Coleen Rooney disputes Rebekah Vardy Nobu costs claims
Coleen Rooney has disputed âmisleadingâ claims made in the High Court by Rebekah Vardy, who is challenging the âsheer magnitudeâ of costs she has to pay the former as a result of 2022âs Wagatha libel trial.
Mrs Vardy lost that case after a judge ruled it was âsubstantially trueâ she had leaked Mrs Rooneyâs private information to the press, and was ordered to pay 90% of Mrs Rooneyâs costs, which has reached more than ÂŁ1.8m.
On Tuesday, Robin Dunne, representing Mrs Rooney in the costs dispute, said claims made in court on Monday about hotel costs incurred by a lawyer representing her in 2022 were âfactually incorrectâ.
Mrs Vardyâs KC Jamie Carpenter had said Mrs Rooneyâs total included costs for a lawyer staying âat the Nobu Hotel, incurring substantial dinner and drinks charges as well as mini bar chargesâ.
But Mr Dunne, noting the charges been widely reported in the media as âevidence of the defendant wildly spendingâ, said they were âpotentially defamatoryâ and steps would be taken.
He added that a âmodestâ hotel had been booked for the lawyer, but on the first night there had been no wi-fi or working shower, so he transferred to the Nobu after Mrs Rooneyâs agent said she could get reduced rates.
A room at Nobu ordinarily costs ÂŁ600 but was charged at ÂŁ295, which he said was the same price as a room at a Premier Inn.
Addressing the claim that ÂŁ225 had been spent on a food and minibar tab, Mr Dunne said the minibar bill had actually come to ÂŁ7 for two bottles of water, and that the lawyer had not eaten at the Nobu restaurant during his stay.
Senior Costs Judge Andrew Gordon-Saker rejected one of Mrs Vardyâs claims that it was âunreasonableâ for Mrs Rooney to use Stewarts, a London-based law firm, and that she should have sought one near to where she lived in the north west of England.
Mr Gordon-Saker said: âThis was always going to be a high-profile case and it attracted significant press coverage both here and elsewhere.
âDefamation is still a specialist area and most of the firms who specialise in defamation are based in central London.â
Regarding the size of the claim and the importance of the matter to the âreputations at stakeâ, he said âinstructing a solicitor in central London was a reasonable choiceâ.
The judge also rejected Mrs Vardyâs claim that it had been unreasonable for Mrs Rooney to consult her barrister, David Sherborne, on 30 occasions, at a cost of nearly ÂŁ500,000.
Mr Gordon-Saker added that the conduct of Mrs Vardy â in particular destroying evidence â âadds to the complexityâ and âclearly justifies rates in excess of the guidelinesâ for the most experienced lawyers.
But he did say less experienced lawyers should have been charged at a lower hourly rate.
Mrs Rooney, the wife of former England captain Wayne Rooney, was nicknamed Wagatha Christie in 2019 after saying she had conducted a sting operation to find out who had leaked stories about her from her private Instagram to the Sun newspaper. She concluded: âItâsâŠ. Rebekah Vardyâs account.â
That post led Mrs Vardy, the wife of Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy, to sue her for libel, and the trial attracted huge interest when it reached court two years ago.
Mrs Justice Steyn ruled that Mrs Rooneyâs accusation was âsubstantially trueâ, saying it was likely Mrs Vardy âknew of, condoned and was actively engagedâ in the process of leaking stories about Mrs Rooney to the Sun in collaboration with Mrs Vardyâs agent, Caroline Watt.
Mrs Rooney branded the trial âhorribleâ in an interview with British Vogue last year.
She suggested she could not forgive Mrs Vardy for her libel claim, but said âthe relief was everythingâ to win.
Mrs Vardy went on to trademark the phrase âWagatha Christieâ after losing.
The case also inspired the Olivier Award-nominated play, Vardy V Rooney: The Wagatha Christie Trial.