Rebekah Vardy launches appeal bid against Wagatha Christie costs ruling
Rebekah Vardy has launched an appeal bid against a ruling on costs in the latest stage of her Wagatha Christie libel battle against Coleen Rooney, her lawyers have confirmed.
Barristers for the women returned to the High Court in October in a dispute over how much Mrs Vardy should pay in costs after she lost the legal action in 2022.
In a three-day hearing, lawyers for Mrs Vardy â the wife of Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy â argued that the sum should be reduced due to what they said was âserious misconductâ by Mrs Rooneyâs legal team, who allegedly âdeliberately understatedâ her costs.
But Senior Costs Judge Andrew Gordon-Saker found âon balance and, I have to say, only justâ, that Mrs Rooneyâs legal team had not committed wrongdoing, and therefore it was ânot an appropriate caseâ to reduce the amount of money that Mrs Vardy should pay.
Court documents show that Mrs Vardy has launched an appeal bid, which her lawyers Kingsley Napley confirmed related to the misconduct ruling.
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.
Mrs Vardy sued her for libel, but Mrs Justice Steyn found in July 2022 that the allegation was âsubstantially trueâ.
The judge later ordered Mrs Vardy to pay 90% of Mrs Rooneyâs costs, including an initial payment of ÂŁ800,000 (âŹ951,280).
The previous hearing in London was told that Mrs Rooneyâs claimed legal bill â ÂŁ1,833,906.89 â was more than three times her âagreed costs budget of ÂŁ540,779.07â, which Jamie Carpenter KC, for Mrs Vardy, said was âdisproportionateâ.
He claimed that Mrs Rooneyâs legal team had committed misconduct by understating some of her costs so she could âuse the apparent difference in incurred costs thereby created to attack the other partyâs costsâ, which was âknowingly misleadingâ.
Robin Dunne, for Mrs Rooney, said that âthere has been no misconductâ and that it was âillogical to say that we misled anyoneâ.
He added that the argument that the amount owed should be reduced was âmisconceivedâ and that the budget was ânot designed to be an accurate or binding representationâ of her overall legal costs.
Judge Gordon-Saker ruled that while there was a âfailure to be transparentâ, it was not âsufficiently unreasonable or improperâ to constitute misconduct.
He ordered Mrs Vardy to pay Mrs Rooney a further ÂŁ100,000 ahead of the full amount owed being decided at a later date.




