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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Price v Price (t/a Poppyland Headware) [2003] EWCA Civ 888 (26 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/888.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 888 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM NORWICH COUNTY COURT
Judge O'Brien
Deputy District Judge Pugh
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LADY JUSTICE HALE
____________________
PAUL TERENCE PRICE |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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ROSALIND PRICE (trading as Poppyland Headware) |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Nicholas Heathcote Williams (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke : This is the judgment of the court.
"(1) Particulars of claim must –
(b) … be served on the defendant by the claimant within 14 days after service of the claim form."
"Save in special cases or exceptional circumstances it can rarely be appropriate on an overall assessment of what justice requires to deny the plaintiff an extension where the denial will stifle his action because of a procedural default, which even if unjustifiable, had caused the defendant no prejudice for which he cannot be compensated by an order for costs."
"I note that medical evidence was being obtained by Dr Carl Gaffney, Consultant Rheumatologist, and await this report by return now please.
If the report is still not available, please confirm when you anticipate being in a position to disclose it, and please provide us with an update as to the Claimant's recovery from his injuries.
We would also be grateful if you could detail without prejudice if necessary, what Special Damages are being claimed in respect of this claim, although we note that you have issued proceedings on this case.
What is the situation regarding your Client's employment? If still off work, when is a return to employment likely? From the enquiries we were able to undertake via our insured, it appears that your Client was earning £60 per week, and if this is indeed the case we cannot see how we are concerned with a claim where losses are likely to exceed £50,000 as per your Claim Form, but would appreciate clarification.
We look forward to hearing from you as soon as possible please."
No reply was received, and on 3rd July 2001 the insurers sent a chasing letter.
"Having protected the position for limitation purposes we are not yet in a position to serve particulars containing medical evidence and a schedule but we are working towards that end."
"… it seems to me that giving that reason was not consistent with the present requirements of being open and above board in conducting litigation. The main reason, of course, the reason behind the delay was seeking a second medical opinion. That was not communicated to the other side. In my judgment it plainly should have been. If they were seeking to instruct another doctor, consistent with the way the protocol operates (and I appreciate that the action has now started), it would seem to be the proper course would be to notify the other side, and to notify the name of the doctor and possibly as well give some explanation as to why a second doctor was being instructed, but certainly to provide the name of the doctor proposed to be instructed. That was not done."
"Our client now has legal aid to enable him to commission a full up to date medical report. Particulars of claim were not served with the claim form because of the absence of medical evidence, and we intend to ask the court to give permission for service of the particulars out of time with medical evidence to be served at a later stage when the reports become available. We confirm we have instructed Counsel to draft the particulars. Your clients have not been prejudiced in any way. There has been a provisional admission of liability subject only to proof of causation, and your clients have been well aware of the circumstances at an early stage."
"Although there is reference to a medical report and medical evidence, and the application being made for medical evidence apparently to be served even later than the particulars, there is not a breath of a hint that what is really going on is that they are not satisfied with the evidence of the doctor whom the defendants have agreed should be instructed, but are in fact instructing another doctor; indeed, the letter would tend to suggest that the delay is that they simply require a further report – an up-to-date report – presumably from Dr Gaffney, if that is the only doctor that was known about."
"According to our client's file you were proposing to instruct Dr Gaffney to prepare a medical report as long ago as January 2000. Our clients confirmed that they had no objections to you instructing that expert on 6 January 2000. Was a report obtained? If not, why not?
We note that you state that our clients have not been prejudiced in any way. Please confirm how you know that to be the case.
You will be aware that if this is a multi-track case that our clients are entitled to retract an admission of liability. In view of the close relationship between the owner of the business and the employee, that may well be the case. You should not therefore rely on the pre-proceedings admission when drafting the particulars of claim. Mr Price appears to have been in all respects a joint owner of the business and would therefore be as responsible for safety as Mrs Price.
We note that you are preparing an application for permission for service of the particulars of claim out of time. We are not prepared to deal with that permission ex parte. Please ask for a hearing date with a time estimate of at least one hour."
"We confirm a report was obtained from Dr Gaffney but our medical evidence is not yet finalised and for that reason we are still not ready to proceed. We note your observations regarding liability and the time to be allowed for a hearing of any application."
"I am afraid I have to say that that letter comes as close to a blatant lie as one would ever fear to see in litigation correspondence."
(i) That the claimant was saying that he had sustained a chronic and disabling back problem as a result of the accident;
(ii) That he had obtained a report from Dr Hazleman in addition to Dr Gaffney;
(iii) That Dr Hazleman supported the claimant's claim;
(iv) That the claimant was maintaining that but for the accident he would have returned to the kind of management consultancy work he was doing up to 1994 (when he had moved to Cromer with his wife at the age of 40) and would probably have earned at a gross rate of £60,000 a year (instead of £60 a week) for the rest of his working life.
"Before the court can interfere it must be shown that the judge has either erred in principle in his approach or has left out of account or has taken into account some feature that he should, or should not, have considered, or that his decision was wholly wrong because the court is forced to the conclusion that he has not balanced the various factors fairly in the scale."
"(h) the effect which the failure to comply has on each party; and
(i) the effect which the granting of relief would have on each party."
