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[2014] NSWSC 1210
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Colbron v Freeman [2014] NSWSC 1210 (18 August 2014)
Last Updated: 4 September 2014
Case Title:
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Colbron v Freeman
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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14 August 2014
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Decision Date:
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18 August 2014
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Before:
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McCallum J
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Decision:
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Appeal allowed; judgment entered against Mr Colbron in the Local Court
set aside
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Catchwords:
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APPEALS - appeal against judgment entered in the Local Court - proceedings
brought in the Local Court by a barrister against a solicitor
for unpaid fees -
where barrister had already made an application to have the fees assessed under
the Legal Profession Act 2004 - where assessor returned the file without making
an assessment - whether assessment "complete" within the meaning of the statute
- whether solicitor immune from suit in the Local Court
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Warwick Archibald John Colbron (plaintiff) Rodney Paul Freeman
(defendant)
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Representation
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- Counsel:
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Counsel: RD Marshall (plaintiff) R Carey (defendant)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Colbron & Associates (plaintiff) Photos Legal
(defendant)
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File Number(s):
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2014/195872
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Publication Restriction:
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None
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JUDGMENT
- HER
HONOUR: This is an appeal against a decision of the Local Court in a dispute
arising between a barrister and solicitor over payment
of the barrister's fees.
For reasons that were not clear, the appeal came before me as duty judge.
- The
plaintiff in the proceedings below was Mr Rodney Freeman, the barrister, who is
the respondent to the appeal. The defendant in
the proceedings below was the
solicitor, Mr Warwick Colbron, who is the appellant. In order to avoid
confusion, it is convenient
to refer to the parties by their names.
- The
amount involved in the proceedings below was approximately $20,000 in legal
costs rendered in fee notes issued by Mr Freeman to
Mr Colbron. The proceedings
were commenced in the Local Court by statement of claim filed by Mr Freeman on
27 February 2013. By an
amended defence filed on 21 May 2013 Mr Colbron
contended, amongst other things, that since Mr Freeman had made an application
to
have his fees assessed pursuant to division 11 of part 3.2 of the Legal
Profession Act 2004, and since the assessment was not yet "completed", Mr
Freeman was not entitled to proceed with the claim in the Local Court.
- Mr
Colbron's defence invoked s 355(b) of the Legal Profession Act, which
provides:
355 Consequences of application
If an application for a costs assessment is made in accordance with this
Division:
(a) .....
(b) the law practice must not commence or maintain any proceedings to recover
the legal costs until the costs assessment has been
completed.
- The
Magistrate did not determine that issue. His Honour found that there was a valid
costs agreement in place when the services charged
for in the disputed accounts
were undertaken. In light of that finding, his Honour said:
"There is no need for me to determine whether the return of the costs
assessment application by the costs assessor to the manager
costs assessment
without the making of a determination means the assessment was completed or
not."
- The
parties are in agreement in the present appeal that his Honour ought to have
determined that issue, since it was a matter raised
on the pleadings. The
critical issue is what flows from that concession.
- Mr
Colbron submits that s 355 confers statutory immunity such that, where a costs
assessment has been sought and not completed, there is no jurisdiction in the
Local Court to determine a costs dispute. That contention was not specifically
disputed in the hearing of the appeal before me. Secondly,
Mr Colbron submits
that the assessment in the present case was not "completed" within the meaning
of s 355. That contention is disputed by Mr Freeman and is, in effect, the sole
issue raised in the appeal.
- Mr
Freeman's position is addressed in a notice of contention filed 11 August 2014
in which he contends that the decision of the Magistrate
should be affirmed on
the following grounds:
His Honour ought to have held that the costs assessment involving the
defendant (as costs applicant) and the plaintiff (as costs respondent)
was
completed for the purposes of s 355(b) of the Legal Profession Act 2004
(NSW) (the LPA) when the costs assessor returned the relevant file to the
Manager, Costs Assessment without making a determination.
His Honour ought to have held that LPA s 355(b) did not operate to preclude
the defendant from commencing or continuing to prosecute the proceedings in the
court below.
