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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Graham v Chorley Borough Council [2006] EWCA Civ 92 (21 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/92.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 92 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PRESTON COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Appleton
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division|)
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
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Neina Graham |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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Chorley Borough Council |
Defendants/ Respondents |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Timothy Edge (instructed by Forbes) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Paragraph | ||
Part 1. | Introduction | 1 |
Part 2. | The statements of case and the evidence before the judge | 3 |
Part 3. | The defendants' submission of no case to answer and the judge's ruling | 12 |
Part 4. | The correct destination of the appeal | 17 |
Part 5. | The judge's failure to put the defendants to their election | 25 |
Lord Justice Brooke:
Part 1. Introduction
Part 2. The statements of case and the evidence before the judge
"As, on the day of the accident, I was training my puppy in the back garden, I was walking from the house down the garden path when my right foot caught against the raised flagstone and I fell forwards."
Part 3. The defendants' submission of no case to answer and the judge's ruling
"Your Honour, before I call evidence, I wonder if I may address your Honour in relation to the claimant's case?
Judge: By all means"
Part 4. The correct destination of the appeal
"An appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeal where the decision to be appealed is a final decision –
a) in a claim made under Part 7 of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 and allocated to the multi-track under these Rules."
Para 1(2)(c) provides:
"(c) 'final decision' means a decision of a court that would finally determine (subject to any possible appeal or detailed assessment of costs) the entire proceedings whichever way the court decided the issues before it."
i) That he accepted the defendant's submission that there was no case to answer (Decision 1);
ii) That judgment be entered in favour of the defendants (Decision 2).
If the claimant had submitted that the judge should not have heard a submission of no case to answer without first putting the defendants to their election, the judge might have made a third decision, namely that they need not be put to their election (Decision 3).
"The judges of this court (and the staff at the Civil Appeals Office) have to interpret the order of the lower court as we find it. The relevant decision is the Court's order, and the Destination Order determines where appeal should lie from that order… The appeal court must be the one that is readily ascertainable from the face of the court's order, and not one which would or might have been ascertainable if the judge had made a different order. It would be intolerable if appeal courts had to be subjected to a complicated examination of the types of order that might have been made if the parties had dealt with things differently in the lower court, merely for the purpose of determining whether they possess jurisdiction. The destination of the appeal should be ascertainable from the language of the order" (at para 29, emphasis supplied).
Part 5. The judge's failure to put the defendants to their election
"which ought to be followed in such cases, as has been quite clearly laid down in this court, of refusing to rule on the submission unless counsel for the defendant said he was going to call no evidence. That must be regarded as the proper practice to follow."
"Let me state my central conclusion as emphatically as I can. Rarely, if ever, should a judge trying a civil action without a jury entertain a submission of no case to answer. That clearly was the court's conclusion in Alexander v Rayson and I see no reason to take a different view today, the CPR notwithstanding. Almost without exception the dangers and difficulties involved will outweigh any supposed advantages...Any temptation to entertain a submission should almost invariably be resisted."
Keene LJ agreed, and Scott Baker LJ, also agreeing, said, in a one-paragraph judgment (at para 36):
"It seems to me that the wise words of Romer LJ in Alexander v Rayson in 1936 still hold good today. Only in the most exceptional circumstances should a judge entertain a submission to dismiss an action at the close of the claimant's evidence without putting the defendant to his election. This was not such a case and it is difficult to envisage many situations when such a course would be appropriate."
"[H]ave the claimants advanced a prima facie case, a case to answer, a scintilla of evidence, to support the inference for which they contend, sufficient to call for an explanation from the defendants? That it may be a weak case and unlikely to succeed unless assisted, rather than contradicted, by the defendant's evidence, or by adverse inferences to be drawn from the defendant's not calling any evidence, would not allow it to be dismissed on a no case submission."
"I think it is not terribly helpful. It contains information from previous White Books that they should have jettisoned but never had the courage to do so. The only authority, I think, is from a deputy High Court judge [Mr David Foskett QC]."
The judge said that this authority did not create a precedent binding on any other first instance judge.
"Well, with respect to the learned Lord Justice, simply trying cases at first instance, if there is a serious credibility problem which will not be affected one way or the other by any evidence from the defendants, the court cannot just say, 'Well, we had better let the thing run'. That is not the CPR way of doing things."
"[W]hatever evidence the defendants were to call, your case is not ever going to get any better".
Later on, he said:
"The crucial question for this court is whether the claimant is to be accepted and believed in the account she has given of the accident. There is no other evidence anybody can possibly give to avoid the court in having to make its mind up about whether that is an acceptable account or not. It is as simple as that."
"The court simply applies the standard test which is simply this: Has she discharged the proving of her case on the balance of probabilities? In other words, is the court satisfied that it is more likely to be correct than not that what she says about the accident is correct? How can the court possibly proceed when there are at least three competing versions from her about what has happened? The answer is it cannot. The matter has been drawn to my attention because we have finished the evidence of the Claimant, but it cannot possibly be remedied by anything that anybody is going to say, were the defendants to be made to call evidence".
Lord Justice Rix:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: