BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> AB & Ors v The Nugent Care Society (Formerly Catholic Social Services (Liverpool)) [2006] EWHC 2986 (QB) (23 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/2986.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2986 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
Crown Square Manchester M3 3FL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
A. B. and Others |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
The Nugent Care Society (formerly Catholic Social Services (Liverpool)) |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr. Edward Faulks QC and Mr. Nicholas Fewtrell (instructed by Hill Dickinson) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 7th November to 17th November 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Holland:
Introduction
Limitation Law
"14(1) Subject to subsection (1A) below, in sections 11 and 12 of this Act references to a person's date of knowledge are references to the date on which he first had knowledge of the following facts-
(a) that the injury in question was significant; and
(b) that the injury was attributable in whole or in part to the act or omission which is alleged to constitute negligence, nuisance or breach of duty; and
(c) the identity of the defendant, and
(d) if it is alleged that the act or omission was that of a person other than the defendant, the identity of that person and the additional facts supporting the bringing of an action against the defendant;
and knowledge that any acts or omissions did or did not, as a matter of law, involve negligence, nuisance or breach of duty is irrelevant
(2) For the purposes of this section an injury is significant if the person whose date of knowledge is in question would reasonably have considered it sufficiently serious to justify his instituting proceedings for damages against a defendant who did not dispute liability and was able to satisfy a judgment.
(3) For the purposes of this section a person's knowledge includes knowledge which he might reasonably have been expected to acquire-
(a) from facts observable or ascertainable by him, or
(b) from facts ascertainable by him with the help of medical or other appropriate expert advice which it is reasonable for him to seek;
But a person shall not be fixed under this subsection with knowledge of a fact ascertainable only with the help of expert advice so long as he has taken all reasonable steps to obtain (and where appropriate, to act on) that advice."
As for Section 33:
"33(1) if it is appears to the court that it would be equitable to allow an action to proceed having regard to the degree to which-
(a) the provisions of section 11 or 11A or 12 of this Act prejudice the plaintiff or any person whom he represents; and
(b) any decision of the court under this subsection would prejudice the defendant or any person whom he represents;
the court may direct that those provisions shall not apply to the action, or shall not apply to any specified cause of action to which the action related.
(3) In acting under this section the court shall have regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular to-
(a) the length of, and the reasons for, the delay on the part of the plaintiff;
(b) the extent to which, having regard to the delay, the evidence adduced or likely to be adduced by the plaintiff or the defendant is or is likely to be less cogent than if the action had been brought within the time allowed by section 11, by section 11A or (as the case may be) by section 12;
(c) the conduct of the defendant after the cause of action arose, including the extent (if any) to which he responded to requests reasonably made by the plaintiff for information or inspection for the purpose of ascertaining facts which were or might be relevant to the plaintiff's cause of action against the defendant;
(d) the duration of any disability of the plaintiff arising after the date of accrual of the cause of action;
(e) the extent to which the plaintiff acted promptly and reasonably once he knew whether or not the act or omission of the defendant, to which the injury was attributable, might be capable at that time of giving rise to an action for damages;
(f) the steps, if any, taken by the plaintiff to obtain medical legal or other expert advice and the nature of any such advice he may have received."
'It is appropriate to take into account:
a. Claimant's actual knowledge; and
b. Any further knowledge that he might reasonably have acquired from facts observable or ascertainable by him or from facts ascertainable by him with the help of such medical or other expert advice which it was reasonable for him to seek.'
"45. In my judgment, the presence of the word "reasonably" in section 14(2) and the presence of the word "reasonably" and "reasonable" in section 14(3) require the same approach to be adopted in both subsections. Parliament cannot have intended that a substantially objective test be applied in section 14(3), but a substantially subjective test in section 14(2). It makes no sense to say that, in deciding whether a claimant would reasonably consider an injury to be sufficiently serious to justify litigation, the court should take account of the intelligence, personal history and all the personal characteristics of the claimant; but in deciding whether a person would reasonably be sufficiently curious about the causes of his injury to seek expert advice, those factors are to be disregarded. The concept of reasonableness is common to both section 14(2) and 14(3). It should be given the same meaning in both subsections.
