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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 >> Miley v Friends Life Ltd [2017] EWHC 2415 (QB) (04 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/2415.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2415 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Charles Thomas Miley |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Friends Life Limited |
Defendant |
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Caroline Harrison QC, Sonia Nolten and Luka Krsljanin
(instructed by Aviva Legal Services) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14th – 17th and 21st – 22nd March, and 26th June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
"2…Whilst paying tribute to the level of industry to which these well intentioned and articulate submissions attest I resist the temptation to try to reconcile and resolve all of the subordinate issues which have thereby been generated. As the Court of Appeal held in Customs and Excise Commissioners v A and Another [2003] Fam 55:
"82 A judge's task is not easy. One does often have to spend time absorbing arguments advanced by the parties which in the event turn out not to be central to the decision-making process…
83 However, judges should bear in mind that the primary function of a first instance judgment is to find facts and identify the crucial legal points and to advance reasons for deciding them in a particular way. The longer a judgment is and the more issues with which it deals the greater the likelihood that: (i) the losing party, the Court of Appeal and any future readers of the judgment will not be able to identify the crucial matters which swayed the judge; (ii) the judgment will contain something with which the unsuccessful party can legitimately take issue and attempt to launch an appeal; (iii) citation of the judgment in future cases will lengthen the hearing of those future cases because time will be taken sorting out the precise status of the judicial observation in question; (iv) reading the judgment will occupy a considerable amount of the time of legal advisers to other parties in future cases who again will have to sort out the status of the judicial observation in question. All this adds to the cost of obtaining legal advice.
84 Our system of full judgments has many advantages but one must also be conscious of the disadvantages."
3 I have tried to balance those advantages and disadvantages in what follows by giving reasoned decisions on those issues of fact which I consider to be central but without dealing with every peripheral issue the resolution of which would not in any event impact on my essential findings or upon the outcome of the claims."
THE BACKGROUND
A PRELIMINARY OBSERVATION
i) Witness evidence relating to the claimant's presentation over the years;ii) Extensive covert surveillance;
iii) Contemporaneous documentation relevant to the matters in issue between the parties including: letters, emails, tax returns, bank and credit card statements and mobile telephone records;
iv) The claimant's contemporaneous accounts of the extent of his alleged disability as given, for example: to the defendant, to the Department of Work and Pensions and to professionals examining him both for therapeutic and forensic purposes;
v) The claimant's response to tests and examinations performed upon him by various medical and related professionals.
THE LAY WITNESS EVIDENCE
"The symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) vary from person to person, and generally there may be good periods and bad periods. There may be times when your symptoms improve and you'll be able to do many normal everyday activities. At other times, symptoms may flare up and get worse, affecting your daily life."
"Diagnosis of the chronic fatigue syndrome can be made only after alternative medical and psychiatric causes of chronic fatiguing illness have been excluded. No pathognomic signs or diagnostic test for this condition have been validated in scientific studies…"
THE CLAIMANT'S ALLEGED LIES
The "Newman lie"
The "DWP lies"
Lies on the financial review form
"Other Income (income from investments may be ignored)
(a) Are you receiving or have you received any other income during the course of this claim? (You should include any continuing salary, bonus, pensions, commissions, etc.)
(b) Are you expecting to receive any other income in the future?"
On each form, the claimant responded to these questions in the negative.
"What then ought I to conclude in this will that "investments" and "securities for money" mean? Those two phrases may mean almost anything within limits according to the context in which they appear. In Jarman on Wills, 7th ed, vol 2, p 1272, …[w]ith regard to "investment," the learned author says (ibid, 1273): "'investment' is a vague term and no general rule can be laid down as to its meaning."
"5(c) An amount of money invested in some species of property; also, A form of property viewed as a vehicle in which money may be invested."
