LONDON, March 11 (Reuters) - A judge ruled British
businesswoman Amanda Staveley's PCP Capital Group and Barclays
will have to pay their own legal costs, after Stavely
lost her case against Barclays over how it negotiated a
financial lifeline during the credit crisis in 2008.
Judge David Waksman said on Thursday he made 'no order as to
costs', meaning both sides will pay their own when Barclays had
suggested it would seek to have PCP pay for both sides following
PCP's defeat in the trial.
Waksman in February had found Barclays guilty of “serious
deceit” over the deal which offered Barclays a lifeline during
the crisis, but denied Stavely damages and dismissed her claim.
Stavely incurred costs of nearly 20 million pounds in
fighting the case, court documents showed.
(Reporting By Lawrence White)