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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 >> Peters v East Midlands Strategic Health Authority & Ors [2009] EWCA Civ 145 (03 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/145.html Cite as: [2010] QB 48, (2009) 12 CCL Rep 299, [2009] EWCA Civ 145, [2009] LS Law Medical 229, [2009] 3 WLR 737, [2009] PIQR Q1 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Butterfield J.
90P02879
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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Chantelle Peters (By her Litigation Friend Susan Mary Miles) |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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East Midlands Strategic Health Authority and Dr P Halstead -and- Nottingham City Council |
Defendants/Appellants Part 20 Defendant/ Appellant |
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Mr Edward Faulks QC and Paul Stagg (instructed by Messrs Freeth Cartwright LLP) for the Defendants/Appellants
Ms Olivia Chaffin-Laird (instructed by Nottingham City Council) for the Defendant/Appellant
Hearing dates: Tuesday 10 and Wednesday 11 February 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson: this is the judgment of the court.
Introduction
The relevant statutory provisions
"10. Any amount which would be disregarded under paragraph 12 of Schedule 10 to the Income Support Regulations (personal injury trusts).
10A. Any amount which would be disregarded under paragraph 12A of Schedule 10 to the Income Support Regulations (personal injury payments) with the exception of any payment or any part of any payment that has been specifically identified by a court to deal with the cost of providing care.
19. Any amount which would be disregarded under paragraph 44(a) or 45(a) of Schedule 10 to the Income Support Regulations (compensation for personal injuries which is administered by the Court)."
"19. Any amount which-
(a) falls within paragraph 44(2)(a), and would be disregarded under paragraph 44(1)(a) or (b), of Schedule 10 to the Income Support Regulations; or
(b) would be disregarded under paragraph 45(a) of that Schedule."
"12. Where the funds of a trust are derived from a payment made in consequence of any personal injury to the claimant, the value of the trust fund and the value of the right to receive any payment under that trust.
12A. (1) Any payment made to the claimant or the claimant's partner in consequence of any personal injury to the claimant or, as the case may be, the claimant's partner.
(2) But sub-paragraph (1)-
(a) applies only for the period of 52 weeks beginning with the day on which the claimant first receives any payment in consequence of that personal injury;
(b) does not apply to any subsequent payment made to him in consequence of that injury (whether it is made by the same person or another):
44. (1) Any sum of capital to which sub-paragraph (2) applies and-
(a) which is administered on behalf of a person by the High Court or the County Court under Rule 21.11(1) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 or by the Court of Protection;
(b) which can only be disposed of by order or direction of any such court; or
(c) where the person concerned is under the age of 18, which can only be disposed of by order or direction prior to that person attaining age 18.
(2) This sub-paragraph applies to a sum of capital which is derived from-
(a) an award of damages for a personal injury to that person; or
(b) compensation for the death of one or both parents where the person concerned is under the age of 18."
The judgment
"69. Having considered the submissions of the parties and the authorities drawn to my attention I consider that the proper approach to the assessment of damages for future care where there is a possibility that future provision will be made by the State is as follows. First, C is clearly entitled to damages to satisfy her reasonable needs for care in the future. It is for the Court to determine what is reasonable. Where a Claimant is sentient and able to express a view then the wishes of the Claimant will be very important and may even be determinative on the question of what is reasonable. However where, as here, the Claimant is incapable of expressing any wish or at least where it is not possible reliably to ascertain what her wishes are I must consider what is reasonable in terms of the competing proposals being put forward by the parties.
70. If the statutory provision meets and, on the balance of probabilities, will continue to meet, the Claimant's reasonable needs then the Claimant will not have to pay for private provision in the future and she establishes no loss under this head. Such a conclusion is so even though it might be thought that it should be the tortfeasor rather than a public body that should be required to meet the costs of future care. Further, in deciding whether statutory provision will be made in the future I am entitled to have regard to the right to enforce the statutory duties of the public authority.
71. Relying on those principles the defendants submit that if the evidence demonstrates that care which satisfies the Claimant's reasonable needs will be available free of charge in the future then she will in fact sustain no loss and cannot recover for the cost of future care. However the burden of proof is on the defendants to prove that the claimant would have access to State funded care in the future which will provide her for the rest of her life with her reasonable needs for care."
