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IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
CCRTF
98/1003/CMS2
IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM SHEFFIELD COUNTY COURT
(MR
RECORDER ANTON LODGE QC
)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Friday,
29 April 1999
B
e f o r e:
THE
VICE-CHANCELLOR: The Rt Hon Sir Richard Scott
LORD
JUSTICE THORPE
LORD
JUSTICE JUDGE
-
- - - - -
VANESSA
DAWN DIMOND
Claimant/Respondent
-
v -
R
J LOVELL
Defendant/Appellant
-
- - - - -
(Handed
Down Transcript of
Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London
EC4A 2HD
Tel:
0171 421 4040
Official
Shorthand Writers to the Court)
-
- - - - -
MR
IAN MCLAREN QC & MR STEVEN TURNER
(Instructed by Nelson & Co., Leeds, LS3 1LF) appeared on behalf of the
Appellant
MR
DANIEL BRENNAN QC & MR MARC WILLEMS
(Instructed by Cotrill Stone Lawless, Manchester, M2 5WA) appeared on behalf of
the Respondent
-
- - - - -
J
U D G M E N T
(As
approved by the Court
)
-
- - - - -
©Crown
Copyright
THE
VICE-CHANCELLOR:
1. The
facts of this case are very simple and the sum involved is trivial. But the
case raises issues of considerable importance and some difficulty. Other
cases, we are told, are queuing up in county courts around the country awaiting
the result of this appeal. There are cases in this Court, too, awaiting the
result.
2. The
case arose out of a road traffic accident in Sheffield on 30 December 1996.
Mrs Dimond, respondent in this Court and the plaintiff below, was driving her
motor vehicle, a Suzuki Vitari, when the appellant, Mr Lovell, drove his car
into the back of hers. She did not suffer any physical injury but her vehicle
was damaged. It was still capable of being driven and, for about three weeks
or so, she continued to drive it. It then went into the garage for repairs.
Mrs Dimond was a bank manager. She needed a car to drive to and from work. I
expect she needed a car also for social activities. So arrangements had to be
made for her to obtain a replacement vehicle. Her husband after the accident
had consulted insurance brokers about the recovery of damages. The insurance
brokers advised him of the replacement vehicle services on offer from 1st
Automotive Ltd.
3. 1st
Automotive Ltd specialise in hiring replacement vehicles to individuals whose
cars, without any fault on their part, have been damaged by the negligence of
other drivers and are off the road while being repaired. A particular feature
of the services provided by 1st Automotive is that a customer can postpone
paying for the hiring until his or her damages claim against the driver of the
other vehicle has concluded. Since 1st Automotive takes on only those who
appear to have cast iron negligence cases with no element of contributory
negligence, 1st Automotive has a very high recovery rate of, according to the
evidence, 97 per cent. The form of agreement into which 1st Automotive
requires its customers to enter entitles 1st Automotive to have the conduct of
any litigation that may be necessary in order to recover the damages. One of
the main advantages that an agreement with 1st Automotive offers is that the
customer obtains not only a suitable replacement vehicle while his or her
damaged vehicle is being repaired, but obtains also relief from the nuisance of
having to make and pursue the damages claim. The replacement vehicle can be
delivered to the customer. When the customer’s car is roadworthy again,
the replacement vehicle can be left at the customer’s garage for
collection by 1st Automotive. The customer has to pay nothing until the
conclusion of the damages claim when, if all has gone well, 1st
Automotive’s charges will be covered by the damages recovered from the
negligent driver.
4. In
reality, of course, the recovery will not be from the negligent driver. It
will be from the negligent driver’s insurers. This present litigation
appears to be litigation between Mrs Dimond and Mr Lovell. In reality it is
litigation between 1st Automotive and Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd, Mr
Lovell’s insurers. I will refer to them as ´CIS’.
5. Mrs
Dimond was happy to sign 1st Automotive’s form of agreement. She knew
she needed a replacement vehicle while hers was being repaired. She made no
enquiries as to whether other companies might be able to supply her with a
suitable replacement vehicle at a lower rate of charge than 1st Automotive was
offering. She, or more likely her husband, simply accepted their
broker’s recommendation that she should deal with 1st Automotive.
6. She
signed the 1st Automotive agreement on 25 January 1997. A Ford Mondeo was the
replacement vehicle. The date on which the vehicle was to be returned was left
open. It was not known exactly when her Suzuki would be ready. The details of
the charges to be made were not specified in the agreement. Miss Christine
Smith, a director of 1st Automotive, gave evidence that the rate of charge
could not be specified until it was known for how long the hiring had
continued. The reason she gave for this was that 1st Automotive’s daily
rate of charge reduced after the first seven days. In addition a charge of
£5 per day was made by 1st Automotive for a “Collision Damage
Waiver”. This rate of charge could have been but was not specified in
the agreement before it was signed. 1st Automotive makes a delivery charge of
£15. This, too, could have been but was not specified in the agreement
before it was signed. No details whatever of the charges were inserted into
the appropriate places in the agreement before it was signed by Mrs Dimond.
7. Mrs
Dimond’s Suzuki was repaired and ready for collection from her garage by
1 February 1997. So her hiring of the Ford Mondeo lasted 8 days. She duly
returned the vehicle to her garage from where it was collected by 1st
Automotive. 1st Automotive then entered the details of the applicable charges
into the appropriate places in the agreement that Mrs Dimond had signed. The
hiring charge was £30 per day for 8 days, £240. The delivery charge
of £15 and the CDW charge of £5 a day for 8 days were added. So the
charges entered in the agreement totalled £295.00. With VAT the total
amount shown due to 1st Automotive was £346.63.
8. The
£346.63 was the sum that 1st Automotive set about endeavouring to recover,
in Mrs Dimond’s name, from CIS. CIS paid Mrs Dimond the cost of the
repairs to the Suzuki within three days of the bill for the repairs being
presented to them. But they drew the line at the £346.63. So proceedings
were commenced and the claim for £346.63 came before Mr Recorder Anton
Lodge Q.C., sitting in the Sheffield County Court.
9. There
were two lines of defence. The first was that under the agreement between Mrs
Dimond and 1st Automotive, 1st Automotive provided Mrs Dimond with credit in
that she was able to defer payment for the car hire until her damages claim had
concluded. Accordingly, it was argued, the agreement was a regulated consumer
credit agreement for the purposes of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 and, since
the prescribed requirements of the Act had not been complied with, the
agreement was unenforceable against Mrs Dimond. So, it was argued, she had had
the use of a replacement vehicle without having any obligation to pay for it.
Since she did not owe 1st Automotive the £346.63, or any other sum, for
her hire of the Ford Mondeo, she could not recover that sum as damages from Mr
Lovell. Mrs Dimond’s (or rather 1st Automotive’s) response to this
was that the agreement was not a consumer credit agreement as defined by the
1974 Act, but if it was and if, in consequence, it was unenforceable,
nonetheless Mrs Dimond’s right to claim damages for the loss of use of
her Suzuki for 8 days remained.