"The Claimant submits that the money from the sale of his restricted shares was not "income" within the definition in the Financial Review Form but was "income from an investment" (see paragraph 8 of his Further Submissions). It is respectfully submitted that this is plainly wrong, because the shares were clearly and expressly part of the Claimant's bonus, and thus part of his total remuneration from employment. Selling the shares merely amounted to an election to receive the value of his bonus in a different form, that is, cash, as opposed to continuing to hold the shares. When cashed, the value of the shares crystallised, and the sum realised became income which was liable to tax as income (not as a capital gain).
In the plain, clear and unambiguous words of the Financial Review Form, the Claimant has received 'other income during the course of his claim'. Further, the shares were demonstrably part of his bonus, and 'bonus' is expressly mentioned in the Financial Review Form. Therefore it is submitted on the clear words of the document, the Claimant has failed to disclose that which he should obviously have disclosed, and which it is submitted he must have known that he should have disclosed."
"As I remember, I had a deferred payment from PJL, the details of which will be in here. It was paid in respect of a previous year. It was a bonus I'd earned in previous years and paid tax on in previous years… I imagine at the time I wouldn't even think of that deferred bonus…that is either an oversight on my part or something I felt didn't require being declared because of it being from previous years' earnings."
General credibility
i) In June 2013, the claimant kept an activity diary in which he recorded, for example: going on cycle rides, working on emails, socialising and painting the garage door. Save for one venial occasion upon which he records going for a coffee with a friend when, in fact, he went out for an alcoholic drink, there is no direct contrast between what he says he was doing and what he is seen to be doing. Moreover, the fact that he recorded significant activity at a time when he was not being filmed enhances rather than undermines his credibility.ii) I do not consider, upon a fair and objective assessment of the evidence as a whole, as the defendant contends, that the evidence reveals that the claimant has only good days as opposed to a pattern of good and bad days. In this context, I note, in particular, that any bad days are likely to have been those upon which he did not venture out of the house and were thus not captured on video.
iii) The evidence reveals that the claimant has the cognitive ability, on occasion, to deal with emails, to initiate transactions on the internet, to engage with strangers and to socialise with friends. He has been able to ski, drive and travel alone on the train. Yet again, however, he has never denied being able to perform both mental and physical activities at some level. Although he reported being blocked by a mental fug, he was also stating in 2013, before the payments under the policy were stopped, that he still tried to do at least one mental task a day and was able to read, look at his emails and use the internet for short periods. I do not find that there is a sufficient level of contrast, between (i) what the claimant has been shown to be able to do in the surveillance and other objective evidence and (ii) his own account freely given, to support the suggestion that he is lying. It is to be noted when it falls to be determined whether the level of his symptoms satisfy the threshold test for his entitlement to benefits that his work with PJL had involved long hours, frequent evening meetings and very significant and sustained levels of concentration. I must take into account, as I do, the nature of the claimant's employment when applying the contractual test of entitlement under the policy.
iv) The defendant rightly points out that the claimant has taken frequent holidays both at home and abroad. Doubtless, this required a certain level of stamina but not one which I find to be inconsistent with the claimant's honesty or accuracy. The claimant was simply never asked about holidays at any relevant time before the payments were stopped under the policy and I am not satisfied that he could reasonably be expected to volunteer this information unprompted.
v) The point is fairly made on behalf of the claimant that the defendant, armed as it was with hours and hours of DVD footage, could have asked him direct and specific questions the answers to which may well have put beyond doubt whether or not he was being honest and straightforward. This they chose not to do.
vi) The evidence of the extent to which the claimant is able to shop and socialise does not significantly contradict his accounts of the extent of his limitations and carries the allegation of misrepresentation no further.
vii) The defendant suggests that the video evidence does not reveal that the claimant's friends and family behave any differently towards him than if he were fully fit. In the circumstances of this case, however, it is not apparent to me quite what overt demonstrations of assistance or concern could reasonably have been expected to have been portrayed.
