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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 >> Campbell v Thomas Cook Tour Operations Ltd (Rev 1) [2014] EWCA Civ 1668 (30 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1668.html Cite as: [2015] 2 CMLR 11, [2015] 1 WLR 2007, [2014] WLR(D) 454, [2015] 1 Lloyd's Rep 353, [2015] WLR 2007, [2014] EWCA Civ 1668 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT
SITTING AT SHEFFIELD
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROBINSON)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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JANICE CAMPBELL | Claimant/Respondent | |
v | ||
THOMAS COOK TOUR OPERATIONS LIMITED | Defendant/Appellant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr M Chapman (instructed by Thomas Cook Legal Department) appeared on behalf of the Appellant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE VOS:
Introduction
"Section 29 [of the 2010 Act] does not apply to anything governed by [the Regulation]."
It is hard to imagine a simpler provision, yet the meaning of the words "anything" and "governed by" have given rise to real controversy.
The relevant provisions of the Regulation
"(3)This Regulation should not affect other rights of passengers established by Community legislation and notably Council Directive 90/314/EEC of 13 June 1990 on package travel, package holidays and package tours and Regulation (EC) No 261/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 February 2004 establishing common rules on compensation and assistance to air passengers in the event of denied boarding and of cancellation or long delay of flights. Where the same event would give rise to the same right of reimbursement or rebooking under either of those legislative acts as well as under this Regulation, the person so entitled should be allowed to exercise that right once only, at his or her discretion.
(5) Assistance given at airports situated in the territory of a Member State to which the Treaty applies should, among other things, enable disabled persons... to proceed from a designated point of arrival at an airport to an aircraft... including embarking... The assistance should be organised so as to avoid interruption and delay, while ensuring high and equivalent standards throughout the Community and making best use of resources, whatever airport or air carrier is involved...
(17)Complaints concerning assistance given at an airport should be addressed to the body or bodies designated for the enforcement of this Regulation by the Member State where the airport is situated. Complaints concerning assistance given by an air carrier should be addressed to the body or bodies designated for the enforcement of this Regulation by the Member State which has issued the operating licence to the air carrier...
(19)Since the objectives of this Regulation, namely to ensure high and equivalent levels of protection and assistance throughout the Member States and to ensure that economic agents operate under harmonised conditions in a single market, cannot sufficiently be achieved by the Member States and can therefore, by reason of the scale or effects of the action, be better achieved at Community level, the Community may adopt measures, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity as set out in Article 5 of the Treaty. In accordance with the principle of proportionality as set out in that Article, this Regulation does not go beyond what is necessary in order to achieve those objectives."
"Article 1
Purpose and scope
1. This Regulation establishes rules for the protection of and provision of assistance to disabled persons and persons with reduced mobility travelling by air, both to protect them against discrimination and to ensure that they receive assistance.
2. The provisions of this Regulation shall apply to disabled persons and persons with reduced mobility, using or intending to use commercial passenger air services on departure from, on transit through, or on arrival at an airport, when the airport is situated in the territory of a Member State to which the Treaty applies.
3. Articles 3, 4 and 10 shall also apply to passengers departing from an airport situated in a third country to an airport situated in the territory of a Member State to which the Treaty applies, if the operating carrier is a Community air carrier...
Article 3
Prevention of refusal of carriage
An air carrier or its agent or a tour operator shall not refuse, on the grounds of disability or of reduced mobility:
(a) to accept a reservation for a flight departing from or arriving at an airport to which this Regulation applies;
(b) to embark a disabled person or a person with reduced mobility at such an airport, provided that the person concerned has a valid ticket and reservation.
Article 4
Derogations, special conditions and information.
1. Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 3, an air carrier or its agent or a tour operator may refuse, on the grounds of disability [in certain specified circumstances relating to safety and airport size]...
In the event of refusal to accept a reservation on the grounds referred to under points (a) or (b) of the first subparagraph, the air carrier, its agent or the tour operator shall make reasonable efforts to propose an acceptable alternative to the person in question...
Article 7
Right to assistance at airports
1. When a disabled person or person with reduced mobility arrives at an airport for travel by air, the managing body of the airport shall be responsible for ensuring the provision of the assistance specified in Annex I...
Article 10
Assistance by air carriers
An air carrier shall provide the assistance specified in Annex II without additional charge to a disabled person or person with reduced mobility departing from, arriving at or transiting through an airport to which this Regulation applies provided that the person in question fulfils the conditions set out in Article 7(1), (2) and (4)."
The judge's reasoning
(1) Mrs Campbell had a disability within section 6 of the 2010 Act.
(2) The third requirement to make reasonable adjustments contained in sections 29(7) and 20(5) of the 2010 Act was applicable here. That requirement was:
"a requirement where a disabled person would, but for the provision of an auxiliary aid, be put at a substantial disadvantage in relation to a relevant matter in comparison with persons who are not disabled to take such steps as it is reasonable to have to take to provide the auxiliary aid."
Section 20(11) of the 2010 Act provides that this reference to an auxiliary aid includes reference to an "auxiliary service."
(3) Thomas Cook was a "service provider" within section 29 of the 2010 Act and was under a duty not to discriminate against Mrs Campbell in the provision of the service of providing her holiday and to make reasonable adjustments in respect of her by the provision of auxiliary aids such as the provision of some form of seating or seeking to facilitate her check-in procedure or both.
(4) A clear case of discrimination was made out by Mrs Campbell since Thomas Cook's staff failed to take any of the simple steps possible to prevent or reduce her suffering by asking other passengers to allow her to move to the head of the queue, finding something for her to sit on or making arrangements for her place in the queue to be saved while she sat elsewhere in the airport.