10. The
second line of defence was that Mrs Dimond had failed to mitigate her damage.
1st Automotive’s charge for the 8 days represented a daily charge of
£43.33, inclusive of everything. The “spot rate” for car hire
in the Sheffield area for 8 days varied between £27.42 and £23.89,
depending on the age of the car. In simply accepting 1st Automotive’s
rates without any inquiry as to comparative rates on offer by other companies,
Mrs Dimond had failed to act reasonably vis-à-vis the defendant from
whom she expected to recover the charges. Moreover the services provided by
1st Automotive to Mrs Dimond for the £43.33 per day went beyond simply the
supply of a car for hire and included advantages which could not in law form
part of her damages claim. Mrs Dimond’s response was that she had acted
reasonably in all the circumstances in contracting with 1st Automotive and that
their charges were reasonable.
11. The
Recorder agreed with Mrs Dimond on each of the issues I have mentioned. He
held that the agreement was not caught by the 1974 Act but that, even if it was
and was unenforceable, Mrs Dimond could still recover as damages the cost of
hiring a replacement vehicle. He held, also, that Mrs Dimond had acted
reasonably in entering into the agreement with 1st Automotive and that 1st
Automotive’s rates were reasonable. He gave judgment in Mrs
Dimond’s favour for the £346.63 and a further £30 as to which
no issue now arises.
12. Mr
Lovell, by CIS, has appealed. The argument before us has been much the same
as it was before the Recorder. There are three issues of principle.
13. First,
are agreements such as those 1st Automotive offers its customers consumer
credit agreements for the purposes of the Consumer Credit Act 1974? If the
answer is ´Yes’, a further issue arises as to the enforceability of
the agreements.
14. Second,
can a plaintiff such as Mrs Dimond recover damages for the loss of use of her
vehicle notwithstanding that she has had the use of a replacement vehicle
provided by a car hire company under an unenforceable agreement? If a
plaintiff has had the use of a replacement vehicle without having to pay for
it, can the plaintiff nonetheless recover damages?
15. Third,
can a car owner whose car has been involved in an accident caused by negligence
of another driver and without any fault on his own part accept the deal being
offered by a company like 1st Automotive and recover their charges as damages
notwithstanding that a cheaper hiring of a similar vehicle could have been
obtained from a normal car hire company if the car owner had shopped around?
16. Each
of these points of principle is of considerable commercial importance both to
1st Automotive and the other companies which offer credit car hire agreements
to no-fault owners of cars damaged in road accidents and also to CIS and other
insurance companies which have to find the damages payable to the no-fault car
owners. The figure of £30 million a year has been mentioned as the sum
that, nation-wide, turns on the result of this case. Not only are similar
cases queuing up in the county courts but there are cases listed for hearing in
this court which raise the same issues. One of these is Fantoni -v- Dunscombe,
Case No. CCRTI 98/1623/2. Since the outcome of this appeal seems likely to be
determinative of the Fantoni -v- Dunscombe appeal I gave leave on 17 February
1999 for written submissions on behalf of the parties to that appeal to be
placed before us. The defendant in Fantoni -v- Dunscombe has availed himself
of that leave.
17. I
must turn now to the three issues of principle:-
Is
1st Automotive’s agreement a consumer credit agreement?
18. I
have already given some details of the form and content of the agreement. I
have not yet, however, referred to the printed Conditions of Hire that are
incorporated into the agreement. The important conditions for present purposes
are conditions 5, 6, 7, 8, 18 and 19. I should set out these conditions in full.
“5. Where
the hire is consequent upon the Hirer’s own vehicle being unroadworthy as
a result of a road traffic accident:
(i) The
Lessor will allow the Hirer credit on the hire charges until such time as a
claim for damages has been concluded against the party (hereinafter called the
third party) that the Hirer alleges is liable for damages, arising out of the
said accident, subject only to condition (6) hereunder.
(ii) The
Lessor shall have the right to pursue an action in the Hirer’s name
against the third party.
(iii) The
Lessor shall have the right to pursue such action through the County Court
and/or High Court and the Hirer must co-operate in the conduct of the action
and, if required by the Lessor, attend any hearing that the Court appoints.
(iv) PROVIDED
THAT notwithstanding the credit facility referred to above the hirer will
discharge any indebtedness as soon as reasonably practicable, and shall take
such action as is necessary to obtain interlocutory judgment or an interim
payment of damages for the purpose of discharging the said indebtedness.
6. If,
and only if, the Hirer, is in default of condition (5iii) then the credit
allowed by the Lessor to the Hirer shall be terminated and the hire charges
will be due from the Hirer to the Lessor 28 days from the Lessor giving notice
thereof to the Hirer by reference to this condition (6).
7. The
rate charged for the hire of the vehicle shall be the daily, weekly or monthly
rate charged for that vehicle as published in the Lessor’s rental tariff
valid at the commencement of the hire.
8. Except
where condition (5) applies, the Hirer will pay to the Lessor on demand all
charges due under this agreement, plus Value Added Tax at the rate appropriate
at the time of the hire.
18. This
agreement may be terminated by either party giving 24 hours notice of
termination and the vehicle being returned to the Lessor.
19. Maximum
rental period of THIS RENTAL AGREEMENT must not exceed 28 days”.
19. I
would draw particular attention to the following features of these Conditions:-
(i) In
condition 5(i) the Lessor is expressed to allow the Hirer “credit on the
hire charges ...”. Condition 5(iv) refers to “the credit
facility”. And condition 6 refers to the termination of “the
credit allowed to the Hirer”.
(ii) Condition
5(iv) requires the Hirer to “discharge any indebtedness as soon as
reasonably practicable ...” Condition 6 says that, in the contingency
specified, “... the hire charges will be due ... 28 days from the Lessor
giving notice thereof ...”. And condition 8 requires the Hirer, except
where condition 5 applies, to “... pay ... on demand all charges due
...”.
20. These
features of the Conditions of Hire make it clear, in my judgment, that the
agreement creates an underlying indebtedness on account of hire charges
notwithstanding that the hirer’s damages claim has not yet been concluded
and that the time for payment of the indebtedness has not yet arrived.
21. With
these terms of the agreement in mind I now turn to the relevant provisions of
the 1974 Act.
22. Sections
8 to 15 contain interlocking definitions of agreements to which the Act
applies. It is of importance to decide which if any, of these definitions
catches 1st Automotive’s agreement.
23. Section
8 provides:-
“(1) A
personal credit agreement is an agreement between an individual (“the
debtor”) and any other person (“the creditor”) by which the
creditor provides the debtor with credit of any amount.
(2) A
consumer credit agreement is a personal credit agreement by which the creditor
provides the debtor with credit not exceeding £15,000”.
24. Section
9 defines “credit” as follows:-
“(1) In
this Act “credit” includes a cash loan, and any other form of
financial accommodation”.
