Judgment
Lord Justice Rimer :
1. This is an appeal by Hallam-Peel & Co, solicitors, against an order dated 17 August 2007 made by His Honour Judge Welchman in Lambeth Court Court upholding a wasted costs order made against them by District Judge Jacey on 20 January 2006. The appeal is thus a second appeal, for which Jacob LJ gave permission on
The facts
2. On 25 November 1998 the London Borough of Southwark, claimant in the action and respondent to the appeal (“Southwark”), obtained a possession order in Lambeth County Court against its tenant, Mandy Cooper, the defendant, of premises at 43 Sidmouth House, Commercial Way, London SE15. The order was suspended on terms as to payment of rent arrears and costs.
3. Ms Cooper breached the terms and became a tolerated trespasser. She left the premises in December 2003, but her former partner, Mr Parry Dubois, remained in occupation. In November 2004 Southwark applied for the issue of a warrant for possession based on the 1998 order. It was due to be executed on 9 February 2005. On
4. On
5. Mr Dubois’s application came before District Judge Worthington on
6. At that hearing counsel for Mr Dubois also made an unheralded request for an order for specific disclosure by Southwark, for the purpose of the disposal of the outstanding issues raised by Mr Dubois’s application. The judge declined to make a disclosure order. He did, however, say that if Hallam-Peel made a reasonable request for a relevant document that Southwark refused to provide, and its refusal were to lead to an adjournment on a further occasion, it was likely that a costs discretion would be exercised against Southwark.
7. On
8. Mr Dubois’s application was amended on 18 February 2005. It no longer included any challenge to the validity of the request for the issue of the warrant. The only grounds relied on were: (i) the Article 8 point, (ii) that all payments due under the possession order had been made and so the order was no longer enforceable, and (iii) the proposed application under Part IV of the Family Law Act 1996. Hallam-Peel served the amended application on Southwark on the same day, with a witness statement from Mr Dubois. They also asked Southwark to provide them with any documents it had relating to a particular attendance by Ms Cooper and Mr Dubois at the rent payment office in May 2003 and to the subsequent payment of the then outstanding debt. On 9 March 2005 they chased Southwark for confirmation as to what Ms Cooper and Mr Dubois were told about the legal costs in May 2003 and when they cleared the debt under the possession order. They made no other disclosure request. In particular, they did not ask for the production of the request for the issue of the possession warrant. The information asked for on
9. The adjourned hearing of Mr Dubois’s application was listed for
10. In discussing an adjournment, counsel for Southwark raised the point that, if the matter were to be adjourned, Hallam-Peel should attend the adjourned hearing to show cause why they should not personally pay any costs thrown away. He said that “whilst I do not rely upon the fact that [Mr Dubois] has public funding and hence any order for costs against him is unlikely to be of much effect, therefore if a costs order is to be made which is effective it is only going to be effective if it is a wasted costs order.” Contrary to counsel’s disclaimer, it is obvious that Mr Dubois’s status as a publicly funded litigant was the reason for his suggestion. Judge Eastman was sympathetic and said that his initial reactions were that, if counsel wanted an adjournment in order to argue the new point, he wanted to know why Hallam-Peel should not pay the costs of the adjournment. He suggested that counsel should obtain instructions as to whether to pursue the point. That raised a potential conflict of interest between Hallam-Peel and Mr Dubois, to which the judge may not have been fully sensitive. Counsel took instructions, following which he sought permission to re-amend the application to raise the point and asked for an adjournment.
11. The judge was of the view that the new point “fundamentally affects these proceedings” and he further adjourned them, making an order adding Mr Dubois as a defendant and giving him permission to re-amend the application notice to raise the new point and to assert that the rent account was more than £200 in credit in February 2004. The origin of the present appeal is that, as asked by counsel for Southwark, the judge also made an order requiring Hallam-Peel to attend the adjourned hearing “ready to show cause why they should not pay costs of and occasioned by this adjournment.” No order was sought or made that Mr Dubois should pay those costs, although as a publicly funded litigant he would have had the benefit of the usual protection. The inter partes costs order was “costs of today plus adjournment reserved.”
