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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Hibberd-Little v Carlton [2018] EWHC 1787 (QB) (06 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/1787.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1787 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
KATHRYN HIBBERD-LITTLE |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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EMILY CARLTON |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Watt-Pringle (instructed by Clyde & Co Claims LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 29 May 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Saggerson
Introduction
Summary of the Parties' Positions
"after the accident everything changed. I always seemed to be tired and my brain just didn't seem to function in the way it had before … I no longer seemed to be able to handle the pressure of the (teaching) job and I started to find it stressful, believing that it was only a matter of time before I was found out and sacked."
5.1 It is denied that the Claimant sustained a "very severe" diffuse axonal injury ("DAI") or any other brain or neurological injury in the accident, and [denied] that she has been left with "subtle and pervasive" cognitive and behavioural deficits".
5.2 The defendant also accepts that there are no enduring psychological consequences and does not put forward a psychological or psychiatric explanation for the Claimant's reported enduring symptoms: "It is denied that the Claimant developed PTSD with associated agoraphobia and panic attacks and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder as a result of the accident. She has no current neuropsychological or psychological disorders as a result of the accident, which will impact upon her future functioning, and there is no risk of deterioration as a result of the accident. Nor does she require any treatment."
5.3 The defendant relies on the apparent absence of contemporaneous or near contemporaneous records in treating doctors' and other records of symptoms commonly associated with brain injury. The defendant submits that it is for the claimant to prove that the accident caused the orthopaedic and organic brain injuries about which she now complains and that such injuries have caused the losses particularised in her most recent Schedule. It is not necessary for the defendant, so it is submitted, to put forward a positive case on causation or to put forward an alternative diagnosis of such enduring problems as the claimant has. On the defendant's approach the action has a value of only a fraction of what is claimed. The medical and causation issues are foreshadowed in more detail in the defendant's Schedule of Medical Issues.
The Issues
6.1 What injuries did the claimant suffer as a result of the collision? Did she suffer a Diffuse Axonal Injury with associated vestibular compromise and the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and orthopaedic injuries alleged?
6.2 If she suffered organic brain and vestibular injuries, did they cause her to give up her career as a teacher?
6.3 What loss has the claimant suffered as a result of the accident?
6.4 Is the claimant a reliable and accurate historian such that a temporal link can be established on the factual evidence between the accident and such enduring symptoms as she continues to experience?
"… the most that he could find on the whole of the medical evidence was that the condition of cramp of the hand due to repetitive movements (PDA4) might have an organic cause or a psychogenic cause, or a combination of both causes or one cause to begin with and the other supervening. He was disposed to hold that the respondent had a cramp of the hand, but she had failed to satisfy him that its cause was an organic one. She had also failed to satisfy him that it was caused by her typing work, as opposed to being merely associated with it." [1196 D – E]
The claim was dismissed. The Court of Appeal overturned the judgment, but it was restored on appeal to the House of Lords. Having referred to the fact that there was an acute conflict in the expert medical evidence [1196 H], Lord Hope of Craighead held at 1201 A – E:
"The majority in the Court of Appeal appear to have thought that the whole matter ought to have been disposed of by looking solely at the medical evidence. On their approach it was enough that the judge was unwilling to accept Dr. Lucire's explanation that the respondent's condition was conversion hysteria. That being so, as there was no other explanation, the conclusion was in their view inevitable that this was a condition which was organic in origin. I have already observed that in my opinion they were approaching the matter from the wrong starting point. But their disposal of this issue is open to objection on more fundamental grounds. In the first place what they were doing was to invert the onus of proof. The respondent's whole case was that her cramp had an organic cause. It was essential to her success that it was proved to have been caused by repetitive movements while typing. So, according to the ordinary rule, the onus was on her to prove that the cause which she had alleged was the right one. It was open to the appellants to lead evidence in rebuttal to the effect that its cause was a psychogenic one. But they did not have to prove that it was due to a conversion hysteria. Failure to prove this alternative explanation was a factor to be taken into account in the decision as to whether the respondent had established an organic cause, but it was no more than that. It still left open the question, in the light of the wider dispute revealed by the medical evidence, whether an organic cause had been established for the cramp so that it could be said to have been due to the respondent's typing work. It was precisely because he was unable to answer this question in her favour on the medical evidence that the judge turned for such assistance as it might offer to the other evidence."
