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Shaman Kapoor

“Absolutely at the cutting edge; solid reliable and innovative.” Chambers and Partners

Shaman’s practice covers several fields of commercial and common law with his costs practice bridging over both fields. Most recently he has been regularly involved in injunctive relief in the High Court and is heavily engaged in group action in the Grenfell civil proceedings on behalf of 85 claimants, and the group action of professional rugby players against World Rugby and other governing bodies. He is regularly in the High Court and Senior Courts Costs Office and receives instructions domestically and internationally. He is a frequent speaker at most key seminars on the costs calendar. He teaches advocacy for Lincoln’s Inn and has been ranked as a leading junior for many years. He was a contributing editor to Sweet & Maxwell’s Greenslade on Costs (2009-2017), he is the editor of our Costs Newsletter (3+9 = Costs) and is a contributing editor to Thomson Reuters’ “Costs & Funding following the Civil Justice Reforms: Questions & Answers”, The White Book. He is a qualified mediator and is an appointed deputy district judge.

Areas of expertise

Alternative Dispute Resolution

Shaman prides himself on his soft and interpersonal skills which, in the context of advocacy in alternative dispute resolution (ADR), are deployed to extract a positive outcome in situations which appear to be irrecoverable.

As a barrister, he has extensive experience of commercial litigation mediation, international arbitration, and civil liability claims resolved through ADR including joint settlement meetings and round table meetings both for multi-party and group litigation. Shaman is particularly highly regarded for costs mediations and is regularly sought out as an expert costs mediator. He has further undertaken specialist mediator training for paper-based provisional assessments.

Clinical Negligence and Personal Injury

Shaman has developed a broad expertise in clinical negligence matters and thrives on getting to grips with the detail of medical practice and procedure. His experience in personal injury work is extensive and he is currently instructed as a senior-junior in the Grenfell Tower civil proceedings on behalf of 85 bereaved, survivor and resident claimants being the only claimant group to file and serve a particulars of claim. He is also instructed as a senior-junior in the group claims brought by professional and semi-professional rugby players against World Rugby and other regulatory bodies for the alleged failure to protect against sub-concussive and concussive head injury. He has experience of multi-disciplinary expert involvement and acts for claimants and defendants. Shaman prides himself on meticulous preparation and client service to compliment his formidable advocacy and expert handling skills.

Cases of note

  • Alix Popham (and approximately 209 others) v (1) World Rugby (2) The Rugby Football Union (3) Welsh Rugby Union
  • Sid-Ali Atmani and 84 others v (1) Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea (2) The Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation Limited [Ongoing] - The Grenfell Tower fire tragedy resulted in the death of 72 people. It has proved to be a landmark moment in fire and building safety and construction method and may yet be a landmark case for principles of compensation in an injury claim arising out of a tort. Shaman’s clients (led by Susan Rodway QC) are the only claimants to have articulated their claims in a particulars of claim being a vast document asserting duties arising out of common law and statute as well as misfeasance in public office, and claiming for aggravated and exemplary damages in addition to compensation.

Commercial

Shaman’s commercial law experience includes international arbitration and domestic and international commercial disputes including contractual arrangements associated with financial investments, construction projects, high net worth individuals, oil and gas, software developers and global corporations. He has experience of contractual disputes in a variety of commercial settings including litigation funding, promissory note and loan disputes, shareholder disputes, fees disputes and injunctive relief.