46. The Adams approach to reasonableness indicates that if a person who has suffered a particular type of injury would reasonably be inhibited by the injury itself from instituting proceedings, then that is a factor that should be taken into account in deciding whether he or she would reasonably have considered it sufficiently serious to justify proceedings. The standard that has to be applied is that of the reasonable behaviour of a victim of child abuse who has suffered the degree of injury suffered by the claimant in question and of which he has knowledge.
48. …, the Bryn Alyn test, modified as it must be to take account of the decision in Adams, shows that the section 14(2) requirement is not solely directed to the seriousness of the injury. That is not to say, however, that even in such a case, the quantum of the injury is not highly material in determining whether at any given time the claimant would reasonably have considered it sufficiently serious to justify proceedings. To regard the inhibiting effect of the injury in question as decisive would be to deprive section 14(2) of its proper effect. The subsection is directed to the question of whether litigation is reasonably justified by reason of the seriousness of the injury. The words "sufficiently serious" are of central importance.
49. In my view, it will be a question of fact in every case whether, having regard to (i) the claimant's knowledge of the seriousness of the injury and (ii) the inhibiting and other consequences of the injury for the claimant, at the date of knowledge he would reasonably have considered the injury to be sufficiently serious to justify his instituting proceedings. I have in mind the observation of Lord Hoffmann in Adams that, in view of section 33, there is no need to construe the knowledge provisions of section 14 narrowly or in favour of claimants. Accordingly, the more serious the claimant knows the injury to be, the less likely the court is to regard the inhibiting and other consequences of the injury to be grounds for concluding that the claimant was justified in not instituting proceedings. But it will always depend on the facts of the particular case."
"The Limitation Acts are designed to protect defendants from the injustice of having to fight stale claims especially when any witnesses the defendants might have been able to rely on are not available or have no recollection and there are no documents to assist the court in deciding what was done or not done and why. These cases are very time consuming to prepare and try and they inevitably divert resources from the education authority to defending the claim rather than teach. Under section 33 the onus is on the claimant to establish that it would be equitable to allow the claim to proceed having regard to the balance of prejudice.
The question of proportionality is now important in the exercise of any discretion, none more so than under section 33. Courts should be slow to exercise their discretion in favour of a clamant in the absence of cogent medical evidence showing a serious effect on the claimant's health or enjoyment of life and employability. The likely amount of an award is an important factor to consider, especially if, as is usual in these cases, they are likely to take a considerable time to try. A claim that the claimant's dyslexia was not diagnosed or treated many years before at school, brought long after the expiry of the limitation period, extended as it is until after the claimant's majority, will inevitably place the defendants in greater difficulty in contesting it, especially in the absence of relevant witnesses and documents. The contesting of such a claim would be both expensive and likely to divert precious resources. Courts should be slow in such cases to find that the balance of prejudice is in favour of the claimant."
JM
a. James Hepburn. The significant abuse occurred when the Claimant went to work in the Horticultural Department, a separate area conducted as a market garden. From time to time when in the boiler house or a potting shed Hepburn made him engage in acts amounting to gross indecency, alternatively he attempted to bugger him.
b. Anthony Milligan. He was in charge of the Horticultural Department. About once a month he made the Claimant engage in acts amounting to gross indecency.
c. Terence Barber. On one occasion he perpetrated a minor indecent assault.
14th May 1971. The Claimant's 18th birthday.
14th May 1974. The end of the limitation period referable to any cause of action in negligence.
14th May 1977. The end of the limitation period referable to a cause of action in trespass.
1996 (? October). In the course of a consultation with his General Practitioner referable to a drink problem and his resultant conduct towards his wife he speaks, seemingly for the first time, about the fact of having been sexually abused. There is no contemporaneous note to this effect.
27th October 1998. In response to a Police initiative he makes a witness statement recounting his experience of sexual abuse. The statement includes the following: "I couldn't tell anyone about the abuse I was suffering … I wanted to tell my parents but couldn't bring myself to do it … When I left St. Aidans I began drinking alcohol, although I was still a young man. I have been drinking ever since. I believe 'St. Aidans ruined my life. I have never been able to forget it … I am pleased now that I have had the opportunity to get it all off my chest. I have been asked if I intend to claim compensation for the abuse I have suffered. To tell you the truth, the thought never entered my head. I have not told this to claim compensation, as I have said before, my life has been ruined and I want these people to be brought to justice." For their part, the Police officers advised him to consult a solicitor. In the event he gave evidence against Hepburn who was acquitted.
