Legal Cost Specialists

The 100% succcess fee myth

Three cheers for the National Accident Helpline.

Those probably aren’t words you expected to read on the defendant friendly Legal Costs Blog, but credit where credits due.

The National Accident Helpline (NAH) in their desperate lobbying to save their business model, as part of the consultation process into implementation of the Jackson Report, commissioned independent research by academics Professor John Peysner, Dr Angus Nurse and John Flynn from the University of Lincoln. Their report, Excessive & Disproportionate Costs in Litigation, “casts fresh doubt on current government proposals to reform the ‘no win no fee’ compensation regime”.

(The strange thing about reports delivered by independent experts is that they almost always manage to say what those commissioning the report wanted. Have you ever noticed how medical experts instructed by claimants always conclude that the injuries suffered by the claimant are so life-changing that the claimant will never be able to work again or lift anything heavier than a tooth-pick? On the other hand, the medical experts instructed by defendants invariably conclude that there is nothing wrong with the claimant that a strong mug of tea wouldn’t sort out.)

The corresponding press release stated:

“The University of Lincoln researchers examined data on more than 20,000 civil litigation cases and concluded that in certain cases defendant delay can be a significant factor in increased litigation costs and can cost up to six times as much as other causes of delay.

The findings suggest that defendant delays add unnecessary court costs to cases where there is a failure to reach settlement. If a case goes to court, claimants win 90 per cent of the time.”

Traditional wisdom as to cases that go to trial can be found in Master Hurst’s comments in Designer Guild Ltd v Russell Williams (Textiles) Ltd (t/a Washington DC) (No 2) [2003] EWHC 9024 (Costs):

“There is an argument for saying that in any case which reached trial a success fee of 100% is easily justified because both sides presumably believed that they had an arguable and winnable case.”

The courts are not meant to apply the benefit of hindsight when determining the reasonableness of a success fee (“when the court is considering the factors to be taken into account in assessing an additional liability, it will have regard to the facts and circumstances as they reasonably appeared to the solicitor or counsel when the funding arrangement was entered into and at the time of any variation of the arrangement” – Costs Practice Direction 11.7). However, the courts are often persuaded that an initial assessment that a case has no better than 50/50 prospects of success must have been an accurate assessment if the matter does then proceed to trial.

Now, based on this research, we know that cases that proceed to trial are not carefully balanced but only go that far because defendants fail to make proper admissions of liability in weak cases. Using the court approved “Ready Reckoner” to calculate success fees, for cases which proceed to trial if there is a 90% chance of success this justifies a success fee of only 11%. Even where the CFA is entered into after liability has been disputed by the defendant, we now know this means little or nothing. The defendant has probably made an inappropriate decision 90% of the time and the claim will still succeed.

This research also knocks on the head the argument that the “Ready Reckoner” method of calculating success fees is unduly harsh to claimant solicitors as it wrongly assumes that the costs earned in won cases will be the same as the level of costs in lost cases. The argument put forward by some claimant representatives was that explained in Smiths Dock v Edwards [2004] EWHC 1116 QB:

“Mr Morgan QC submitted that because most wholly unsuccessful cases reach trial whilst most successful cases settle before trial, there is a disequilibrium that should result in higher success fees.”

This argument was rejected in Smiths Dock with the Court approving the general use of the “Ready Reckoner”. The claimant argument does nevertheless seem to have been accepted as showing the “Ready Reckoner” did not produce “unfairly high” success fees.

However, we now have evidence, kindly supplied by NAH, showing that the “Ready Reckoner” figures are almost bound to be incorrect and rather than being too low are actually too high. If the vast majority of cases that proceed to trial are won by claimants, the fees earned in won cases will, on average, be higher than the work undertaken on lost cases. The “Ready Reckoner” assumption that “won” and “lost” cases are of equal value is mistaken, but not in the way claimant representatives have previously argued.