Cases of note

  • Strategic Holdings 2 Limited v (1) Simon Wetton (2) Francesca Cava [2022], Fancourt J – successfully resisting an application for a freezing injunction arising out of a failed transaction to purchase to land and subsequently obtaining an order for costs on the indemnity basis.
  • Candy Works Limited v Taylor [2022], HHJ Klein sitting as a Judge of the High Court – acting as counsel for the applicant in successfully obtaining injunctive relief to protect the business assets including TikTok account of a thriving start-up.
  • Yumn Ltd v (1) Standard Chartered Bank (2) Shapoorji Pallonji & Company Private Limited [2021], HHJ Pelling QC, sitting as a Judge of the High Court – a case arising out of an agreement for onshore and offshore works totalling USD$216.6 million which involved an injunction seeking the restraint of the payment of an on-demand bond of USD$32.2 million pending the referral to emergency arbitration of the question of whether there was entitlement to make the demand.  Acting as counsel for the second defendant on the claimant’s application for a non-party costs order
  • Be In v Google [2018] - Working as junior counsel in the preparation and issue of a claim in the Commercial Court against Google for breach of a non-disclosure agreement and duty of confidence.
  • Global Energy Horizons Corporation v Gray [2019] - One of a team of junior counsel acting for the defendant, a former shareholder in the claimant company. The claimant was an advisory and investment firm. The defendant was accused of having diverted an opportunity to acquire interests in technology for the stimulation of late life oil wells. The claimant considered the wells to be worth in excess of US$500m. The complex proceedings were split between a liability trial (2012) and an enquiry trial (2015). Shaman was instructed in the preparation for the quantum trial (2019) and in particular with respect to the preparation for an interim application for an abuse of process. The defendant’s interests were ultimately held to be valueless.
  • ICC Arbitration: Software Provider v Global Telecoms Corporation [2015] - The dispute focused on the interpretation of contractual terms as between the parties in respect of the claimant contractor providing open-source software services. The case turned on whether a minimum commitment amount of USD $14m was payable to the claimant. The case resolved at a mediation a few weeks before a final arbitration hearing.

Construction

Specifically arising out of the Grenfell Tower tragedy, Shaman has experience of the Building Regulations, Approved Document B, and The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. This experience is complemented by Shaman’s experience at common law including landlord and tenant, contractual disputes generally, insurance work and claims for compensation (whether arising out of injury or not). He is well placed to engage in cladding and other building defect disputes.

Cases of note

  • Sid-Ali Atmani and 84 others v (1) Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea (2) The Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation Limited [Ongoing] - The Grenfell Tower fire tragedy resulted in the death of 72 people. It has proved to be a landmark moment in fire and building safety and construction method and may yet be a landmark case for principles of compensation in an injury claim arising out of a tort. Shaman’s clients (led by Susan Rodway QC) are the only claimants to have articulated their claims in a particulars of claim being a vast document asserting duties arising out of common law and statute as well as misfeasance in public office, and claiming for aggravated and exemplary damages in addition to compensation.

Costs and Litigation Funding

"Down to earth and does not mince his words. He embraces technology and has a good drafting style." "Shaman goes above and beyond."
Chambers and Partners 2022. “One of the best costs juniors out there.” The Legal 500 2022

Since 2005, his costs practice has grown with vigour and he is well-known amongst practitioners and the judiciary. Shaman enjoys the technical points and the diversity of practice areas to which costs work applies and is regularly involved in costs budgeting, enforceability arguments, assessments (Senior Courts Costs Office and Supreme Court) and advisory and drafting work on retainers. 

He is regularly in the High Court and Senior Courts Costs Office and receives instructions domestically and internationally. He is highly regarded for strategy and is often instructed behind-the-scenes in significant substantive litigation. 

Cases of note

  • Patel v Karmakar [January 2023], DJ Lumb, Regional Costs Judge, Oxford County Court – judgment awaited in this dispute which analyses the rate of recoverability of a solicitor acting as a litigant in person.  Further details to follow.

  • Dr. Craig Wright v The Person or Persons Responsible for the Operation and Publication of the Website www.bitcoin.org (including the person or persons using the pseudonym “Cøbra”) [October 2022], Costs Judge Rowley – judgment awaited on the question of whether “persons unknown” are entitled to take an active role in proceedings whilst retaining anonymity.

  • Mr. Mark Hallsworth v EUI Limited [2022], DJ Woodburn , Regional Costs Judge, Bristol County Court – instructed on the preliminary issue of whether the threshold of “exceptional circumstances” was met pursuant to CPR 45.29J so as to enable the court to consider costs in excess of fixed recoverable costs.  Success in a rare example of the threshold being met.

  • Ibiyinka Macaulay v (1) Dr Abdul Karim (2) Croydon Health Services NHS Trust [2022], Senior Costs Judge Gordon-Saker – the claimant had the benefit of legal aid throughout the proceedings.  Following a split trial on liability, the claim against D1 was dismissed; but judgment against D2 was entered with damages to be assessed.  The claimant was ordered to pay D1’s costs; D2 settled the claim in a Tomlin Order.  Acting for the successful claimant, the Court held that QOCS protection could and did apply even in the case of a legally aided claimant who had protection under s.11 of the Access to Justice Act 1999.  Damages pursuant to the Tomlin Order were not “damages awarded” per Cartwright.  And interim damages were neither an award for damages against which QOCS would permit an order for costs to be enforced.