13th November 1998. In the course of a further consultation with his General Practitioner he gives a history of sexual abuse so as to be advised to undergo counselling.
March 1999. Having consulted solicitors he makes an ultimately successful CICA claim for compensation for the sexual abuse.
2001. Having changed to his present solicitors he is referred to Miss Helen Roberts, a clinical psychologist for a report, such eventually forthcoming on the 1st August 2001.
8th October 2001. The present proceedings are commenced.
26th November 2003. He is seen by a psychiatrist, Dr. Peter Wood at the behest of the Defendants.
"51. I believe that St Aidan's ruined my life. I have never been able to forget it. When I sit and think about it, it is as if I am still there. I am transported back to my school days. I have felt a lot of anger about what happened to me.
52. I started to suffer from nightmares whilst at St Aidan's. I dreamed of "monster men" being aggressive, and sexually aggressive, towards me. I still suffer from nightmares that are always the same. Until recently my nightmares were about being physically or sexually threatened. Since the death of my mother I have also had dreams about her, which I find to be distressing.
53. I suffer from sudden flashbacks that can come at any time and make me feel anxious and out of control.
54. I started to wet the bed whilst I was at St Aidan's and this problem continued long into my adult life.
55. I have always had a drinking problem. This started when I left St Aidan's as a very young man, as I was feeling depressed. Memories of the abuse when the police first visited me about my time in care made me drink even more. I have also used cannabis. At the time I was drinking, I did not connect it to the abuse that I had suffered but it did help to block out the memories of the abuse. Once I had had a drink, I felt like "one of the lads" again."
Later in the statement, he adds: "I have suffered depression for many years and I have tried to kill myself several times … At the time I began to suffer depression, I think I did connect it to the abuse I suffered but I also think that I suffered depression as it was linked to me drinking too much."
"65. The police first approached me in October 1997. DC Higgins had contacted me about an investigation into allegations of abuse at St Aidan's School. At that time I did not want to talk to anyone about my experiences there. It was too painful. I found it very hard to talk to the police.
66. I did not want my wife to know. I had never told anyone about the abuse I had suffered at that stage. It was so painful that at first I denied knowledge of the abuse that I had suffered. I also felt extremely worried that my abuse would be publicised."
In the balance of the statement he recounts the subsequent pressure put upon him by his wife, she having been alerted by the fact of police interest and the ultimately cathartic effect of the Police enquiry, such enabling him to seek help from his General Practitioner and to receive help as an incidental consequence of the consultation with Miss Roberts.
a. As helpfully summarised by Mr. Maxwell QC and Miss Weereratne, per Miss Roberts: the nature of the sexual abuse was particularly traumatising and the initial response included feelings of guilt and responsibility, bed-wetting and nightmares. He attempted to cope by avoiding psychological distress and vulnerability. He became angry, aggressive, suspicious and mistrustful. Intimate relationships were affected and sexual relationships were dysfunctional. He has had significant problems with alcohol and depression. His psychopathology arises primarily from childhood sexual abuse and is severe in the short, medium and long term.
b. Per Dr. Wood, there are other factors consistent with the continuing problems (e.g. a conduct disorder such as led to the approved school order and a reaction to being in care) and, given perceived unreliability as a historian there is no good basis upon which to credit severe psychopathology.
c. Both agree that this Claimant has never lacked the capacity to complain about the abuse and its consequences but that:
"We agree that many survivors of sexual abuse do not complain for many years and that this is a common feature of sexual abuse which may be due to injunctions to maintain silence, feelings of isolation and the shame experienced by such victims. We agree that it is described in the literature, that male survivors of childhood sexual abuse have particular problems in this regard."
a. Mr. JM had actual knowledge of the fact of injury occasioned by sexual abuse to the extent discussed above.
b. Prior to October 1998 he was reasonably inhibited from obtaining medical advice. That inhibition is common and understandable – I gratefully adopt the joint medical opinion to that effect. That said, the inhibition can only be a factor for my consideration and in this case I do not regard it as decisive. Thus, the extent to which any such inhibition may be decisive must be related to the period post limitation under consideration – the longer the symptoms persist the less weight a court can give to the claimed inhibitory forces. Overall I do not think that such a factor should carry weight up to October 1998 and I am reinforced by the concession that by 1996 circumstances did prompt some mention to the General Practitioner. Further and in any event in this case medical advice could not go to whether the injury was significant (such would be the premise for any consultation) but as to how severe it was and what could be done about it.