This research, if it is accurate, also undermines the assumptions that many ATE insurers apply in relation to staged ATE premiums and the individual “assessments” that some ATE insurers apply to the final stage (usually the pre-trial stage). In Rogers v Merthyr Tydfil CBC [2006] EWCA Civ 1134 the approach of DAS was explained:

“At Stage Three the risks involved vary significantly, and it was felt better to rate this element of the premium individually. DAS’s aim is to make sure that the trial premium is directly proportional to the risk involved, so that each case is individually underwritten, taking into account the merits and the estimated maximum loss figure (EML). In order to calculate the EML the claimant’s solicitor is asked to provide details of the disbursements he has already incurred and an estimate of his own side’s disbursements up to and including trial. He is also asked for an estimate of the opponent’s total costs and disbursements up to and including trial. The estimates provided in the allocation and pre-trial questionnaires are used when they are available.

The underwriter is then required to assess the risk and to apply a percentage in order to calculate the premium. In this case liability had been denied and there was no Part 36 offer. The prospects of success had been assessed by case handlers as ‘acceptable’, which in effect meant 51%. Mr Bellamy would not expect prospects of success to be rated much higher than this in a case about to go to trial where liability was still denied. Based on that information the underwriter applied a rate of 54% to the EML, producing a third stage premium of £3,510 plus IPT. The insurers expect to lose about half the cases which go to trial.”

The NAH research, if correct, shows that this assumption is fundamentally flawed. Instead of losing approximately 50% of cases that go to trial, the success rate is probably nearer 90%. The figures claimed from defendants by way of final stage ATE premiums are almost certainly too high.

The irony may be that research commissioned by NAH to support the current recoverability scheme has shown that the approach of the courts and ATE providers is fundamentally flawed and results in excessive costs being recovered.

[This post is based on an article that previoulsy appeared in Litigation Funding magazine.]

 

10 thoughts on “The 100% succcess fee myth”

  1. It’s hardly surprising that, with the claimant in the driving seat, delay by the defendant results in increased costs being incurred. Why someone feels the need to commission a report to point out the obvious is beyond me.

    -‘Now, based on this research, we know that cases that proceed to trial are not carefully balanced but only go that far because defendants fail to make proper admissions of liability in weak cases. ‘-

    Not sure if serious, but not exactly telling of the bigger picture anyway. The success rate at trial is not really relevant. Maybe the defendant does take a weak case to trial (indeed it would seem that 9/10 times he does), but how many cases does the claimant solicitor drop at exchange of witness evidence or liablity/causation evidence or after expert meeting or before incurring the brief fee for that one winner? We don’t know.

    Without this information a sensible conclusion cannot be drawn.

    A similar point can be made about ATE. Regardless, I am much less taken by ‘90% success rate means premium calculations are too pessimistic’ argument anyway. A success fee is up to a 100% uplift, but most of the time premiums are less than 10% of their insurance cover.

  2. The NAH clearly did not attend certain Yorkshire courts where due to the sensible nature of certain Defendant Solicitors, only cases that the Defence are confident in winning go to trial, where the Defence generally wins.

    What both parties need to do is be realistic.

    If you are going to make a nuisance payment, make it at the outset – not a day before trial and then moan at the level of costs. If you have a dodgy client, represent him properly and tell him not to litigate – not sit back and pray for a nuisance payment.

  3. Some Defendant’s run cases as they “have to be seen to run some”

    I believe that recently a decision was given in the SCCO re portal claims and ATE. Decision was that a staged policy was not required

    Does anyone have any details on this? or maybe even the judgment?

  4. Annon @ 11:38am

    I have the full judgment, if you want to post your email on here I can forward it to you.

    Many thanks,

  5. Thanks Annon2

    do you happen to use anything like costs monkey or swarb, maybe be better to swap via that rather than email addresses on the open net

  6. I believe it says thst a staged premium is not necessary for moj cases and that a single stage premium can be reasonable but that’s all I know

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