  • Farrer & Co. v Yerteyeva [2021], Costs Judge Leonard – representing Farrer & Co, in a solicitor-client dispute, the client was a high profile and successful businesswoman and lawyer in Kazakhstan, as well as a former board member at a Bank.  Her points of dispute claimed that she had not consented to the hourly rates claimed or the work to be done amongst other things.  In a resounding victory for Farrers, the client’s evidence was found to be plainly misleading in parts and that in every aspect of the informed consent allegation Farrers had discharged the initial burden upon themselves and the client failed to discharge the consequential burden.  The client’s state of distress at the time of signing the retainer did not mean that she was incapable of making informed decisions.  The firms charges were found to be characteristic of specialist central London firms representing high-net worth individuals

  • EJC v East North Hertfordshire NHS Trust - The defendant’s hospital negligently supervised and managed the claimant in her neonatal period, which included a failure to diagnose hypoglycaemia, causing her to suffer hypoglycaemic brain injury with microcephaly, developmental delay and cortical visual motor impairments. An award of £5.25m was made, with periodic payments of £165,000 per annum for life. Costs amounted to £350,000, however, the case remains notable because it dealt with the question of what constitutes “a good reason to depart from the budget”.

  • Among the issues at stake were the consequences of the change in discounted rate which was introduced in 2017. This change, the first such alteration since 2001, caused a significant impact on the calculation of damages, and as a result, on the work reasonably required with consequential cost.
  • Halifax Bank of Scotland Reading Branch Fraud Case - Between 2002 and 2007, small business owners were transferred to HBOS’s corporate division, headquartered at its Reading branch, which in turn referred them to Quayside Corporate Services (QCS), a consultancy. QCS pressurised business owners to take on inflated debt burdens, and then siphoned off money by invoicing the owners for very large fees. Their HBOS contacts received hundreds of thousands of pounds in cash, holidays, luxury goods, drugs and prostitutes.
    Many of the businesses were then asset stripped by QCS and either made bankrupt or sold for nominal amounts to companies often associated with the directors of QCS.
    The scheme drained the bank and small businesses of around £245m and left hundreds of people in severe financial difficulties. The protagonists were convicted of fraud in 2017.
    Lloyds Banking Group, which acquired HBOS in 2009, set up a £100m compensation scheme for customers who had been defrauded. Compensation packages have ranged from £100k to £5m with each party’s costs running to hundreds of thousands of pounds. Shaman was instructed on behalf of a group of claimants on the issue of costs.
  • Robinson v EMW Law LLP [2018] EWHC 1751 (Ch.) - A hotly contested detailed assessment requiring Shaman’s input on the preliminary points of the enforceability and scope of the retainer, and the recoverability of consultancy fees for a solicitor who was a party in the substantive litigation. The matter was appealed from a Senior Courts Costs Office (SCCO) master to a High Court judge assisted by another SCCO master.
  • RBOS Shareholders Action Group Limited v Fladgate LLP - Recognised by The Lawyer’s Top 20 Cases of 2017, this litigation arose out of RBoS’s 2008 shareholder rights issue intended to generate £12bn, but which left shareholders with a wiped-out valuation after RBoS’s nationalisation. Shareholders brought claims for mis-selling amongst other losses and the litigation was the subject of a group litigation order. Shaman advised on own-client and between-the-parties costs.
  • Coventry & Ors v Lawrence & Ors – Supreme Court - In this landmark case, Shaman was instructed to deal with the detailed assessment of the costs in the Supreme Court proceedings where, amongst other issues, the recoverability of additional liabilities was asserted by the opposing party as being incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
  • Murrells v Cambridge University NHS Foundation Trust [2017] EWHC B2 (Costs) - Shaman successfully represented the claimant in a case arising out of a claim for clinical negligence that settled shortly after the defence. The case involved the operation of the concept of proportionality and distinguished BNM v MGN Ltd [2016] EWHC B13 on the basis of pre- and post- Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (LASPO) additional liabilities.

