Libel suits in the UK are astonishingly expensive to boot.
Congratulations Tesla, on lining the pockets of Carter-Ruck at your expense and causing the BBC to spend a small fortune on their own legal costs in pursuit of this pointless case.
Senior barristers, or in Scotland senior advocates. Usually over 10-12 years at the bar.
We have a system where in higher courts people are represented directly by lawyers but by barristers/advocates - the theory is that they have a primary duty to the court and not to the client. A lawyer will instruct a barrister/advocate to run a case - in more serious cases a QC (senior) will be used along with a junior barrister/advocate.
NB My wife qualified as an advocate in Scotland - best bit being that when they are training (mostly following a qualified advocate around for a year as an unpaid assistant) you are known as an advocates devil. The whole process of training is known as devilling and the advocate training you is your devil-master. :-)
Expensive top flight barristers* with lots of experience (10-15 years minimum) that are recommended and appointed QC by the Lord Chancellor. They take precedence over other barristers and tend to be very expensive, experienced and with a proven case history and reputation. You can tell them because they get to wear silk gowns (sometimes being elected is known as "taking the silk")
Kinda the barrister equivalent of being elected to the National Academy of Sciences or a Fellow of the Royal Society.
* Barristers are one of two types of lawyers in the UK (the other being solicitors) they do most of the court-room advocacy etc.
Depending on the case, the judge can order that the loser pays more if they feel the case was fraudulent, misleading, etc.
See Samsung vs Apple, initially Apple didn't have to pay Samsung's fees, but after Apple annoyed the judge with their non-apology apology, the judge ordered that Apple pay [1]:
As to the costs (lawyers' fees) to be awarded against Apple, we concluded that they should be on an indemnity basis. Such a basis (which is higher than the normal, "standard" basis) can be awarded as a mark of the court's disapproval of a party's conduct, particularly in relation to its respect for an order of the court. Apple's conduct warranted such an order.
Yes, but it's very rare for the winner to be able to recover their full costs. The loser can dispute the costs, which then requires more legal /court time to put a "fair" value on the winner's costs, which in itself can cost a small fortune for a complex case. The whole libel system is an expensive nightmare for anyone caught up in it frankly.
Congratulations Tesla, on lining the pockets of Carter-Ruck at your expense and causing the BBC to spend a small fortune on their own legal costs in pursuit of this pointless case.