“I am instructed that …”: words that signal to the judge that you know your case is hopeless but your client is insisting that you run it. It was even referred to as “the traditional coded message” in a passage in Cook on Costs (2010).
Dyson LJ made it clear in a case called Richard Buxton (Solicitors) v Mills-Owens & Anor [2010] 1 WLR 1997 that use of the expression amounts to unacceptable advocacy.