Arbitration

Shaman is regularly engaged in commercial litigation and arbitration related work and he routinely appears in the High Court and the Senior Courts Costs Office on both domestic and international instruction. His practice covers several fields of commercial and common law with his costs and litigation funding practice bridging over both fields. He is experienced in high profile and group action work, and he is a regular speaker at seminars, a lead advocacy tutor, a writer, and Mediator.

Shaman’s arbitration experience includes domestic and international commercial disputes including contractual arrangements associated with financial investments, construction projects, high net worth individuals, oil and gas, software developers and global corporations. He has experience of contractual disputes in a variety of commercial settings including litigation funding, shareholder disputes, promissory note issues and loan disputes, fees disputes and injunctive relief.

Cases of note

  • Candey Limited v Crumpler & Another (as Joint Liquidators of Peak Hotels & Resorts Limited, in liquidation) [2022] - CANDEY (the Appellant) was instructed by Peak Hotels & Resorts Ltd (“PHRL”), a company incorporated in 2014 in the British Virgin Islands (“BVI”) in relation to PHRL’s US$368 million joint venture dispute, and interest in, the uber-luxury Aman Hotel group. 
    The Appellant had represented PHRL for 2 years in extensive litigation in England and other jurisdictions including Hong Kong, the BVI and New York. The chief battle ground was London, where a High Court trial was due to commence in April 2016. However, on the eve of trial, PHRL ran out of funds and was wound up on a US$35 million debt in a Hong Kong arbitration and related insolvency proceedings in the BVI. The Respondents, liquidators from KPMG, were appointed by the BVI court to act as joint liquidators for PHRL with permission to continue the ownership dispute in London. Notwithstanding the insolvency, the High Court proceedings in London continued. CANDEY had previously agreed to act on a deferred fixed fee of £3.86 million. To protect their position in all the foreign jurisdictions, where they were fighting, a fixed and floating charge and security had been agreed by CANDEY’s client and registered in the BVI, PHRL’s seat of incorporation. 
    CANDEY was disinstructed and the liquidators, through new solicitors, settled the claim for circa US$13.5 million. A dispute then ensued between CANDEY and the liquidators as CANDEY claimed payment of its contractually agreed fixed fee and asserted a right to be paid first from any recovery because of its solicitors’ lien. The matter reached the Court of Appeal several times and ultimately the Supreme Court held that it was a question of construing the intention of the parties as to whether the lien had been waved, and the additional security of a fixed charge without express reservation of the lien was inconsistent with the inference of a solicitor’s lien.  Shaman was instructed behind the scenes on behalf of the liquidators.
  • Yumn Ltd v (1) Standard Chartered Bank (2) Shapoorji Pallonji & Company Private Limited [2021] - SPC is a company incorporated in India and is a diversified organisation of 18 major companies which operate in the engineering and construction, infrastructure and real estate sectors (amongst others).  It has been trading for more than 150 years with landmark construction projects in more than 60 countries. YL is a company incorporated in Rwanda.  It is a special purpose vehicle set up to engage SPC for the “project”, namely, to design, engineer and construct a peat power plant in Rwanda.  YL is owned predominantly by two other Mauritian holding companies.  The agreements were subject to English law and included an arbitration clause.  They contracted for Onshore works (from inside Rwanda) and for Offshore works (form outside Rwanda) for a total value of USD$216.6 million.  Injunctive relief was sought to restrain the payment of an on-demand bond of USD$32.2 million, pending referral to emergency arbitration.  Shaman was instructed by King & Spalding LLP as counsel for the second defendant.
  • Sid-Ali Atmani & 84 Others v (1) Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea (2) The Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation Limited [2020 – ongoing] Sid-Ali Atmani & 84 Others v (1) Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea (2) The Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation Limited [2020 – ongoing] - The Grenfell Tower fire tragedy resulted in the death of 72 people. It has proved to be a landmark moment in fire and building safety and construction method and may yet be a landmark case for principles of compensation in an injury claim arising out of a tort. Shaman is instructed as senior-junior on behalf of the claimants and his team is the only group to have articulated their claims in a particulars of claim being a vast document asserting duties arising out of common law and statute as well as misfeasance in public office, and claiming for aggravated and exemplary damages in addition to compensation.  Whilst the litigation is ongoing in the High Court, there are significant ADR efforts ongoing.