12. Mr Dubois’s application was duly re-amended on
“30. In this case, evidence regarding the application for the warrant was requested on
31. There are no grounds for [Southwark’s] application for a wasted costs order. The adjournment on
13. With respect, I regard that account as disingenuous. The only point made in relation to the request for the warrant in Hallam-Peel’s two letters of
14. Once it was dropped, the request for the issue of the warrant became irrelevant to the remaining grounds on which Mr Dubois wished to pursue his application. His application, as amended on
15. In the event the hearing on
The hearing before Judge Jacey
16. Southwark was represented by counsel, Mr Mullee. Mr Miles represented Hallam-Peel. Judge Jacey explained in his judgment that the date of the request for the issue for the warrant was relevant before and at the hearing of 11 February 2005, but that when Judge Worthington made it plain at that hearing that the request was made within the six-year period the relevance of the request disappeared. Mr Dubois did not thereafter ask Southwark to produce it until the morning of 14 July 2005, when counsel did so and, following its production, raised the new irregularity point. Mr Miles expressly disclaimed before Judge Jacey that it was part of his case that a sight of the request had been sought before then. The case made by Southwark was that Hallam-Peel acted unreasonably in not raising the new point until 14 July 2005 because it had led to the further adjournment. Judge Jacey said that Mr Miles could not explain why his firm had not asked earlier for a sight of the request nor why counsel asked for it on 14 July 2005. During the argument, Judge Jacey referred to counsel as having had “a sudden brainwave” but there is no evidence as to what prompted counsel to ask for the document.
17. Judge Jacey concluded that Hallam-Peel had acted unreasonably. He said:
“8. … Firstly, has the legal representative of whom complaint was made acted improperly, unreasonably or negligently? In my view, and I say this with great respect to the solicitor concerned, I find that he has acted unreasonably. This issue of information, the details of the rent and costs outstanding, the details of which were put on the request for the warrant for possession, should have been taken up at a very early stage and not left, as it was, to counsel to spot the point just prior to the hearing of 14th July. It was perfectly open to the solicitor for [Mr Dubois] to write to the court manager and ask for a copy of the request and it would have been given to him. To wait all that time for the claimant’s law office to supply the copy, and in fact not even having made a specific request for a copy of this document, in my view was unreasonable. And to then be a party to the amendment of the application, that in my view is unreasonable too. It is, with great respect to the solicitor, a breach of duty to the court [not] to ensure that all matters are properly raised before the court and in good time so that everybody can deal with the matter and the court itself has sufficient time to deal with them. This was simply not done. It was all left to the last moment. I quite understand the position counsel was put in, because he had a duty to the client and he had to discharge that duty, which he did. So I say that the conduct was unreasonable.
10. [sic] On the second leg: did the conduct cause the applicant to incur unnecessary costs? I find again, yes it did. ….
11. Finally, part three of the test: is it in all the circumstances just for the legal representative to compensate the applicant for the whole or part of the relevant costs? My finding, for the reasons which I have already given, is that it is reasonable to so find and order.”
18. Judge Jacey ordered Hallam-Peel to pay the wasted costs of the hearing of 14 July 2005, which he assessed at £750, and also the costs of the wasted costs application, assessed at £1,292. He refused permission to appeal.
The appeal to Judge Welchman
19. On
The appeal to this court
20. The wasted costs application and order was made under the jurisdiction conferred by section 51 of the Supreme Court Act 1981, of which the relevant provisions read:
“(1) Subject to the provisions of this or any other enactment and to rules of court, the costs of and incidental proceedings in –
(a) the civil division of the Court of Appeal;
(b) the High Court; and
(c) any county court,
shall be in the discretion of the court. …
(2) In any proceedings mentioned in subsection (1), the court may disallow, or (as the case may be) order the legal or other representative concerned to meet, the whole of any wasted costs or such part of them as may be determined in accordance with rules of court.
(7) In subsection (6), ‘wasted costs’ means any costs incurred by a party –
(a) as a result of any improper, unreasonable or negligent act or omission on the part of any legal or other representative or any employee of such a representative; or
(b) which, in the light of any such act or omission occurring after they were incurred, the court considers it is unreasonable to expect that party to pay.”
21. The only basis on which Southwark has suggested that Hallam-Peel deserved to be visited with a wasted costs order is that it is said that they had acted “unreasonably”. Counsel agreed that it was not necessary to show that the alleged unreasonable conduct amounted to an abuse of the process of the court but that it was necessary to show that it involved a breach of duty to the court.
