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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Smith v Stratton & Anor [2014] EWHC 1749 (QB) (26 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/1749.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1749 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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MR GRANT SMITH (BY HIS LITIGATION FRIEND DEBORAH BONNER) |
Claimant |
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and – |
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(1) MR ANTHONY STRATTON (2) MOTOR INSURERS BUREAU |
Defendants |
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Mr W Featherby QC (instructed by Thursfields) for the Second Defendant
The First Defendant neither appearing nor being represented
Hearing date: 21 and 22 May 2014
Draft circulated 28 May 2014
Judgment handed down 26 June 2014
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(1) Subject to clauses 6 to 17, if a claimant has obtained against any person in a court in Great Britain a judgment which is an unsatisfied judgment then MIB will pay the relevant sum to, or to the satisfaction of, the claimant or will cause the same to be so paid.
(2) Paragraph (1) applies whether or not the person liable to satisfy the judgment is in fact covered by a contract of insurance and whatever may be the cause of his failure to satisfy judgment. This
The second defendant's position
"Clause 5 (requirement to pay unsatisfied judgment) does not apply in the case of an application made in respect of a claim of any of the following descriptions ….
… a claim which is made in respect of a relevant liability described in paragraph (2) by a claimant who, at the time of the use giving rise to the relevant liability, was voluntarily allowing himself to be carried in the vehicle and, either before the commencement of his journey in the vehicle or after such commencement, if he could reasonably be expected to have alighted from it, knew or ought to have known that –
(iii) the vehicle was being used in the course or furtherance of a crime; or
(iv) the vehicle was being used as a means of escape from, or avoidance of, lawful apprehension …".
(1) voluntarily allowing himself to be carried in the vehicle
(2) he knew or ought to have known that the vehicle was being used in the course or furtherance of a crime and/or as a means of avoidance of lawful apprehension
(3) that that knowledge was gained, or ought to have been gained, either before the commencement of his journey or after the commencement of his journey and, in the latter case, he could reasonably be expected to have alighted from the vehicle after the reality dawned or ought to have dawned.
then clause 6 provides an exception to the principle that the MIB must meet an unsatisfied judgment against the uninsured driver of that vehicle.
The claimant's position
"What was the purpose of the journey before the chase that led to the accident? What was the point of origin of the journey? When did it start? What was the destination? At the time of the claimant expects to reach the destination? Was the route that had been taken and was yet to be taken between the points of origin and destination?"
The reply was as follows
"The claimant was walking on a friend's house to his mother's for dinner. The vehicle stopped and he was offered a lift. He was aware that the vehicle was going somewhere on the way to his mother's (possibly the 1st defendant's girlfriend's). Fairfield Terrace was not far from the point at which the claimant was picked up.
- Accordingly; -
- The purpose of the journey (as far as the claimant is concerned) was a lift to his mother's house.
- The claimant commenced the journey at a point between his friends home and his mother's house near to Fairfield Terrace, Bramley
- The claimant is unable to provide a specific time, albeit shortly before 6:40 PM (time of the accident)
- The claimant's destination was his mother's house
- He expected to reach his mother's house before 7 PM when he was due to have dinner
- The claimant has no recollection of the route taken. He believes that the vehicle may have been used to visit the 1st defendant's girlfriend although he is unsure."
Agreed Factual Matrix
Convictions
(1) the claimant, and for that matter, Mr Stratton were not subject to the extensive investigation concerning other characters in the locality
(2) despite extensive enquiries involving about 25 police officers no charge at all has been brought against anyone who was in the car in connection with the events of 6 January apart from driving offences against Mr Stratton.
The answer he gives is that there is no evidence at all of a joint enterprise for the supply of drugs during the evening of 6 January 2011.
The presence of cannabis at the scene
The presence of cash
Making off
The evidence of Mr Nichols
(1) At paragraph 5 he says that an arrangement was made for all 4 to travel in the Astra together. This is in distinction to the contention on behalf of the claimant set out in the Part 18 reply that the claimant was fortuitously offered a lift while walking home from a friend's house.
(2) At paragraph 7, he says that within a short time of the police car appearing the occupants of the car told Mr Stratton to "smoke 'em". This phrase has the same meaning as "blow 'em".
All of us were dropping off drugs; £20 deal (Henry[2])
3 bags skunk. About £20 each
15 minutes dealing. Sold one.
Just done a deal. I handed it out the window.
I took money. Don't know who handed it to me.