c. I do not gain much assistance from the medical evidence relevant to this issue. My general preference in areas of conflict is for the opinions of Miss Roberts but I cannot regard them as helpful to the Claimant on the 'significant injury' limitation issue. She on one view is saying that he has been correctly identifying a significant injury for a prolonged period, albeit seeking to cope by avoidance and alcohol.
a. The length of and reasons for the Claimant's delay. The overall delay was from 1968 to October 2001, a period of 33 years. The delay since the termination of the limitation period in 1974 to October 2001 was 27 years. As to reasons for the delay, there appear to be three: first, the Claimant's hope that he could cope with the symptoms by avoidance and alcohol; second, the inhibitions on complaint discussed above, and third, the Claimant's lack of interest in compensation as appeared from his Police statement and his evidence to me.
b. The impact on the respective cases. On behalf of the Claimant nothing is identified as hampering his case. The case formulated on his behalf is based upon currently available witnesses and documentary material. No doubt it might have been more cogent nearer the time but that is not a matter of specific contention. By contrast the Defendants do complain strongly about impact on their defence of lost documentation (in particular, Mr. JM's contemporaneous personal file is no longer to be found) and depletion in terms of oral evidence (the then headmaster, their crucial witness in a case about systems is dead as is the alleged abuser, Milligan; Hepburn, if alive is 74; Barber, if alive is 83; and all have to think back 38 years). Paradoxically the one point that the Defendants clearly can still invoke to good effect is causation: I have yet to hear evidence and submissions but I can be forgiven for finding the prospect of connecting any proven breaches of duty care on the part of the Defendants to prevention of the alleged acts of junior staff members done in secret privacy judicially challenging. In this context Lister v. Hesley Hall Ltd (2002) 1 AC 215 offers no help to the Claimant, quite the contrary.
c. The conduct of the Defendants: no point arises.
d. The duration of the Claimant's disability. As discussed at length, such extended to at least 2001 and may in some measure still continue.
e. The Claimant's conduct. Nothing significant arises.
f. The steps taken by the Claimant to obtain advice – such have already been fully discussed.
JB
a. He complains of excessive and arbitrary corporal punishment, principally meted out by the bricklaying instructor, Mr. F.J. Colquitt. Particular mention is made of one occasion when the latter punched him in the stomach with such force that he coughed up blood for some time thereafter and a doctor was called in to examine him.
b. He further complains of sexual 'groping' on three occasions by a housemaster, Mr. James McEvoy, each such occasion being in contrived privacy.
12th December 1975. His 18th birthday.
c. 1976. He got married. He told his wife something of the physical abuse.
12th December 1978. The end of the limitation period referable to an action in negligence.
12th December 1981. The end of the limitation period referable to an action in trespass.
24th November 1995. At the request of the Police he made a witness statement giving his account of the sexual abuse. The officers advised him to see a solicitor and he did so. Per his present witness statement: "I confirm that prior to being advised to seek advice from a solicitor I was unaware that I could bring a civil action against the perpetrator or the owners of the home itself. When the Police contacted me my initial thought was that I wanted justice and wanted McEvoy to face criminal charges.
January 1998. Proceedings are commenced on his behalf claiming damages essentially for negligence in the management of St. Aidan's. With respect to limitation the date of knowledge is specified as November 1995.
January 2001. The prosecution of McEvoy for, inter alia, an offence against this Claimant is stayed as an abuse of process.
"We agree that the Claimant has never had a psychiatric condition that would have prevented him from complaining, or being aware of what was happening to him.
We agree that Mr. JB's account has indicated that he was aware of the harm caused to him being abused and complained of this before reaching his majority, i.e. at around the time the events are alleged to have taken place. We do not identify Mr. JB as suffering from any psychiatric illness that would have altered his awareness since the alleged abuse took place.
We agree that Mr. Brown has identified feelings of guilt and shame and his fear of nakedness and confined spaces as having occurred from the time he was at St. Aidan's. These are pointers to his awareness of the effect of the alleged abuse at around the time it is said to have taken place.
We agree that there are indications that the Claimant has identified telling his wife of some of his abusive experiences in care before they married when he was 21, which would indicate his awareness of his adverse experiences between the ages of 18 and 21.
