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Corporate & Insurance Panel Costs Auditing

We have an established and highly experienced team of costs professionals who are able to review and monitor any size of legal spend on behalf a large corporate client or an insurance company.
 

If you find yourself considering the amount of invoices or the billing practices of your lawyers, we are able to advise you upon the appropriate level of charges, as well as ensuring their regulatory and statutory practices are up to standard.

Moreover, we are able to help you negotiate terms and fee structures to meet specific needs. Our qualifications and understanding of the market allow us to achieve results that might not have been possible without a working knowledge of statutory and regulatory framework that lawyers must adhere to.

Advising law firms on costs and billing practices

If you are a law firm, we are able to advise you on proper billing practices to make sure you are not likely to fall into dispute with your clients.

In our experience, even the most established and well-regarded law firms have adopted irregular charging and billing practices that could have been avoided.

Our team will review your matter, provide you with a fee estimate and then work with you to achieve the required outcome in an agreed timeframe.

Our ability to advise upon multiple areas of costs litigation differentiate us from other Costs Lawyers.

Latest blogs and news

Empowering beneficiaries to challenge costs: The Kenig v. Thomson Snell & Passmore case

Last month, The Court of Appeal delivered an important costs judgement which has the potential to significantly impact how beneficiaries can challenge solicitors’ fees in contentious trusts, probate, private wealth and estate proceedings.

Once upon a time in the Supreme Court

Michael Tyler discusses the decision of the UK Supreme Court in R (on the application of PACCAR Inc and others) (Appellants) v Competition Appeal Tribunal and others (Respondents) [2023] UKSC 28

It’s a fix! The Fixed Recoverable Costs regime and the impact on professional negligence claims

The 1 October 2023 saw the Fixed Recoverable Costs (“FRC”) regime extend beyond personal injury claims in the fast track to almost every area of civil litigation, including professional negligence, and sees the introduction of a new Intermediate Track.

We address in this article, the impact of the FRC regime on Professional Negligence claims, and how this affects the recoverability of costs.

Make 2023 the year hourly rates are recovered in full

Much has been said about the Guideline Hourly Rates (GHR) following Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd v LG Display Co. Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 466 and Athena Capital Fund v Secretariat of State for the Holy See [2022] EWCA Civ 1061. Paying parties rely on them and Judges at summary assessment feel bound to follow them, despite the potential damage they could do to the profession’s reputation in London given how the GHR compare to the market. However, there are positives and lessons to learn from these decisions.

Novak needs a Cost Expert: Costs in Appeal Hearings Explored

Being an avid tennis fan, in the small hours of 16th January 2022, I checked my phone to see if Novak Djokovic was going to be able to compete for his 21st Grand Slam title (surpassing Roger Federer and Rafa Nadal as the most decorated male tennis player in Grand Slam history) or whether his appeal would in fact be rejected leading to his deportation.

Claimants given costs boost in inheritance disputes – Hirachand v Hirachand

The Court of Appeal has recently handed down its judgment in the case of Hirachand v Hirachand, concerning an appeal against an order made in May 2020 in proceedings brought by Sheila Hirachand for provision from the estate of Navinchandra Hirachand, her late father, under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 (“the 1975 Act”).

Discounted CFAs – how do they work and are they too good to be true?

When both client and solicitor have equal skin in the game it can create a harmony that other funding methods cannot reproduce.

Could litigation funding be available for my claim?

We understand that litigation can be expensive and clients are sometimes anxious by how much it may cost to resolve their dispute.  This is why we offer our clients a number of different funding options to suit their needs.

Are DBAs viable for funding commercial litigation?

A Damages-based Agreement (DBA), as stated in the Explanatory Memorandum to the Damages- Based Agreements Regulations 2013, is a “private funding agreement between a representative and a client whereby the representative’s agreed fee (‘the payment’) is contingent upon the success of the case, and is determined as a percentage of the compensation received by the client.”

Funding defamation and privacy proceedings – are there still options?

We are now a year on from the abolishment of the recovery of success fees in Defamation and Privacy proceedings, which brought these distinct areas of law into line with the judgment of the European Court of Human Rights in MGN v UK.

Changing landscape for litigation funders - Arkin Cap lifted by Court of Appeal

The Court of Appeal upheld a decision that the so-called ‘Arkin Cap’ is not a binding rule but ultimately at the Court’s discretion, in the recent case of ChapelGate Credit Opportunity Master Fund Ltd v Money & Ors.

Are ‘no win no fee’ arrangements suitable for inheritance claims under the 1975 Act?

When a client decides to pursue a claim under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1975 for reasonable financial provision, one of the first discussions between lawyer and client is how the claim will be funded.

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