Saw police. Jo mentioned it
drove away. Contd turns (?). wheels span on mud.
All said "smoke 'em"
The evidence is directly contradicted by his own interview under caution.
His evidence is not consistent with the plea entered by Shenbanjo on 15 August 2012.
His (Mr Stratton's) own signed statement provided for Mr Nichols does not support the account relied upon in Mr Nichols statement.
Mr Stratton has not been called and the claimant has been deprived of testing his evidence.
The hearsay notice provides no explanation as to why Mr Stratton has not been called.
The 2nd defendant has evidently had access to and assessed this witness but consciously decided not to call him.
The statement relied upon is not even signed
The statement omits obvious and important material relating to the claimant
The failure of the claimant to give evidence.
Mrs Bonner
Mrs Gee
The juxtaposition of Kellet Road and the Fairfields.
Onus and Standard of Proof
"I think that the time has come to say, once and for all, that there is only one civil standard of proof that is proof that the fact in issue more probably occurred than not".
"Lord Nicholl's nuanced explanation left room for the nostrum, "the more serious the allegation, the more cogent the evidence needed to prove it" to take hold and repeated time and again in fact finding hearings in care proceedings…….. It is time for us to loosen its grip and give it its quietus '.
"As to the seriousness of the allegation, there is no logical or necessary connection between seriousness and probability."
Findings of Fact
(a) I can understand the pessimism of the defendant solicitors that they would ever get this man to court either voluntarily or even under witness summons. Even if they had, his evidence that they were all on a drug dealing mission could only have been given after a warning that he need not answer questions the answer to which was incriminating. The fact that in these circumstances he would not have answered cannot be discounted. Nevertheless, an effort could have been made. That has to be set to some extent however against the factors I have just set out and of course the right of the claimant, under CPR33.4, to seek to require Mr Stratton's attendance
(b) I accept that the statement by Mr Stratton was made 6 months after the events to which it refers. That is a relatively long time. I recognise that length of time affects recollection and thus reliability but, despite Mr Axon's submissions, what he said in his witness statement is not significantly inconsistent with the general picture he painted to the police except to the extent that greater candour with the police would have incriminated him further. In this connection I remind myself of his evidence that he picked this car up only 10 minutes or so before the accident. Mr Axon relies on this to support his contention that there was no time to drug deal before the accident occurred. This however is premised on the basis that Mr Stratton was honest about this to the police. If he had admitted that he had the car earlier this may have led to questions about what he and his friends were doing earlier. I have already commented that there must be some circumspection about his evidence that he can refuel the car, pick up his friends, and get from Tong Road to the Fairfields in the short time in which he says he was in possession of the car.
(c) This is first hand hearsay
(d) Mr Stratton had reason to conceal things from the police but it is difficult to see what reason he had to be so forthcoming to Mr Nichols unless there was truth in what he was saying. He gains nothing from giving evidence of the nature upon which the second defendant relies. As against this, there are some inconsistencies in his evidence to the police. He has convictions for dishonesty and he is clearly a man whose integrity is very much open to question.
(e) and (f) do not appear to me to be relevant.
Ex Turpi Causa Non Oritur Actio
"whether, on the one hand the criminal activity (transportation of drugs) merely gave occasion for the tortious act of the defendant to be committed or whether, even though the accident would never have happened had they not made the journey which at some point involved their obtaining and/or transporting drugs with the intention to supply or on the other hand whether the immediate cause of the claimant's damage was the negligent driving"
"viewed as a matter of causation, the damage suffered by the claimant was not caused by his or their criminal activity. It was caused by the tortious act of the defendant in the negligent way he drove the car. In those circumstances the illegal acts were incidental and the claimant is entitled to recover his loss"
"Where the character of the joint enterprise is such that it is foreseeable that a party or parties may be subject to an unusual or increased risks of harm as a consequence of the activities of the parties in pursuance of their criminal objectives, and the risk materialises, the injury can properly be said to be caused by the criminal act of the claimant even if it results from the negligent or intentional act of another party to the illegal enterprise."
The 1999 Agreement
Conclusion
I am grateful to counsel for their very able assistance in this matter.
HHJ Saffman
Note 1 "no right of action arises from a shameful cause" [Back] Note 2 A Henry is 1/8 of an ounce. Apparently the expression is derived from Henry VIII. [Back] Note 3 See Wisniewski v Central Manchester Health Authority [1998] PIQR P324, CA
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