Civil Costs provides a thorough and authoritative survey of
the current costs regime under the Civil Procedure Rules, helping
practitioners understand the technicalities of the law and how it has
been affected by the Jackson reforms and LAPSO (the Legal Aid,
Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012) and developed under
ensuing recent key case law. It deals with all areas of civil costs,
from the basic principles of entitlement to the practical details of how
costs are actually assessed.
Civil Costs
is going into its sixth edition since 1995 and last published in 2013.
This is a complex area and one that is subject to extensive change.
There has been a considerable surge in the number of costs cases over
the past decade, and it has shown no sign of abating, with many
influential cases having appeared in the last year (see New to this
Edition below).
The book is written by the
recently retired Chief Master of the Senior Courts Costs Office, Peter
Hurst, who for many years, as the Senior Costs Judge for England and
Wales, has been the leading authority on the subject in Britain. The New
Law Journal summed up Peter Hurst’s standing in the field of costs when
reviewing a previous edition: “It would be hard to imagine a guide to
civil costs written by a more knowledgeable author.”
The
highly publicised Jackson Report on Civil Litigation Costs was issued
in 2010, and its recommendations led to extensive and controversial
costs reforms in civil litigation – which is central to the subject area
of this title – and the previous edition of Civil Costs described the
new regime then unfolding from the legislative adoption of the reforms
then in process. Lord Justice Jackson had concluded that many civil
litigation costs were disproportionate and impeded access to justice,
and his package of reforms was designed to control costs and promote
access to justice. The ensuing legislation was mainly embodied in
“LASPO”, the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012,
introduced in April 2013.
The sixth
edition provides a thorough and authoritative survey of the of the
current costs regime as it has now settled in and developed via recent
case law and will be an invaluable addition to the library of those
involved in civil litigation.
Key features:
- Provides
a thorough and authoritative survey of the current costs regime under
the Civil Procedure Rules and the post-Jackson reforms.
- Fully
updates coverage of the cost regime as reformed by LASPO (the Legal Aid,
Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012) and as it has now
settled in and developed via key recent case law.
- Deals with
all areas of civil costs, from the basic principles of entitlement to
the practical details of how costs – both non-contentious and
contentious – are actually assessed
- Covers the review of and appeal against the summary assessment of costs
- Examines penalties and sanctions for wasted costs, and the court’s inherent jurisdiction
- Includes chapters on costs in arbitration proceedings, proceedings before the court of protection and before other tribunals
- Looks at the recovery of costs and the charging of interest on the unpaid amount
- Includes coverage of the award and assessment of costs in proceedings before the Supreme Court (and European Court of Justice).
- Examines and provides direction on the problems surrounding Conditional Fee Agreements
- Contains chapters on the general principles of assessment, the Supreme Court, and the European Court of Justice
- Provides commentary on the key costs cases
- Written
by the recently retired Chief Master of the Senior Courts Costs Office,
who for many years has been the leading authority on the subject in
Britain
New to this Edition:The
6th Edition covers recent key cases, elucidating issues related to such
concepts and subjects as Proportionality, QOCS, Part 36, CFAs,
Equitable Lien and Litigants in Person. For example:
- (Proportionality) May v. Wavell Group Plc [2016] 3 Costs LO 455, Master Rowley. This decision was reversed on appeal and the figure of £75,000 allowed. May v Wavell Group, Central London County Court 22 December 2017 HHJ Dight. Unreported. It is understood that the claimant is appealing.
- (QOCS) Corstorphine (A Child) v Liverpool City Council,
[2018] EWCA Civ 270. The Court of Appeal held that the purpose of the
QOCS regime was to protect personal injury claimants from adverse costs
orders.
- (Part 36) Application in Private, [2017] EWHC
3606 (Comm); Sir Jeremy Cooke. The court would hold the offeror to the
terms of its Part 36 offer unless there had been such a change of
circumstances since the making of the offer that it would be unjust to
do so.
- (Part 36) Gemma Ballard v Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust,
[2018] EWHC 370 (QB), Foskett J. Where two Part 36 offers had been made
by the defendant, the Judge stated that he did not think that the
second offer had any relevance. He awarded the Defendant the costs from
the end of the relevant period of the first offer and the Claimant was
awarded her costs up to that date. On appeal the Court held that it was
difficult to see how the second offer could be regarded as irrelevant.
It had the effect of the more or less automatic right of the Defendant
to its costs of the trial: CPR 36.17(3) (a). Whatever the relevance of
the first offer, it could not have that effect: CPR 36.17(7) (a).
- (Part 36) Gamal v Synergy Lifestyle Ltd,
[2018] EWCA Civ 210. The Court of Appeal has explained that any
payment on account after a Part 36 offer will, unless the appropriate
notice is given, reduce the Part 36 offer by the amount of the payment
- (Part 36) Briggs v CEF Holdings Ltd,
[2017] EWCA Civ 2363. The Court of Appeal stated that the general rule
under Part 36 was that if an offer was not accepted in time, the offeree
bore the costs of the offeror until the offer was accepted. If the
offeree could show that that would cause injustice, that was different;
it was up to the offeree to demonstrate it
- (CFAs) Budana v Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust [2017] EWCA Civ 1980, where the Court of Appeal dealt with the assignment of CFAs.
- (CFAs) Herbert v HH Law Ltd,
[2018] EWHC 558 (TCC); Soole J. The Court held that the LASPO changes
did not remove risk assessment as a relevant factor when considering the
success fee percentage increase on a solicitor-client assessment. For a
costs judge faced with a r.46.9(4) application for a reduction of the
percentage increase, the level of risk was likely to be the primary
consideration.
- (CFAs) Surrey (A Child) v Barnet and Chase Farm Hospitals NHS Trust; AH v Lewisham Healthcare NHS Trust; Yesil (A Child) v Doncaster & Bassetlaw Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust;
[2018] EWCA Civ 451. If a receiving party switched to a funding method
that was far more disadvantageous to a paying party, the paying party
was entitled to ask why it had switched. That entailed examining the
reasons for the choice. While the judge had rightly held that the advice
could be relevant to the reasonableness of the decision, the real issue
was not the advice, but the reasons why the receiving party had made
its choice.
- (Litigants in Person) Barton v Wright Hassall LLP
[2018] UKSC 12. The Court held that “Unless the rules and practice
directions are particularly inaccessible or obscure, it is reasonable to
ex