MOTIVE
OTHER LAY WITNESSES
i) they are complicit, at least to some degree, in his fraud and have loyally perjured themselves in his cause; orii) he has managed to sustain a sufficiently consistent and credible portrayal of serious disability to fool them; or
iii) he has convinced himself, wrongly, that his symptoms are sufficiently serious to entitle him to claim and they, equally wrongly, agree; or
iv) a combination of two or more of the above applies.
i) almost without exception he goes to bed between about 8.30 and 9pm;ii) they do not have nights out;
iii) he only rarely drives;
iv) he presents as being depressed and frustrated on a daily basis.
i) on more than one occasion she has visited the claimant and found him in bed or immobile on the sofa;ii) if he has to arrange something for his wife or daughter, for example, buying a birthday card, he relies on her assistance and she goes out with him to help;
iii) she acted on his behalf on a successful appeal in respect of his application for Employment and Support Allowance because he was unable to cope with the prospect of doing it on his own;
iv) she has observed the strain which the claimant's presentation has put upon his wife and daughter.
i) in contrast to the position before the diagnosis of CFS, it was he, rather than the claimant, who would now initiate any social outings together ;ii) often, the claimant would not want to make the effort to socialise;
iii) on those occasions upon which they were together, the claimant would, after a while, become visibly tired;
iv) in summary, the claimant is a shadow of his former self.
i) he still sees the claimant about once a week but these arrangements are rarely initiated by the claimant himself;ii) their meetings are shorter than they had been hitherto;
iii) the claimant visibly deteriorates as time goes by with signs of fatigue;
iv) in broad terms, he is not the man he was.
Mrs Miley
The other witnesses
SURVEILLANCE
i) Once more, there is a lack of flat and unequivocal contradiction between what the surveillance evidence reveals and what the claimant says he has done. Had the claimant, for example, denied ever going to the pub or going cycling then the defendant's case would have been immeasurably strengthened. As it is, the value of the surveillance evidence is undermined by the far weaker contrast between the general and the specific.ii) Consistently with the claimant's evidence and that of his wife, the video evidence reveals no occasion upon which the claimant goes out in the evening whether with friends or otherwise.
iii) There are a number of days on which he is not seen to leave the house at all.
iv) Despite the fact that Mrs Miley is in work, there are a number of occasions when she undertakes other duties, such as mowing the lawn and doing the school run when the claimant does not appear to be otherwise occupied.
v) The footage of the second visit to the CPAD assessment clearly shows the claimant struggling to walk the distance to the car. The defendant is constrained to explain this by speculating that the claimant was putting on a show because he may have suspected that he was under surveillance. However, this suggestion does not explain why, if the claimant were alerted to the possibility that he was being watched, that he did not curtail his activities for a longer period. The claimant said under cross examination that he was unaware that he was being filmed at any stage and I believe him.
DEMEANOUR
EXPERT EVIDENCE
"During the course of preparing the report, the Working Group has continued to be concerned at the widespread controversy surrounding the existence and nature of CFS/ME. Patients, their carers, and healthcare professionals encounter different levels and varying manifestations of disbelief and prejudice against people affected by the condition. The disbelief and controversy over CFS/ME that exists within the professions has done nothing to dispel public disbelief in the existence of such a seemingly varied and inconstant illness."
None of the experts in this case disavows the existence of CFS as a real pathology but it is the reference to it as a "varied and inconstant illness" which resonates against the background of this case.
"Indeed, there may be severe impact on people's lives even of less overtly severe CFS/ME, as the descriptions offered by Cox and Findley for mild and moderate CFS/ME suggest. Such patients may suffer most impact through the discrepancy between what they were able to achieve previously and what they can now do. Even less prolonged illness, whatever the severity, can have very substantial personal and social impact, mainly intrusions on the individual, relationships, work, and finances. Self-confidence and self-esteem are severely eroded in many cases."
CONCLUSION
Note 1 15 December 1994, Annals of Internal Medicine Vol. 121 No. 12 [Back]