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Mazur recent decision

It has long been recognised, for example in Paturel v Marble Arch Services Ltd [2006] 4 Costs LR 556 and reflected in the Guide to Summary Assessment, that unqualified fee earners with equivalent experience to a newly qualified solicitor or FCILEX can command a Grade C or higher rate. Mazur does not change this principle. However, work performed by such fee earners must not include tasks that constitute the conduct of litigation, the exact boundaries of which are likely to be clarified through further litigation. Experienced is, of course, not the same as authorised.

In practice, a team of fee earners may therefore include:

  • Fee earners who are qualified and authorised (for example, a solicitor)
  • Fee earners who are qualified but not authorised (for example, a Fellow of CILEX)
  • Fee earners who are neither qualified nor authorised but are experienced enough to command a Grade C rate (for example, a non-qualified fee earner with 10 years of litigation experience)
  • Fee earners who are neither qualified, authorised, nor experienced, who are properly considered Grade D

All such fee earners, as employees of a firm of solicitors, would remain under the SRA’s regulatory authority and therefore be regulated, whether or not they are also authorised, qualified or experienced.

Solicitor’s firms will need to be aware of these crucial distinctions when managing the composition of teams of fee earners. Costs lawyers and costs draftsmen will need to be aware of these distinctions when presenting, challenging or defending Bills of Costs.

If you’d like to discuss what Mazur means for your firm’s costs management or litigation strategy, please get in touch with the Your Legal Costs team via E: management@yourlegalcosts.co.uk or T: 0151 449 0005.

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