Coleen Rooney defeats Rebekah Vardy once again in ‘Wagatha Christie’ legal battle
Judge rules Coleen Rooney does not need to reduce her costs from Wagatha Christie case
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Your support makes all the difference.Coleen Rooney’s lawyers did not commit misconduct after being accused of “knowingly misleading” Rebekah Vardy by deliberately understating her legal costs during their high-profile Wagatha Christie legal battle, a judge has ruled.
Barristers for Mrs Rooney and Mrs Vardy returned to the High Court following disagreements over how much Mrs Vardy should pay in legal costs after she lost their libel battle in 2022.
Neither Mrs Vardy nor Mrs Rooney attended court on Tuesday, when a judge ruled Mrs Rooney’s lawyers had not committed any wrongdoing.
In 2019, Mrs Rooney, the wife of former Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney, accused Mrs Vardy of leaking her private information to the press on social media, which Mrs Justice Steyn found in July 2022 was “substantially true”.
The judge later ordered Mrs Vardy, the wife of Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy, to pay 90 per cent of Mrs Rooney’s costs, including an initial payment of £800,000.
But the latest hearing in London was told that Mrs Rooney’s claimed legal bill – £1,833,906.89 – was more than three times her “agreed costs budget of £540,779.07”, which Jamie Carpenter KC, for Mrs Vardy, said was “disproportionate”.
He claimed in written submissions that Mrs Rooney and her legal team “deliberately understated” some of her costs so she could “use the apparent difference in incurred costs thereby created to attack the other party’s costs”, which he claimed constituted “serious misconduct”.
The disputed costs included a solicitor’s stay at the luxury Nobu Hotel – which Mrs Rooney’s representatives said was at a preferential rate and only used because a previously booked hotel had no working wifi or shower.
He continued that the earlier “understatement” of some costs was “improper and unreasonable” and “involved knowingly misleading Mrs Vardy and the court”.
This warranted a reduction in the amount that Mrs Vardy should pay, Mr Carpenter claimed.
Robin Dunne, for Mrs Rooney, said that “there has been no misconduct” and that it was “illogical to say that we misled anyone”.
In a ruling on Tuesday, Senior Costs Judge Andrew Gordon-Saker found “on balance and, I have to say, only just”, that Mrs Rooney’s legal team had not committed wrongdoing, and therefore it was “not an appropriate case” to reduce the amount of money that Mrs Vardy should pay.
He said that while there was a “failure to be transparent”, it was not “sufficiently unreasonable or improper” to constitute misconduct.
Mr Dunne said the argument that the amount owed should be reduced was “misconceived” and that the budget was “not designed to be an accurate or binding representation” of her overall legal costs.
He said: “Mrs Vardy’s argument appears to arise from her frustration that her deplorable conduct in this litigation has led to the budgets becoming irrelevant.”
He continued: “Had Mrs Vardy conducted this matter in a reasonable fashion, Mrs Rooney would be confined to her budget and would have recovered no more, absent good reason.”
The hearing is dealing with points of principle before a line-by-line assessment of costs, which will take place at a later date.
The hearing will conclude on Wednesday.
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