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] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Wilson & Anor v. Glasgow City Council [2004] ScotCS 75 (11 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2004/75.html Cite as: 2004 SCLR 638, [2004] ScotCS 75 |
[New search] [Help]
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
PD623/03 PD667/03
|
OPINION OF LADY SMITH in the cause HAZEL WILSON Pursuer; against GLASGOW CITY COUNCIL Defenders: and ELIZABETH GOULD Pursuer: Against GLASGOW CITY COUNCIL Defenders: ________________ |
Pursuers: Lloyd; Thompsons
First Defenders: Forsyth, Edward Bain
Second Defenders: O'Rourke, Edward Bain
11 March 2004
Introduction:
[1] These two cases came before me together on the motion roll. Both were personal damages actions. Wilson had been raised in August 2003 and Gould had been raised in September 2003. Accordingly, Chapter 43 of the Rules of the Court of Session, as substituted by Act of Sederunt (Rules of the Court of Session Amendment No. 2) (Personal Injuries Actions) 2002, S. S. I 2002 No. 570, applied to them. [2] In Wilson, the pursuer sought damages for past solatium and past services in respect of rib fractures and soft tissue injuries, the symptoms from which subsisted for a period of about four months. She had been injured when she fell down a flight of slippery steps at the defenders' premises in the course of her employment with them. The pursuer's statement of the value of the claim was lodged on 15th December 2003 (No. 9 of process). It attributed the sum of £3,500 to solatium and £300 to services. The defenders lodged a statement of value of claim on 29th January 2004 (No.11 of process). It attributed the sum of £1,800 to solatium and £200 to services. The defenders lodged a Minute of Tender (No.12 of process) in the sum of £2,250 (net of any liability under s.6 of the Social Security (Recovery of Benefits) Act 1997) also on 29th January 2004. That tender was accepted by Minute of Acceptance of Tender (No.13 of process) which was lodged on 9th March 2004. [3] In Gould, the pursuer sought damages for past solatium and past services in respect of a blunt force head injury, the symptoms from which lasted also for a period of about four months. She was employed by the defenders as a cook and had been injured when the door of a refrigerator that she was trying to open suddenly came away from its hinges causing her to fall backwards and hitting her on the head. The pursuer's statement of the value of the claim (No. 10 of process) was lodged on 15th December 2003. It attributed the sum of £2,500 to solatium and £90 to services. The defenders lodged a statement of value of the claim (No. 13 of process ) on 10th February 2004. It attributed the sum of £1,700 to solatium and £50 to services. The defenders had lodged a Minute of Tender (No. 12 of process) on 27th January 2004 in the sum of £2,000 (net of any liability under section 6 of the Social Security (Recovery of Benefits) Act 1997. That tender was accepted by Minute of Acceptance of Tender (No. 14 of process) which was lodged on 9th March 2004. [4] The pursuers enrolled for decree in terms of the Minutes of Tender and Acceptance and certification of one skilled witness. Those motions were not opposed. However, the defenders enrolled for modification of their liability in expenses to that of the Sheriff Court ordinary scale without sanction for counsel, in terms of Rule of Court 42.5. That motion was opposed.
The defenders' submissions:
[5] It was submitted by counsel for the defenders in both actions that the cases were of trivial value, that there were no complexities involved in the litigations and that there was no need for the employment of counsel. Mr O'Rourke, for the defenders in the Gould case, said that valuation and tendering had been dealt with by the agent instructing him "in house" without reference to counsel, as it was a straightforward matter. The same agent was instructed in the Wilson case. It was said that the low value and straightforward nature of the claims was evident from the outset and that, in these circumstances, the pursuers should have raised the actions in the Sheriff Court rather than in the Court of Session. Reference was made to McIntosh v British Railways Board 1990 SC 338 in support of a submission that whilst it was recognised that the pursuers were entitled, given the limits of the privative jurisdiction, to raise these actions in the Court of Session, they should not have done so. The power to modify expenses was a valuable safeguard for defenders and ought to be exercised in this case. Reference was also made to the case of Coyle v Fairey Installations Ltd 1991 SC 16 in support of a submission that the point at which to test whether the pursuer should have raised the action in the Sheriff court was at the beginning of the action. It should, in this case, have been obvious to the pursuers, at the outset , that these were always going to be straightforward cases of low value. Gordon v Strathclyde Buses 1995 SLT 1019 was referred to as an example of a case which settled for £1,450 where modification was granted and reference was also made to Campbell v SCA, unrepd 19th May 1995, as an example of a case in which modification was not granted, even although the damages were small, in the sum of £2,500.The pursuers' submissions:
[6] For the pursuers, it was conceded that the cases were straightforward and of modest value and it was accepted that the court had the power to modify expenses. However, the onus lay on the defenders to satisfy the court that there ought to be modification. The correct test, as gleaned from McIntosh and Coyle was that the court required to be satisfied that the likely expenses far outweighed the value of the claims. In these cases, the genuine expectation of the pursuers' agents had been that it would be less expensive to litigate in the Court of Session than in the Sheriff Court because of their experiences of the operation of the new rules for procedure in personal damages actions. Only simplified pleadings were required, more efficient procedures ensued once the action was raised, the rules were designed to secure resolution of disputes as quickly as possible, and procedure roll debates were the exception, unlike the sheriff court where, in their experience, debates were a regular feature. Further, these pursuers would have sought to exercise their right to a jury trial and the damages awarded by a jury could well have been considerably higher than the sums that the pursuers decided to accept when tendered. Nothing advanced by the defenders by way of submission had been to the effect that the expense of running these actions in the Court of Session was likely to be higher than in the sheriff court.Discussion:
[7] In determining whether or not to grant the defenders' motion, I took account of the fact that there was no dispute between the parties as to the straightforward nature of these claims and that they were of modest value. However, it seemed to me that the reason why expenses have hitherto been modified in cases falling into that category is that they are suitable for the practices and procedures of the sheriff court and it is likely that it will cost significantly less to litigate there. It has been seen as prejudicial to a defender to be forced to litigate in the Court of Session because it has been assumed that it will be significantly more expensive to do so and that is not a prejudice which he can reasonably be expected to suffer if the case is straightforward and of modest value. That would appear to be the thinking that underlies what was said in McIntosh by the Lord President in delivering the opinion of the court @ 345:"Nothing in what we have said so far is intended to restrict in any way the power of the court to modify an award of expenses to a pursuer at the end of the case. A pursuer who raises his action in the Court of Session and seeks to take advantage of the practices and procedures of this court must take account of the risk that if the sum which he recovers is small he will be confined to expenses on the sheriff court summary cause scale or on the sheriff court ordinary scale with or without sanction for counsel according to the circumstances: At this stage, when all the facts are known and all imponderables are out of the way , the court can reflect its view as to whether in the event the sheriff court was the appropriate court for the determination of the case . It does so with the advantage of then knowing the result, which is an advantage not usually enjoyed by the pursuer's advisers at the start of the case. This is a valuable safeguard in the defender's interest against their being exposed to claims in this court where the awards are trivial in relation to the expenses."
The same assumption also appears to underlie the thinking in Fairey. At p.19, Lord Morison in delivering the opinion of the court, having referred to McIntosh, said:
"The proper approach, as is made clear in the passage read as a whole, is that in respect of actions brought in the Court of Session the court should determine whether the initial choice of forum was justified in all the circumstances of the case known to the pursuer's advisers when the action was raised, having regard to the high level of costs likely to be incurred by bringing an action there."
"(1) In any cause where the court finds a party entitled to expense , the court may direct that expenses shall be subject to such modification as the court thinks fit."