"There is no doubt that in most cases the question of onus ceases to be of any importance once all the evidence is out and before the court. But in this case it was not so simple. As Lord Thankerton observed in Watt v. Thomas [1947] A.C. 484, 487 the question of burden of proof as a determining factor does not arise at the end of the case except in so far as the court is ultimately unable to come to a definite conclusion on the evidence, or some part of it, and the question arises as to which party has to suffer from this. From time to time cases arise which are of that exceptional character. They include cases which depend on the assessment of complex and disputed medical evidence, where the court finds itself in difficulty in reaching a decision as to which side of the argument is the more acceptable. I think that this was such a case, and that the judge was justified in reminding himself where the onus lay as he examined the evidence".
"In my judgment, there was no need of any blanket allegation of fraud, fakery or fabrication in the pleaded defence … The defence and its counter schedule of damages, together with the expert's reports … sufficiently put in issue the defendant's lack of acceptance that [the claimant] had suffered the injuries and sequelae of which he complained… In truth there was no wholesale attack of fabrication, no general attack on [the claimant's] honesty … Instead, there was, as must occur at the close of many a trial, a detailed submission by reference to specific points which had arisen in the evidence as to why the judge should regard [the claimant's] credibility as being both at the heart of his claim and as being suspect. The submission divided its fire between specific allegations of falsehood, exaggeration, and inconsistency, to be balanced … against the lack of objective verification of the symptoms relied on."
The Accident - Claimant's Evidence
18.1 "My last memory before the collision is looking in my rear-view mirror and seeing the approaching car coming towards me at speed… The car behind me was unable to stop and drove into the rear of my car… The force of the collision was clearly substantial …"
18.2 "Just before the point of impact I remember bracing and gripping the steering wheel with both hands, pulling myself forward s and turning my neck to the right for some reason… I remember a sort of crunching sound … I do not remember the car being propelled forward (or) being restrained by the seatbelt. My first memory after the accident is being stood outside at the back shouting at the other driver… I can only assume I was rendered unconscious for a period of time. I know that I rang my father, but I have no memory of that either. In fact, I have very patchy recollection after the accident for several days."
In her oral evidence the claimant demonstrated her brace reaction to the approach of the other car. She demonstrated clutching tightly at the steering wheel with hands at "ten-to-two" as if pulling herself forward with her left cheek close to the centre of the steering wheel (so that she was facing to her right). She said she had no recollection of the immediate aftermath of the collision and most of what she now says about that day is patched together from a few memories and what she has been told by her husband and mother. The claimant does not relate any memory of her head being thrown back from its forward flexed position as she describes turning to face the driver's side window of the car. There is no evidence that she hit her head on the head rest or at all. In oral evidence she recalled that she had shouted out "Oh my God" (thinking that the defendant was going to hit her car) but also thinking "we'll be alright" (or "OK" as in her witness statement). She adds the further memory of everything being black. She says that she recalls her husband responding "What?" and that everything happened very quickly. She attributes all her many, subsequent vicissitudes to this accident and its consequences.
Trevor Hibberd-Little's Evidence
20.1 "I suddenly remember hearing Kathryn shout out and looking across at her. She was gripping the steering wheel with both hands and had pulled herself forwards towards it and was looking to her right".
20.2 He recalls exclaiming "What?" when the claimant first shouted out, but the collision was almost instantaneous with his question. He does not describe any reactive contrary motion of the claimant's head as a result of the collision even though he must have been looking directly at his wife at this moment and is confident "every detail is ingrained in me". He hit his left knee on the glove compartment on the passenger side and his head had been resting on the passenger seat head rest. Afterwards it was he who exchanged details with the other driver and called the police (who referred the matter directly to the Highways Agency). Two men from the Highways Agency soon arrived at the scene. He describes the claimant as appearing to be in a lot of pain and not responding rationally to questions. She declined to go in the ambulance when it arrived and drove herself and her husband home. This, both the claimant and her husband maintain, was a bad decision. He says that both he and the claimant took accident photographs. The claimant's reluctance to accept this obvious proposition was difficult to understand, whether she recalled it or not. Before that Trevor recalls the claimant standing between her car and the defendant's exclaiming that the car was only a day old. Once home he says the claimant was in a lot of pain hence the decision to go to hospital, driven by the claimant's mother.
