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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 >> Reaney v University Hospital of North Staffordshire NHS Trust & Anor (No 2) [2016] EWHC 1676 (QB) (08 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1676.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1676 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CHRISTINE REANEY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE NHS TRUST (1) -and- MID STAFFORDSHIRE NHS FOUNDATION TRUST (2) |
Defendants |
____________________
David Westcott QC and Charles Feeny (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 16 June 2016
Further written submissions thereafter.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foskett:
Introduction
"It was … common ground that if the defendants' negligence caused [the Claimant] to have care and other needs which were substantially of the same kind as her pre-existing needs, then the damage caused by the negligence was the additional needs. On the other hand, if the needs caused by the negligence were qualitatively different from her pre-existing needs, then those needs were caused in their entirety by the negligence." (Emphasis as in original.)
The effect of the Court of Appeal's decision and its subsequent guidance
"It may be that the significance of the difference between needs which are quantitatively different and those which are qualitatively different was not spelt out during the course of the trial."
"In the alternative, if the Court rejects the appellants' case as to the necessity of proving actual expenditure but nonetheless accepts the appellants' principal legal argument that they can only be liable for the consequences of such additional loss as they have caused, then the valuation of loss as set out in Scenario B below would reasonably apply."
"In respect of future loss, and in particular care, the Defendants will contend that the Claimant must prove that any additional loss is likely to be incurred. Specifically given that there is no claim for the first carer and no funds available to fund such a carer, the likelihood is that the Claimant will remain dependent on the Local Authority for her basic care needs. In the circumstances as it appears below, the Claimant will only suffer loss to the extent that she must pay additional charges to the Local Authority."
"2. The action be remitted to Foskett J to decide the amount of damages to be paid to the Claimant … in accordance with the judgment on liability dated 11 January 2013, the directions on the law of this court and the findings of fact made in the judgment dated 19 September 2014.
…
4. The parties shall file written submissions on quantum to Foskett J by 30 November 2015 on receipt of which the matter shall be listed for further oral submissions if Foskett J so desires or a written judgment shall be produced. Such written and oral submissions shall be limited to the quantification of the damages payable for the additional loss caused to the claimant by the defendants' admitted breach under the following heads of loss:
(a) Care
(b) Accommodation
(c) Equipment
(d) Transport
(e) Physiotherapy
(f) Holidays"
"It is submitted that the Claimant … must face the consequences of having advanced at first instance a case which the Court of Appeal have considered to be wrong in law. The evidence adduced by the Claimant at trial reflected the Claimant's approach in law and was not specific to loss arising from additional needs. Having regard to the terms of the order of the Court of Appeal, the Claimant cannot re-open the facts or invite the court to make findings on a different factual basis to that set out in the judgment of September 2014. It is only where there is evidence and factual findings supporting a basis for loss caused by additional needs that the Claimant can ask the court now to quantify damages." (My emphasis)
"5. The order of the court:
a. offered the Respondent no opportunity to call further evidence upon the remission of the case to the Judge; and
b. properly required the assessment of damages to be effected by reference to the findings of fact already made by the Judge.
6. Indeed, the Respondent's approach to the appeal was to argue, inter alia, that the evidence (to the transcripts of which reference was made) supported a conclusion that the care etc. now needed was sufficiently different from that which would have been required in any event, to warrant full recovery. The Court of Appeal declined to find that the evidence supported such a conclusion; so the question which the Respondent now wishes to ask the Judge to resolve has already been decided.
"The court accepts the submissions in the Appellants' response. The wording of para 2 of the order is clear and unambiguous: the assessment is to be done on the basis of the findings of fact already made by the Judge and no other findings."
The competing positions taken in response to that clarification
"It is to be noted that the clarification provided by the Court of Appeal of the scope of this Court to make further findings of fact arose in the context of the Claimant's attempts to (a) adduce fresh evidence as to her current position; and (b) argue before this Court that her current needs are 'qualitatively different' to those which would have existed 'but for' the Defendants' admitted negligence."