  • Halifax Bank of Scotland Reading Branch Fraud Case [2019] - Between 2002 and 2007, small business owners were transferred to HBOS’s corporate division, headquartered at its Reading branch, which in turn referred them to Quayside Corporate Services (QCS), a consultancy. QCS pressurised business owners to take on inflated debt burdens, and then siphoned off money by invoicing the owners for very large fees. Their HBOS contacts received hundreds of thousands of pounds in cash, holidays, luxury goods, drugs and prostitutes.
    Many of the businesses were then asset stripped by QCS and either made bankrupt or sold for nominal amounts to companies often associated with the directors of QCS.
    The scheme drained the bank and small businesses of around £245m and left hundreds of people in severe financial difficulties. The protagonists were convicted of fraud in 2017.
    Lloyds Banking Group, which acquired HBOS in 2009, set up a £100m ADR compensation scheme for customers who had been defrauded. Compensation packages have ranged from £100k to £5m with each party’s costs running to hundreds of thousands of pounds. Shaman was instructed on behalf of a group of claimants.
  • RBOS Shareholders Action Group Limited v Fladgate LLP [2017] - Recognised by The Lawyer’s Top 20 Cases of 2017, this litigation arose out of RBoS’s 2008 shareholder rights issue intended to generate £12billion, but which left shareholders with a wiped-out valuation after RBoS’s nationalisation. Shareholders brought claims for mis-selling amongst other losses and the litigation was the subject of a group litigation order. The costs of the litigation have themselves been the subject of intense interrogation and anticipating the potential need for arbitration to resolve the costs issues (themselves running to tens of millions of pounds), Shaman was instructed to advise.
  • Khorafi & Ors v (1) Bank of Sarasin-Alpen (ME) Ltd (2) Bank Sarasin & Co Ltd [2015-2016] - The DIFC ordered the Swiss Bank defendants to pay compensatory damages to the family of a Kuwaiti business for the sale of inappropriate structured real estate, commodity backed and equity sector basket instruments in late 2007-2008. The Court concluded that the Bank had committed a clear case of mis-selling unsuitable investments to an unsophisticated investor without regard to the regulatory protection afforded to customers.  The Khorafi family had purchased structured instruments to the value of some USD$200 million, with a view to secure their capital but to generate a profit on investment over and above their own obligations to a Kuwaiti bank.  The case had far reaching consequences worldwide for the regulatory regime in which banks operate.  Shaman was instructed behind the scenes on anticipated arbitration proceedings relating to the litigation funding of the Claimants.
  • ICC Arbitration: Software Provider v Global Telecoms Corporation [2015] - The dispute focused on the interpretation of contractual terms as between the parties in respect of the claimant contractor providing open-source software services. The case turned on whether a minimum commitment amount of USD $14m was payable to the claimant. The case resolved at a mediation a few weeks before a final arbitration hearing and Shaman was instructed as sole counsel.
     

Recommendations

  • “Down to earth and does not mince his words.  He embraces technology and has a good drafting style.”  “Shaman goes above and beyond.” (Chambers and Partners 2022)
  • “Has a broad range of knowledge, and is adept at dealing with all manner of knotty problems thrown up during costs hearings.” “Absolutely at the cutting edge.” “Solid, reliable and innovative, he offers good-quality advice in a timely fashion.” (Chambers and Partners 2021)
  • “A fighter for the client who has got an encyclopaedic knowledge when it comes to costs. He is able to act for individual clients as well as commercial ones, and can explain things well to them. He knows this area of law inside out and presents his cases with sophistication.” (Chambers and Partners 2020)
  • “Has the right mindset to be able to compromise with the other side on commercial terms; if not able to settle, he is, however, a robust advocate who stands up for the cause.” “He is concise and easily understandable.” (Chambers and Partners 2019)
  • “Shaman is truly an expert in the costs arena.” (The Legal 500 2022)
  • “One of the most commercially savvy barristers one can find and a very formidable advocate.” (The Legal 500 2021) 
  • “Clear, to the point and his advice is always solution focused.” (The Legal 500 2020)