"72. In the light of my findings of fact, together with my view about the probabilities of C remaining at The Spinnies indefinitely even if funding was available, I am satisfied that the defendants fail to establish that C's reasonable needs for care in the future will be provided by the Local Authority. Whilst as the law presently stands C will have access to State-funded care in the future, that care is unlikely to provide her with the quality of care she presently enjoys for the rest of her life. The only way to ensure that she does receive such care in the future is for her to be self-funding.
73. In my judgment there is no reason in principle why she should give up that option at the behest of the tortfeasor defendants and make herself dependent on the State. She has an immediate right to full compensation from the tortfeasor. She is entitled to look to the tortfeasor for such compensation. She is not obliged to make herself dependent on State resources. On the evidence it would be folly for her to do so if the aim is to ensure, as all the experts agree is appropriate, that she stays at The Spinnies or at some comparable establishment. For the avoidance of doubt I find that it is reasonable for C to choose to be self-funding as opposed to relying to any extent on state provision for her care, and reasonable for her to make that choice immediately. No one suggests that there is any half-way house available in the circumstances of this case, whereby for example the Local Authority met part of the necessary care costs with the tortfeasors topping up any shortfall. In those circumstances and in the light of my findings of fact I conclude that the defendants are liable to pay the costs of past care, to the limited extent indicated, and the costs of future care to the claimant subject to the question of mitigation of damages and double recovery. "
"75. But the loss sustained by the claimant here is fixed and established. It is, for present purposes, the cost of her future care. She cannot avoid or reduce or mitigate any part of that loss. The question here is not one of mitigation of loss, but who should pay for it. In any event, as I have made clear, in my judgment it is entirely reasonable for the claimant not to rely on the statutory obligation of the Local Authority to provide for her where the alternative of recovery from the defendants is available to her for all the reasons articulated in this judgment. Even if matters were otherwise equal as between relying on the Local Authority and recovering from the defendants – which they are not – the claimant would be fully entitled as a matter of law to choose to pursue the tortfeasors. The argument of the defendants is simply unsustainable. The loss of the claimant remains the same whoever foots the bill. I am quite satisfied that there is here no question that the claimant will recover for avoidable loss."
"78. On the other hand, I have the evidence of Mrs Miles, which I unhesitatingly accept, that she, the Deputy in effective control of the management of C's financial affairs, is very much of the view that C's future care should be privately funded. In those circumstances I find that, providing the court orders that the tortfeasors meet the cost of future care, Mrs Miles will not require the Local Authority to provide the claimant with care under its statutory obligations in the future, at any rate in the absence of some wholly unexpected development which compels hers to abandon her stated intention to rely on private funding. I am further confident that I can rely on any future Deputy taking precisely the same view. Such successor will be appointed by the Court of Protection and will unquestionably be a person of probity and integrity entirely fitted to be trusted not to abuse their position.
79. In those circumstances no question of double recovery arises. The claimant will recover her loss from the tortfeasors instead of recovering from the Local Authority, not as well as recovering from them."
The issues
The first issue: true construction of para 44(2)(a) of schedule 10 to ISR
"38. I accept the submissions of Miss Swift and Mr Leveson in preference to those of Mr Kelly. Ultimately the second defendant's contentions depend upon the assertion that the words "an award of damages for a personal injury" in paragraph 44(a) of Schedule 10 to the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987, as amended, are necessarily confined to damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity and do not include any other head of damage. Despite Mr Kelly's persuasive advocacy, there does not appear to me to be any semantic or legal support for this assertion. If an injured claimant recovers damages for (a) the pain, suffering and loss of amenity he has endured because of his injury; (b) the earnings he has lost because his injury has prevented him from working; and (c) the costs of the care provided for him while recovering from his injury, it seems to me that (b) and (c) are just as much damages "for" the injury as (a). All three heads of damage equally flow from the injury. It may be that the pain and suffering will normally be so closely connected with the injury as to be capable of being regarded as being part of the injury itself; but the element of loss of amenity might well include matters which – in terms of cause and effect – are no different from loss of earnings (e.g. loss of the ability to pursue a pre-accident hobby). Indeed, it is interesting to note that in Moeliker v. A. Reyrolle & Co Ltd [1977] 1 W.L.R. 132, Browne L.J. said (at page 140D):
"It may well be, as suggested in argument, that damages for loss of earning capacity were in the past usually included as an unspecified part of the general damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity."
39. I cannot see any significant difference between damages "for" a personal injury and damages "in consequence of" such an injury. If one looks at another type of claim, it is customary to use the words "damages for breach of contract" to cover both immediate and consequential losses resulting from the breach. I cannot see any reason why different consequences should follow from whether a person's capital is being assessed under paragraph 12 of Schedule 10 of the 1987 Income Support Regulations or under paragraph 44(a) of the same Schedule.
40. However, what seem to me to put this point beyond doubt are the various legislative provisions cited by Miss Swift in which the words "damages for personal injuries [or a personal injury]"are used in contexts which clearly show them to be referring to heads of damage other than those for pain, suffering and loss of amenity (e.g. loss of earnings or profits, as in section 2 of the Law Reform (Personal Injuries) Act 1948)."
The second issue: is the claimant entitled as of right to choose damages rather than provision by the Council?
"Let it be conceded that if the board had recovered the £10,000 from the Ousel under its statutory power that would have been satisfaction pro tanto of the damages; still the fact is that the board has not recovered this sum, and, in our judgment, there is no duty upon it to do so. It is true that at the trial of the issue the Ousel owners declared themselves ready to pay and in fact tendered the money, which is now on deposit with stakeholders, but we cannot see that this makes any difference, for the tender has never been accepted. The passage from the judgment of Lord Goddard in Morris Ltd. v. Perrott and Boulton cited by the President shows quite clearly that even if the board had obtained judgment against the Ousel there would have been no duty upon it to proceed to execution in alleviation of the Liverpool, which is a tortfeasor. Here, in fact, no claim for payment has ever been made. The letter of January 26, 1959 (from which I have read), is merely an intimation that a claim may be made hereafter. As to the second part of the President's decision, this case, in our judgment, has nothing to do with the duty to mitigate damages. It concerns the board's legal rights, and no duty rests on it at the demand of a tortfeasor to satisfy part of the damages by resorting to another tortfeasor; still less by resorting to an innocent party made liable merely by statute.
If it were otherwise there would be no necessity for the Law Reform (Married Women) and Tortfeasors Act, 1935, and the law about contributions between tortfeasors, for any tortfeasor could oblige the creditor to sue the other debtors in order to alleviate his burden. The President in fact recognises this in his judgment in these words. "Let me say at once that this is not a question of one tortfeasor making the hopeless attempt to insist that another tortfeasor shall be sued first, or at all, as a condition of determining his own liability; or, indeed, of the tortfeasor dictating to the board whom else they shall sue, or in what order."
"In Hodgson v Trapp [1989] AC 807, 819 Lord Bridge of Harwich warned against double recovery and it was held that statutory benefits received by way of attendance and mobility allowances ought to be deducted from the sum awarded because they were available to meet the cost of care and mitigated damages recoverable in respect of the cost of that care. I agree with Miss Gumbel that the decision was intended to address that specific problem. An earlier statutory regime had been more tolerant to claimants in this respect. It is, however, conceded on behalf of the claimants in these cases that, if the compensatory principle requires only accommodation and care provided by the local authority under section 21 of the 1948 Act, damages cannot be awarded as if they were not so provided."
"Mr Hunter accepts that the tortfeasor is liable to make good losses he has caused. However, if the losses will in fact be met from a source other than the tortfeasor, the claimant has no claim to the extent that the losses are made good from that other source. Double recovery is to be prevented. Local authorities are under the statutory duty imposed by Section 21 of the 1948 Act and regulations provide that they cannot charge for facilities provided. The claimant, and those responsible for the claimant's welfare, such as a receiver, are under a duty to secure and maximise funding available from public funds. They must ensure that such benefits as are available are obtained. To the extent that needs are met by local authorities, and it is reasonable for support from the local authority to be sought, there is no loss for the tortfeasor to make good."
