![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Smout v Wulfrun Hotels Ltd [2023] EWHC 1128 (KB) (10 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/1128.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1128 (KB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
ON APPEAL FROM
THE COUNTY COURT AT BIRMINGHAM
CLAIM NO F33YY756
B e f o r e :
____________________
PHILLIP SMOUT |
Respondent/Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
WULFRUN HOTELS LIMITED |
Appellant/Defendant |
____________________
Philip Davy (instructed by FBC Manby Bowdler) for the Respondent/Claimant
Hearing date: 27.4.2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Ritchie:
The appeal
Bundles and evidence
The issue
Appeal - CPR 52
Findings of fact
Chronology of the Recorder's findings and the action
"Please can you provide evidence that this is not a frivolous case where your firm has encouraged Mr P Smout to make a speculative claim against our business. Unless you provide further evidence this e-mail is now a cease and decist instruction. We aim to defend our business against any litigation and by sending any further correspondence you are expressly entering into an agreement for reimbursing our costs at £100 per letter defend the claim." (sic)
"Your malingering client who claims he is a trained physiotherapist works on building sites and could have injured himself anywhere. Unless some concrete evidence is forthcoming I shall pass on the claim to our insurance company and you can argue the case with them directly. For the record your client's claim is being challenged and your incompetence is on record for citing the incorrect statues under which you were making the claim. It beggars belief that as a law firm you turn to typographical errors in your defence for the shabby work produced. Therefore I must draw the inference that the money spent on legal training was wasteful. Our company has repeatedly had to put up with your pathetic assertions which have yet to be substantiated. We are a reputable business with an excellent record for health and safety. Take your empty threats for contempt of court as the matter is not in the courtroom. In turn focus on providing some hard evidence to support your claim."
"rather than looking at things in objective fashion (sic) Mr. Khan you had impulsive urge to making claims against our company without carrying out necessary due diligence. If you were a solicitor, I would have you struck off for incompetence but unfortunately you never made the grade."
"may I remind you that all such correspondence are able to be put before the judge dealing with the case, and so you may wish to moderate your tone in future."
The Judgment
Grounds of appeal
"such interest should not run from the date of the accident: for the simple reason that these misfortunes do not occur at that moment, but are spread indefinitely into the future; and they cannot possibly be quantified at that moment, but must of necessity be quantified later... Interest should be awarded on this lump sum as from the time when the Defendant ought to have paid it, but did not; for it is only from that time that the Claimant can be said to have been kept out of the money. This might in some cases be taken to be the date of the letter before action but at the latest it should be the date when the writ was served."
"Eveleigh L.J. did not think that it was right in determining the rate of interest to proceed upon the basis that a defendant should be penalised. There are many cases where the plaintiff does not wish to have his damages assessed as quickly as possible. There is a number of reasons where neither side may be anxious to proceed expeditiously. On the other hand the plaintiff has not had the money, while the defendant has had the advantage of not having been compelled to pay. Eveleigh L.J. considered that the court "should seek to discover a rate of interest which will compensate the plaintiff in recognition of the fact that a sum of money in respect of general damages should be considered, over the relevant period, as existing for his benefit." He then said at page 823H:
"On the other hand, the sums payable as interest will be relatively small and it will generally be undesirable to add to the expense of litigation by seeking to achieve a precise determination of the plaintiff's actual loss. Most plaintiffs will be paying tax at the basic rate. Some would not have invested the money at all. Others might have skilfully used it in interest free stock.
In awarding interest the judge is exercising a discretion. In the great majority of cases the plaintiff could have proceeded with greater dispatch; and yet it may well be wrong to deprive him of interest particularly as the defendant will have had the use of the money. I therefore think that we should approach this matter upon the basis that the court should arrive at a final figure which will be fair, generally speaking, to both parties.
It is not a fair basis upon which to award interest to assume that the defendant should have paid the proper sum (and this means the exact sum) at the moment of service of the writ. It is true that he must be paid some interest from that date because a sum of money was due to him. Unlike the case of a claim for a fixed money debt, no one can say exactly how much. The plaintiff does not have to quantify his demand and yet in most cases he is in the best position to evaluate his claim. The defendant may not have the material upon which to do so. He may not have had the necessary opportunity for medical examination. The plaintiff may not have given sufficient details of his injuries for anything like an estimate, as opposed to a guess, to be made of the value of the claim.
