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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wild & Anor v Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust [2014] EWHC 4053 (QB) (03 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/4053.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4053 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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LISA DIANE WILD IAN DANIEL WILD |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SOUTHEND UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Defendant |
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Charles Bagot (instructed by Browne Jacobson LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14, 17 and 18 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Michael Kent QC :
The facts in more detail
The evidence of the psychiatrists
"caused by the 'nervous shock' of the still-birth of his son Matthew. In my opinion the event causing the shock was the realisation that his son was dead. I am of the opinion that this event started on 20 March 2009 when the attending midwife was unable to find the heartbeat and his wife became tearful and appeared devastated. At this point I am of the opinion that Mr. Wild believed that his son had died. This was subsequently confirmed when he was told that this had happened by the attending clinical team. His knowledge of the death was the cause of shock to Mr. Wild. It was in my opinion compounded by having to wait and then his wife having to deliver their stillborn son. That is that it was all part of a shocking event that unfolded from 20 to 21 March 2009 as an inexorable progression."
"The psychiatric disorder arose from the sudden knowledge of his son's death in utero followed by a period of several hours at home in apprehension at his wife's delivery the following day culminating in the experience of seeing and then holding his dead son".
"We agree that the abnormal grief reaction (and depression and/or PTSD) was caused by Mr. Wild witnessing the still-birth of his son Matthew on 21 March 2009."
The case for the Second Claimant
The "primary victim"
The "control mechanisms"
a) "a marital or parental relationship between the plaintiff and primary victim";b) "the injury for which damages were claimed arose from the sudden and unexpected shock to the Plaintiff's nervous system";
c) the Claimant "was either personally present at the scene of the accident or was in the more or less immediate vicinity and witnessed the aftermath shortly afterwards";
d) "the injury suffered arose from witnessing the death of, extreme danger to, or injury and discomfort suffered by the primary victim";
e) "there was not only an element of physical proximity to the event but a close temporal connection between the event and the plaintiff's perception of it combined with close relationship of affection between the Plaintiff and the primary victim."
"One looks to the totality of the circumstances which bring the claimant into proximity in both time and space to the accident. It seems to me, therefore, to be implicit in his judgment read as a whole that when he said at page 423 –
'The shock must come through sight or hearing of the 'event' or of its immediate aftermath'.
he was not intending to confine 'the event' to a frozen moment of time."
"I can see no reason in logic why a breach of duty causing an incident involving no violence or suddenness, such as where the wrong medicine is negligently given to a hospital patient, could not lead to a claim for damages for nervous shock, for example where the negligence has fatal results and the visiting close relative, wholly unprepared for what has occurred, finds the body and thereby sustains a sudden and unexpected shock to the nervous system."
"[D]oes permit a realistic view being taken from case to case of what constitutes the necessary 'event'. Our task is not to construe the word as if it had appeared in legislation but to gather the sense of the word in order to inform the principle to be drawn from the various authorities.…In my judgment on the facts of this case there was an inexorable progression from the moment when the fit occurred as a result of the failure of the hospital properly to diagnose and then to treat the baby, the fit causing the brain damage which shortly thereafter made termination of this child's life inevitable and the dreadful climax when the child died in her arms. It is a seamless tale with an obvious beginning and an equally obvious end. It was played out over a period of 36 hours, which for her both at the time and as subsequently recollected was undoubtedly one drawn-out experience."
"The distinction in the authorities is between the case where the claim is founded upon 'merely being informed of, or reading, or hearing about the accident' and directly perceiving by sight or sound the relevant events. Information given as the events unfold before one's eyes is part of the circumstances of the case to which the Court is entitled to have regard."
"(i) an external, traumatic, event caused by the Defendant's breach of duty which immediately causes some person injury or death; and (ii) a perception by the Plaintiff of the event as it happens, normally by his presence at the scene, or exposure to the scene and/or to the primary victim so shortly afterwards that the shock of the event as well as of its consequence is brought home to him".
"There was no such event here other than the final consequence of Mr. Taylor's progressively deteriorating heart condition which the health authority, by its negligence many months before, had failed to arrest."
In paragraph 33 of the Master of the Rolls' judgment in Taylor v A Novo there is this:
"It follows from what I have said that in my view the reasoning of Auld J in the Taylor case was correct. As I have explained at para 13 above, the observations of Peter Gibson LJ in Sion v. Hampstead Health Authority [1994] 5 Med LR 170 were obiter dicta and they are therefore not binding on this court".
"In the Walters case 2003 PIQR P232 the court had to decide what was the event for the purposes of establishing a right of action as a secondary victim. The court was able on the facts of that case to hold that the event was a 'seamless tale with an obvious beginning and an equally obvious end...played out over a period of 36 hours'. It was "one drawn out experience". I do not see how this sheds any light on the question that arises in this case where the injuries and death suffered by Mrs Taylor were certainly not part of a single event or seamless tale."
Conclusion