(b) The application for relief was not made promptly. It was made disgracefully late;
(c) The failure to serve particulars of claim within the prescribed time was intentional: it was not an inadvertent oversight;
(d) There was no good reason for the failure to serve particulars of claim within the prescribed time. The claimant's solicitor told the deputy district judge that the trouble with Dr Gaffney's report was not that it did not support a claim for damages for personal injuries but that it did not support a claim on the scale the claimant wished to present;
(e) There had been two flagrant breaches of the pre-action protocol. No particulars of the financial loss nor the claimant's injuries were notified in the letter before action, and the claimant's solicitor entirely departed from the protocol once he or his client were dissatisfied by Dr Gaffney's report;
(f) We do not know the extent to which the failure to comply was dictated to the claimant's solicitor by his client.
"43. Provided that judges make their decisions in these cases within the general framework provided by CPR 3.9 and 1.1, they are unlikely to fall foul of the ECHR in this regard. In Ashingdane v United Kingdom (1985) 7 EHRR 528 at [57], the European Court of Human Rights said:
'Certainly, the right of access to the courts is not absolute but may be subject to limitations; these are permitted by implication since the right of access 'by its very nature calls for regulation by the State, regulation which may vary in time and place according to the needs and resources of the community and of individuals'.'
44. More recently the court emphasised the need for proportionality when it said in Tinnelly & Sons Ltd v United Kingdom (1998) 27 EHRR at [72]:
'… a limitation will not be compatible with Article 6(1) if it does not pursue a legitimate aim and if there is not a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved.'"
(a) the parties are on an equal footing;
(b) unnecessary expense is avoided;
(c) a case is handled in a way that is proportionate to the matters listed;
(d) a case is dealt with expeditiously and fairly;
(e) an appropriate share of the court's resources is allocated to it.
"86. It is also quite clear that it would not be possible or fair to conduct a trial of the additional issues Mr Walsh's advisers sought to introduce into his case in August 1999. Their predecessors had had their opportunity to set out his case in 1993 and early 1994, and they did not take it. It would be wrong to allow them to amend their schedule of loss now to include a whole lot of new issues dating back over the previous seven years. In my judgment the defendant's insurers were entitled to say that it would be unjust to expose them now to an inquiry into the reasons why Mr Walsh was made redundant in June 1992 and to a claim that any loss of income he sustained after that time must be ascribed to the effects of his 1989 accident.
89. In deciding what order to make on the defendant's application, we now apply a new procedural code which was designed with the overriding objective of enabling us to deal with the case justly. So far as practicable, we must ensure that it is dealt with fairly.
90. It would not be fair to expose the defendant now to a claim which incorporates all the additional items the claimant sought to introduce into it for the first time in August 1999. On the other hand, since his claim, as formulated at the time the court gave directions in January 1994, could still be justly assessed today, it would not be fair to dismiss his action altogether. This would entail permitting the negligent defendant to retrieve all the money his insurers paid into court, ordering repayment of the interim payments made between 1991 and 1993, and directing the claimant to pay the defendant his costs of the entire action, as District Judge Rhodes ordered on 22nd June 1999. This type of order had to be made under the former "all or nothing" regime. It is no longer obligatory to make such an order today, if it would be unjust to do so.
91. In my judgment, it would not be just to strike out this statement of case under CPR 3.4(2) in these circumstances. By the same token, it would not be just to allow the claimant to enlarge his pleading or his schedule of special damages in any way, or to allow him to serve a witness statement or to give any evidence which goes in any way beyond what he is reported to have told his doctors and the other medical experts in the reports which culminated in Mr Shepherd's report in 1994 (if the defendant wishes to rely on that undisclosed report). He may of course rely on his pleaded case, which will sound in general damages, that by reason of his injuries he is at a disadvantage on the open labour market. The action should be allowed to proceed to trial on that basis, and subject to the condition, which will form part of the order of this court, that the judge assesses the compensation which would have been payable to Mr Walsh at a trial conducted on 15th March 1995 and that he is not entitled to any interest on those damages between that date and the date of this court's order allowing his appeal."
Order: The appeal is allowed to the following extent, namely:
- That the claimant may serve particulars of claim but only on condition:
(a) That in this action the claimant may only claim such injury as is substantiated by the medical evidence received by the claimant's solicitor from Dr Gasney prior to April 2001 and losses consequential on such injury; and(b) That the claimant files and serves the particulars of claim claiming such injury and loss together with the said medical evidence and a schedule of such loss by 22nd July 2003.- The costs order made by Judge O'Brien in the court below do stand.
- The claimant pay the defendant the costs of this appeal to be subject of detailed assessment if not agreed.
- Save that the defendant may set-off the amount of such costs against any damages or interest which the claimant may recover, the determination of the claimant's liability to pay such costs and any application by the defendants for an order for payment of such costs by the legal services commission under section 18 of the legal Aid Act 1988, alternatively under Regulation 5 of the Community Legal Services (Cost Protection) Regulations 2000 be referred to a costs judge in accordance with regulation 10 of the community legal services (Costs) regulation 2000.
- The claimant's cost of the appeal be the subject of detailed assessment in accordance with the community legal services (Costs) Regulations 2000.