Moreover, in many cases the plaintiff's condition will not have stabilised. We all know that the picture at the date of trial can be very different from that which was given at the date of writ. It is nobody's fault as a rule, but simply a reflection of the difficulty in forming an accurate medical opinion. There may be an unexpected change for the worse. In this case the interval after service of the writ will help to ensure a proper figure for damages which will be greater than that which the plaintiff would have obtained at the time of the writ. On the other had if his condition has improved and his award is less in consequence, this will mean that the defendant has been saved from the possibility of paying more than he should have done. These considerations show that, while it is right to regard the plaintiff as having been kept out of an award, we should not regard it as necessarily resulting in a loss to him of 4 per cent of the judgment sum. I appreciate that against this argument it may be said that the judgment sum is the true figure to work on and that any lower figure, inflation apart, which might have been awarded at an earlier trial, would have been unfair to the plaintiff because, as we now know, the claim was really worth the sum now awarded. However, to award interest on this sum as though it were a debt is to call upon a defendant to pay interest upon a figure that was never demanded and which at the date of the writ is usually sheer guesswork. These considerations lead me to the conclusion that what I call the true earnings rate of interest, namely 4 per cent, if appropriate to a debt, is too high when applied to general damages.
Moreover, the recipient of interest at 4 per cent will generally pay tax of at least 30 per cent and therefore, after tax, the net interest is only 2.8 per cent.
As the plaintiff does not pay tax on the interest on general damages and as I regard 4 per cent gross as too high, we must look for a net figure below 2.8 per cent. There was evidence in this case that to very select bodies, such as pension funds, two recent government stock issues which are index linked had all been taken up. The actual interest rate which these produced of course fluctuates according to the figure at which the stock stands after issue but the evidence was that around 2 per cent was enough to attract investors. National savings index-linked certificates also produce only a very low rate of interest.
These considerations lead me to regard the figure of 2 per cent as appropriate for interest on an award of general damages."
This passage in Eveleigh L.J's judgment was referred to with apparent approval in the opinion of Lord Diplock in Wright v. British Railways Board [1983] 2 A.C. 773 at 784C. It appears that the interest rate of 4% to which Eveleigh L.J. refers was the then current rate of interest on judgment debts.
Wright v. British Railways Board was an appeal to the House of Lords in which it was contended that the 2% rate of interest on general damages set as a guideline in Birkett v. Hayes was too low. It was held that the interest to be awarded on general damages could only be a conventional figure for which the Court of Appeal was generally the best qualified to lay down guidelines. The guideline is not a rule of law nor a rule of practice. It sets no binding precedent and can be varied as circumstances change or experience shows that it does not achieve even handed justice or that it makes trials more lengthy or expensive or settlements more difficult to reach. Lord Diplock, who gave the leading opinion with which the other four members of the court agreed, saw no ground which would justify the House of Lords in holding that the guideline in Birkett v. Hayes was wrong. Although the rate of inflation had slowed, at least temporarily, no one yet knew what the long term future for inflation would be. The purpose of the guideline was to promote predictability and so facilitate settlements and eliminate the expense of regularly calling expert economic evidence at trials of personal injury actions. The 2% guideline should continue to be followed for the time being, at any rate, until the long term trend of future inflation had become predictable with much more confidence. When that state of affairs was reached, it might be that the 2% guideline would call for examination afresh in the light of fresh expert economic evidence. Mr Limb, counsel on behalf of the appellant, submits that the time has now come to carry out the reconsideration which Lord Diplock contemplated."
Later in the judgment Maw LJ ruled as follows:
"All the authorities agree, as did counsel for each party in this appeal, that the guideline should be a simple rule of thumb capable of being applied easily and without controversy in all but exceptional cases, not least to enable the very many personal injury cases which settle to do so without unnecessary and disproportionate bother and expense."
"3. It is common ground that an award of interest is intended to compensate the claimant for being kept out of his money after it should have been paid, not, of course, as a punitive measure. I find that a more useful description of the purpose than the reference to the Latin tag restitutio in integrum , although that is an expression used in the cases. The real question is, "What is the level of that compensation by way of interest?" when, on any view, such interest is only a proxy for the actual detriment suffered by the claimant for being kept out of his money.
Conclusion
END