25. The
first question for decision is whether 1st Automotive’s agreement is a
personal credit agreement, as defined. If it is, it is certainly a consumer
credit agreement (since the credit provided was of only £346.63). I will,
however, defer consideration of this question until I have referred to the
other relevant definitions of the Act. The reason for this is that Mr Brennan
QC has submitted strongly that the Act must be read as a whole and that, so
read, it is apparent that the expression “personal credit
agreement” was never intended to catch credit hire agreements.
26. Section
10 provides as follows:-
“(1) for
the purposes of this Act -
(a) running
- account credit is a facility under a personal credit agreement whereby the
debtor is enabled to receive from time to time (whether in his own person, or
by another person) from the creditor or a third party cash, goods and services
(or any of them) to an amount or value such that, taking into account payments
made by or to the credit of the debtor, the credit limit (if any) is not at any
time exceeded; and
(b) fixed
sum credit is any other facility under a personal credit agreement whereby the
debtor is enabled to receive credit (whether in one amount or by
instalments)”.
27. It
seems to me clear that 1st Automotive’s agreement does not allow its
customers “running account credit” as described in section
10(1)(a). It follows that, if the agreement is a personal credit agreement, it
allows fixed sum credit as described in section 10(1)(b).
28. Section
11 is of importance. It provides as follows:-
“(1) A
restricted-use credit agreement is a regulated consumer credit agreement -
(a) to
finance a transaction between the debtor and the creditor, whether forming part
of that agreement or not, or
(b) to
finance a transaction between the debtor and a person (the
´supplier’) other than the creditor, or
(c) to
refinance any existing transaction of the debtor’s, whether to the
creditor or another person,
and
“restricted-use credit” shall be construed accordingly”.
I
need not read the rest of section 11.
29. The
Recorder took the view that if the agreement was a consumer credit agreement as
defined, it would have been a restricted-use credit agreement under section
11(1)(c). I think, with respect that this must be wrong. The arrangement
between Mrs Dimond and 1st Automotive did not involve the re-financing of any
existing indebtedness. It involved the postponement of the time for payment of
an indebtedness, namely, the car hiring charges. The charges were payable and
the indebtedness was created under the same transaction as provided for the
postponement of the time for payment. There was no re-financing. The
agreement postponing the time for payment was, in my opinion, for section 11
purposes, an agreement for financing the transaction between Mrs Dimond and 1st
Automotive. If it was a consumer credit agreement it was caught by section
11(1)(a), not section 11(1)(c).
30. Section
12 defines the expression “debtor - creditor - supplier agreement”.
It provides as follows:-
“A
debtor - creditor - supplier agreement is a regulated consumer credit agreement
being -
(a) a
restricted-use credit agreement which falls within section 11(1)(a), or
(b)
......,
or
(c) .......
.”
31. So,
if the 1st Automotive agreement is a consumer credit agreement, it is a debtor
- creditor - supplier agreement under section 12.
32. Nothing
for present purposes turns, in my opinion, on sections 13 or 14. It is worth
noting, however, that if the Recorder had been right in regarding the agreement
as caught by section 11(1)(c), the agreement would have been a “debtor -
creditor agreement” as defined in section 13.
33. Section
15 defines the expression “consumer hire agreement”. It provides
as follows:-
“(1) A
consumer hire agreement is an agreement made by a person with an individual
(the “hirer”) for the bailment. .... of goods to the hirer, being
an agreement which -
(a) is
not a hire-purchase agreement and
(b) is
capable of subsisting for more than three months, and
(c) does
not require the hirer to make payments exceeding £15,000.
(2) A
consumer hire agreement is a regulated agreement if it is not an exempt
agreement”.
34. Section
16 deals with exempt agreements. It is accepted that 1st Automotive’s
agreement is not an exempt agreement under section 16. It is beyond question
an agreement for the bailment of goods to the hirer. But it is not capable of
subsisting for more than three months. Condition 19 limits its duration to 28
days. So the agreement is not a consumer hire agreement under section 15. A
critical question, however, is whether a hire agreement that escapes section 15
because it cannot subsist for more than three months can nonetheless be a
consumer credit agreement, provided, of course, that it allows some “form
of financial accommodation” (section 9). Mr Brennan submits that it
cannot, for the purposes of the Act, be both a hire agreement and a credit
agreement. He supports his submission by referring to some of the Regulations
made under the Act. I will come to those in a moment.
35. Section
60(1) of the Act requires the Secretary of State to “make regulations as
to the form and content of documents embodying regulated agreements ...”.
36. Sub-section
(2) says that:-
“Regulations
under subsection (1) may in particular:-
(a) require
specified information to be included in the prescribed manner in documents, and
other specified material to be excluded;
(b) contain
requirements to ensure that specified information is clearly brought to the
attention of the debtor or hirer, and that one part of a document is not given
insufficient or excessive prominence compared with another”.
37. But
sub-section (3) provides:-
“(3) If,
on an application made to the Director by a person carrying on a consumer
credit business or a consumer hire business, it appears to the Director
impracticable for the applicant to comply with any requirement of regulations
under sub-section (1) in a particular case, he may, by notice to the applicant,
direct that the requirement be waived or varied in relation to such agreements
... and the regulations shall have effect accordingly”.
38. It
is apparent, therefore, that the Act contemplates that compliance with
regulations made thereunder may be impracticable for the purposes of particular
businesses. In that event the Act provides its own remedy. The owner of the
business can apply for the regulations to be varied or waived.
39. Section
61 introduces the concept of a regulated agreement being “properly
executed”. It provides, under sub-section (1), that an agreement is not
“properly executed” unless:-
“(a) a
document in the prescribed form itself containing all the prescribed terms and
conforming to regulations under section 60(1) is signed in the prescribed
manner both by the debtor or hirer and by or an behalf of the creditor or
owner, and
(b) the
document embodies all the terms of the agreement, other than implied terms, and
(c) ...
.”
40. It
is common ground in the present case that the document signed by Mrs Dimond did
not embody all the terms of the agreement between her and 1st Automotive. In
particular, it omitted to include any details of the hire charges. It follows
that the agreement was not “properly executed”.
41. Section
65 provides that:-
“(1) An
improperly - executed regulated agreement is enforceable against the debtor or
hirer on an order of the court only.
(2) .....”.
42. And
section 127(3) requires the court to dismiss an application for an enforcement
order under section 65(1) “unless a document (whether or not in the
prescribed form and complying with regulations under section 60(1)) itself
containing all the prescribed terms of the agreement was signed by the debtor
or hirer (whether or not in the prescribed manner)”.
43. In
the present case, no application for an enforcement order has been made by 1st
Automotive. In any event, the court could not make an enforcement order since
no such document as is required by section 127(3) was ever signed by Mrs Dimond.
44. The
1974 Act was not brought into effect for a number of years. When it was
eventually brought into effect in 1983 it was accompanied by the Consumer
Credit (Agreements) Regulations 1983 made under various sections of the Act,
including sections 60, 61 and 127.
