Background
The case of St Francis Group 1 Limited and others versus John Thomas Kelly and others involved a complex dispute arising from a management buy-out (MBO) transaction. The Kelly family sold two of their companies to a group of purchasers represented by the Claimants in 2017. As part of the transaction, the first Defendant, John Thomas Kelly, executed a Claim Waiver, which included an indemnity against all losses incurred by the Claimants in connection with any claims. In 2020, despite the Claim Waiver, the Defendants initiated proceedings against Mr Baker and Mr Braid, alleging fraud. The claim was unsuccessful, and the court found in favour of the Claimants, including a successful counterclaim for indemnity under the Claim Waiver.
Costs Issues Before the Court
The primary costs issues before the court involved the detailed assessment of costs payable by the first Defendant to the Claimants under the terms of the Claim Waiver. Key issues included whether the Claimants were entitled to recover in-house legal costs, the reasonableness of the costs incurred, and the scope of the indemnity provided by the Claim Waiver. Additionally, there were disputes over the particularisation of the first Defendant’s Points of Dispute, which were deemed inadequate by the court.
The Parties’ Positions
The Claimants argued that they were entitled to an indemnity for all reasonable and properly incurred costs related to the fraud claim, including both external legal costs and in-house legal costs. They contended that the first Defendant’s Points of Dispute were inadequately particularised and should be dismissed. The first Defendant argued that the Claimants’ costs were excessive and not within the scope of the indemnity, and he sought significant reductions. He also claimed that the Claimants had not managed the disclosure exercise cost-effectively.
The Court’s Decision
The court determined that the Claimants were entitled to recover costs under the indemnity provided by the Claim Waiver, including in-house legal costs, as long as they were reasonable in amount. The court found that the first Defendant’s Points of Dispute were largely inadequately particularised and struck out several preliminary points. The court allowed some specific challenges to proceed, requiring the first Defendant to rebut the presumption that each item of cost was reasonable. The court also noted that the first Defendant’s approach was calculated to increase costs and difficulty for the Claimants.
The Court’s Approach to Particularity
Judge Leonard’s decision reinforces that Points of Dispute under CPR 44.5 cannot rely on generic, “cut-and-paste” objections. The first Defendant’s approach of inserting identical objections against every timed item in the £468,687 bill was found to be meaningless and contrary to Ainsworth principles.
The court struck out preliminary points that failed to identify specific items being challenged. This included complaints about “excessive time” and “duplication” that gave no details about which entries were disputed or why.
Practical Implications for Costs Practitioners
The judgment clarifies that paying parties must rebut the CPR 44.5 presumption that costs are reasonably incurred and reasonable in amount. Broad assertions about costs being “unusually high” without item-specific objections will not succeed.
The decision emphasises that detailed assessment hearings must be managed fairly and proportionately. Courts will not accept Points of Dispute that force parties to identify objections during the hearing itself.
Key Takeaways
For costs draftsmen preparing Points of Dispute under CPR 44.5, the St Francis v Kelly judgment confirms that specificity is essential. Each objection must clearly identify the disputed item and provide concise grounds for challenge, ensuring the receiving party can adequately respond.


















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