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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 >> Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority v First Tier Tribunal (Social Entitlement Chamber) (Criminal Injuries Compensation) & Anor [2017] EWCA Civ 139 (14 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/139.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 187, [2017] PIQR P13, [2017] EWCA Civ 139, [2017] 4 WLR 60 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER)
JR/2930/2014
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR BRIAN LEVESON)
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
____________________
CRIMINAL INJURIES COMPENSATION AUTHORITY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FIRST TIER TRIBUNAL (SOCIAL ENTITLEMENT CHAMBER) (CRIMINAL INJURIES COMPENSATION) -and- Y (by his Mother and Litigation Friend) |
Respondent Interested Party |
____________________
Malcolm Johnson (of BL Claims, London) for the Interested Party
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing date : 15 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Brian Leveson P :
The 2008 Scheme
"For the purposes of this Scheme, personal injury includes physical injury (including fatal injury), mental injury (that is temporary mental anxiety … or a disabling mental illness…) and disease (that is a medically recognised illness or condition). Mental injury or disease may either result directly from the physical injury or from a sexual offence or may occur without any physical injury. Compensation will not be payable for mental injury or disease without physical injury, or in respect of a sexual offence, unless the applicant:
(a) was put in reasonable fear of immediate physical harm to his or her own person; or
(b) had a close relationship of love and affection with another person at the time when that person sustained physical and/or mental injury … and
(i) that relationship still subsists (unless the victim has since died) and
(ii) the applicant either witnessed and was present on the occasion when the other person sustained the injury or was closely involved in its aftermath; or
(c) in a claim arising out of a sexual offence, was the non-consenting victim of that offence (which does not include a victim who consented in fact but was deemed in law not to have consented)."
The Approach of the Tribunals
"It appears to me that the concept of injury, in the context of a situation in which compensation for it must be assessed, presupposes a pre-injury state which is capable of assessment and comparison with the post-injury state. It is obvious from the circumstances of this case that the child concerned never had, nor could have, any existence save in a defective state. Accordingly, in my opinion, it is inevitable that her plight, grievous though it may be, cannot be seen as 'personal injury', within the meaning of para. 5 of the revised 1969 Scheme."
"(a) That argument would require a submission that [Y] has a claim for 'wrongful life'. The fact of his being born at all would be his actionable injury.
(b) The common law does not recognise a claim for 'wrongful life' by a child whether injured or uninjured: [McKay v Essex Health Authority [1982] QB 1166] has been unchallenged authority for that proposition for over 30 years.
(c) Although the Scheme is a free-standing scheme the terms of which are to be applied to the evidence presented, it is not to be interpreted in a vacuum; regard can and should be had to the relevant common law where appropriate ([Rust-Andrews v. FTT (Social Entitlement Chamber and another) [2012] PIQR P7; [2011] EWCA Civ 1548 at para. 34]). …
(d) At common law [Y] would have no claim (although his mother would have a claim for certain additional costs of bringing up a disabled child).
(e) It would be impossible to quantify [Y's] claim. How does one define his 'injury', if his uninjured state is to be defined as not being conceived or born at all? Where does his condition fall in the tariff of awards? What is the benchmark against which loss of earnings and loss of earning capacity are to be assessed?
(f) It is implausible that the Scheme would have provided far greater recovery (out of public funds) than that available under the common law (the cost of being looked after without any discount for the cost of raising a child without his genetic disorder) at the very least without a specific provision to that effect.
(g) The only possible comparator which could lead to a meaningful quantification of compensation for 'special expenses' under para. 35 is a child born without the genetic disorder from which [Y] suffers. But [Y] could never be that child: from the moment of conception his genetic disorder and consequent disability were pre-determined – not because every fruit of conception between those parents was bound to suffer that disorder but because [Y] was so bound and was in fact born with that disorder."
"That might have been appropriate under the 1969 Scheme, which explicitly provided that compensation was to be assessed on the basis of common law damages. In contrast the 2008 Scheme has a self-contained set of provisions for assessing the amount of compensation…"
"The crime of violence was an incestuous rape which led both to the birth of the claimant in his condition (sic). The issue is whether his condition can be regarded as a personal injury. On this issue I find the reliance on Millar unconvincing. … The scheme is intended to be a practical self-contained workable pragmatic scheme to compensate victims of crimes of violence. Subject to specific decisions of the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court/House of Lords, it is inappropriate to consider its provisions in the context of deep philosophical discussions about the nature of life and existence. …
The 2008 Scheme provides that compensation be payable to 'an applicant'. Clearly, at the time of the claim, the applicant is a person. There is no provision in the scheme that the applicant must have been 'a person' at the time that the crime of violence was committed. In everyday terms and in common parlance it seems to me that he has suffered injuries. Those injuries have been sustained in and are directly attributable to a crime of violence."
The Appeal
"But how can a court begin to evaluate non-existence, 'the undiscovered country from whose bourn no traveller returns'? No comparison is possible and therefore no damage can be established which a court could recognise."
"This entails the court deciding what would be a reasonable and literate man's understanding of the circumstances in which he could under the scheme be paid compensation for personal injury caused by a crime of violence."
This phrase, Mr Johnson argued, echoed the observations in the UT referring to what would be understood "in everyday terms and in common parlance".
Discussion
Lord Justice McFarlane :
Lord Justice Henderson :