"40. The judge was entitled, in the circumstances, to conclude that "undue weight" should not be given to the evidence as to the claimant's wishes and to have doubts about other evidence called on her behalf as to the appropriateness of a private arrangement. He was entitled to make his own assessment. A judicial assessment of what can be claimed and required does involve an assessment of the nature and extent of the claimant's needs. The claimant's family were showing no interest in her and life at home with her family was not an option. The difference between "best interests" and "the reasonableness of the treatment chosen and claimed for" is considerably reduced. This was a case in which the judge in his analysis was entitled to treat what was in her best interests, as he assessed them, as what was the reasonable requirement in all the circumstances. The judge approached the evidence with great care. He considered the possibilities for the future. I find nothing perverse about his approach or his conclusion.
41. In general terms, the approach is to compare what a claimant can reasonably require with what a local authority, having regard to uncertainties which almost inevitably are present, are likely to provide in the discharge of their duty under Section 21. If the second falls significantly short of the first, as Owen J found in Crookdake it did, the tortfeasor must pay, subject to the argument raised in both cases that Section 21 provision augmented by contribution from the tortfeasor meets the reasonable requirements. If it is the statutory provision which meets the claimant's reasonable requirements, as assessed by the judge, the tortfeasor does not have to pay for a different regime. I accept that in making the comparison a court may have regard to the power to compel a local authority to perform its duties."
"The position in relation to care expenses is different. Although local authorities have, since 1993, been obliged to give care to those in need of such care, there is no provision, equivalent to section 2(4) of the 1948 Act, enacting that a defendant tortfeasor cannot allege that it would be unreasonable for a claimant to have incurred, or to incur in the future, the cost of care provided privately. It is, therefore, always an issue in such cases whether private expenses of care which have been incurred have been reasonably incurred and whether it would be reasonable to incur such private expenses in the future."
Double recovery
The third issue: was the judge right to find that it was reasonable for the claimant to opt for self-funding rather than provision by the Council?
The Spinnies as a suitable home for life for the claimant
"He is in the process of changing his registration to Young Person's Service, which will permit him to care for residents up to the age of 24. He considers that at that stage he will probably change his registration to Adult Services which would entitled him to provide care for residents up to the age of 65. He told me that his aim, at least at present, is to continue to provide a home for the young people now resident at The Spinnies for the rest of their lives and if necessary be would seek to alter his registration beyond the age of 65 if necessary."
Would the Council and the PCT provide the claimant with a home for life at The Spinnies or an equivalent institution?
"The Spinnies is a privately owned residential care home and there can be no guarantee it will remain on option for [the claimant] for the indefinite future. In the event she remains within the care of the Local Authority, her support package will be continually monitored, revised and assessed so as to balance the provision of appropriate care with the best financial option."
"…Everyone agrees that C should stay at The Spinnies or an equivalent establishment for life if possible. That can be achieved if she is self-funding. However, C is in a high cost placement and is a substantial drain on hard-pressed resources. Ms Harty has no choice but to seek to minimise those costs. That may mean trying to negotiate a reduction in the fees for The Spinnies with consequent compromise in the quality of care and facilities provided to C or it may mean moving her. New, cheaper, larger and untested care provision is shortly to become available. Ms Harty will have to consider that for C. She would like to be able to say that the Local Authority would not have to move her but she is quite unable to commit herself to that proposition. She has had to make hard decisions in the past and accept second best by reason of limited resources. She may have to do the same with C. C's best chance of staying at The Spinnies or an equivalent would be if she was self-funding."
Future legislative changes?
"In addition to the constraints on the Local Authority budget, if C has to rely on State provision she is, in my judgment, exposed to far greater uncertainty in terms of funding. The rules on what if any contribution C has to pay for her care are Byzantine and inconsistent. They are plainly ripe for reform. Judges have repeatedly drawn attention to the wholly unsatisfactory nature of the statutes and regulations under which the contribution to be made by someone in C's position are calculated. It is quite possible that the rules will change so that her award is brought into account in the future. She could thus lose other elements of her award intended for different purposes simply in order to fund her placement."
Postscript on the mitigation issue
The fourth issue: the multiplier
"We would accept that there may be cases where the possibility of a claimant receiving direct payments is so uncertain that they should be disregarded altogether in the assessment of damages. It will depend on the facts of the particular case. But if the court finds that a claimant will receive direct payments for at least a certain period of time and possibly for much longer, it seems to us that this finding must be taken into account in the assessment. In such a case, the correct way to reflect the uncertainties to which Tomlinson J referred is to discount the multiplier. We did not understand Mr Taylor to contend otherwise."
Overall conclusion