In a recent High Court judgment, the issue of applying District Court costs in a case taken in the Circuit Court was considered by the court.
The case concerned a personal injury where the applicant/plaintiff fell on a public footpath in Dungarvan, Co. Waterford. The plaintiff won the case and was awarded €8,000 and costs but as the amount awarded was within the jurisdiction of the District Court, the costs awarded were on the District Court scale, not the Circuit Court scale where the case was heard.
The High Court judge was alarmed at the legal costs the plaintiff's solicitors claimed after the taxation of costs amounting to €24,231 which was a multiple of three times the award to the plaintiff. The plaintiff appealed by way of Judicial Review asserting that the District Court Rules Committee and the County Registrar acted in breach of s.17(4) of the Courts Act 1981 (as amended) which was argued as prohibiting the imposition of scale fees by any rules of court.
The court considered the legislation cited by the defendant and case law and found that “the point is that the action could have been brought in the District Court, where it is likely that it would have been heard with considerably less formality in terms of pleading and with less delay.” “The procedure in the District Court is designed to provide a fast and economic resolution of civil actions". The High Court judge was satisfied that in all the circumstances ‘'the obtaining of a decree following a hearing in a defended case, comes within the description of “the doing of a specified thing”, as provided for in the proviso, or exception to the general prohibition on having scales of fees, as provided for in s.17(4).”
The High Court judge emphasized that “it is entirely sensible that there be a scale of recoverable fees, which is applied across the board” and “enables people to know what level of legal costs they are likely to face if they are unsuccessful in a civil action heard in the District Court”. The judge found that it had not been established that the applicant’s constitutional right of access to the courts had been infringed by virtue of the size of the shortfall between the fees charged and those allowed, as the County Registrar had not declared that the bill of costs was reasonable.
The court concluded that, contrary to the contention of the applicant/plaintiff, there was no evidence that the County Registrar did not have regard to the matters set out in Schedule 1 of the 2015 Act.
Accordingly, the High Court refused the appeal by way of Judicial Review and upheld the decision of the Circuit Court judge.
Nolan v. The County Registrar for the County of Waterford & Others (2024)
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