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Andrew Morgan says fixed success fees
simply do not work for asbestos claims and
should be abolished.
This article first appeared in Litigation
Funding in October 2008.
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Success Fee Levels in Asbestos Claims
The recent consultation document on pleural plaques claims indicates the Government
wishes to impose a no fault tariff scheme for people suffering from
this asbestos disease. It points to a deeper malaise threatening
all asbestos victims.
The Background
Lord Woolf, in Callery v Gray, called for an evidence-based
assessment of the risks of RTA claims, on the basis that
claimant lawyers, on average, should be paid for all the work that
they do, win or lose. He meant to address concerns that
CFA “additional liabilities” could exceed damages.
Research was commissioned to calculate suitable success fees for
RTA, work accident and lastly industrial disease
claims. Success fees were set by the Rules Committee following
a series of mediations between both sides of the industry.
For asbestos disease claims the
“headline” success fee of 27.5% reflected historic evidence
but did not reflect practitioners’ current assessment of
risk. They had deep concerns the insurance industry would
continue to run "generic" challenges and that the fundamental basis
for any asbestos disease claim would remain constantly under
threat. They were reassured by (1) an understanding that the
claimant would be entitled to seek an uplift where "generic issues"
were at large (but no such provision appeared in the CPR),
(2) the expectation that success fee levels could be reviewed and
(3) the robust nature of the evidence obtained by Professors Fenn
and Rickman and their analysis of it.
Even so, there was a glaring flaw in looking at historic data to
assess success fees for the future when asbestos cases were expected to become more risky
and were only going to face more and more novel and potentially
devastating challenges from the insurance industry.
And lo, what was predicted has come to pass.
The Insurers’ Challenges: Barker, Trigger Issue and
Plaques
Since the mediation the Fairchild principle was attacked
vigorously by the insurers and was overturned by the House of Lords
in Barker. Without statutory reversal from a sympathetic
government terminally ill claimants or their bereaved
families would today be facing almost intractable
difficulties in securing full damages in mesothelioma
claims.
In the “Trigger Issue” litigation insurers now challenge the
claimants’ entitlement to enforce judgment, so that they will go
uncompensated. A vast swathe of asbestos cancer claims is now
poisoned by an uncertainty that simply did not exist at the time
that Fenn and Rickman prepared their statistics.
The low success fee of 27.5% for asbestos claims arises from the
historically good rate of recovering some compensation (but not
necessarily full compensation) in the many asbestos pleural plaques
claims which Fenn and Rickman studied. The House of Lords has
since ruled that such injuries (for injuries they are) are not
compensatable at all. If those claims are taken out of the equation
then the appropriate level of success fee changes dramatically.
A Philosophical Aside?
Fenn and Rickman’s research strongly assumes that the past
serves as a good guide to the future. In RTA and work accident
claims that assumption was always valid and remains so. In asbestos
disease claims, uniquely, that assumption was always contingent,
and is now demonstrably false.
Expert practitioners assess risk in asbestos disease claims
using years of experience. Whilst we may be optimistic about our
skills and abilities we often perceive considerable risk.
This risk is then reflected in a significant discount as to
damages. This risk is the measure used by counsel when
advising clients, funding insurers and (in the “good old days” but
today very rarely) the Legal Services Commission as to the
strengths and weaknesses of a case. It is not, though, the
basis upon which the “fixed success fees” were arrived at. The
dissonance between the fixed success fees and practitioners’ expert
assessments of the overall risks (supported by any number of SCCO
decisions) is a big problem that needs addressing.
Predictably Unpredictable
The fundamental principle underpinning Conditional Fee Agreements as a funding method
is that lawyers must be paid for all the work that they do, on the
average: the success fees in successful claims cover the costs lost
in unsuccessful claims. Lord Woolf proposed a mechanism whereby the
figure that achieves that aim (but no more) can be measured. That
mechanism does not work when the assumptions of predictability on
the large scale and uniformity over time are invalid. In asbestos
disease claims those assumptions are demonstrably false.
The Barker attack, the Trigger Issue litigation and the Pleural
Plaques decision all prove that an objective, scientific,
evidence-based assessment of future risks is impossible. Uniquely,
in asbestos disease claims fixed success fees have been shown not
to work. They should be removed from the CPR without delay to
protect asbestos claimants’ access to justice. Such access now
hangs by a thread, simultaneously precarious and precious.
Andrew Morgan is a partner
in our asbestos claims
department. For more information or if you believe you may
have an asbestos related claim please contact Andrew on
020 7861 4036 or email andrew.morgan@ffw.com