22. Mr Marven’s submission to us in support of the appeal was that there was no factual justification for the “show cause” order made by Judge Eastman, let alone for the substantive wasted costs order made by Judge Jacey and upheld by Judge Welchman. The only charge against Hallam-Peel was that they could and should have asked for the production of the request for the warrant earlier than 14 July 2005 but had failed to do so. The answer is that they did not ask for it before then because they had no reason to do so. It is not suggested that there was anything in the material they had seen to suggest that the request was irregular. They therefore had no reason to assume or even suspect that it was or might have been. The request was not regarded by either side as relevant to the only case that Mr Dubois was making by his application as amended on
23. Mr Broatch, for Southwark, did not seek to meet that submission head on. The thrust of his submissions was rather that the case now made by Mr Marven to this court involved a fundamental – and, before this court, impermissible — departure from the case made by Hallam-Peel in Mr Miles’s witness statement in answer to the wasted costs application and also in the grounds of appeal to Judge Welchman. That case had been to the effect that it was Southwark’s fault that the request had not been produced earlier. It was no part of it that the answer to the wasted costs application was that, for reasons outlined by Mr Marven, it could not be said to have been “unreasonable” for Hallam-Peel not to have asked for a sight of the request earlier. This court ought not now to listen to an appeal based on a quite different approach.
24. I have much sympathy with that submission since there is in my view no doubt that the thrust of the case that Hallam-Peel have now made is markedly different from that made in the courts below. They there took a false point in their defence and, by doing so, dug themselves into a bigger hole. But even so I consider that each of Judges Eastman, Jacey and Welchman was in error. Judge Eastman did not consider the basis on which a charge of unreasonableness against Hallam-Peel might have been sustained: he did not ask himself why it was arguable that they should have sought production of the request earlier. It is, however, fair to note that (i) counsel made no submissions to him against the making of a “show cause” order; and (ii) the order he made was only a “show cause” order, and it was open to Hallam-Peel to do just that, which they could easily have done but did not.
25. Following the making of his order, Hallam-Peel sought to “show cause”. That things then got worse for them can in part be laid at their own door. Instead of taking the good point that their omission to ask for a copy of the request between 11 February and 14 July 2005 could not be regarded as unreasonable because there was no obvious reason why they should have asked for it, they made the bad point that the fault lay with Southwark for failing to produce the request in response to a demand for it which they had not made. That stance did not help them and although before Judge Jacey Mr Miles was no longer making quite that case, he still failed to advance the obvious defence. He did not therefore do all he could to steer Judge Jacey away from error and Judge Jacey fell into it. He found (in paragraph 8 of his judgment) that it was unreasonable for Hallam-Peel not to have asked earlier for a copy of the request was unreasonable: but he nowhere explained why that was unreasonable, and Mr Marven’s submissions satisfied me that it was not. Judge Jacey even criticised Hallam-Peel for being “a party to the amendment to the application,” which he also castigated as unreasonable. What can he have meant? Was he suggesting that Hallam-Peel should have refused to ask for the amendment and so deprive their client of the opportunity of arguing a point that might have won the case for him?
26. I make clear that I am not suggesting that, in the circumstances prevailing immediately after the hearing of 11 February 2005, asking for the production of the request for the issue of the warrant is something that no solicitor might reasonably have done. It is trite that different lawyers will look at the same case in different ways and have thoughts and ideas about them that others will or may not have. The same lawyer may also see it differently six months on and consider investigating an angle that had not occurred to him before. The point about the present case is that it does not appear to have occurred to Hallam-Peel that a sight of the request might open up a new avenue of argument. Even if that is to be regarded as a shortcoming on their part, and I do not decide that it was, I refuse to accept that such a shortcoming can or should fairly be castigated as “unreasonable” conduct on their part, involving a breach of duty to the court, such as to justify a wasted costs order against them.
27. I need say little about Judge Welchman’s judgment upholding Judge Jacey’s. His view was, in short, that Judge Jacey had considered the matter correctly and had been entitled to find that Hallam-Peel had acted unreasonably. He too failed to consider why it was said that they had unreasonably.
28. In my judgment each of Judges Eastman, Jacey and Welchman was in error in their respective responses to Southwark’s claim that Hallam-Peel should be answerable for the costs thrown away by reason of the adjournment on 14 July 2005. No such order should have been sought or made. I would allow Hallam-Peel’s appeal and set aside paragraph 1 of Judge Jacey’s order and the dismissal of the appeal against it by Judge Welchman’s order of 17 August 2007. I would wish to have further written submissions from both sides as to what orders (if any) we should make in place of the costs orders made by Judges Jacey and Welchman and as to the costs of this appeal.
Lord Justice Thorpe :
29. I agree.