It was, as I have observed, a very ambitious position for the Claimant's advisers to take given the terms of the Court of Appeal's judgment and the terms of paragraph 4 of its order.
"Scenario A represented a calculation of the damages recoverable by the Claimant in the event that the Court accepted the Defendants' argument that no damages should be recoverable for future expenditures that the Claimant had not demonstrated were likely to be incurred. The calculation represented a combination of General Damages, past losses, some items of future loss specifically proven by the evidence, and concessions made by the Defendants.
Scenario A itself became redundant once the Defendants decided not to pursue the argument that the Claimant was required to prove that future expenditures would be likely to be met. Counsel explained to the Court at the oral hearing that the Defendants did not intend to contend that this argument, albeit that it was a proper principle, should be deployed to restrict the Claimant's damages in this case, partly in light of the terms of remission.
However the figures in Scenario A do identify the sums that ought to be ordered [on the basis that I am bound solely by findings appearing in the judgment of 14 September 2014]. This is because the directions of the Court of Appeal permit only the re-assessment of heads of loss on essentially the same basis as had been set out in Scenario A: viz., General Damages, past losses, some items of future loss specifically identified by the Court, and concessions made by the Defendants – because these are the only elements of the claim that are not disqualified from calculation because of the lack of the building blocks of assessment (i.e. findings about what the Claimant's reasonable needs would have been in any event assessed on an objective basis, as opposed to an assessment of the provision which would have been made as a matter of fact).
Accordingly …:
a) it would have been open to the Defendants to continue to pursue the legal argument underpinning Scenario A (the need to prove the likelihood of future expenditure) as described in Appendix 1, but they have chosen not to do so in the circumstances of this case
however
b) the figures in Scenario A do, for the reasons explained above, coincidentally represent the figures which, subject to the caveat below, the Defendants say should be awarded, since the Judge is bound by the directions of the Court of Appeal to make an award solely by reference to findings of fact which he has already made."
"20. However, the Defendants are willing to make a proposal that would permit the Court to make an informed estimate of the sort of award that would have been made if a conventional approach to the quantification of loss had been adopted.
21. It is possible to discern from the judgment that there is evidence that the Court would have accepted had it thought that the evidence was relevant to the assessment. Thus, by way of example, the Court regarded Mr Gardner as a credible and authoritative expert – and if it had thought that there was any relevance to his opinions about what would have been regarded as a reasonable need in the event that a claim had been brought in relation to [the Claimant's] pre-existing paraplegia, the Court would have made findings of fact on the basis of them.
22. The Defendants would be prepared to consent to the admissibility of such evidence as a basis for fresh findings of fact (ie evidence that the Court would have accepted had it thought it relevant) provided that it is understood that the enquiry upon which the Court is embarking is to make an objective assessment of reasonable 'but-for' needs and the damages payable for exacerbation of her condition …
23. To deploy such evidence, and to rely upon such findings of fact, would be to range beyond the scope of the enquiry ordered by the Court of Appeal – but the Defendants contemplate that the Court could do this with the consent of the parties.
24. If such an approach were agreed, the Defendants' contentions as to the sums justified by the evidence are set out in Appendix I (attached to these Supplementary Submissions for convenience).
25. In the absence of any such agreement the Defendants will stand on (what they will argue are) their rights; and they will insist upon an assessment of quantum consistent with the requirements of the judgment of the Court of Appeal."
How should the present stage of the proceedings be dealt with?
(1) The Court of Appeal endorsed the approach to the evaluation of the Claimant's damages as that set out in Kemp and Kemp, a passage to which the Appellants had drawn the court's attention: see [15] of its judgment.
(2) In part of the argument before me, the damages payable by a defendant who was responsible for all the present needs of the Claimant were identified as £Z (leaving out damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity) and the amount of damages that would have been payable by a defendant who was responsible for all her needs in the pre-existing situation as £X. It was asserted by the Defendants that the amount of damages payable by a defendant who caused the additional needs would be £Z - £X pounds = £Y. That is what the Defendants say they should pay to the Claimant. The Claimant agrees and Mr Moon has confirmed that, in the present state of the proceedings, she seeks no more than £Y.
(3) The Court of Appeal sent the case back to me to assess the amounts payable under the six heads of claim identified in paragraph 4 of the order on the foregoing basis.(4) The Court of Appeal decided not to deal with the issue of whether the needs of the Claimant in the pre- and post- negligence situations had to be "objectively assessed", did not consider the submissions of the Defendants on this basis and did not consider the competing submissions about Scenario B (see paragraph 14 above). I have to infer that it took this position either because it felt that the issue of the correct approach was covered in its existing judgment and/or that, in any event, my judgment contained sufficient findings to enable me readily to readjust the relevant calculations in accordance with the correct approach as ordained by the Court of Appeal and that it was thus not necessary to descend itself into the details of the quantification. That would be consistent with that court's understanding of what the Defendants had put forward in Scenario B in Appendix 1. That is why, in my view, the order made by the Court of Appeal was in the terms it was. (I would add that I must regard the omission to mention the Supplemental Judgment in the order as an oversight and I can only assume it was not referred to because it was not mentioned in the draft sent to the court by the Appellants.)
(5) When the Court of Appeal (through the message of the Master of the Rolls of 18 December 2015) described paragraph 2 of the order in the terms that it did, it was intending to close the doors firmly and finally on the Claimant's attempt to re-open the factual issue of whether her needs in the post-negligence scenario were "qualitatively different" from those in the pre-negligence scenario. However, it was not intending to restrict the ambit of the further proceedings before me such that I could not carry out fully and fairly the task set out in paragraph 4 of the order, the perception remaining that I could carry out that task without revisiting any part of evidence given at the trial and on the basis of the findings I had made.
(6) Following on from (5), if the consequences of not being able to review the transcript of the evidence for the purposes of carrying out the exercise set in paragraph 4 of the order had been spelt out by the parties in the Notes sent to the Master of the Rolls (which they were not), the clarification would have been in less apparently rigid terms.
"… whether the Claimant is entitled to damages in respect of her reasonable needs which exceed
(a) the reasonable needs for which provision would in fact have been made in the 'but-for' situation; or
(b) the reasonable needs which she would have had in the 'but-for' situation."
"… it is accepted on both sides that I should consider the "but for scenario" (namely, what would have been the Claimant's likely position but for the pressure sores and their consequences) and then the "post-pressure sores scenario"."
"But for the admitted negligence, the Claimant would have required approximately 7 hours of professional care each week (supplemented by a very modest level of family support at the time of transfers) until the age of 70, whereafter until the age of 75 she would have required gradually increasing visits from one local authority carer until from the age of 75 onwards when, as now, a total of about 31½ hours per week would be provided by the local authority based upon the attendance of two carers. Again, a modest (though somewhat increased) additional family input would probably have been required, but the significant feature of this period is that the professional care provided (in reality through the local authority) would not have been on a 24/7 basis."
"… The objective analysis of the position (which, for this purpose, has to be seen as yielding a different result from what the local authority, juggling limited resources, assessed as being required) shows that she required henceforth two carers on a 24/7 basis, a requirement that will continue for the rest of her life."
"But for the admitted negligence, the Claimant would have required approximately 7 hours of professional care each week (supplemented by a very modest level of family support at the time of transfers) until the age of 70, whereafter until the age of 75 she would have required gradually increasing day-time care such that from the age of 75 onwards she would have required a total of about 31½ hours per week based upon the attendance of two carers. Again, a modest (though somewhat increased) additional family input would probably have been required, but the significant feature of this period is that the professional care provided would not have been on a 24/7 basis."
Such a conclusion could have had an impact on some of the other heads of claim.
Conclusion
Note 1 Presumably, £266,000 odd compared with over £1 million. [Back]