David Peakman v Linbrooke Services Limited [electronic resource]
Language: English Publication details: 2008Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: [2008] EWCA Civ 1239, 13 November 2008. The case concerns proper allocation of claims. Linbrooke Services Limited (L) contracted with (P) to carry out work for it. P is a cable jointer. L was doing the work for the company Thales (T). P appealed against a decision to make no order for costs. P had claimed against L for no payment of work done, the costs of diesel fuel and of missing tools and damages for terminating contract without notice. L contested all the claims, and claimed that the contract was terminable at will. L counterclaimed damages for remedies to the defective works and for loss of contract with T because of the defective works. P obtained satisfaction, minus a reduction of 25%. L got 50% of his claims for defective work. P had to pay L £265 plus interest. P contested L's counterclaim about loss of profits on contracts. It claimed that, because of the T counterclaim, the case was allocated to the multi-track instead of the small claims track. "Held": P had to pay L. There was no evidence for the T counterclaim. So the case should have followed the small claims track. L's conduct brought to T more costs than necessary. The judge should have taken this into account when deciding about the costs. L should pay 50% of P's costs from the date the case was allocated to the multi-track.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Law report | Virtual Online | ONLINE PUBLICATION (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 146250-2001 |
[2008] EWCA Civ 1239, 13 November 2008. The case concerns proper allocation of claims. Linbrooke Services Limited (L) contracted with (P) to carry out work for it. P is a cable jointer. L was doing the work for the company Thales (T). P appealed against a decision to make no order for costs. P had claimed against L for no payment of work done, the costs of diesel fuel and of missing tools and damages for terminating contract without notice. L contested all the claims, and claimed that the contract was terminable at will. L counterclaimed damages for remedies to the defective works and for loss of contract with T because of the defective works. P obtained satisfaction, minus a reduction of 25%. L got 50% of his claims for defective work. P had to pay L £265 plus interest. P contested L's counterclaim about loss of profits on contracts. It claimed that, because of the T counterclaim, the case was allocated to the multi-track instead of the small claims track. "Held": P had to pay L. There was no evidence for the T counterclaim. So the case should have followed the small claims track. L's conduct brought to T more costs than necessary. The judge should have taken this into account when deciding about the costs. L should pay 50% of P's costs from the date the case was allocated to the multi-track.