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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 >> Allen & Ors v Depuy International Ltd [2015] EWHC 926 (QB) (01 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/926.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 926 (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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ALLEN AND OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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DEPUY INTERNATIONAL LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Charles Dougherty QC & Mr Alexander Antelme QC (instructed by Kennedys Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 17, 18, 19, & 20 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE SIMLER DBE :
Introduction
"whether under the substantive law of New Zealand, as applicable pursuant to the Private International Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1995, their claims are precluded by section 317 of the ACA 2001".
(i) Is s.317 ACA 2001 a substantive or a procedural rule? If the rule is characterised as procedural only it will be disregarded by this court. By contrast, if it is a substantive rule, it must be applied by this court.(ii) If the rule is substantive, does s.317 remove the right of these Claimants to compensatory damages for personal injury in this case as a matter of New Zealand law? In particular, does s.317 require relevant conduct in New Zealand as the Claimants contend before it has any application?
The expert evidence
The New Zealand Accident Compensation Scheme
"extinguishing present common law rights in respect personal injuries …" (paragraph 306(b)).
The Woodhouse Report identified common law actions for damages as hindering the rehabilitation of injured persons, and the fault principle as an illogical justification for the common law remedy in negligence, erratic and capricious in its operation (paragraph 485(1) and (2)). At paragraph 489 the Woodhouse Report dealt with the consequential changes that would result from the establishment of a no-fault scheme and at paragraph 490 the compulsory nature of the scheme, as follows:
"489 (1) Given a suitably generous scheme on the foregoing basis it follows automatically that previous ways of seeking to achieve the same or a similar purpose become irrelevant.
(2) Thus the common law rights in respect of personal injuries should be abolished and the Workers' Compensation Act repealed.
(3) …
(4) Such a scheme, involving the acceptance of community wide responsibility in respect of every injured citizen, must clearly be handled as a social service by an agency of the Government.
(5)….."
"490 (1) The scheme which has been outlined involves comprehensive entitlement. It must be given comprehensive support.
(2) Protection is not to be restricted to work accidents or to road accidents, or to any period of the day, or to any group in the community. Individual liability, moreover, will disappear in favour of national responsibility.
(3) If the scheme is to be universal in scope it must be compulsory in application. Accordingly there will be no place for special arrangements or for "contracting out". ..".
"enhance the public good and reinforce the social contract represented by the first accident compensation scheme by providing for a fair and sustainable scheme for managing personal injury that has, as it overriding goals, minimising both the overall incidence of injury in the community, and the impact of injury on the community (including economic, social, and personal costs) …"
"(a) is entitled to be provided by the Corporation with rehabilitation, to the extent provided by this Act, to assist in restoring the claimant's health, independence, and participation to the maximum extent practicable; but
(b) is responsible for his or her own rehabilitation to the extent practicable having regard to the consequences of his or her personal injury".
"(2) The funds for the Treatment Injury Account are to be derived from—
(a) any levies payable by registered health professionals or any organisation that provides treatment under this Act, or a prescribed class of such persons or organisations; and
(b) if there is no such levy or the levy relates only to funding part of the Account, from the Earners' Account (in the case of an earner) or the Non-Earners' Account (in the case of a non-earner); and
(c) in the case of injuries suffered before the prescribed date from which levies become payable, from the Earners' Account (in the case of an earner) or the Non-Earners' Account (in the case of a non-earner)."
The substance/ procedure divide
".. regard should be had in each case to the purpose for which the distinction is being used and to the consequences of the decision in the instant context. The rule under examination must be considered as a whole, without giving undue weight to the verbal formula selected by previous judges, or by the draughtsman of a statute to introduce the rule. …..The mechanistic approach, sometimes found in English cases, of relying on the classification of the introductory verbal formula as used in a quite different statute, or of accepting a classification as procedural or substantive made for some purpose quite unrelated to the conflict of laws is now discredited. …"
"In applying this distinction to actions in tort, the courts have distinguished between the kind of damage which constitutes an actionable injury and the assessment of compensation (i.e. damages) for the injury which has been held to be actionable. The identification of actionable damage is an integral part of the rules which determine liability. As I have previously had occasion to say, it makes no sense simply to say that someone is liable in tort. He must be liable for something and the rules which determine what he is liable for are inseparable from the rules which determine the conduct which gives rise to liability. Thus the rules which exclude damage from the scope of liability on the grounds that it does not fall within the ambit of the liability rule or does not have the prescribed causal connection with the wrongful act, or which require that the damage should have been reasonably foreseeable, are all rules which determine whether there is liability for the damage in question. On the other hand, whether the claimant is awarded money damages (and if so, how much) or, for example, restitution in kind, is a question of remedy."
i) the availability of heads of loss or kinds of damage is substantive; butii) once the substantive right or liability is established, the remedy or response is a matter of procedural law to be determined by the rules of the forum; and
iii) assessment or quantification of damages, (including limits, caps or floors) are all questions of remedy and procedural.
Section 317 in more detail
"if the meaning of the text may appear plain in isolation of purpose, that meaning should always be cross checked against purpose in order to observe the dual requirements of s.5. In determining purpose the Court must obviously have regard to both the immediate and the general legislative context. Of relevance to may be the social, commercial or other objective of the enactment."
"Proceedings
317 Proceedings for personal injury
(1) No person may bring proceedings independently of this Act, whether under any rule of law or any enactment, in any court in New Zealand, for damages arising directly or indirectly out of—
(a) personal injury covered by this Act; or
(b) personal injury covered by the former Acts.