Medical records up to 2014 – Onset and Trajectory of symptoms
"Initially painful and stiff: Better after 2 weeks; so went back to work at end of holidays. Still has constant dull pain at back of neck; better in mornings and worse by the end of the working day. Also aware of clicking…
… Drinks 3-4 cider/vodka/wine every few weeks … likes walking, sewing – lives with husband. Does school work in the evening: sits at table/on sofa. Sits on sofa to watch TV (series) …up to 2 hours. At weekends does housework …
Says mood, sleep, appetite, energy, all OK. Likes (job?) not a lot, feels under attack by the government, but does not identify other workplace or non-workplace stressors when asked specifically".
On examination she had some limited movement on extension of the neck and some muscular tenderness. No issues were raised with regard to her mental state. The impression of the OH doctor was that the claimant was fit to work and she was advised to continue with analgesia.
30.1 (Referral): Initially painful & stiff, better after 2 weeks, so went back to work at end of holidays. Still has constant dull pain "at back of neck", better in mornings and worse by the end of the working day. Also aware of clicking when moves the neck.
30.2 The Injuries: She recalls these commencing within ten minutes, intensifying over the next day or two, describing acute variable intermittent pain, stiffness and restriction of movement affecting the cervical, upper thoracic and lumbo-sacral spine, her left thumb and discomfort in both wrists and her chest wall with initial intrusive occipital headaches. Initially she experienced pins and needles in both upper limbs but this settled within a week or so. In general the acute phase lasted for around a two-week period. During that stage activities involved in day-to-day living and self-care were especially uncomfortable. Following the acute phase she describes all material symptoms continuing to slowly improve.
30.3 Present Symptoms: Waking up first thing in the morning she describes intrusive stiffness and aching at the back of her neck provoked by lifting her head off the pillow. Her left thumb remains painful when gripping or when bending her thumb … The clicking sensation she experiences in her neck during head movements I explained is benign … She teaches … and found the first few weeks difficult and uncomfortable with reduced standing …
30.4 Consequential effects: Her confidence driving declined with apprehension, anxiety, intrusive thoughts and expecting further accidents in similar situations.
30.5 Her sleep pattern was initially disturbed nightly with associated fatigue, … but this incrementally restored within a period of around two months. Her recreation of yoga remains on hold. She … is now around seven [weeks] pregnant. She relied on her husband who, she explained, undertook most of the domestic activities predating.
30.6 (Prognosis): After the acute phase she describes all material symptoms appropriately improving. (She) is now around seven weeks pregnant and I would expect her material symptoms will likely cause unnecessary discomfort, particularly in the latter stages of her pregnancy. However, I am not expecting any complications in her pregnancy or the delivery. Her confidence driving declined but is slowly improving.
He also notes: "On direct questioning she confirms no recollection of any other related… accidents, injuries or symptoms". He deals specifically with situational anxiety, her apparent recovery from headaches after 2 months and notes that the claimant presented "without any obvious psychological impairment, anxiety or depression". It is of note that the trajectory of the claimant's recovery from headaches after about 2 months is not consistent with other reports from the claimant that her headaches continued to be "horrendous". Dr. O'Connor notes: "Following the acute phase she describes all material symptoms continuing slowly to improve". The claimant's disturbed sleep pattern is discussed with associated fatigue and he describes these difficulties as "…incrementally restored within a period of around two months". In the context of sleep disturbance, no mention is made of flashbacks or intrusive dreams (but the claimant thinks she mentioned them). The prognosis, in summary, is good with gradual resolution of her symptoms expected within a matter of months. The claimant was pregnant at the time of this appointment.
"Physically she suffers from continuing neck and thumb pain, balance difficulties, and headaches. She also suffers chronic and debilitating fatigue, aggravated by mental exertion. Cognitively she suffers from a range of functional cognitive deficits including deficits of various types of memory, concentration, organisation and planning, easy distraction, decision making, multitasking, logical sequencing, reading, tracking of group conversation, self-expression and word retrieval difficulties, mental arithmetic, new learning and social judgment. Such deficits are present in situations when they cannot be accounted for by anxiety and/or low mood… In association with the above difficulties the quality of her occupational, social, interpersonal and family life had been reduced by a sense of detachment from others, embarrassment at her psychological and cognitive difficulties, and social and psychological withdrawal". [I will refer to these as the "enduring cognitive and behavioural symptoms"].
39.1 "[The claimant] never developed problems with smell, vision, hearing or vertigo… she never suffered any nausea. (Later she reports vertigo and nausea when travelling).
39.2 "[She] has not developed any impulsivity in terms of decision making…" but had become more anxious and reliant on her parents. (By the time the claimant sees Ms. Levett in August 2015 she is reporting "impulsive behaviours").
39.3 Her motivation remains intact (after a period when it did flag before her cognitive behaviour therapy).
These reported symptoms are consistent with the contemporaneous medical information. Dr. Allder also notes:
39.4 "…she progressively developed paranoid anxiety over the 12 months following the accident…"
39.5 "[She] is also suffering from light sensitivity".
39.6 He notes self-reporting of flashbacks, dizziness, problems with short term memory, concentration, social sensitivity, mental and physical fatigue and word-finding with a period of post traumatic amnesia of between 2 and 3 weeks (with "snapshot" memories). Dr. Allder recognises the whiplash-type injuries and says: "The neck and the headache very much went together…" (and he refers to the pain diary kept by the claimant).
Change of Career
54.1 Following a long-term relationship with Trevor Little, the couple married in October 2012.
54.2 This was shortly after the claimant changed schools, leaving Camden to join the staff at Selsdon Primary School.
54.3 She and her husband went on a delayed "honeymoon" to Alaska in July 2013.
54.4 The Mug Tree Limited (her tea room business vehicle) was incorporated on 7 October 2013, of which after 6 November 2013 she was the sole director.
54.5 She resigned her teaching post in May 2014 (effective at the end of that summer term).
54.6 In June 2014 she withdrew from a proposal to take possession of commercial premises in Crowborough, having been in contact with property agents since at least November 2013.
54.7 The claimant and Trevor moved from Croydon to East Sussex on 7 July 2014.
54.8 She took possession of tea room premises in November 2014 in East Grinstead.
54.9 On 13 December 2014 she opened the tea room in East Grinstead (The Mug Tree).
54.10 After three unfortunate early miscarriages between October 2013 and March 2014, the claimant gave birth to a son, Henry, on 7 May 2016.
59.1 "In July 2014 I took the decision to leave a profession that I dearly loved before I was pushed. It was the hardest decision that I have ever taken in my life, but one that I knew I had to make. I knew that I had to take on something far less demanding cognitively and I naively thought that running a small coffee shop might be the answer. (It) should have been a walk in the park for someone like me …"
59.2 "At the beginning I had the enthusiasm to get the shop off the ground and was working 6 days a week in order to do so, but this took its toll on my health and wasn't sustainable."
59.3 "Before starting the coffee shop I had a significant rest period. I had given up full time employment … in July 2014 and did not begin to work with the coffee shop until November 2014. This meant I was well rested and had plenty of opportunities to recover from the fatigue I had been experiencing … I was able to maintain a clean house as I had little else to do other than housework and some slight preparation of paperwork for the coffee shop."
71.1 The claimant was and remains a naturally intelligent woman with a FSIQ of about 125-130, a level shared by only the top few percent of the population. If she believed that setting up a new business and running it would be a "walk in the park" or that it would be "easy" and something she could do at a distance or in the evenings after school, particularly if she was also seeking a step-change promotion in the SEN context, then this merely reflects the fact that her FSIQ is not matched by her common sense. The reality is that she was able to undertake much decision-making and preparation for the new business throughout 2013 (particularly the latter part), after the accident and whilst still teaching.