45. Paragraph
2 dealt with the form and content of regulated consumer credit agreements and,
by sub-paragraph (1), required them to contain the information set out in
column 2 of Schedule 1 to the Regulations. Sub-paragraph (2) catered for the
situation where information about financial particulars could not be exactly
ascertained and permitted “estimated information based on such
assumptions as the creditor may reasonably make in all the circumstances of the
case ....” to be included. It is common ground that the agreement
between Mrs Dimond and 1st Automotive did not contain the requisite information.
46. Paragraph
6(1) required that:-
“The
terms specified in column 2 of Schedule 6 ... in relation to the type of
regulated agreement referred to in column 1 ... are hereby prescribed for the
purposes of section 61(1)(a) ... and of section 127(3) ...”.
47. Schedule
6 has the following entry under column 1.
“Restricted-use
debtor - creditor - supplier agreements for fixed-sum credit ...”.
Against
this entry under column 2 is the following prescribed term:-
“A
term stating the amount of the credit, which may be expressed as the total cash
price of the goods, services, land or other things, the acquisition of which is
to be financed by credit under the agreement”.
Under
column 1 there is an entry “consumer hire agreements”. Against
this entry, under column 2, the prescribed term is:-
“A
term stating how the hirer is to discharge his obligations under the agreement
to pay the hire payments ...”.
48. Mr
Brennan drew attention to these contrasting requirements for the purpose of
submitting that hire agreements were intended to be regulated as consumer hire
agreements and not as consumer credit agreements. I am very doubtful, however,
whether it is proper to attempt to construe the 1974 Act in the context of the
1983 Regulations. It is certainly right to try and construe the 1974 Act as a
whole. But the 1983 Regulations post-dated the Act by some 9 years and I do
not think the content of the Regulations can be taken to be a guide to what
Parliament intended by the language used in the Act.
49. Before
returning to the Act, however, I should refer to the Consumer Credit (Exempt
Agreements) Order 1989 made by the Secretary of State under, amongst other
empowering sections, section 16 of the Act.
50. Paragraph
3(1) of the 1989 Order provides that:-
“(1) The
Act shall not regulate a consumer credit agreement which is an agreement of one
of the following descriptions, that is to say -
(a) a
debtor - creditor - supplier agreement being either -
(i) an
agreement for fixed-sum credit under which the total number of payments to be
made by the debtor does not exceed four, and those payments are required to be
made within a period not exceeding 12 months beginning with the date of the
agreement”.
51. I
need not refer to the other limbs of paragraph 3(1). Paragraph 3(1)(a)(i)
shows that if, contrary to Mr Brennan’s submissions, agreements like 1st
Automotive’s are consumer credit agreements, the hire companies can
prevent them from being regulated agreements by limiting the period of credit
to a maximum of 12 months.
52. But
that is of no relevance to 1st Automotive’s agreement with Mrs Dimond
which contained no limit on the duration of the “credit” save that
it would terminate on the conclusion of the claim for damages.
53. So
I return to the critical question, namely, whether a hire agreement under which
payment for the hire is deferred for a period after the hire has come to an end
is a personal credit agreement as defined in section 8 of the Act.
54. The
Recorder held that it was not. He noted that under condition 5 of the
agreement payment was not due “until such time as a claim for damages has
been concluded” and held that because the hirer had no contractual
obligation to pay until that time, credit was not being given. This reasoning
cannot, in my judgment, be accepted. If payment for goods or services or land
is deferred after the time when, if nothing about time of payment had been
agreed, the payment would be due, the payer is being given credit. Such
authority as there is supports this view.
55. In
R
-v- Miller
[1977] 1 WLR 1129 (C.A.) a case in which an undischarged bankrupt was charged
with obtaining credit while a bankrupt, Roskill L.J. giving the judgment of the
court, said:-
“The
obtaining of credit, in our view, means obtaining some benefit from another,
without immediately giving the consideration in return for which that benefit
is conferred”. (p. 1134).
On
this view Mrs Dimond obtained credit from 1st Automotive.
56. In
Consumer Credit Legislation Vol. 1, paragraph 437 contains a discussion of
“The ingredients of credit”. Credit involves, in the view of the
editor, Professor Goode:-
“(a) the
supply of a benefit;
(b) attracting
a contractual duty of payment;
(c) in
money;
(d) the
duty to pay being contractually deferred;
(e) for
a significant period of time after payment has been earned;
(f) such
deferment being granted by way of financial accommodation”.
Each
of these elements is present under the agreement between Mrs Dimond and 1st
Automotive. In paragraph 443 the following general principle is expressed:-
“Debt
is deferred, and credit extended, whenever the contract provides for the debtor
to pay, or gives him the option to pay, later than the time at which payment
would otherwise have been earned under the express or implied terms of the
contract”.
57. This
principle, in my judgment, correctly expresses the test for identifying
“credit” for the purposes of the 1974 Act.
58. After
we had reserved judgment in this appeal a decision of Mr Justice Pumfrey in a
tax case,
Grant
-v- Watton
,
[1999] Simons Tax Cases 330, came to my attention. The question in the case
was whether a close company had made a loan to a director. A loan, for this
purpose, would include “any form of credit”. At p. 345 the judge
considered the scope of these words and said this:-
“In
my judgment, on the face of it, credit is granted where payment is not demanded
until a time later than the supply of services or goods to which the payment
relates. Credit is the deferral of payment of a sum which, absent agreement,
would be immediately payable”.
I
entirely agree.
59. These
statements of principle, applied to the facts of the present case, seem to me
to require the conclusion, a conclusion which common sense also demands, that
in allowing payment for the replacement vehicle to be deferred until her
damages claim was concluded, Mrs Dimond was being allowed credit. The
agreement itself referred to the deferral as “credit” (condition
5(i) and (iv) and condition 6).
60. So
what are the arguments against that conclusion? Mr Brennan has drawn our
attention to a letter dated 27 July 1998 sent to 1st Automotive by the Office
of Fair Trading. The author of the letter expressed the opinion, also
expressed by the Recorder, that “the agreement does not entail credit, as
payment of the hire is only required on settlement of an insurance claim and
therefore there would not appear to be any contractual deferment of
debt”. I do not accept this opinion. It fails to notice the existence
of an indebtedness from, at latest, the end of the hiring. The agreement
refers to the indebtedness in condition 5(iv). More important, the question
whether there is a contractual deferment of debt cannot be answered simply by
looking at the contractual date of payment. It is necessary also to ask when,
but for that stipulation, payment would have had to be made. It is the
difference between the two dates that constitutes the credit.
61. Mr
Brennan reminded us also that the validity of the very agreement that we are
considering in this appeal was considered by the House of Lords in
Devlin
-v- Baslington
,
which was conjoined with
Giles
-v- Thompson
[1994] 1 AC 142. There was no suggestion by any of their Lordships that the
agreement might be caught by the 1974 Act.
62. The
point of validity that was argued before the House of Lords related to the
allegedly champertous nature of the agreement. This attack on the
agreement’s validity was rejected by the House of Lords. No point on the
1974 Act was raised. It is impossible to treat the upholding of the agreement
by their Lordships as indicating any view, one way or the other, on a point not
raised before them at all.