We agree that the Claimant has spoken of consciously attempting to bury his recollections of adverse experiences in his subconscious, however, the evidence he has provided to the Court is to the contrary, for example, at paragraph 65 of his statement he identifies continuing very sharp memories of his experiences. He suggests he has symptoms related to specific circumstances which remind him of his abuse.
We agree that there are many psychological reasons why people do not report child abuse to police or take legal action, which do not arise from mental illness. These reasons often relate to the trauma/impact of the abuse on the victim and any negative experiences they have when trying to disclose it as a child."
In the balance of the joint report Miss Lovelock draws attention to various matters that would militate against reacting to the abuse and its continuing impact (such including, as she believes, long standing P.T.S.D.). The joint report continues: "Dr. Wood has taken note of the paragraphs above. While these contribute to an understanding why the Claimant did not report his experience of abuse at an earlier time, they do not suggest that he lacked the capacity to complain at any particular time. He could have reported the abuse but elected not to do so for a range of reasons." The final relevant contribution is: "We agree that the Claimant's composure and way of coping with life would have continued without major disruption if there had not been a police investigation into the alleged abuse in the 1990's."
a. The delay has been somewhat less: 23 years passed between 1972 and 1995; and some 14 years between the termination of the limitation period and the latter date.
b. Leave aside another potentially powerful causation argument, the Defendants undoubtedly suffer from loss of evidential cogency: there is no personal file; documentation relevant to any 1972 investigation into McEvoy's conduct is no longer available (hence the abuse of process ruling by the criminal court); and Connell the headmaster is dead as is Colquitt.
c. As before it is not a case in which a Claimant was only stayed from suing by lack of adequate knowledge – rather it is a case where the thought of suing never arose and would not have done but for prompting by the Police.
PL
11th June 1982. His 18th birthday.
11th June 1985. The limitation period referable to an action in negligence terminates 1986. He makes an unsuccessful claim to the C.I.C.B. in respect of a stabbing injury.
11th June 1988. The limitation period referable to action in trespass terminates.
14th December 1994. At the request of the Police he makes a witness statement implicating both abusers. The officers advised him that he could be entitled to criminal injuries compensation.
7th June 1995. Dick pleaded guilty to multiple sexual offences against boys in his care. The offence alleged with respect to this Claimant is left to lie on the file.
2nd April 1996. Hoskin is convicted of like offences including one such against this Claimant. The latter gives evidence at the trial.
April 1996. Having deliberately delayed pursuit of compensation until the trial was over, the Claimant consulted solicitors and learned that a claim for damages for negligence could be open to him.
January 1997. His claim is commenced.
"55. The physical injuries I sustained were short term. I do not have physical scarring from the physical abuse I suffered. I do have mental scars that are a lot worse and more difficult to deal with. I think that my suffering has passed on to other people, because I have given other people and prison screws a hard time. I still struggle a lot today with the bad memories I have of my time in St. Aidan's.
56. I do however feel that I have been mentally scarred by the physical and sexual abuse I think I knew from day one I had been affected, but I did not realise how significant this was until many years later. I started feeling a lot worse after telling the police about the abuse.
57. The abuse has left me with low self-esteem. I still suffer difficulties with relationships and I have a big mistrust of authority. This has led me into a life of crime and imprisonment.
"58. I still suffer nightmares and have very bad memories of the part of my childhood I spent at St. Aidan's. I get these nightmare often. My mind sometimes goes off to what happened when I am wake too, for example when I am watching television.
59. I have tried to escape my memories by drug abuse and alcohol abuse and I have used these substances to avoid the painful reality. I started drinking and smoking cannabis when I was 16. From about the age of 20 I started using heroin and from about the age of 23 I started using cocaine."
"9.3. It remains my opinion that Mr. PL was too scared as a child to tell anyone what was happening. He was also unaware he was able to take action until he became involved in giving evidence. However, it is my opinion that he found this a difficult process and as stated in the previous report, he only decided to pursue this action to protect other children and to fulfil his promise to his mother to when he was very close. The psychometric assessment carried out clearly supports that Mr. PL finds it a very difficult process to discuss what happened and this is consistent with his reluctance to pursue proceedings until he promised his mother he would do so."
Further, she notes effects of the abuse at three stages, immediate, short term and long term, tracing a deteriorating situation.
Generally