may remit to the Auditor of Court for taxation the account of a solicitor to his client -

(a) where the account is for work done in relation to a litigation in the Court of Session, on the motion of the solicitor or the client; and

(b) in any case, in an action in which the solicitor or his representatives sue the client for payment of the account.

(2) A motion under paragraph (1)(a) may be enrolled notwithstanding that final decree in the litigation has been extracted.

(3) Where a remit is made under paragraph (1) -

(a) the solicitor shall, within 21 days, lodge in the office of the Auditor of Court the account, which shall be in such form as shall enable the Auditor of Court readily to establish the nature and extent of the work done to which the account relates and shall detail the outlays incurred by the solicitor together with such supporting material as is necessary to vouch the items on the account;

(b) the Auditor of Court shall assign a diet of taxation not earlier than fourteen days from the date he receives the account and intimate that diet forthwith to the solicitor;

(c) the solicitor shall then, forthwith, send by first class recorded delivery post, a copy of the account lodged, the interlocutor remitting the account, and give notice in terms of Form 73 of the date, time and place of the taxation to the client; and

(d) the Auditor shall report his decision to the court and shall forthwith send a copy of his report to the solicitor and to the client.

(4) Either party, provided that he or his representative has attended at the diet of taxation, may, in accordance with rule 349, state objections to the report mentioned in paragraph (3) above, otherwise the report shall be final.

(5) Where the Auditor taxes the account of a solicitor to his client in respect of the conduct of a litigation on behalf of the client, he -

(a) shall allow a sum in respect of such work and outlays as have been reasonably incurred;

(b) shall allow in respect of each item of work and outlay such sum as may be fair and reasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the case;

(c) shall, in determining whether a sum charged in respect of an item of work is fair and reasonable, take into account -

(i) the complexity of the litigation and the number, difficulty or novelty of the questions raised;

(ii) the skill, labour, specialised knowledge and responsibility involved;

(iii) the time spent on the item of work and on the litigation as a whole;

(iv) the number and importance of any documents or other papers prepared or perused without regard to length;

(v) the place where the circumstances (including the degree of expedition required) in which the solicitor's work or any part of it has been done;

(vi) the amount or value of any money or property involved in the litigation; and

(vii) the importance of the litigation or its subject matter to the client;

(d) shall presume (unless the contrary is demonstrated to his satisfaction) that -

(i) an item of work or outlay was reasonably incurred if it was incurred with the express or implied approval of the client;

(ii) the fee charged in respect of an item of work or outlay was reasonable if the amount of the fee or the outlay was expressly or impliedly approved by the client; and

(iii) an item of work or outlay was not reasonably incurred, or that the fee charged in respect of an item of work or outlay was not reasonable if the item of work, outlay or fee charged, was unusual in the circumstances of the case, unless the solicitor informed the client prior to carrying out the item of work or incurring the outlay that it might not be allowed (or that the fee charged might not be allowed in full) in a taxation in judicial proceedings between party and party; and

(e) may disallow any item of work or outlay which is not vouched to his satisfaction."

[26] The most recent consolidation of the Rules of Court came into effect on 5 September 1994 in terms of the Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of Session 1994) 1994. Under those Rules the relevant Rule of Court is 42.7:

"Taxation of solicitor's own accounts

42.7-(1) Subject to section 61A(1) of the Solicitors (Scotland) Act 1980, the court may remit to the Auditor the account of a solicitor to his client-

(a) where the account is for work done in relation to a cause in the Court of Session, on the motion of the solicitor or the client; or

(b) in an action in which the solicitor or his representative sues the client for payment of the account.

(2) A motion under paragraph (1)(a) may be enrolled notwithstanding that final decree in the cause has been extracted.

(3) The account referred to in paragraph (1) shall-

(a) be in such form as will enable the Auditor to establish the nature and extent of the work done to which the account relates;

(b) detail the outlays incurred by the solicitor; and

(c) be accompanied by such supporting material as is necessary to vouch the items in the account.

