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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 >> Harman v East Kent Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2015] EWHC 1662 (QB) (11 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/1662.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1662 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BEN HARMAN (A child proceeding by his Mother and Litigation Friend JOANNE HARMAN) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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EAST KENT HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Defendant |
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Mr John Whitting QC (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28 and 29th April 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
BEN'S CONDITION
CARING FOR BEN
PRIOR'S COURT
"In general terms, the approach is to compare what a claimant can reasonably require with what a local authority, having regard to uncertainties which almost inevitably are present, are likely to provide in the discharge of their duty under Section 21. If the second falls significantly short of the first, as Owen J found in Crookdake it did, the tortfeasor must pay, subject to the argument raised in both cases that Section 21 provision augmented by contribution from the tortfeasor meets the reasonable requirements. If it is the statutory provision which meets the claimant's reasonable requirements, as assessed by the judge, the tortfeasor does not have to pay for a different regime. I accept that in making the comparison a court may have regard to the power to compel a local authority to perform its duties."
"87. To summarise, the judge was right to hold that the Council could and would make direct payments to meet the claimant's care needs despite the award of damages, and that these payments should be taken into account in the assessment of damages.
88. Once the judge decided that the Council would make such direct payments, it seems to us that he was bound to hold that they should be taken into account in the assessment of damages…
91. It is trite law that a claimant is entitled to recover the full extent of his loss. That involves asking what the claimant would have received but for the event which gave rise to the claim and which he can no longer get; and what he has received and will receive as a result of the event which he would not have received but for the event. The question then arises whether the latter sums must be deducted from the former in assessing the damages: Parry v Cleaver [1970] AC 1, 13. In Hodgson v Trapp [1989] 1 AC 807, 891 Lord Bridge said that it was "elementary" that if in consequence of the injuries he has sustained a claimant enjoys receipts to which he would not otherwise have been entitled, then prima facie those receipts are to be set against the aggregate of his loss and expenses in arriving at the measure of damages. To this basic rule there are certain well established exceptions, none of which is of application in the present case.
92. In principle, payments by third parties which a claimant would not have received but for his injuries have to be taken into account in carrying out the assessment of damages unless they come within one of the established exceptions. It is not suggested that direct payments made by a local authority in the exercise of its statutory functions to make care arrangements under section 29 NAA and section 2 CSDPA may not in principle be taken into account. If the court is satisfied that a claimant will seek and obtain payments which will enable him to pay for some or all of the services for which he needs care, there can be no doubt that those payments must be taken into account in the assessment of his loss. Otherwise, the claimant will enjoy a double recovery.
93. In Freeman v Lockett, Tomlinson J decided that there should be no reduction in the claimant's damages to reflect the possibility of direct payments by the local authority. A sufficient basis for his decision was his finding that, provided that no deduction on account of the possible receipt of state or local authority funding was made from her award of damages, the claimant would withdraw her application for funding; she wanted to rely exclusively on private funding for her care.
94. But he would in any event have refused to make any reduction in the claimant's damages on account of direct payments for other reasons. He said that there was no principled basis on which the court could estimate what funding the claimant could reliably expect to receive from the local authority for the rest of her life. The court "does not speculate unnecessarily or in an unprincipled manner….I cannot understand how it can be appropriate to impose upon the Claimant the unnecessary risk that funding from an alternative source may cease or be reduced rather than simply to order the provision of the fund in its entirety" (paragraph 35).
95. In making these observations, Tomlinson J was influenced by the fragility of the policy from which the right to receive direct payments derived. He said that "in the ordinary way, the regime pursuant to which direct payments are made for domiciliary care is very much more vulnerable to adjustment in order to save costs than is the direct provision of residential care" (paragraph 38).
96. We would accept that there may be cases where the possibility of a claimant receiving direct payments is so uncertain that they should be disregarded altogether in the assessment of damages. It will depend on the facts of the particular case. But if the court finds that a claimant will receive direct payments for at least a certain period of time and possibly for much longer, it seems to us that this finding must be taken into account in the assessment. In such a case, the correct way to reflect the uncertainties to which Tomlinson J referred is to discount the multiplier. We did not understand Mr Taylor to contend otherwise."
"The second issue: is the claimant entitled as of right to choose damages rather than provision by the council?
33. It is trite law that, if a claimant has distinct rights of action against more than one wrongdoer in respect of the same loss, he can recover against them all, provided that he does not recover in total more than the amount of the loss. So far as we are aware, this principle has never been expressed as having anything to do with the rule that a claimant must take all reasonable steps to mitigate the loss caused to him by the defendant's wrong and that he cannot recover damages for any such loss which he could have avoided but has failed, through unreasonable inaction, to avoid: for the rule, see McGregor on Damages, 17th ed (2003), para 7–004. "
34. This principle has also been applied to cases where the claimant has a right of action against the wrongdoer and a statutory right to recover the same loss against an innocent public authority. An example of such a case is The Liverpool (No 2) [1963] P 64 . We discuss this case below.
35. The question raised by this appeal is whether the principle also applies where the claimant has both a right of action against the wrongdoer to recover damages in respect of a head of loss and a statutory right to have the loss made good in kind by the provision of services by a public authority. In such a case, is the claimant entitled to recover damages from the wrongdoer as a matter of right, or can he do so only if, in all the circumstances of the case, it is reasonable for him not to enforce his statutory right against the public authority?