71.2 The search for suitable premises more convenient to her new home in the country (she was in communication with "Lawson Commercial" in this regard from at least November 2013 and probably I infer for some weeks before that); the completion of a business plan and the application for business finance (her loan application dates from 11 October 2013 and must have been in preparation for some time before) is consistent with a long-planned life-style change. In 2014 training, which she says, was underway for the establishment of a catering business, the continued search for premises, and making arrangements to take on the lease of The Mug Tree must have involved time, effort and focus. Such a level of activity is not consistent with what she claims was a "long rest period" before starting the tea room business in December 2014. Neither, I find, is it easy to reconcile with her later subjective reporting of continuing debilitating symptoms. It is much more consistent with the medical records up to spring 2014. Her activity is not consistent with impulsive decision-making. It is clearly part of a long-term, developing plan executed with care and forethought. It is, however, consistent with disillusionment with teaching; a decision to change course and lifestyle which the claimant was determined to pursue notwithstanding she was suffering from the effects of a whiplash-type injury.
71.3 She was investigating the Go-Daddy business hosting website as early as 24 June 2013 and I cannot accept her explanation that this was school-related. Had it been so it would have been relatively straightforward to demonstrate this.
71.4 On Tuesday 30 December 2014 a local newspaper reported on the opening of The Mug Tree tea room. The news report states how the claimant had decided to cast off the stresses of Ofsted inspections and government targets and that in opening the tea shop she was realising a dream. In quotation marks it reports the claimant's own words: "It got harder and harder with all the government changes and the pressures. I reached the end of where I could go without going for promotion but that wasn't something I wanted to do. I didn't want to give up more of my life and I felt the time was right to do this". The opening hours are advertised in the article as being between 11.00am and 4.00pm (which the claimant points out is one of several inaccuracies). Making due allowance for the fact that the East Grinstead Courier is not a publication of record and one would hardly expect the claimant to say she was opening-up due to the chronic effects of a road traffic accident, these unguarded comments are strikingly consistent with other documents (such as the business loan submission and the medical records); the events at Selsdon from the autumn of 2013 and what I find was a decision after marriage to start a family and move to a more relaxing lifestyle in the country. None of this is congruent with how the claimant describes her career change in her witness statement.
71.5 The Mug Tree Business Plan (the disclosed version is dated 1 November 2014). It is preceded by handwritten notes dated 17 October 2013. The Business Plan is an important document. Of particular interest is the declaration: "[The claimant] no longer wishes to remain in a highly pressurised career … Her … career had reached a plateau". This document also indicates that the claimant had been in touch with business advisors for over a year and she accepted that this must have been before November 2013. She also says (and I accept) that the document was prepared and completed over time (she cannot put a completion date on it). I accept that. Not only does the document strongly point towards long preparation involving discussion with business advisors, it also clearly points towards, and is consistent with, plans for tea rooms being at the forefront of the claimant's mind throughout the autumn of 2013. This would have involved thought and effort on her part, irrespective of the help I accept she must have received from Messrs. Dixon and Miller, her advisers at different times along the way. In addition, the document further illustrates the claimant's tendency towards self-aggrandisement, a trait seen in several parts of the evidence. In it she describes herself as running a craft group for 3 years; being a master tea tender, a barista and a semi-professional baker (none of which are accurate). In oral evidence the claimant gave an unsatisfactory explanation of paragraph 10.1 of the document: "What do you plan to do if your business fails?" to which she answers in the document: "I will always have the option of returning to teaching…" but explains in evidence "I think it means that I always intended to return to go back to teaching with a strong team under me". She says this in order to make it fit with other parts of her evidence but it is, frankly, a ludicrous construction of the answer in the document. Mr. Miller (a senior loan fund manager with GLE oneLondon helping with an application for finance at an earlier stage of the business plan) did not even know that the claimant had had an accident or had been injured. He describes the claimant as "vibrant" and with sufficient enthusiasm for the business project. It is likely that the document was the result of a long collaborative process with advisers, but the claimant's explanation of it (for example, in the Part 18 Answers of 12 January 2018) is, in my judgment, improbable and her attempt to excuse unremoved "errors", which she excuses as "poor choice of wording" and by reference to her reduced ability to deal with long documents, has a hollow ring. I conclude from this that not only is the claimant prepared to say whatever she thinks is necessary to get what she wants, however much embellishment is required, but that she is prepared to put forward any explanation for a "poor choice of words" in a document such as this seemingly regardless of how realistic such explanations are.