(4) The Auditor shall-

(a) fix a diet of taxation not earlier than 14 days after the date on which he receives the account; and

(b) intimate the diet to the solicitor.

(5) On receipt of intimation of the diet of taxation from the Auditor, the solicitor shall forthwith send to his client by registered post or the first class recorded delivery service-

(a) a copy of the account to be taxed;

(b) a copy of the interlocutor remitting the account; and

(c) a notice in Form 42.7 of the date, time and place of the diet of taxation.

(6) In taxing an account remitted to him under paragraph (1), the Auditor-

(a) shall allow a sum in respect of such work and outlays as have been reasonably incurred;

(b) shall allow, in respect of each item of work and outlay, such sum as may be fair and reasonable having regard to all the circumstances of the case;

(c) shall, in determining whether a sum charged in respect of an item of work is fair and reasonable, take into account any of the following factors:-

(i) the complexity of the cause and the number, difficulty or novelty of the questions raised;

(ii) the skill, labour, and specialised knowledge and responsibility required, of the solicitor;

(iii) the time spent on the item of work and on the cause as a whole;

(iv) the number and importance of any documents prepared or perused;

(v) the place and circumstances (including the degree of expedition required) in which the work of the solicitor or any part of it has been done;

(vi) the importance of the cause or the subject-matter of it to the client;

(vii) the amount or value of money or property involved in the cause; and

(viii) any informal agreement relating to fees;

(d) shall presume (unless the contrary is demonstrated to his satisfaction) that-

(i) an item of work or outlay was reasonably incurred if it was incurred with the express or implied approval of the client;

(ii) the fee charged in respect of an item of work or outlay was reasonable if the amount of the fee or the outlay was expressly or impliedly approved by the client; and

(iii) an item of work or outlay was not reasonably incurred, or that the fee charged in respect of an item of work or outlay was not reasonable if the item of work, outlay or fee charged, was unusual in the circumstances of the case, unless the solicitor informed the client before carrying out the item of work or incurring the outlay that it might not be allowed (or that the fee charged might not be allowed in full) in a taxation in a cause between party and party; and

(e) may disallow any item of work or outlay which is not vouched to his satisfaction.

(7) The Auditor shall-

(a) prepare a report of the taxation of the account remitted to him under paragraph (1);

(b) transmit his report to the appropriate department of the Office of Court; and

(c) send a copy of his report to the solicitor and the client."

[27] It will be noted that there are a number of differences between the terms of Rule 350 (as amended) of the Rule of Court 1965 and Rule 42.7. of the current Rules of Court. In particular, Rule 42.7. does not contain a provision similar to the revised Rule of Court 350(4), restricting the right to lodge state objections to the Auditor's report.

[28] As far as the competency of the Court granting decree in terms of the motion before me, I consider some guidance is to be found in Maclaren's Court of Session Practice at page 473, where the learned author writing in 1916 stated that:

"The law-agent of a party in a depending cause had also a right to be sisted in order to recover his expenses in cases where his client had obtained (a) decree for expenses, or (b) judgment necessarily leading to such a decree, or (c) where there had been collusion between the parties to defeat his claim."

The passage was cited with approval in Peek v Peek 1926 SC 565, in which the Second Division recognised the competency of law agents for one of the parties to an action seeking to be sisted as parties to the action, with a view to their recovering their expenses. What is also clear from the Opinions in Peek v Peek, however, and indeed from the earlier case on Clark v Henderson (1875) 2 R 428, which is referred to in Peek, is that the question of a solicitor's right to obtain an award of expenses against his client can give rise to issues of fact, which the Court would have to resolve before pronouncing any decree in favour of the solicitor. The Opinion of Lord President Inglis in Clark, which was issued after all members of the Inner House had been consulted, made clear that such issues of fact can be resolved in the original process or in a separate action raised by the solicitor against his client. As Lord President Inglis put it at page 430 of the report "There is no question of competency, whether the claim is disposed in the one action or the other."