63. More
cogent, in my view, was Mr Brennan’s reliance on paragraph 456.6 in
Consumer Credit Legislation, Vol. 1 that deals expressly with “credit
hire agreements” and the question whether the deferment of the obligation
to pay the hire charges constitutes the provision of credit. According to
paragraph 456.6 it does not. The issue is dealt with in the following passage:-
“There
are several answers to this contention. The first is that for the purposes of
the Act there is no extension of credit at all. Under the Act there are only
two forms of credit, namely credit which finances a transaction and credit
which refinances an existing indebtedness. To fall within the first of these
two categories the credit must finance the acquisition of land, goods, services
or other things. But in the case of a rental agreement nothing is being
acquired; there is merely the renting of a vehicle. Nor does the case fall
within the second category .... it is not thereby financing an existing
indebtedness, it is merely fixing the time when a future indebtedness is to
arise ...”.
64. This
passage was written by Professor Goode, an acknowledged master of the
intricacies of consumer credit control. Nonetheless I am unable to accept this
analysis. First, the proposition that a car hire agreement does not involve
the acquisition of a service is not, in my judgment, correct. A car hire
company offers a service to its customers just as does a company that hires out
video tapes, a liveryman who hires out horses or Moss Bros in hiring out
evening dress. There is, in my opinion, no distinction in principle between a
service that consists of making available some article for use by a customer
and the service offered by a barber or by a taxidriver or by a caterer. If any
of these services is made available on terms that involve deferring payment for
a period after the service has come to an end, the supplier of the service is,
in my opinion, providing a credit facility to the customer. In the present
case, the agreement that Mrs Dimond’s obligation to pay for the car hire
would be deferred until her damages claim had been concluded was, in my
judgment, an agreement allowing her “credit” for the purposes of
the 1974 Act.
65. Finally,
Mr Brennan submitted that the structure of the Act made it impossible for an
agreement to be at the same time a consumer hire agreement and a consumer
credit agreement. That possibility does not arise in the present case. The
1st Automotive agreement was not capable of lasting for more than three months,
so it could not have been a consumer hire agreement as defined. But the point
is a fair one because if condition 19 had been omitted, the 1st Automotive
agreement would have been a consumer hire agreement under section 15. Could it
at the same time have been a consumer credit agreement?
66. Professor
Goode supports Mr Brennan in his submission that it could not. Paragraph 456.6
continues, after the passage I have already cited, as follows:-
“....
it is hard to believe that the draftsman of the Act could have contemplated a
legal regime under which a single facility, the rental of goods, at a single
rental could simultaneously be a regulated consumer hire agreement ... and a
regulated consumer credit agreement. The complexities of such a regime and the
confusion that would be engendered in the minds of hirers presented with two
different and incompatible sets of disclosure will be obvious. Plainly
consumer credit and consumer hire are envisaged as mutually exclusive
categories ...”.
67. I
see the force of this but am not persuaded that the two regimes would
necessarily be incompatible. If certain prescribed requirements have to be
included in regulated agreements for the hire of goods and other requirements
have to be included in regulated agreements that provide credit, then
agreements that both provide for the hire of goods and allow credit for payment
of the hire charges may have to include both sets of requirements. If any
genuine case of incompatibility were to arise, the Act provides the remedy via
an application under section 60(3) for a waiver or variation of the requirements.
68. I
prefer an answer to this first question that confronts the potential two
regimes difficulty to one that ignores the obvious credit facility being
provided to customers under agreements like 1st Automotive’s and that
distorts the otherwise clear language of the statutory definitions in sections
8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 of the Act.
69. In
my judgment the 1st Automotive agreement was a personal credit agreement
(section 8(1)), a consumer credit agreement (section 8(2)), an agreement for a
fixed sum credit facility (section 10(1)(b), a restricted-use credit agreement
under section 11(1)(a) and a debtor - creditor - supplier agreement under
section 12(a). It would also have been a consumer hire agreement if it had
been capable of lasting more than 3 months.
Is
the 1st Automotive agreement enforceable?
70. It
is common ground that the agreement was not, for the purposes of section 61,
“properly executed”.
71. First,
the document signed by Mrs Dimond did not contain all the “prescribed
terms” (s.61(1)(a)). Secondly the document did not contain all the terms
of the agreement between Mrs Dimond and 1st Automotive. As to the first
deficiency, Mr Brennan submitted that 1st Automotive could not have included in
the document all the prescribed terms as set out in Schedule 6 to the 1983
Regulations. I do not agree that this was so. The prescribed term
particularly pointed to by Mr Brennan was “A term stating the amount of
the credit, which may be expressed as the total cash price of the goods,
services, land or other things, the acquisition of which is to be financed by
credit under the agreement”. Mr Brennan submitted, in paragraph 6.4 of
his Skeleton, that the amount of the credit would be unknown since the length
of the hire period would be unknown. But the daily rate of hire would be known
and an estimate of the period of hire could be obtained from the garage that
was repairing the damaged vehicle. In these circumstances paragraph 2(2) of
the 1983 Regulations would, as I read it, apply and would have allowed 1st
Automotive to insert an estimate of the amount of credit with an indication of
the assumptions on which the estimate was made. I do not accept that 1st
Automotive could not have complied with the Regulations.
72. Mr
Brennan submitted also that the prescribed requirements that were omitted from
the document signed by Mrs Dimond could be waived or varied by the Director on
an application under section 60(3). The proposition that a section 60(3)
application can be made in order to validate an agreement already entered into
where the credit has already been provided seems to me doubtful. Another way
of putting the same point is to doubt whether a section 60(3) waiver or
variation of requirements could retrospectively validate an agreement
unenforceable for want of compliance with the statutory requirements. Section
60(4) seems to me to stand in the way. A sub-section (3) notice would, in the
case of an existing agreement, be bound to prejudice the interests of the
debtor or hirer. We did not receive any detailed submissions from counsel as
to whether or not an application could now be made under section 60(3) by 1st
Automotive. My view, however, on a reading of sub-sections (3) and (4) is that
the section 60(3) application must be made and the notice of waiver or
variation must be given by the Director before the agreement has been entered
into and that the notice can have prospective but not retrospective effect.
73. Accordingly,
in my judgment, the agreement between Mrs Dimond and 1st Automotive cannot be
enforced against her. This is not a case, for reasons already explained, in
which an enforcement order under section 127 could be obtained.
Can
Mrs Dimond nonetheless claim damages for the loss of use of her car?
74. This,
in my opinion, is the most difficult issue in the case. There is no doubt but
that, by the negligence of Mr Lovell, Mrs Dimond was deprived of the use of her
car for 8 days. There is also no doubt but that she had a genuine need of a
replacement vehicle and that the reasonable cost to her of obtaining one would
have been recoverable as damages. But, in the event, she has had the use of a
replacement vehicle but has no legal liability to pay for it. This has come
about not through the benevolence of a friend or relation but because 1st
Automotive’s car hiring agreement has fallen foul of the Consumer Credit
legislation. If she can, nonetheless, recover damages she has said that she
will pay the damages over to 1st Automotive even though she has no legal
liability to do so.
