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Booth v Britannia Hotels Ltd: SCCO 26 Mar 2002

(CA) The Claimant worked as a part time chambermaid at a Manchester Hotel, where, on 14 November 1991, she sustained a minor crush injury to her left hand while making a bed. She was then aged 17.5. Three years later she started proceedings in Oldham County Court and the Claimant rejected the payment in of pounds 1,000 made the following year on the basis that she was now suffering from reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD). This clearly had a dramatic effect on the quantum of the claim, and as a result the issues of liability and quantum were ordered to be tried separately. In November 1996 the Defendants increased their payment into court to the sum of pounds 2,500. On 10 December 1996 after a two day trial judgment was given for the Claimant on the issue of liability, with costs on County Court Scale 2, and damages were ordered to be assessed. A year later, by consent, an order was made transferring the issue of quantum to the High Court, where, in April 1998 a trial was fixed for five days, starting on 9 December 1998.
Two months after judgment had been given in relation to liability the Defendants’ agents made periodic video recordings of the Claimant. Recordings were made on 24 February and 12 June 1997; 30 September and 2 October 1998. All recordings, but particularly the last two, showed a full range of movement in the left hand, which, in the firm opinion of the Defendants’ medical adviser, was not consistent with RSD. In October 1998 the Claimant’s final schedule of loss sought pounds 617,000. Some five weeks before trial on quantum the Defendants disclosed their video recordings to the Claimant.
As a result the Claimant decided to accept the pounds 2,500 in court, and together with the CRU payments, which totalled pounds 24,552, though these were later reduced to pounds 633.36. The Defendants agreed in the consent order to pay the Claimant’s costs on the standard basis.
The Claimant’s bill sought to recover pounds 82,839.86, together with VAT of pounds 13,255.64. The Defendants submitted that it was unreasonable to incur costs of pounds 92,000 in respect of a claim which settled for pounds 2,500.
The District Judge before whom the assessment of costs first came ordered the Defendants to pay all the liability costs and 60% of the costs in relation to quantum. As a result of her detailed consideration of the bill she allowed pounds 16,000 for legal liability costs and pounds 34,688.33 for the quantum costs, after taking into account the 40% reduction.
The Court of Appeal, which heard this appeal days after the decision in Lownds v Home Office, held that the District Judge was wrong to order the Defendant to pay 40% of the Claimants quantum costs. The video evidence was only disclosed at a relatively late stage because it was not conclusive until then. The costs were accordingly remitted to the District Judge for re-assessment in the light of the judgment if they could not be agreed.
The case is of interest, because, although decided after Lownds, it adopted a different approach to the question of proportionality.

Judges:

Kennedy, Jonathan Parker LJ j and Sir Swinton Thomas

Citations:

[2002] EWHC 9030 (Costs)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal FromBooth v Britannia Hotels Ltd CA 26-Mar-2002
The claimant had made a large personal injury claim (pounds 617,000) but was forced to reduce it to all but nothing when video evidence was provided shortly before trial. She accepted a payment in of pounds 2,500 and other benefits worth just over . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Costs

Updated: 23 March 2022; Ref: scu.235583

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