[29] It is appropriate to note that later on the same page of his Opinion Lord President Inglis doubted the competency of the Court granting absolvitor in favour of the defender and then sisting a law agent as a party to an extinct process. On one view that supports the view that the motion the motion enrolled on behalf of the pursuer's former solicitors is incompetent, because it seeks a decree against the pursuer within the process of an action, which is no longer depending before the Court. However, I have regard to the terms of the numerous Rule of Court that have applied since Lord President Inglis delivered his Opinion, I have reached the conclusion that it is competent for the Court to entertain and adjudicate upon, within the process of an action raised in the Court of Session, a claim for payment by the solicitor for one of the parties to the action, of an account of expenses the solicitor has submitted to his client, even although the action has concluded as far as the pursuer and defender are concerned, whatever the nature of the final decree as between the original parties to the action.

[30] Whatever the nature of the changes to the Rules of Court that have taken place since 1806, or the reasons that may have lain behind those changes, two matters are clear. Throughout it has been competent for any party to a Court of Session action or their solicitor to apply to the Court to have the solicitor's account of expenses against the client remitted to the Auditor of Court for taxation. And it has always been competent for such an application to be made and granted, even when the action in Court of Session, which gave rise to the solicitor's account of expenses, was no longer in dependence before the Court.

[31] It is also clear that throughout it has been competent for a solicitor who has acted for a party to an action before the Court of Session to seek payment of his account of expenses from his client by raising separate proceedings. For that reason it cannot be said to be necessary for the solicitor to be allowed to seek recovery of his expenses within the process of the original action.

[32] In my opinion, it falls with the power of the Court, both at common law and in exercise of its statutory powers under section 5 of the Court of Session Act 1988, to regulate its procedure as to allow a solicitor who has acted for a party to an action before the Court of Session to seek to recover his fees and outlays from that party. Rule 42.7-(1) would have limited, if any, practical effect if upon receipt of a Report from the Auditor of Court the Court could do nothing within the process of the original action to determine any questions of liability for expenses that may exist between the party to the action and the solicitor. That is particularly so when regard is had to the terms of Rule 42.7 -(2).

[33] It my opinion, it is also clear from the terms of the Rule 42.7 is that if either the solicitor or the client seeks a remit of an account of expenses to the Auditor, the Court can not only grant a motion to that effect, it can also determine any issues of liability that may arise between the solicitor or the client relating to payment of the account of expenses, no matter at what figure it may be taxed. The Court's power to do so is in addition to its powers to rule on any objections taken to the Auditor's report by way of a Note of Objections lodged in terms of the provisions of Rule of Court 42. 4.

[34] I am equally clear that when in an action such as the present the Court receives a report from the Auditor it is not bound to pronounce a summary decree against the client and in favour of the solicitor for the sum at which the account has been taxed, less any payment to account that has been made. In my opinion, that follows for a variety of reasons. In the first place the statutory provisions relating to charges, precepts and decrees, which appeared in several of the statutory predecessors to Rule of Court 47.2, are not to be found in the current rule. Secondly there is the fact that the role of the Auditor under Rule of Court 47.2 is limited to adjudicating upon the reasonableness of the charges in the account of expenses. He has no role to play in adjudicating upon that the client's liability for all or any part of the expenses claimed in the solicitor's account of expenses.

[35] In my opinion, once the Auditor has reported to the Court on his taxation of an account of expenses remitted to him under Rule of Court 42.7 - (1)(a), the further procedure to be followed by the Court must depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. In the present case, it is clear that the pursuer disputes that he is liable to pay his former solicitors any outstanding balance between the figure at which the account of expenses (No. 25 of Process) was taxed and the expenses that have been recovered from the defender. It would appear that dispute involves both questions of fact and questions of law. In my view, the way forward is to fix a By Order hearing at which I can discuss further procedure with counsel and in particular whether the pursuer and his former solicitors should lodge Minutes in process setting out their respective factual and legal contentions in respect of the issues between them. The action will be put out By Order for that purpose.


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