Unfortunately, in this case, Oakwood Solicitors Ltd lost and Mr. Menzies was granted his Appeal. This has been a difficult decision to accept, but we must be proactive now it’s received.
We believe it is important to know the facts of Menzies to really understand the Judgment, in case those reading believe their Firms are protected by a retainer or authority form to a client at the point of acceptance of an offer.
Speaking about the case, Katie Bell, Director, Solicitor Advocate (Civil) & Head of Costs at Oakwood Solicitors Ltd, said:
“To say we are disappointed with the final outcome of the Limitation Preliminary point would be an understatement, but it’s just another bump in the road on these types of cases.
“We are in a culture now where unfortunately this is the norm these days and these types of claims will keep coming through your doors. Following the steps above should protect any future work and ensure the 12 month limitation starts to run.
“I could say I don’t find the Judgment practicable or relevant in the current century, where we have different retainers and agreements with clients, but this won’t change where we are. Change your policies and protect your Firms is the best advice to give.”
Below we break down the circumstance of this case, and what Firms should implement to ensure they are protected.
Mr. Menzies was a former client of Oakwood Solicitors Ltd where we acted for him on an RTA case. Following the successful outcome of his case, we deducted a percentage of his Damages to cover our shortfall in costs, as outlined in our Retainer.
Mr. Menzies was given a detailed Retainer at the outset of the claim with all information in about the deduction and the Solicitor Act Assessment process of challenging his Solicitors fees.
He was then given a Statute Bill at the end of his case that explained all the costs of his claim, the amount recovered from the Defendant and the shortfall in the Firms costs.
Due to the level of Damages Mr. Menzies successfully recovered from the work of Oakwood’s Fee Earners, his 25% cap of Damages was a high Sum.
The full amount was not taken from Mr. Menzies, as the shortfall in costs was less than 25% of his Damages, so Oakwood took the shortfall amount as per the Retainer with Mr. Menzies and sent the remaining amount of the deduction to Mr. Menzies.
Some 20 months after the case was concluded, Mr. Menzies instructed the Firm of JG Solicitors to pursue a Solicitor Act Assessment for him to challenge the amount of fees he paid Oakwood as a deduction from his Damages.
Oakwood Solicitors Ltd deemed Mr. Menzies was Statute Barred in bringing his case, as it had been 12 months since payment of the Bill had taken place. Oakwood Solicitors Ltd disputed the Solicitor Act Assessment Claim brought by Mr. Menzies on the basis the same was outside of limitation.
Since then, Oakwood Solicitors Ltd has had four Hearings all on Limitation.
JG Solicitors made an Application to Appeal the Court of Appeal’s decision on three grounds. Only one was successful – The Court of Appeal was wrong in law to find that the term “payment” in Section 70(4) of the Solicitor Act 1974 does not require a “settlement of Account”.
The Supreme Court Justices determined that payment required some form of agreement by the Client to the Bill presented.
The Supreme Court agreed there was a valid retainer in place that assessed a mathematical sum owed by the client as a cap, they agreed bills had been sent to the client at the conclusion of the case and payment of the same had been taken from the deduction on client account.
They however asserted it could not be payment in terms of the Solicitor Act as no agreement from the client had been received before payment took place.
In essence regardless of your retainer with the client, your explanation to the client at the end of the claim, your authorities with the client agreeing Damages with a section showing the deduction cap being taken, the presenting of the client with a Bill and the client not responding or challenging the costs taken from Damages, does not satisfy payment in terms of section 70(4) of the Act.
Mr. Menzies had full details throughout his claim of what he would be charged. He even asserted he was surprised to receive some of the deduction back as he had thought the full amount would be taken for conducting his case.
None of the above is sufficient. You must get from the client a signed authority at the conclusion of the case once costs are agreed and the Final Statute Bill presented to the Client, to constitute payment for limitation to start to run under the Act.
So how do we protect our Firms going forward? If you have a standard CFA with deduction then do the following:
The notion from the Supreme Court that Solicitors can commence their own assessment after the one month period and recover their costs of doing the same will inevitably backlog the High Courts and Judiciary and result in Solicitors being owed more costs that will be difficult to recover.
It is important to remember Menzies is a limitation point. Yes, Firms will probably be in a situation now where old clients have a right to assessment, but this does not mean they will be successful.
Remind former clients of Belsner and referring their case to the Legal Ombudsmen, being the most appropriate forum for their complaint on fees charged.
The Solicitor Act gives client’s the right to challenge our Bills. Make sure you have the correct processes in place to protect your Firms and fight these claims when they are presented.
Get in touch today for a no-obligation consultation. Choose one of the methods on the right-hand side of this page, or call us on 0113 200 9720 to find out how we can help you.
Meet the author
Katie Bell is a Director, Solicitor, Higher Rights Advocate Civil Proceedings, who is the Head of the Cost Department. Katie has worked for the firm since November 2010, specialising in Cost Litigatio…
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