- The
circumstances in which that issue arose are as follows. Mr Freeman, as I think
is common ground, undertook the provision of some
legal services at the request
of Mr Colbron. He issued two fee notes which Mr Colbron refused to pay. Mr
Freeman then took it upon
himself to apply for an assessment under the Legal
Profession Act. The assessment prompted an exchange of correspondence
between the parties which, it appears, led the costs assessor to conclude
that
there were a number of issues between the parties raising "disputed facts" which
she had no power to make a decision about.
- The
assessor's conclusion was, I think, misconceived. The Act specifically provides
in s 359(3) that for the purposes of determining
an application for assessment,
a costs assessor may determine whether or not disclosure has been made in
accordance with division
3, and whether or not it was reasonably practicable to
disclose any matter required to be disclosed under division 3, and whether
a
costs agreement exists and its terms. In any event, in due course the assessor
returned the assessment to the manager, costs assessment
purportedly in
accordance with the regulations.
- The
correspondence from the assessor was in the following terms:
I refer to previous correspondence. I have received many submissions from the
parties. It appears to me that the issues between the
parties include:-
1. Whether there was a disclosure of fees;
2. Whether there was any agreement as to the fees and charges;
3. Whether the work itemised in the memorandum of costs an fees was
performed.
I consider al l of the above matters are disputed facts.
It may also be suggested that the Cost Applicant sought assessment as no
disclosure was made and s317 of the Legal Profession Act 2004 applies.
However that position cannot be automatically presumed.
What is of concern is that I have no power to make a decision over disputed
facts arising between the parties and the issues set out
above are all factual
disputes.
Pursuant to regulation 1238 of the Legal Profession Act 2004 I have
the power to return the assessment to the Court.
However before doing so, I shall allow the parties a further 14 days from the
date hereof to make such submissions on these issues
as they may wish.
- It
should be acknowledged that, at the time the costs assessor decided to return
the file, there was some authority for the position
she took, in the decision of
the Court of Appeal in Doyle v Chadwick [2007] NSWCA 159. After receiving
the costs assessor's correspondence, Mr Freeman commenced the proceedings in the
Local Court. As already noted, the
position contended for by Mr Colbron was
specifically pleaded in the amended defence filed in May 2013.
- Mr
Colbron's position subsequently found express approbation in the decision of
Beech-Jones J in Griffith v ABC [2013] NSWSC 750 published on 6 June
2013. I will return to the terms of that decision. Mr Colbron then wrote to the
manager of cost assessment raising
the decision of Beech-Jones J and inviting
the manager, costs assessment again to refer the assessment for consideration by
an assessor,
contending that the proceedings in the Local Court could not be
maintained until the costs assessment was "completed". Following
a further
exchange of correspondence between the parties, the manager, costs assessment
ultimately declined to refer the assessment
again.
- The
manager set out the competing positions of the parties and
concluded:
"In this particular case and at this stage I will not be sending the matter
back to an assessor again at the request of the costs
respondent".
- It
should be noted that, apart from expressly pleading the matter by way of
defence, Mr Colbron also raised the issue whether the
proceedings commenced by
Mr Freeman could be maintained prior to the completion of the costs assessment
in the context of an application
by Mr Freeman for leave to adduce expert
evidence. In addressing the Magistrate on that issue, Mr Colbron argued that the
assessment
was not "completed" and that the proceedings in the Local Court
should not proceed so long as that was the case.
- In
particular, Mr Colbron said:
"There is a very fundamental issue of s 355 of the Legal Profession
Act which statute bars the commencement of these proceedings and the
maintenance of these proceedings where a costs assessment has been
commenced
under division 11, and it clearly was commenced."
- The
Magistrate responded by observing that the only issue before him that day was
whether to make an order for expert evidence. He
noted that there was no motion
to do anything else, and in due course it appears he proceeded to grant leave to
Mr Freeman to adduce
expert evidence as sought.
- The
Magistrate ultimately proceeded to hear the matter which, I was informed at the
hearing of the appeal, lasted some four days.
As already noted, he determined
the proceedings in favour of Mr Freeman and declined to determine the matter
raised by the defence
as to whether the maintenance of the proceedings was
subject to the statutory immunity in s 355.
- During
the argument about the expert evidence to which I have referred, the parties
made reference to the fact that the proceedings
were incurring a great deal of
costs. The Magistrate remarked that, in his experience as a Magistrate, that
seemed to occur most
frequently in matters involving disputes between members of
the legal profession, which his Honour described as "the most difficult
cases
that the Court observes".
- Unfortunately,
that seems to characterise the dispute between the present parties. Regrettably,
having regard to the amount of costs
which must have been incurred in the
proceedings in the Local Court, I have concluded that the costs assessment was
not completed
within the meaning of the section and, accordingly, that it was
not open to Mr Freeman to prosecute his claim in that jurisdiction.
As already
observed, that is a conclusion which, in the present case, has not achieved the
object of the legislation of providing
a cheap, quick and efficient method of
resolving costs disputes, but that is not the test.
- In
Doyle v Chadwick, Hodgson J said, at [61]:
In my opinion, Davies AJ was correct to say that a costs assessor, assessing
costs between a lawyer and client, can determine disputes
as to the terms of the
costs agreement, and Dunford J was wrong to say otherwise. However, where the
existence of the terms of the
agreement are in dispute in a way that would
require the hearing of evidence to resolve, it may be appropriate for the costs
assessor
to decline to resolve the dispute; and in the Muriniti litigation, it
would in my opinion have been open and reasonable for Davies
AJ to have
permitted the question to have been determined in the proceedings before him. As
it turned out, the costs assessor did
decline to resolve this question; and in
my opinion, in those circumstances, the costs assessor should not have issued a
certificate
which could be converted into a judgment. That is, in a case where
there is a real dispute on substantial grounds as to whether any
costs are
payable, a costs assessor should not complete an assessment by issuing a
certificate unless satisfied that the costs are
payable, because the certificate
can be filed so as to take effect as a judgment.
- I
would respectfully disagree with his Honour's conclusion that there are
circumstances in which it may be appropriate for a costs
assessor to decline to
resolve a dispute of the kind that was raised in the present matter. I would
respectfully adopt the reasons
stated by Beech-Jones J in Griffith.
Unfortunately, it appears from the report of Beech-Jones J's judgment that he
was not taken to the remarks of Hodgson J set out
above. Nonetheless, his Honour
did consider competing obiter dicta remarks of two different judges in the same
decision in the case
of Wentworth v Rogers [2006] NSWCA 145; (2006) 66
NSWLR 474. His Honour observed that there was a divergence of views between
Basten and Santow JJ in that case and preferred the conclusion stated
by Santow
J. Beech-Jones J said at paragraph [46]:
The consequence is that I prefer and will act upon the approach stated by
Santow JA in Wentworth v Rogers at [40]. Thus, I will approach
the balance of
the application on the basis that it is the cost assessor's duty and function to
determine as best he or she can such
issues of fact and law as arise on the cost
assessment in order to discharge their function under s 367 of the Act. If a
cost assessor
were to refuse to do so, then relief in the nature of mandamus
would be available to require them to do so.
- It
seems to me that that is the position that arose in the present case. The costs
assessor was wrong to refuse to determine the issues
raised by the application.
The appropriate course at that point was for Mr Freeman to seek relief in the
nature of mandamus as contemplated
in the remarks of Beech-Jones J to which I
have referred. The terms of s 355 are quite plain. In the absence of the
completion of
the costs assessment process, which it must be observed had been
invoked by Mr Freeman himself, it was not open to him to prosecute
his claim in
the Local Court.
- Mr
Freeman in the proceedings before me relied on my remarks in the matter of
Coshott v Barry (2012) NSWSC 850, where I said (at [41] and [42]):
41. In my view, the defendants' submissions in the present case misconceive
the juridical foundation of the costs assessment system.
A solicitor's
entitlement to lodge an application for a costs assessment is not a source of
right or title in itself. It is an aspect
of the regulation of the legal
profession under the Legal Profession Act 1987. The Act creates an
administrative mechanism for quantifying legal costs in a variety of
circumstances, some of which raise no limitation
issue (such as costs ordered by
a court). To the extent that it provides for the assessment of costs payable
under contract, I do
not think it alters the fundamental nature of the right and
title to those costs.
42. Support for that view may be found in the decision of the English Court
of Appeal in Coburn v Colledge [1897] 1 QB 702 at 705-706, where Lord
Esher MR said:
Before any enactment existed with regard to actions by solicitors for their
costs, a solicitor stood in the same position as any other
person who has done
work for another at his request, and could sue as soon as the work which he was
retained to do was finished,
without having delivered any signed bill of costs
or waiting for any time after the deliver of such a bill. Then to what extent
does
the statute alter the right of the solicitor in such a case, and does the
alteration made by it affect or alter the cause of action?
It takes away, no
doubt, the right of the solicitor to bring an action directly the word is done,
but it does not take away his right
to payment for it, which is the cause of
action. The Statute of Limitations itself does not does not affect the right to
payment,
but only affects the procedure for enforcing it in the event of dispute
or refusal to pay. Similarly, I think s 37 of the Solicitors
Act, 1843, deals,
not with the right of the solicitor, but with the procedure to enforce that
right.
- However,
whilst I remain of the view there expressed, that the costs assessment regime
provided for in the Legal Profession Act does not alter the fundamental
nature of the right and title to those costs, the simple fact is that the
parties' rights at common
law have been altered by the statutory regime, at
least to the extent of affecting the procedure of enforcement in the event of a
dispute, a matter expressly contemplated in the remarks of the Court of Appeal
in the matter of Coburn v Colledge [1897] 1 QB 702 in the remarks set out
above. What the statute plainly says, in unequivocal terms, is that an action
cannot be commenced or maintained
until the costs assessment process is
completed. That approach makes some sense, as I observed earlier in my judgment
in Coshott v Barry.
- The
history of the costs assessment system is that it was introduced as part of the
package of reforms effected by the Legal Profession Reform Act
1993. In Coshott v Barry at [16], I said:
"Before then, legal costs were regulated by the prescription of maximum scale
costs and were subject to 'taxation' by the court. That
system was viewed as
being overly formal, legalistic and complex. The reforms were intended to
provide a 'faster, easier and cheaper
system of review of bills of costs',
largely removing caps on the quantum of legal costs that could be charged whilst
introducing
new measures for the protection of clients, including stricter
disclosure obligations and the costs assessment system."
- One
of the matters which appears to have been of concern to Hodgson J in his
Honour's remarks in Doyle v Chadwick is the proposition that a costs
assessor had no authority to compel the attendance of witnesses or to hear
evidence or to allow cross-examination.
His Honour referred to disputes where
the existence of the terms of a costs agreement were in dispute "in a way that
would require
the hearing of evidence to resolve". That, however, begs the
question. The plain purpose, in my view, of the costs assessment regime
provided
for in the Legal Profession Act is that such disputes should be resolved
in a way that is fast and cheap. Parliament has evidently not considered it
necessary for
such disputes to be resolved by the hearing of evidence.
- As
noted by Beech-Jones J in Griffith, the Act does plainly confer a
fact-finding function on costs assessors and that function is, in a limited way,
amenable to appellate
review. I would, accordingly, respectfully adopt his
Honour's reasons for concluding that a costs assessor to whom an assessment
is
referred is not entitled to return an assessment under regulation 128 without
determining it. The nature of the powers and functions
of the costs assessor is
primarily to be found in the Act rather than in the regulations. Section 367
seems to me, plainly, to contemplate
that the way in which a costs assessment
must be brought to completion is by being determined in accordance with that
section.
- It
follows, in my view, that the proceedings in the Local Court contravened s 355
of the Legal Profession Act. The Magistrate ought to have held
accordingly and, for those reasons, the notice of contention must be rejected
and the appeal must
be allowed.
- Subject
to hearing from Mr Freeman, I would propose to accede to Mr Colbron's submission
that, in the circumstances, the appropriate
order is that judgment be entered in
favour of Mr Colbron.
**********
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