Two words have taken on great significance for lawyers and
their clients, over the last few years – ‘fundamental’ and ‘dishonesty’. They
are relevant to Personal Injury claims which can be struck out in full under
s57 of the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015, where there has been
fundamental dishonesty. In such a case the court must dismiss the primary claim unless the claimant would suffer
substantial injustice as a result. So the default position is that the claim is
dismissed. If a claimant is found to have exaggerated symptoms then the
whole claim is at risk. The purpose of this provision is to deter fraudulent or
exaggerated claims.
The words are also relevant in relation to costs, and this is main
focus of this post. In 2013 the government imposed dramatic changes in the way
personal injury claims are conducted. These changes reduced the levels of legal costs that
can be claimed against insurers in successful cases. At the same time, we had
the introduction of QOCS – qualified one way costs shifting. In simple terms
this meant that a successful defendant cannot enforce an order for legal
costs against a claimant. There are exceptions to this rule, one of which
relates to ‘fundamental dishonesty’. A successful defendant can ask the court for
permission to enforce an order for costs where a claim is found to be
‘fundamentally dishonest.’ That sounds quite reasonable on the face of it.
But there is a problem. Many of us have been concerned about
what happens if a claimant takes their case to trial and loses. There is
nothing unusual about that. It happens every day in one court or another. So
you have two drivers whose cars collide. One driver gives one version the other
a different version. The judge has to decide which one is preferred. This is
the whole point of litigation. If it is clear cut either way you don’t end up
at trial.
But does this mean that the loser is fundamentally dishonest
and therefore at risk of shelling out thousands of pounds in costs? When does
poor memory become dishonesty? What takes dishonesty into the realms of fundamentalism?
Is there a liberal dishonesty?
One of my colleagues was recently faced with exactly this
issue. The argument was about whether the defendant’s car had stopped short of
our client’s vehicle. The other side were arguing that if their evidence
prevailed then our client must be fundamentally dishonest and thus liable for
the costs. In fact, our client won, but it was a genuine concern.
This has recently been considered by the County Court in the
case of Nesham v Sunrich Clothing; reported in Legal Futures. There had been a
car accident and the judge preferred the Defendant’s evidence. The Defendant's lawyers asked for costs saying that
the claimant must have been fundamentally dishonest because his version of events was rejected –
HHJ Freeman summarised the dilemma –
The claimant - “gave me his version of
events. I have preferred not to accept that version, but it does not
necessarily follow that he was fundamentally dishonest”
He went on - “And it is the experience of
everybody who litigates in this field that drivers involved in an accident will
give different and contrary versions of accidents to the extent of not just
which lane they were in, but where they came from, the route they had taken and
so forth… which may not constitute dishonesty, far less fundamental dishonesty.”
The judge criticised the defendants for using the
threat of fundamental dishonesty as a tool to pressurise claimants to abandon
claims. The judges analysis must be right. Otherwise any unsuccessful claimant
is at risk of bankruptcy just because the court prefers the others side’s
evidence. This would defeat the whole point of QOCS which is to enable ordinary
people to pursue claims without worrying about costs. This is only a county
court decision so is not binding on any other courts.
I hope the higher courts give us some
clarification on this as soon as possible. The introduction of QOCS has seen a few problems but if we get this issue wrong, wipe out any benefits altogether.
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