(5) Thomas Cook was therefore liable to pay damages to Mrs Campbell in respect of that unlawful discrimination which he assessed at £7,500, unless the provisions of paragraph 33(2) excluded its application.
(6) The judge had regard to chapter 13.2 of the Code of Practice on services, public functions and associations which provided that the basic presumption under the 2010 Act is "that discrimination because of protected characteristics is unlawful unless any exception applies and any exception to the prohibition of discrimination should generally be interpreted restrictively."
(7) The scheme of the Regulation is to prohibit unlawful disability discrimination by air carriers and managing bodies of airports. In the case of airports, the Regulation applies only to those situated in Member States and for air carriers it is largely directed to obligations that can be enforced in a Member State.
(8) Article 1.2 of the Regulation only applies the Regulation to airports situated in the territory of a Member State and so did not apply to Monastir Airport in Tunisia, which is outside the EU. Article 1.2 does, however, make clear that all the provisions of the Regulation apply as soon as the Claimant arrives at an airport in a Member State regardless of where she has arrived from.
(9) Article 1.3 is an inclusive provision of limited application applying only to passengers (a) departing from an airport situated in a third country (i.e. not a Member State), (b) travelling to a Member State airport and (c) being carried by a community air carrier. It has effect in this case in relation to Monastir Airport, but only makes Articles 3, 4 and 10 of the Regulation applicable.
(10) None of Articles 3, 4 and 10 applies to the situation in this case. Articles 3 and 4 do not apply to airport services. Article 10 requires the air carrier to provide the assistance in Annex II of the Regulation which relates only to matters connected with the flight itself, but "does not cover matters concerning the provision at the airport of departure or such auxiliary aids as a chair," nor does it cover the check-in procedures at the airport.
(11) In relation to an airport in a Member State, the management of disabled persons arriving at the airport is comprehensively dealt with by the obligations imposed on the managing bodies of airports under Article 7 and Annex I.
(12) Passengers arriving at an airport such as Monastir Airport are not under the control of the air carrier rather than the tour operator during the check-in procedure since Article 10 and Annex II comprehensively define the air carrier's obligations and those provisions exclude auxiliary aids in the airport and check-in procedures. The air carrier's obligations at a third country airport are limited to those specified in Article 10 and Annex II of the Regulation so that disabled passengers are not under the control of the air carrier during the check-in procedure.
(13) Thomas Cook owed duties to the Claimant under section 29 of the 2010 Act unless those obligations were displaced by the Regulation. The 2010 Act duties were only displaced in this case if Articles 3, 4 or 10 covered the relevant section 29 obligations in relation to auxiliary aids and check-in procedures at Monastir Airport which they did not.
Thomas Cook's contentions
(1) An EC regulation by its very nature overrides all national laws with the subject matter since it is "of general application... binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States." (See Article 249 of the Treaty establishing the European Community). National legislation must, therefore, be interpreted so as to be consistent with the regulation.
(2) Since the Regulation deals comprehensively with subject matter of Mrs Campbell's complaint of unlawful discrimination, it excludes any remedy under the 2010 Act. (See Sidhu v British Airways [1997] AC 430 per Lord Hope of Craighead at page 453).
(3) The rights of disabled passengers under the Regulation when departing from third country airports are necessarily more limited than they are at a Member State airport reflecting obvious jurisdictional and enforcement limitations.
(4) If the 2010 Act could be used to supplement Mrs Campbell's rights, the efficacy of EU law would be lost.
(5) The proper construction of paragraph 33(2) of the 2010 Act reinforces the above conclusions since the word "anything" refers to "any purported unlawful discrimination" and the words "governed by [the Regulation]" must be construed so as to exclude any circumstances covered by the Regulation such as the events in this case.
The meaning of the Regulation and paragraph 33(2)
Lord Hope said this at page 447G:
"To permit exceptions, whereby a passenger could sue outwith the Convention for losses sustained in the course of international carriage by air, would distort the whole system, even in cases for which the Convention did not create any liability on the part of the carrier. Thus the purpose is to ensure that, in all questions relating to the carrier's liability, it is the provisions of the Convention which apply and that the passenger does not have access to any other remedies, whether under the common law or otherwise, which may be available within the particular country where he chooses to raise his action."
Lord Hope continued as follows at pages 453C to G:
"I believe that the answer to the question raised in the present case is to be found in the objects and structure of the Convention. The language used and the subject matter with which it deals demonstrate that what was sought to be achieved was a uniform international code, which could be applied by the courts of all the High Contracting Parties without reference to the rules of their own domestic law. The Convention does not purport to deal with all matters relating to contracts of international carriage by air. But in those areas with which it deals - and the liability of the carrier is one of them - the code is intended to be uniform and to be exclusive also of any resort to the rules of domestic law.
An answer to the question which leaves claimants without a remedy is not at first sight attractive. It is tempting to give way to the argument that where there is a wrong there must be a remedy. That indeed is the foundation upon which much of our own common law has been built up...
Alongside these principles, however, there lies another great principle, which is that of freedom of contract. Any person is free, unless restrained by statute, to enter into a contract with another on the basis that his liability in damages is excluded or limited if he is in breach of contract... [The Warsaw Convention] was not designed to provide remedies against the carrier to enable all losses to be compensated. It was designed instead to define those situations in which compensation was to be available. So it set out the limits of liability and the conditions under which claims to establish that liability, if disputed, were to be made. A balance was struck, in the interests of certainty and uniformity."
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE:
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE: