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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Jenkinson v Hertfordshire County Council [2023] EWHC 872 (KB) (18 April 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/872.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 872 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
On Appeal from an Order of DJ Vernon dated 20 October 2022
(but handed down at the Royal Courts of Justice, Rolls Building, London) |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ALUN JENKINSON |
Claimant (Respondent) |
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- and - |
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HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL |
Defendant (Appellant) |
____________________
Geoffrey Brown (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 31 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Andrew Baker:
Introduction
The Decision
"3A. Furthermore, the Defendant denies that it can properly [be] held responsible for injury loss and damage arising from negligent treatment of the Claimant's original injury, by way of the surgical operation undertaken to reduce and fix the fracture dislocation of his ankle on 22 December 2017 … at the East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust Lister Hospital. Such treatment was negligent in that:(i) The Claimant's ankle was not stabilised in the correct position;(ii) The surgical fixation was inadequate in regard to reduction of the fracture fragments, lack of removal of the interposed die punch fragment in the tibia and metal work used to hold the fracture;(iii) Non-removal of the die punch fragment precluded reduction of the posterior malleolar fragment and potentially the medial malleolar fragment;(iv) The metal work used in the fixation was inadequate;(v) The three-hole plate in the fibula fracture did not have adequate hold;(vi) There was no lagging of the fibula fracture;(vii) Use of a straight four hole locking plate with lateral placement for fixation of the posterior malleolus did not afford the posterior malleolar fragment a significant buttress effect across its entirety, such that the reduction was not as good as it should have been and was likely [sic., unlikely] to be maintained;(viii) Use of a single posterior to anterior screw in the posterior malleolar fragment will have been insufficient to hold that fracture reduced and was a sub-optimal choice of hardware, even in combination with the plate;(ix) The plate for the medial malleolar fixation was tenuous on account of its having been positioned too superiorly and the limited number of screws used and(x) The fixation was inadequate, such that it failed within a few days.It was as a result of such negligence that the Claimant had to undergo a further 6 operations and has significant problems with working and hobbies, significant pain and dysfunction. But for the negligent treatment, such would not have befallen him. Accordingly, responsibility for the above rests not with the Defendant but with the NHS Trust. Further or alternatively, any chain of causation between the accident and the above has been broken by negligent treatment, which constitutes a novus actus interveniens."
"a) Assessing loss in cases of tort involves consideration of both factual causation and legal causation. An assessment of legal causation requires the court to consider the extent of the loss for which the defendant ought to be responsible;b) Every tortfeasor should compensate the injured claimant in respect of that loss and damage for which he should justly be held responsible;
c) There is no rule of law that later negligence always extinguishes the causative potency of an earlier tort; and
d) In cases where alleged negligent medical treatment is given to address injuries sustained as a result of an earlier tort, only medical treatment so grossly negligent as to be a completely inappropriate response to the injury inflicted by the defendant should operate to break the chain of causation."
"45. In addition, I should also say that there are a number of reasons why permission to amend should not be granted in this case which would have been relevant to the exercise of the Court's discretion.46. First, I agree with and accept the significance of the issues identified by Mr Ley in paragraphs 10 a. to c. of his written submissions. They are all matters which show that prejudice would be suffered by the Claimant in the event that permission for the amendment was granted. By contrast, I consider that there is little (if any) prejudice to the Defendant in my refusing permission. In light of my conclusion above on the prospects of success of the issue raised by the proposed amendment, there is no prejudice caused to the Defendant by way of possibly being found liable for losses which should not be attributed to the Defendant. That is a point reinforced by the fact that it is still open to the Defendant to issue proceedings for an indemnity or a contribution from the alleged negligent treatment provider.
47. Second, to grant permission for the amendment is very likely to cause real disruption to the litigation generally and is likely to lead to the loss of the trial which has already been listed. It is also a course of action which would necessitate extensive further case management and further costs management, including budgeting for an additional party."
(i) "a. If the Defendant pleads a defence of novus actus whatever the merits of that defence, Mr. Jenkinson will need to be advised that the only completely safe course is to apply to join the Hospital as a second Defendant, so that if the defence succeeds, he is able to recover compensation from the Hospital;"
That is not prejudice, it is merely the consequence of a properly arguable possibility (if it exists) that the Hospital was responsible, and the defendant was not, for a major part of the loss and damage that the claimant wants to claim. In any event, it would have been the situation faced by the claimant if the proposed amendment had appeared in the original Defence at the end of November 2021
(ii) "b. a direct claim against the Hospital is now statute-barred (the operation took place on 22/12/17 and the 3-year limitation period expired in December 2020); Mr. Jenkinson would doubtless face a limitation defence and be forced to rely on s.33 of the Limitation Act, and to have a split trial on this issue against the Hospital;"
There was no explanation, or evidence, before the District Judge as to why 22 December 2017 (the date of the initial surgery) might be the 'date of knowledge' under s.14 of the Limitation Act 1980 for any claim by the claimant against the NHS Trust. There was and is no basis for any suggestion, nor was the suggestion made, that if such a claim was time barred, it was not already time barred when the claimant commenced proceedings. In any event, a time bar difficulty, if there is one, over suing the NHS Trust, was not arguably created by the failure of the proposed causation defence and associated allegation of negligence against the NHS Trust to appear in the original Defence at the end of November 2021. Mr Ley rightly conceded as much in the oral argument before me, accepting, on reflection, that he could not rely on any time bar issue as relevant prejudice.
(iii) "c. if successful in being able to proceed against the Hospital, it would be necessary for Mr. Jenkinson to embark (unwillingly) on a clinical negligence claim against the Hospital, obtaining orthopaedic evidence either to confirm the allegations of negligence made by Mr. Machin or to rebut them; the costs of such further medical evidence would (at least initially) be borne by Mr. Jenkinson."
Like the first point, this is not prejudice at all, let alone prejudice caused by the causation plea not appearing in the original Defence, it is merely the consequence of a properly arguable defence that the NHS Trust and not the defendant has liability for much of the loss and damage the claimant seeks to claim.
The Specific Rule
"52. … The question here is whether, when an employee is injured in the service, and by the negligence, of her employer, his liability to her is terminated by the intervening negligence of a doctor brought in to treat the original injury, but who in fact made it worse.53. Unsurprisingly, there is no general rule on the question. As Laws L.J. said in Rahman v Arearose Limited [2001] [QB] 351 at 366G:
"… it does not seem to me to be established as a rule of law that later negligence always extinguishes the causative potency of an earlier tort. Nor should it be. The law is that every tortfeasor should compensate the injured claimant in respect of that loss and damage for which he should justly be held responsible."54. The same question was considered in the High Court of Australia in Mahoney v Kruschick (Demolitions) Pty Ltd (1985) 156 C.L.R. 522 …
55. Finally, we agree with the editors of Clerk & Lindsell on Torts, when they say:
"Moreover, it is submitted that only medical treatment so grossly negligent as to be a completely inappropriate response to the injury inflicted by the defendant should operate to break the chain of causation" (18th ed., 2-55)."56. We are of clear opinion that [here] the chain of causation was not broken. We have in mind that:
(a) the original wrong-doing remained a causative force, as it had increased the vulnerability of the claimant and reduced the mobility of the claimant over and above the effect of the amputation;(b) the medical intervention was plainly foreseeable, and it was also foreseeable that the claimant's pre-existing vulnerability would impose its own risks;(c) given the doctor's conduct was negligent, but was not grossly negligent, and given the findings expressed at (a) and (b) it would not be just and equitable, nor in keeping with the philosophy of the 1978 Act for the wrongdoer to be given, in these circumstances, a shield against (i) being liable to the claimant for any part of the amputation damages; and (ii) being liable to make such contribution to the Trust's amputation damages as was just and equitable.57. In short, the negligence in advising amputation did not eclipse the original wrong-doing. The Bank remained responsible for their share of the amputation damages. The negligence of [the consultant] was not an intervening act breaking the chain of causation."
"The fact that treatment was performed inadequately (including negligently) is not sufficient … and where the choice of treatment and the approach to treatment are not criticised and the focus of criticism is the quality of the surgery performed, its outcome and consequences, I am not persuaded that there is a real prospect of the Defendant showing that the treatment was grossly negligent."
Conclusion