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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 >> Webster & Ors v Mark Liddington & Ors [2014] EWCA Civ 560 (07 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/560.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 560 |
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ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PLATTS
1IQ28336
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
KATHLEEN PATRICIA WEBSTER AND OTHERS |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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MARK LIDDINGTON AND OTHERS |
Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
Mr Nicholas Braslavsky QC and Mr Andrew Grantham (instructed by TJL Solicitors LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: Wednesday 9th April 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jackson:
Part 1. Introduction | (paragraphs 2 to 7) |
Part 2. The facts | (paragraphs 8 to 15) |
Part 3. The present proceedings | (paragraphs 16 to 26) |
Part 4. The appeal to the Court of Appeal | (paragraphs 27 to 31) |
Part 5. Are the appellant clinicians responsible for the contents of the brochures? | (paragraphs 32 to 56) |
Part 6. Were the identified sentences in the brochures misrepresentations? | (paragraphs 57 to 65) |
Part 7. Executive summary and conclusion | (paragraphs 66 to 69) |
i) The clinician would remove a small skin sample from behind the patient's ear under local anaesthetic. The clinician sent this to IEL's laboratory in a sterile container.ii) IEL's technicians cultivated fibroblasts from the skin, using a proprietary Isolagen process. As part of the process the fibroblasts were cultured in FCS.
iii) Once the Isolagen fibroblasts had been developed they were, so far as possible, washed clean of FCS. They were then placed in a suitable medium to create injectate. IEL sent the injectate back to the clinician.
iv) The clinician injected the injectate into the patient in a series of three fortnightly sessions.
Document 2 said that the injectate was:
"a solution using only your own cells."
Document 3 used the same phrase. Document 4 said:
"The patient's immune system recognises the injection of cells as the patient's own and does not reabsorb them or reject them as it does with other foreign materials such as Botox, collagen or hyaluronic acid."
The HMC brochure contained a similar sentence to that quoted from document 4. The WACC brochure said:
"Unlike other collagen development companies Isolagen uses only the patient's unique live cells to produce the patient's own collagen."
i) Do the sentences identified in the schedule served by the claimants' solicitors on 20th January 2012, as a matter of law, constitute representations?ii) If so, were those representations of fact or opinion?
iii) If those were of representations as a matter of law, and were of fact, were they accurate?
i) The defendants are responsible for the statements contained in the brochures which they handed over.ii) The defendants intended the claimants to rely upon those statements and the claimants did reasonably rely upon them.
iii) The brochures all asserted that only the patient's own cells would be injected into the patient. Those assertions were incorrect because the injectate was contaminated, or potentially contaminated, with FCS.
iv) All of the identified sentences in the six brochures constituted misrepresentations except for one of the sentences in document 4 and two of the sentences in the WACC brochure.
i) The judge erred in holding that the defendants were responsible for the accuracy of the contents of the brochures.ii) The judge erred in holding that FCS was bonded with or internalised in the patient's cells.
iii) The identified sentences in the brochures were not misrepresentations because they were substantially or materially accurate.
"On this issue I have no hesitation in accepting the claimants' argument. As the claimants submitted there is a clear imbalance between the expertise and knowledge of the patient on the one hand and the clinic or clinician on the other. The patient relies on the professional, not only to carry out the procedure, but for basic advice about it. In my judgment it was wholly reasonable for a patient to assume that the clinician who was offering the Isolagen procedure knew what it involved. The defendants were all seeking to benefit from Isolagen's literature and were distributing it in order to assist the patient to decide whether or not to pay to have it done. In distributing it for that purpose in my judgment the defendants must be responsible for its content."
1) It was not aware of any facts which showed that the statements about Finelist's financial performance made in the SIM were or might be incorrect in any material way; and/or2) It was not made aware of any facts which showed that the facts stated in the Arthur Andersen reports were or might be incorrect in any material way, and/or which showed that the opinions expressed in those reports were not or might not be reasonable; and/or
3) So far as it was aware, Arthur Andersen considered that the facts stated in those reports were correct and that the opinions stated in them were reasonable.
"In determining whether there has been an express representation, and to what effect, the court has to consider what a reasonable person would have understood from the words used in the context in which they were used. In determining what, if any, implied representation has been made, the court has to perform a similar task, except that it has to consider what a reasonable person would have inferred was being implicitly represented by the representor's words and conduct in their context."
"By supplying the report to interested persons I consider that Henry Boot implicitly represented that this was a report on which they themselves were relying; and that they believed that it was a competent and independent report that had been prepared by an expert. I accept also that Henry Boot implicitly represented that it honestly believed the predictions or estimates contained in the report as predictions or estimates."
i) X may warrant to Z that the information is correct. X may thereby assume contractual liability to Z for the accuracy of the information. That liability may exist under the main contract or a collateral contract.ii) X may adopt the information as his own, thereby taking on such responsibility as he would have if he were the maker of the statement.
iii) X may represent that he believes, on reasonable grounds, the information supplied by Y to be correct. That involves a lesser degree of responsibility than scenario (ii).
iv) X may simply pass on the information to Z as material coming from Y, about which X has no knowledge or belief. X then has no responsibility for the accuracy of the information beyond the ordinary duties of honesty and good faith.
"What, however, is the test of truth or falsity, and how difficult is it to rebut the inference of inducement? Is a representation true if in substance it is true, even if to some extent, let us assume some real and more than trivial extent, it is false? Moreover, where the transaction is complex and the representations are manifold, much may depend on how they are categorised. If the representations are chopped into small slices, and the microscope is turned up to investigate each slice, it may be easier to establish the inaccuracy of a representation than if the matter is looked at more broadly. On the other hand it may be that the smaller the slice, even on the assumption of materiality, the weaker is the inference of inducement. So these questions are interlinked."
"Thus a representation may be true without being entirely correct, provided it is substantially correct and the difference between what is represented and what is actually correct would not have been likely to induce a reasonable person in the position of the claimants to enter into the contracts."
Lord Justice Briggs:
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke: