Interim Tax Invoices and Final Tax Invoices
If you have costs agreements that pre-date the inception of the LPUL - 1 July 2015, then the operation of Sections 334 and 350 of the Legal Profession Act 2004 (LPA 2004) are the key sections to understand if you have a client that wants to:
a. have their previous lawyers tax invoices assessed; and
b. your firm is potentially exposed to a practitioner/client costs assessment.
Section 334 provides as follows:
(1) A law practice may give a person an interim bill covering part only of the legal services the law practice was retained to provide.
(2) Legal costs that are the subject of an interim bill may be assessed under Division 11 (Costs Assessment), either at the time of the interim bill or at the time of the final bill, whether or not the interim bill has been paid.
An application can be made out of time under Section 350 (5) of the LPA 2004. This subsection provides as follows:
(5) However, and application that is made out of time…may be dealt with by the costs assessor if the Supreme Court, on application by the costs assessor or the client or the third party payer who made the application for assessment, determines, after having regard to the delay and the reasons for the delay, that it is just and fair for the assessment to be dealt with after the 12month period.
In my experience, this means that if the law firm cannot establish that there is any substantial prejudice in those costs being assessed – then the costs assessment can proceed. Generally, substantial prejudice can only be established if the lawyer who undertook the work cannot be found or is deceased, the files have been destroyed or there is a very long period of delay (say 6 years).
I will deal with the LPUL provisions in one of my next posts.