(2) Subsection (1) does not prevent any person bringing proceedings relating to, or arising from,—
(a) any damage to property; or
(b) any express term of any contract or agreement (other than an accident insurance contract under the Accident Insurance Act 1998); or
(c) the unjustifiable dismissal of any person or any other personal grievance arising out of a contract of service.
(3) …..
(4) Subsection (1) does not prevent any person bringing proceedings under—
(a) Section 50 or s.51 of the Health and Disability Commissioner Act 1994; or
(b) any of sections 92B, 92E, 92R, 122, 122A, 122B, 123,
or 124 of the Human Rights Act 1993.
(5) Subsection (1) does not prevent any person bringing proceedings in any court in New Zealand for damages for personal injury of the kinds described in subsection (1), suffered in New Zealand or elsewhere, if the cause of action is the defendant's liability for damages under the law of New Zealand under any international convention relating to the carriage of passengers.
(6) ….
(7) Nothing in this section is affected by—
(a) the failure or refusal of any person to lodge a claim for personal injury of the kinds described in subsection (1); or
(b) any purported denial or surrender by any person of any rights relating to personal injury of the kinds described in subsection (1); or
(c) the fact that a person who has suffered personal injury of the kinds described in subsection (1) is not entitled to any entitlement under this Act."
"319 Exemplary damages
(1) Nothing in this Act, and no rule of law, prevents any person from bringing proceedings in any court in New Zealand for exemplary damages for conduct by the defendant that has resulted in—
(a) personal injury covered by this Act; or
(b) personal injury covered by the former Acts."
"320 Corporation to be heard
(1) This section applies to proceedings in which a question arises as to whether or not a person—
(a) has suffered personal injury for which he or she has cover; or
(b) has suffered personal injury covered by the former Acts; or
(c) has died because of personal injury of a kind described in paragraph (a) or paragraph (b).
(2) The court, tribunal, or other body hearing the proceedings may not make a determination unless the Corporation is a party to the proceedings or is given an opportunity to be heard."
"321 Powers of Corporation when person has right to bring proceedings
(1) Subsection (2) applies when—
(a) any entitlement is required to be provided under this Act for personal injury to a person; and
(b) the person has the right to bring proceedings for damages in New Zealand or elsewhere for the personal injury.
(2) When this subsection applies, the Corporation may require a person to do one of the following things, at the person's option and at the Corporation's expense:
(a) to take all reasonable steps to enforce the right; or
(b) to assign the right to the Corporation, and to do all other things necessary to enable the right to be enforced by the Corporation, within a reasonable period.
(3) Subsection (4) applies when—
(a) any entitlement has been or is required to be provided under this Act for personal injury to a person; and
(b) the person has received a sum of money by way of damages, compensation, or settlement of any claim in New Zealand or elsewhere for the personal injury.
(4) When this subsection applies, the Corporation may, as the case requires,—
(a) deduct, from the cost of the entitlement required to be provided to a person, a sum equivalent to the net amount received by way of damages, compensation, or settlement; or
(b) recover from the person, as a debt due, the entitlement provided.
(5) …… "
Interpretation of effect of s.317(1) by New Zealand courts
"All in all, in a situation where the right course for this court is far from self-evident I think that we should try to meet a problem occasioned by the Accident Compensation Act by consciously moulding the law of damages to meet social needs. The only feasible way of doing so, without intruding into the field of compensation which the Act has taken over, appears to be to allow actions for damages for purely punitive purposes; and to accept that as compensatory damages (aggravated or otherwise) can no longer be awarded, exemplary damages will have to take over part of the latter's former role.…."
"substratum of compensatory damages has disappeared and with it all practical possibility of taking account of their award in estimating whether and to what extent there should be any addition by way of exemplary damages. A new approach is necessary. …. "
There is no suggestion in his judgment that compensatory damages remain available but in the background to be used in assessing an award of exemplary damages. Indeed if the bar was merely a bar to recovery as Mr Goddard suggests, then there should have been no difficulty in assessing the compensatory element (albeit that it could not have been recovered) and adding exemplary damages on top to reflect the punitive element that could be recovered.
Importantly, at [89] Tipping J (with whom Elias CJ at [7], Blanchard J at [71] and Wilson J at [248] agreed) having identified the critical question at [85] held:
"Section 319 also has relevance to the second aspect of this first issue. Parliament has expressly provided that exemplary damages may be awarded despite the Courts inability to award compensatory damages. It is therefore no bar to a claim for exemplary damages for personal injury that no compensatory damages may be awarded. The ordinary need for there to be damage to complete the tort of negligence must for this purpose be satisfied by there being a case for the award of exemplary damages. The consequence is that there is no actionable tort of negligence for causing personal injury in New Zealand unless the case justifies exemplary damages."
Other authority
"must be read as extinguishing any cause of action for damages arising directly or indirectly out of personal injury caused and arising in the manner therein described. While the language of the section in form bars an action to enforce the right to damages, its substantial effect, read in the context of the Act as a whole, is to substitute cover under the Act for the right to recover common law damages. It is a substantive law. … The section extinguished the plaintiff's common law right to recover damages for his injury. "
First issue: The proper characterisation of the statutory bar in section 317(1)
Second issue: Conduct outside New Zealand
Conclusion