36. No authority has been cited to us which decides this question in the context of a claim for damages for the cost of accommodation and care where the claimant has a statutory right to receive an equivalent provision from the local authority. There are many cases where the courts have awarded a claimant care costs as a head of loss, not on the grounds that the claimant is entitled to the costs as of right, but because local authority care has been ruled out as inadequate, uncertain or unavailable: see McGregor , Fourth Supplement, 17th ed (2007), para 35–159E. That is what the judge did in the present case and whether he was right to do so is the third issue raised on this appeal…
53. Having reviewed these authorities, we can now express our conclusion on this issue. We can see no reason in policy or principle which requires us to hold that a claimant who wishes to opt for self-funding and damages in preference to reliance on the statutory obligations of a public authority should not be entitled to do so as a matter of right. The claimant has suffered loss which has been caused by the wrongdoing of the defendants. She is entitled to have that loss made good, so far as this is possible, by the provision of accommodation and care. There is no dispute as to what that should be and the council currently arranges for its provision at The Spinnies. The only issue is whether the defendant wrongdoers or the council and the PCT should pay for it in the future.
54. It is difficult to see on what basis the present case can in principle be distinguished from the case where a claimant has a right of action against more than one wrongdoer or a case such as The Liverpool (No 2) [1963] P 64 where a claimant has a right of action against a wrongdoer and an innocent party. In The Liverpool (No 2), those two cases were treated alike. In our judgment, the present case should be treated in the same way. It is true that in the present case, the claimant's right against the council is the statutory right to receive accommodation and care. But the fact that there is a statutory right in the claimant to have his or her loss made good in kind, rather than by payment of compensation, is not a sufficient reason for treating the cases differently.
55. Mr Faulks also submits that there is support for his submission in Crofton v National Health Service Litigation Authority [2007] 1 WLR 923 , paras 88 and 89. We do not propose to set out these paragraphs. Suffice it to say that the whole of paras 87–95 of Crofton's case is predicated on the judge's finding that the council would in fact make direct payments to the claimant to enable him to pay for his care. Crofton's case provides no support for Mr Faulks.
56. In our judgment, therefore, provided that there was no real risk of double recovery, the judge was right to hold that there was no reason in principle why the claimant should give up her right to damages to meet her wish to pay for her care needs herself rather than to become dependent on the state. The judge was right to be concerned about the possibility of double recovery to which we now turn."
COMING HOME
AFTER BEN IS 25: THE ISSUE
EXPERT EVIDENCE
i) There is a regrettable tendency for experts to produce reports which are simply far too long. The comments made by Sir James Munby in his article on this topic in [2013] Family Law 816 are as apposite to personal injury litigation as they are to care cases:
"…too many expert reports…, are simply too long, largely because they contain too much history and too much factual narrative… I want to send out a clear message: expert reports can in many cases be much shorter than hitherto, and they should be more focused on analysis and opinion than on history and narrative. In short, expert reports must be succinct, focused and analytical. But they must also of course be evidence based."
In the experience of this Court it is not unusual for care reports, for example, in catastrophic injury cases to exceed 100 pages in length. Very often the same narrative detail can be found repeated in report after report from different disciplines. The consequences are deleterious. All this involves the parties and the Court in spending a disproportionate time reading the reports which results in an increase in costs. Furthermore, the likelihood that important points are lost in the vastness of the context in which they appear is unhelpfully increased.
ii) Against the background of longer and longer reports there is, however, little sign, in some cases at any rate, that the care and attention spent on analysis and opinion, as opposed to history and narrative, is being given commensurate attention and priority.
iii) Experts should deal with the issues raised by the other side promptly. In this case, the defendant makes a legitimate point in emphasising that neither the claimant's care expert nor educational psychologist dealt with the option of continued residential care in their reports until the joint statements and even then the matter was dealt with in an over concise way. One inevitable consequence of this was that the reasoning of the experts was only finally fleshed out in oral evidence during the hearing. This should not happen.
RESIDENTIAL OR INDIVIDUAL CARE?
i) Since Ben has been at Prior's Court he has thrived. He has made good progress. The stresses upon his parents caused by looking after him at home have been significantly relieved;ii) By the time he reaches the age of 25, Ben will have been in a community residential care setting for many years and it would be logical and appropriate for him to continue to be looked after in a similar environment thereafter. Much of the good work achieved at Prior's Court could be undone if he were to return home;
iii) Inquiries at Prior's Court revealed a choice of organisations which would be in a position to provide high quality residential support for Ben as they had done for others before him;
iv) There is a risk that if Ben were to be looked after at home he would become isolated and lose the benefits of interacting with others of his own age and facing similar challenges;
v) As recently as September 2014, Ben's mother had told the defendant's expert educational psychologist that she did not know what the family's plans were after Ben's time at Prior's Court had come to an end. She now asserts that she will want him to come home but the reality is that parents do change their minds as children grow into adults.
i) Before Ben went to Prior's Court, his parents had been struggling without the benefit of a structured environment with specially trained carers. It was thus unsurprising that he would make good progress when he transferred to Prior's Court. The proposal is that when he leaves Prior's Court he will not be returning to the same home environment in which he had lived before his admission;ii) When Ben first went to Prior's Court his parents had the opportunity to opt for a 52 week placement. They chose, instead, to proceed with a 44 week package. This demonstrates their commitment to playing a continuing and significant part in Ben's life even at a time when the burden of caring for him without adequate support was taking its toll on their lives;
iii) The prospect of having Ben at home in twelve years time is a very different one from that which applied when he first went to Prior's Court. Ben has made progress and the regime which it is proposed would be in place would be tailor made for his needs. This would involve a team of 10-12 carers to supervise him and take him to activities. Furthermore, the accommodation available would be far more appropriate than the family home ever was.
"We are agreed in the final analysis the question of post 25 provision for Ben is a matter of parental choice."
CONCLUSION