75. Mr
McLaren Q.C., counsel for the appellant/defendant, has submitted that if Mrs
Dimond has no legal liability to pay 1st Automotive, she has suffered no
recoverable loss. Her loss of use of her Suzuki has been compensated for by a
benefit derived from 1st Automotive that comes with no charge. So no special
damages for loss of use of her car can be claimed. Mr Brennan, on the other
hand, has submitted that the item of loss for which she is entitled to damages
is the loss of use of her car. It is beside the point that, in the events that
happened, she was able to remedy that loss of use without having to pay anyone
anything.
76. There
are two distinct strands of authority that bear upon this conundrum.
77. One
line of authority holds that benefits received by a plaintiff from a third
party that have offset some loss caused to the plaintiff by the negligence are
immaterial to the plaintiff’s damages claim. The other line of authority
stresses that damages are compensatory and a plaintiff who, in the event, has
suffered no loss cannot recover damages.
78. Parry
-v- Cleaver
[1970] AC1 was a case of the former sort. The House of Lords held that a
policeman disabled in a car accident caused by the defendant’s negligence
did not have to bring his police pension (which he had in substance himself
provided by his pre-accident service) into account against his recoverable
damages.
79. But
in
Hussain
-v- New Taplow Paper Mills Ltd
[1988] 1AC 514, payments by the defendants to the plaintiff equal to half his
pre-accident earnings under their “permanent health insurance
scheme” for their employees (to which employees did not contribute) were
held to be deductible in assessing the plaintiff’s damages for loss of
earnings. Lord Bridge of Harwich, after referring to
Parry
-v- Cleaver,
emphasised “the rule that prima facie the only recoverable loss is the
net loss” (p. 527) and, at p.530, said that:-
“...
it has always been assumed as axiomatic that an employee who receives under the
terms of his contract of employment either the whole or part of his salary or
wages during a period when he is incapacitated for work cannot claim damages
for a loss which he has not sustained”.
80. And
in
Hodgson
-v- Trapp
[1989] 1AC 807 the House of Lords held that attendance and mobility allowances
payable to the plaintiff under the Social Security Act 1975 ought to be
deducted from the damages assessed as being necessary to provide for the cost
of care of the plaintiff. Otherwise there would have been an element of double
recovery.
81. Donnelly
-v- Joyce
[1974] 1 Q.B. 454 was a case in which the plaintiff’s mother had given up
her part-time employment and devoted herself to caring for him. She naturally
did not charge for these services. The plaintiff was awarded damages an
element of which represented his mother’s loss of wages. The Court of
Appeal dismissed an appeal against this award. Counsel for the defendant
submitted that a plaintiff could not recover damages that represented someone
else’s loss unless he was under a legal liability to reimburse that loss.
And this plaintiff was under no liability to reimburse his mother. The Court
of Appeal did not agree, Megaw L.J., giving the judgment of the court, said
this at p. 462:-
“...
The plaintiff’s loss ... is not the expenditure of money ... to pay for
the nursing attention. His loss is the existence of the need .... for those
nursing services, the value of which for the purposes of damages ... is the
proper and reasonable cost of supplying those needs. That, in our judgment, is
the key to the problem. So far as the defendant is concerned, the loss is not
someone else’s loss. It is the plaintiff’s loss”.
82. Donnelly
-v- Joyce
was followed in another Court of Appeal case
McAll
-v- Brooks
(1984) RTR 99. This case, like the present, involved a replacement car. The
plaintiff’s car was off the road being repaired. Under the
plaintiff’s insurance policy a replacement car was made available to him
at a charge of £328. He claimed the £328 from the defendant who was
admittedly liable for the damage to the plaintiff’s car. It turned out,
however, that the insurers were not licensed to carry on an insurance business.
So the £328 was not in law recoverable by them from the plaintiff. Could
the plaintiff claim that sum as damages from the defendant? The Court of
Appeal held, following
Donnelly
-v- Joyce
,
that he could. It was a two judge Court of Appeal. Lawton L.J. cited a
passage from the judgment of Megaw L.J. in
Donnelly
-v- Joyce
.
It included the passage I have already cited. He held that, since the
plaintiff had an admitted need for a replacement car “on the authority of
Donnelly’s
case that need had to be paid for by the wrongdoer”. Dillon L.J. agreed.
He said:-
“The
court is not concerned in awarding damages to consider whether the plaintiff
does or does not owe a legal or moral obligation to a third party or to
consider what the plaintiff is going to do with the money awarded to him”.
83.
McAll
-v- Brooks
is, as a decision of the Court of Appeal, prima facie binding on us. If it
were the last word on the subject, that would be an end of this point. Mrs
Dimond would be entitled to damages for loss of use of her Suzuki even though
she has no obligation to pay anything to 1st Automotive. But
McAll
-v- Brooks
is not the last word on the subject. The last word is the decision of the
House of Lords in
Hunt
-v- Severs
[1994] 2 AC 350.
84. Hunt
-v- Severs
was a case in which the plaintiff had been very severely injured in a
motorcycle accident caused by the defendant’s negligence. They later
married. The plaintiff’s damages claim included claims for the value of
his services, past and future, in looking after her. The trial judge and the
Court of Appeal held that she was entitled to recover the value of those
services although it was the defendant tortfeasor who was providing them. The
House of Lords allowed the appeal. Lord Bridge of Harwich emphasised, as he
had done in
Hussain,
that “... damages in the tort of negligence are purely compensatory.
[The plaintiff] should recover from the tortfeasor no more and no less than he
has lost”. He went on, at p. 357:-
“Difficult
questions may arise when the plaintiff’s injuries attract benefits from
third parties. According to their nature these may or may not be taken into
account as reducing the tortfeasor’s liability. The two well established
categories of receipt which are to be ignored in assessing damages are the
fruits of insurance which the plaintiff himself has provided against the
contingency causing his injuries (which may or may not lead to a claim by the
insurer as subrogated to the rights of the plaintiff) and the fruits of the
benevolence of third parties motivated by sympathy for the plaintiff’s
misfortune. The policy considerations which underlie these two apparent
exceptions to the rule against double recovery are, I think, well
understood”.
85. Lord
Bridge then referred to the cases where the plaintiff had been allowed to
recover as damages the value of care services voluntarily provided by friends
or relations. He referred, in particular, to the passage from Megaw
L.J.’s judgment in
Donnelly
-v- Joyce
on which Lawton L.J. had relied in
McAll
-v- Brooks
.
As to that passage Lord Bridge said this (at p.361):-
“...
I do not find this reasoning convincing. I accept that the basis of a
plaintiff’s claim for damages may consist in his need for services but I
cannot accept that the question from what source that need has been met is
irrelevant. If an injured plaintiff is treated in hospital as a private
patient he is entitled to recover the cost of that treatment. But if he
receives free treatment under the National Health Service his need has been met
without cost to him and he cannot claim the cost of the treatment from the
tortfeasor. So it cannot, I think, be right to say that in all cases the
plaintiff’s loss is ´for the purpose of damages ... the proper and
reasonable cost of supplying [his] needs’.”
