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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 >> Manley v Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis [2006] EWCA Civ 879 (28 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/879.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 879 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Central London Civil Justice Centre
His Honour Judge Crawford Lindsay QC
4CL08359
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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Manley |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis |
Respondent |
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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)
Mark Ley-Morgan (instructed by Metropolitan Police Solicitors Dept) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
Introduction
The issue in broad terms
The facts
The judge's directions and the law
"It is when the jury have to consider whether there should be an award of aggravated damages as additional compensation that the award in this class of case is more analogous to that in defamation proceedings. As the Law Commission point out in their admirable consultative paper Aggravated, Exemplary and Restitutionary Damages (Consultation Paper No 132 (1993) para 2.17ff there can be a penal element in the award of aggravated damages. However, they are primarily to be awarded to compensate the claimant for injury to his proper pride and dignity and the consequences of his being humiliated. This injury is made worse for the claimant because it is more difficult to excuse when the malicious motives, spite or arrogance are on the part of the police (see Rookes v Barnard [1964] 1 All ER 367 at 407ff, [1964] AC 1129 at 1221ff per Lord Devlin)."
"It is when the jury make an award of exemplary damages that the similarity of this class of action with defamation is closest. However, a factor justifying the award of exemplary damages, which in defamation actions makes consistency in the proper amount to award less likely, is that often the award is to prevent a newspaper profiting from the libel by increasing its circulation. This element of profiting from your tort is almost invariably absent from this class of action. In addition, as the defendant is usually a chief officer of police, the personality of the defendant will not usually be significant in determining what the appropriate level of punitive damages should be. While the conduct calling for the award of exemplary damages may differ it is to be hoped that it will be rare indeed for the most senior officers in the force to be in any way implicated.
The fact that the defendant is a chief officer of police also means that here exemplary damages should have a lesser role to play. Even if the use of civil proceedings to punish a defendant can in some circumstances be justified it is more difficult to justify the award where the defendant and the person responsible for meeting any award is not the wrong doer, but his 'employer'. While it is possible that a chief constable could bear a responsibility for what has happened, due to his failure to exercise proper control, the instances when this is alleged to have occurred should not be frequent. There is also a greater problem of awarding exemplary as well as aggravated damages in the class of action under consideration because the very circumstances which will justify the award of aggravated damages are probably the same as those which make it possible to award exemplary damages. This accentuates the risk of a double counting. At least in defamation proceedings there is the additional factor of the defendant profiting from the libel which provides the independent justification for the award of exemplary damages."
"(4) In a straightforward case of wrongful arrest and imprisonment or malicious prosecution the jury should be informed of the approximate figure to be taken as the correct starting point for basic damages for the actual loss of liberty or for the wrongful prosecution, and also given an approximate ceiling figure. It should be explained that these are no more than guideline figures based on the judge's experience and on the awards in other cases and the actual figure is one on which they must decide.
(5) In a straightforward case of wrongful arrest and imprisonment the starting point is likely to be about £500 for the first hour during which the claimant has been deprived of his or her liberty. After the first hour an additional sum is to be awarded, but that sum should be on a reducing scale so as to keep the damages proportionate with those payable in personal injury cases and because the claimant is entitled to have a higher rate of compensation for the initial shock of being arrested. As a guideline we consider, for example, that a claimant who has been wrongly kept in custody for 24 hours should for this alone normally be regarded as entitled to an award of about £3,000. For subsequent days the daily rate will be on a progressively reducing scale. (These figures are lower than those mentioned by the Court of Appeal of Northern Ireland in Oscar v Chief Constable of the Royal Ulster Constabulary [1992] NI 290 where a figure of about £600 per hour was thought to be appropriate for the first 12 hours. That case, however, only involved unlawful detention for two periods of 30 minutes in respect of which the Court of Appeal of Northern Ireland awarded £300 for the first period and £200 for the second period. On the other hand the approach is substantially more generous than that adopted by this court in the unusual case of Cumber v Chief Constable of Hampshire Constabulary (1995) Times, 28 January, in which this court awarded £350 global damages where the jury had awarded no compensatory damages and £50 exemplary damages.)
(6) In the case of malicious prosecution the figure should start at about £2,000 and for prosecution continuing for as long as two years, the case being taken to the Crown Court, an award of about £10,000 could be appropriate. If a malicious prosecution results in a conviction which is only set aside on an appeal this will justify a larger award to reflect the longer period during which the claimant has been in peril and has been caused distress.
(7) The figures which we have identified so far are provided to assist the judge in determining the bracket within which the jury should be invited to place their award. We appreciate, however, that circumstances can vary dramatically from case to case and that these and the subsequent figures which we provide are not intended to be applied in a mechanistic manner.
