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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ball v Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change [2012] EWHC 145 (QB) (10 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/145.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 145 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Dennis Ball |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change |
Defendant |
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Mr Michael Ditchfield (instructed by Nabarro Solicitors LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 26 January 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mrs Justice Swift :
The claim
The hearing
The claimant
Before the onset of symptoms arising from his mesothelioma
The history as set out in the medical records
The witness evidence
The Nursing Home care records
The evidence of Dr Rudd
"Eventually it is inevitable that there will be continued deterioration in his condition, probably with worsening pain, increasing breathlessness, loss of appetite and weight and progressive debility. Commonly pain becomes severe so that morphine or similar analgesics are required and sometimes it is intractable despite large doses of strong analgesics. Breathlessness may become severe as the tumour progresses to constrict the lung so that it cannot expand. The tumour may spread to constrict the heart and it may spread to the other lung causing even more severe breathlessness. Sometimes the tumour spreads to other parts of the body including the abdomen where it may cause swelling due to accumulation of fluid, pain, vomiting and bowel disturbance."
Past awards of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity in mesothelioma cases
The JSB Guidelines published 2004 and 2006
"Mesothelioma causing severe pain and impairment of both function and quality of life. This may be of the pleura (the lung lining) or of the peritoneum (the lining of the abdominal cavity); the latter being typically more painful. The duration of pain and suffering accounts for variations within this bracket. For periods of up to 18 months, awards in the bottom half of the bracket may be appropriate; for longer periods of four years or more, an award at the top end. "
Awards made during the currency of the seventh (2004) and eighth (2006) JSB Guidelines
" . The guidelines say, "The duration of pain and suffering accounts for variations within this bracket." In my judgment, that is a statement which, while it is true to a certain extent, does not take into account all of the matters which, in my experience over the last five years, account for the several variations. For example, one of the other factors which I take into account and which I think should be taken into account, is the extent of the unpleasant surgical procedures, which the victims of mesothelioma may have to undergo. It seems to me that radical surgery, something which probably was not so common at the time these guideline notes were first written a few years ago, is something which particularly exacerbates the level of damages. It is an extremely unpleasant procedure which involves taking out the lung on one side together with the lung lining.
One also has to bear in mind that typically the worst symptoms of pain suffering and loss of amenity occur in the last weeks and days of the disease's progress, and that the death is, particularly when the pain is not well controlled, a horrible one. "
The Master went on to say:
"In my judgment, while this [i.e. the bracket in the JSB Guidelines] is only a guideline, as a bracket it is a very fair spread which is intended and, in my judgment, does take into account, all cases of mesothelioma, from those of the shortest duration to the longest, and is capable of taking account of varying levels of pain and varying levels of medical procedure and surgical intervention. In my judgment, the bottom of the bracket is intended for people who contract the disease but who suffer only the worst symptoms commonly suffered before death and the death itself, and not a protracted period of gradually worsening symptoms before hand."
He concluded:
"A typical victim with a survival from the onset of symptoms of 18 months will, for example, have suffered all the invasive procedures, the biopsies, et cetera, at perhaps an earlier stage and will not be, if I can put it in the vernacular, "poked about" so much during the very worst stages in the last few months, but what makes this type of case, a case of short duration, worse, in my judgment, rather than one which is better (if one can put it that way) is that the two things get telescoped. This is a man who suffered the whole lot of the worst symptoms and medical procedures during a period of between two and three months. Not only the worst symptoms, the final symptoms, the trauma, the pain, the bewilderment, the anxiety, the shock, as it has been described, of the diagnosis, but also has had to go through the procedures, the drainage, the biopsies, et cetera, during the very same period. It all happened extremely quickly. That, in my judgment, is no reason for saying that the damages should fall outside the bracket. Far from it."
He went on to make an award of £55,000 (current value £63,886). It should be noted that Senior Master Whitaker has for some time been in charge of the list of mesothelioma cases at the Royal Courts of Justice and therefore has great experience of such cases.
Awards made during the currency of the ninth (2008) edition of the JSB Guidelines
"In cases of unusually short periods of pain and suffering lasting three months or so, an award in the region of £25,000 may be appropriate."
It seems likely, as Mr Bowley suggested in submissions in the present case, that the additional sentence was based on the award in the case of Gallagher. It did not appear to take account of the views expressed by Master Whitaker in Smith. It was to prove controversial.
" The fact of the matter is that, in my judgment, they [i.e. the JSB Guidelines] are, broadly speaking, as now drafted, generally out of step with the approach that courts have taken and, bearing in mind the extent to which that sort of award - £25,000 differs from the type of award contemplated by Master Whitaker [in Smith], they are, it seems to me, significantly out of step. I have come to the conclusion that if such a radical departure from the general level of awards which the courts make in this type of case, which it seems to me are to a certain extent "sui generis", is to be taken, it ought to come from the Court of Appeal and not the JSB".
The tenth (2010) edition of the JSB Guidelines
"The duration of pain and suffering accounts for variations within the bracket".
The consequence of these changes was that the bracket for mesothelioma awards is now very wide, with over £50,000 between the higher and lower levels of the bracket.
The parties' submissions
Discussions and conclusions
General
The claimant's case
Care : £ 3,929.16 Miscellaneous expenses : £ 250.00 Damages for lost years : £19,376.00
Total damages (inclusive of interest) are therefore £73,890.16