86. Lord
Bridge accepted that it was established in English law that “an injured
plaintiff may recover the reasonable value of gratuitous services rendered to
him by way of voluntary care by a member of his family” (p. 363). He
held, however, that the rationale behind this principle was “to enable
the voluntary carer to receive proper recompense for his or her
services”. So he adopted the view expressed by Lord Denning M.R. in
Cunningham
-v- Harrison
[1973] Q.B. 942 that “in England the injured plaintiff who recovers
damages under this head should hold them on trust for the voluntary
carer”. But this could not be done where the voluntary carer was the
defendant who had to pay the damages.
87. Each
of the other members of the House agreed with Lord Bridge’s reasons for
allowing the appeal.
88. Lord
Bridge’s reasoning, in disapproving the reasoning of Megaw L.J. in
Donnelly
-v- Joyce
,
fatally undermines, in my judgment,
McAll
-v- Brooks
.
If a plaintiff has received a benefit from a third party that has, in the
event, met his need with no cost to himself, be it a need for care services or
a need for a replacement vehicle, the court may allow an award of damages in
order to enable the plaintiff to recompense the third party. The plaintiff
will then hold the amount of the award in trust for the third party. But if
the circumstances of the case do not permit a trust for the third party to be
imposed on the damages, the plaintiff cannot recover the damages. He does not
need to recover damages in order to meet his own loss for, in the event, he has
suffered none. To allow him to recover in circumstances where the trust
solution could not be applied would lead to a recovery by the plaintiff of more
than he had lost. These, in my judgment, are the principles to be applied in
the present case.
89. Mrs
Dimond’s need for a replacement vehicle was met by 1st Automotive. They
supplied her with a vehicle under the terms of the hiring agreement that she
signed. But that agreement is unenforceable for 1st Automotive’s failure
to comply with the requirements of the 1974 Act. 1st Automotive certainly did
not provide the vehicle out of benevolence. It supplied the vehicle in the
course of its business. Would the law in these circumstances impose a trust on
the damages in favour of 1st Automotive? In my judgment, certainly not. The
statutory requirements of which 1st Automotive were in breach were imposed by
Parliament and, under subordinate legislation, by the Secretary of State. I
can see no reason at all how it can be right for equity, via the medium of a
trust, to remedy 1st Automotive’s failure to comply with the statutory
requirements.
Orakpo
-v- Manson Investments Ltd
[1978] AC 95 provides an instructive example. The defendants in the case were
licensed moneylenders. They made loans to the plaintiff but, in doing so,
failed to comply with the requirements of the Moneylenders Act 1927. The
consequence was that the loan agreements were unenforceable. The plaintiff had
used the money to purchase some properties. He had granted the defendants a
first mortgage but that, too, was unenforceable because of the breaches of the
1927 Act. The defendants claimed that to the extent that their money had been
used to discharge vendors’ liens over the properties they were entitled
by subrogation to the benefit of the liens. The House of Lords rejected this
claim. Somewhat different reasons were given by different members of the
House. Lord Salmon, at p.111, commented that he could not think “that it
would be proper to apply an equitable doctrine for the purpose of enabling a
moneylender to escape from the consequences of his breach of the statute
...”. Lord Edmond Davies quoted from the written submission of the
respondent in person:-
“Should
a court of equity grant relief to an offending moneylender in breach of section
6 of the Act of 1927, contrary to the statutory prohibition of remedy? Can a
moneylender claiming relief in equity in these circumstances avoid setting up
his very own breach of the law to support such a claim?”.
He
answered these questions as follows:-
“Considerable
though my reluctance is, in the particular circumstances, to answer these
questions in the negative, I find myself compelled to do so, for to answer
affirmatively would be to enable the court to express a policy of its own in
regard to moneylending transactions which would be in direct conflict with the
policy of the Act of 1927 itself”. (p. 115).
90. In
the present case, the 1974 Act has enacted that an agreement not
“properly executed” is unenforceable. It is not, in my judgment,
the function of the courts to remedy that unenforceability by creating a trust
in favour of 1st Automotive over damages payable to Mrs Dimond. If
McAll
-v- Brooks
had been decided after
Hunt
-v- Severs
the same reasoning would, in my view, have prevented recovery in that case. A
trust in favour of the insurance company that had been carrying on an illegal
insurance business created in order to remedy the consequences of the
illegality would, in my view, have been wrong in principle. If a trust of the
damages in favour of the supplier of the replacement vehicle cannot be created,
Hunt
-v- Severs
stands, in my judgment, as an authority that bars recovery of the damages from
the defendant.
91. In
my judgment, in disagreement with the Recorder,
McAll
-v- Brooks
is no longer good law and Mrs Dimond who has fortuitously obtained a
replacement vehicle without having to pay for it, cannot recover as damages the
amount she would have had to pay if her agreement with 1st Automotive had been
enforceable.
Was
there a failure by Mrs Dimond to take reasonable steps to mitigate her damage?
92. This
question does not strictly arise. But we have had full argument on it. 1st
Automotive, and others carrying on a like business, can adjust their business
practices so as to avoid in the future falling foul of the requirements of the
1974 Act. So this question may still need answering.
93. The
standard of conduct required of a plaintiff in order to avoid charges of a
failure to mitigate his damage is not a particularly onerous one. As it is put
in McGregor on Damages, 16th Ed., in para. 322:-
“Although
the plaintiff must act with the defendant’s as well as with his own
interests in mind, he is only required to act reasonably and the standard of
reasonableness is not high in view of the fact that the defendant is an
admitted wrongdoer”.
94. In
the present case it is clear from the evidence that Mrs Dimond, or perhaps her
husband, simply accepted their insurance broker’s recommendation to use
the services on offer from 1st Automotive. It was, in my opinion, eminently
reasonable for them to have done so. A broker is more likely to have a
knowledge of the services on offer that an individual could acquire even after
a tedious hour or so with Yellow Pages and a telephone. It cannot be the law
that a plaintiff who asks for the advice of a broker and does not herself
telephone around to test the market is failing to take reasonable steps to
mitigate her damage. The broker was, of course, her agent. Should he have
tested the car hire market in order to advise her whom she should approach for
a replacement vehicle? There was no evidence from the broker, so what, if any,
thought he gave to ordinary car hire firms one cannot tell. But it seems to me
that he was entitled to take the view that a firm like 1st Automotive, which
would provide Mrs Dimond with a suitable vehicle and relieve her from the worry
of having to argue with Mr Lovell’s insurers about recovery and from the
worry of any necessary litigation, would provide a service that she could
reasonably decide to take. Mr McLaren pointed out, correctly, that damages for
worry and for the nuisance caused by having to deal with the consequences of an
accident are not recoverable. It does not follow, however, that an injured
party’s decision to hire a replacement vehicle from a company which, as
well as supplying the vehicle, will relieve her of the worry and nuisance which
would normally result from the accident is a decision which fails to take
sufficient account of the defendant’s interest. Nor, in my view, does
the fact that the company’s hire charges are higher than those of the
ordinary car hire companies necessarily lead to a different conclusion. The
evidence in the case was that 1st Automotive’s charges were in line with
those of other companies offering a similar service.
95. It
is, after all, a question of fact whether a plaintiff has acted reasonably in
incurring the item of expense that is sought to be recovered as damages. The
Recorder held that Mrs Dimond had acted reasonably in hiring her replacement
vehicle from 1st Automotive. In so holding he was implicitly also holding that
in doing so Mrs Dimond had not failed to take reasonable account of the
interests of Mr Lovell. The evidence before him entitled him, in my judgment,
to come to that conclusion. I do not think it was obligatory for Mrs Dimond to
shop around or to go to an ordinary car hire company. It was reasonable to
choose the special niche service on offer from 1st Automotive. If the
agreement Mrs Dimond entered into with 1st Automotive had been enforceable
against her, I would, in agreement with the Recorder, have held her to be
entitled to recover as damages the charges payable under it.
96. In
the event, however, I would allow the appeal.
THE
RT. HON. LORD JUSTICE THORPE:
97. I
agree.
THE
RT. HON. LORD JUSTICE JUDGE:
98. With
the exception of the last question, described in argument as
“mitigation” of the plaintiff’s damage, I agree with the
reasoning of the Vice Chancellor about each matter covered in his judgment.
99. Like
the Vice Chancellor I shall assume that this final issue is properly described
as mitigation rather than the assessment of damage. The plaintiff’s claim
is confined to damage suffered because she could not use her own car while it
was being repaired. Such claims are commonplace. Assuming that there is
indeed any loss (as to which, see Lord Mustill’s warning in
Giles
v Thompson
[1994] 1 AC 142, at 167, that “The need for a replacement car is not
self-proving”), it is conventionally assessed by reference to the cost of
hiring a substitute car while necessary repairs are carried out. The
conventional approach is neither fixed nor immutable (in the context of the
hire of a car of equal quality to the damaged car, see
H.L.
Motorworks v Alwahbi
[1977] RTR 276 where the cost was allowed, and
Watson
Norie v Shaw
(1967) 111 S.J. 117 where it was not). Indeed if the approach were fixed or
immutable Lord Mustill would not have expressed himself as he did in
Giles
v Thompson:
"What
matters is that the judges should look carefully at claims for hiring, both as
to their duration and as to their rate. This will do much to avoid the
inflated claims of which defendants’ insurers are understandably
apprehensive and will also discourage promotion of over optimistic claims by
motorists..... "
100. Precisely
the same principles apply to the analogous situation when the court is required
to quantify the diminution in value of a vehicle following accidental damage.
The cost of repair is normally taken to represent the damage (see
The
London Corporation
[1935] P 70, at 77:
Darbishire
v Warran
[1963] 1 WLR 1067 at 1071). This represents a practical method of quantifying
the loss, but in some cases the cost of repairs may not adequately represent
the whole of the diminution in value (
Payton
v Brooks
[1974) RTR 169) and in yet other cases it may be regarded as excessive (
Darbishire
v Warran
).
101. It
is therefore not possible to pronounce authoritatively and finally on the
substantial practical question which concerns the present defendant’s
insurers, that is, whether it is reasonable for every plaintiff whose car has
been damaged in circumstances in which the defendant’s liability is
obvious, or virtually so, to take advantage of the useful facilities offered by
organisations such as 1st Automotive Limited. Without attempting to define the
factual issues which may arise in any individual case the assessment will
reflect ordinary questions such as the reasonableness of the use of an
alternative vehicle, and appropriate steps to be taken in mitigation by the
plaintiff. The circumstances are bound to vary. The individual plaintiff may
have an urgent need immediately to find a replacement car, which may make it
entirely reasonable for him to take advantage of the facilities offered by 1st
Automotive Limited, or similar organisations, notwithstanding that the cost of
the replacement vehicle would also include the additional expense necessary for
these organisations to operate their businesses at a reasonable profit. Where
the defendant’s insurers are unwilling, or hesitate to accept liability
in an obvious case, it may similarly be reasonable for the plaintiff to elect
to use such services. On the other hand if the defendant’s insurers make
a rapid offer to provide an alternative vehicle, or the limited extent of the
damage actually sustained by the vehicle enables the plaintiff to use it while
making reasonable enquiries to check on the alternatives, rather than simply
involve the defendant (or his insurers) in an increased liability, it may be
inappropriate to use the cost charged by organisations like 1st Automotive as
the correct basis for quantifying the claim for loss of use.
102. Reduced
to a single word, the test is reasonableness, and where the claim is inflated
it should be reduced to reasonable levels. Without attempting a disquisition
on the relevant legal principles, in practical terms in most cases it may be
useful for the actual rate of hiring an alternative vehicle to be taken as the
normal starting point. If this figure represents local hire rates there is
unlikely to be much dispute. If the alternative vehicle was hired from an
organisation like 1st Automotive Limited, then if the defendant’s
insurers contend that this rate is unreasonable, they should be prepared to
advance evidence, and argument. If the amount in dispute between the parties
justifies the expense of litigation, the trial judge will have to assess the
claim for loss of use in the light of his findings of fact.
103. Applying
these principles to the present case, my preliminary view on reading the
papers, and indeed during the course of argument, was that the judge’s
assessment in this present case was somewhat over generous. The plaintiff, who
had no urgent need of the replacement car, made no enquiries of the local rates
available from hire companies, nor of the defendant’s insurers, to check
whether they would have been prepared to agree to such rates. However, given
that this was a question of fact for the trial judge, I am not prepared to
dissent from the conclusion reached by the Vice Chancellor.
THE
VICE-CHANCELLOR: The judgments in this case have been handed down and the
judgment of the court is in terms of the judgments handed down as amended
pursuant to the very helpful corrections which were submitted to us. There is
just one thing I wanted to add. I have had a letter from Mr Brennan, who on
the hearing was leading counsel for the respondents, explaining why he could
not be here today. He also has expressed somewhat of a complaint that the
judgments did not deal with the arguments that he put forward relating to a
restitutionary recovery. I just wanted to say about that, so there is no
doubt as to what the position is, that the arguments about restitutionary
recovery did not find any mention in the pleadings in the case; they found no
mention in the judgment of the judge below; they found no mention in any
respondent's notice; they found no mention in the respondent's skeleton
argument. They were mentioned in argument by Mr Brennan, but it seems to me,
having heard the argument, the argument was not sufficiently cogent to warrant
any reference in the judgment. The letter says that Mr Brennan assumes the
court rejected the argument. The assumption is correct.
Order: Appeal
allowed with costs here and below; the respondent do repay to the appellant the
sum of £346.63 together with interest of £18.06; application for
leave to appeal to the House of Lords refused. (
This
order does not form part of the approved judgment
)
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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1999/1311.html