(8) If the case is one in which aggravated damages are claimed and could be appropriately awarded, the nature of aggravated damages should be explained to the jury. Such damages can be awarded where there are aggravating features about the case which would result in the claimant not receiving sufficient compensation for the injury suffered if the award were restricted to a basic award. Aggravating features can include humiliating circumstances at the time of arrest or any conduct of those responsible for the arrest or the prosecution which shows that they had behaved in a high-handed, insulting, malicious or oppressive manner either in relation to the arrest or imprisonment or in conducting the prosecution. Aggravating features can also include the way the litigation and trial are conducted. (The aggravating features listed take account of the passages in the speech of Lord Reid in Broome's case [1972] 1 All ER 801 at 836, [1972] AC 1027 at 1085 and Pearson LJ in McCarey v Associated Newspapers Ltd (No 2) [1964] 3 All ER 947 at 957, [1965] 2 QB 86 at 104-105)."
"3.30 All in all this appellant received £1,400 damages. If he had been differently arrested and differently charged, the likelihood is that he would have been convicted, he would have been at risk of losing his liberty and he would have had no claim whatsoever. I find it impossible to say that either the award under this head of damage or the totality of the award are far too low. It seems to me that the jury rightly took the view that Lord Woolf's bracket was not meant to include those who set dogs on policemen, generally abuse the police, and tell the jury lies to profit from conduct which. differently charged, was criminal. In my judgment this Court should not interfere with the jury's award."
"Compensation for malicious prosecution has three aspects. First, there is the damage to a person's reputation. The extent of that damage will depend upon the claimant's actual reputation and upon the gravity of the offence for which he has been maliciously prosecuted. The second aspect is the damage suffered by being put in danger of losing one's liberty or of losing property. Compensation is recoverable in respect of the risk of conviction. McGregor on Damages 16th Edition paragraph 1862 considers that an award under this head is basically for injury to feelings, unless there has been a conviction followed by imprisonment. The third aspect is pecuniary loss caused by the cost of defending the charge. There was no evidence of pecuniary loss in this case."
"With regard to the first head of compensation for malicious prosecution the jury were not dealing with a man of wholly good character. At the time of these awards the appellant was not a man of good character. He had been cautioned in December 1992 for theft. He had a conviction at the Teesside Magistrates' Court on the 19th November 1993 for being drunk and disorderly. He was also convicted by that court on the 15th December 1993 of stealing two packets of razor blades. Finally on the 22nd August 1995 he had been convicted by the Magistrates of threatening words and behaviour. In respect of all three of those offences he was fined. He had a further caution for being in possession of a small piece of cannabis on the occasion that he was arrested for stealing the razor blades.
The jury may also have reached the conclusion that the appellant was not a person who would be as concerned about facing a prosecution as others might be. Had the appellant been a person of good character with normal sensitivities an appropriate award of damages, taking the figure of £2,000 as a starting point and then making allowance for the facts that the appellant had to appear before the magistrates on no fewer than six occasions and that the prosecution endured over a period of 11½ months, would, in my judgment, have been a figure in the region of twice or 2½ times the sum suggested as the starting figure, namely £4,000 to £5,000. The sum actually awarded by the jury was an eighth or a tenth of these figures. Even making allowances for the appellant's cautions and convictions and for the fact that the appellant may well have presented as someone who would not be as concerned when faced by prosecution for an offence under s.4 of the Public Order Act as others might be, I still view the award in this case of £500 as being inadequate, in the sense that it is substantially below what a reasonable jury could have thought necessary to compensate the appellant. In my judgment the size of the award indicates that the jury probably took no account of the need to increase the starting figure of £2,000 because the malicious prosecution lasted nearly a year, before discounting that figure to take account of the two factors of the appellant's character and his convictions."
"The position here is this, ladies and gentlemen. It is for you to assess the figure. These are only brackets. We did not just pick the brackets out of the air. The brackets are based on a Court of Appeal case which we, as Judges, obviously have to follow in advising you as to the brackets. It is possible, of course, for you to exceed the brackets, but I would invite you, because it is only essentially right that there should be some sort of consistency, unless you are persuaded otherwise you should work within these brackets, but it is a matter for you.
In that event, if you work within the brackets, the brackets set out the figures there that have been discussed. The bracket for the assault is between £1,000 and £2,000. The most serious aspect of this case is the false imprisonment. The bracket there is between £7,500 and £12,500. For the malicious prosecution the bracket is £4,000 to £5,000. So it is up to you, ladies and gentlemen, but that is how I invite you to approach what we call the 'basic damages'."
Lord Justice Moses : I agree.
Lord Justice Richards: I also agree.