High Court untangles claim and counterclaim over law firm sale


Insurance: dispute over higher premiums

The High Court has had to unpick the fall-out of the sale of a law firm, with the seller claiming unpaid purchase money and the buyer arguing that the failure to disclose potential legal action against the firm led to sharp increases in the cost of its indemnity insurance.

The eponymous owner of Leicester firm Douglas Wemyss Solicitors agreed to sell the practice to Sameer Karim in 2008 for £100,000 and sums due at the time of sale in respect of debtors and work-in-progress (WIP). Mr Wemyss stayed on as a consultant.

Half of the sale price was deferred but never paid, while Mr Wemyss also claimed outstanding consultancy fees and WIP, totalling around £135,000 in all plus interest.

In Wemyss v Karim & Anor [2014] EWHC 292 (QB), Mr Wemyss’s claim largely succeeded, with HHJ David Cooke in the High Court in Birmingham giving him judgment for £105,375 plus interest.

But he also accepted some of Mr Karim’s counterclaims, in particular Mr Wemyss’s failure to disclose a possible claim that was eventually issued in 2011 and settled by the firm’s insurers for £325,000 (although £50,000 was attributable to another defendant).

The firm paid £27,283 for its indemnity insurance in the year of the acquisition and it went as high as £58,101 in subsequent years.

HHJ Cooke said that though the claims history was “a significant problem”, the market’s volatility was also responsible for some of the increases, and eventually decided that £58,000 of higher premiums up to the current indemnity year were recoverable from Mr Wemyss under the sale agreement.

The end result was that Mr Wemyss was due £45,000.

Under Mr Karim, Douglas Wemyss Solicitors has won several awards, including the Law Society Excellence Award for client service in 2011 and Leicestershire Law Society’s law firm of the year award in the same year. Last year the firm was named small business of the year in the Leicester Mercury business awards.




Leave a Comment

By clicking Submit you consent to Legal Futures storing your personal data and confirm you have read our Privacy Policy and section 5 of our Terms & Conditions which deals with user-generated content. All comments will be moderated before posting.

Required fields are marked *
Email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Blog


House of Lords shines a spotlight on flawed DBA regulations

As the Litigation Funding Agreements (Enforceability) Bill was debated in the House of Lords last month, a number of peers shone the spotlight on the need to address the poor state of the rules governing DBAs.


Align success measures with your firm’s core values for long-term success

What sets you apart from your competitors? How does your team’s core values help you deliver a service that makes you stand out and help you retain – and win – business?


Four steps for effective pricing

Posted by Stephen Moore, chief executive of Legal Futures Associate MLT Digital In my capacity as host of the Your Law Firm Success podcast, I’ve had the pleasure of interviewing a number of law firm leaders about the levers they… Read More


Loading animation