71.6 Since the Tea Room opened the claimant has undertaken activities designed to increase its profile. Not all have proved successful, but the effort and commitment required is significant. She involved herself in a small business networking group and was awarded "Mumpreneur of the month" in May 2017; she and Trevor operate The Mug Tree Facebook page and she took significant steps to set up a "sling library" at the shop under the auspices of the NCT, abandoning the project due to the irksome levels of paperwork required, and also I accept, it was considered too much to take on.
71.7 There is no evidence that the claimant was about to be "pushed" out of the teaching profession as she claims. Such difficulties as she had at Selsdon in the autumn term of 2013 are, in my judgment, entirely consistent with the continuing effects of physical whiplash-type injuries coupled with the claimant's disappointment at not being promoted and concurrent determination to secure for herself and her husband and future family a quieter, more countrified lifestyle whilst running a tea room.
71.8 The claimant's social activities in the 12 months following the accident are also consistent with the early medical records, and capability to undertake reasonably hard work teaching and planning a new business venture. This is illustrated by her personal bank statements which do not suggest that she was affected by a period of dense post traumatic amnesia nor the immediate onset of a cluster of seriously, debilitating cognitive and behavioural problems immediately after the accident. This is important because these activities provide further evidence, not only that the claimant was functioning at a reasonable level throughout this period, but also because few of these activities have given any of the family and friends witnesses specific cause to be concerned about the claimant's welfare. I would have expected some of the activities to trigger contemporaneous concern about the claimant's memory in the first 4 weeks after the accident if nothing else; or at least a measure of concern about her driving a car. There was none. Examples of the activities include these:
(1) From 2 April 2013 the claimant appears to be functioning at a perfectly unexceptional level. There is nothing very dramatic about this period but she is shopping, visiting restaurants and cafes and going on family outings (driving to Wisely on 7 May) as a matter of routine.
(2) There was a family trip to France in August and September 2013 for which the claimant was the driver (Trevor did not have a licence at this time).
(3) She also drove to a friend's wedding in the Midlands in October 2013.
71.9 This pattern of routine is certainly consistent with the claimant "pushing through" her problems if those problems were related to a nasty whiplash injury with modest psychological implications, but I do not accept that there was anything more to the claimant's injuries than this. The absence of any supporting evidence to the effect that driving was causing the claimant "debilitating anxiety" as she says it did, is also noticeable. Her husband, if no one else, might have been expected to stop her driving long distances if debilitating fatigue, dizziness or disorientation had manifested themselves in the period before the family holiday in France. The chronology of events reveals that the claimant was able to push through the effects of her injuries to a point when she returns from France in September 2013, returns to school, visits Dr. O'Connor and on top of that accelerates her preparations for a new business career. Enduring cognitive and behavioural symptoms cannot have affected her in the way she has since related whilst permitting this level of function and organisation.
71.10 The claimant's explanation of the undated letter from Susan Papas (the Selsdon interim head teacher) about her application to become a Threshold teacher is an example of the claimant's capacity for wishful-thinking. She unrealistically explains that the phrase "…you did not meet all of the Teachers' Standards at this time" supports the conclusion that all extra-curricular activities had been suspended and showed that projects outside the main curriculum had been suspended. This tendency for wishful-thinking is matched by her subjective interpretation when it comes to her explanations of what is to be seen on the video surveillance evidence, what she says about The Mug Tree Business Plan and her attempts to explain away the medical information up to February 2014.
71.11 Despite the claimant's insistence on the central role to be played by Ms Pineau in setting up and running the tea room, there is scant reference to Ms. Pineau in the documents aside from those relating to her one month stint as a Director of The Mug Tree Limited in October/November 2013 and I conclude that whilst a new business was initially planned as a joint venture between the claimant and Ms. Pineau, the claimant was taking the lead and perfectly prepared to go it alone when it proved too much for Ms. Pineau to continue, as it had by November 2013.
71.12 The assertion that the claimant was constrained to make a career change due to severe, chronic cognitive and behavioural problems suffered continuously since the accident is flatly contradicted by the occupation health, Orthopaedic and physiotherapy reports and GP notes up to early 2014.
71.13 I am satisfied that the same assertion is contradicted when the claimant's presentation as a witness is considered, particularly in the light of the fact that as a result of her friendship with Peter Siegel she would, more probably than not, have had particular insight into the possible causes of any cognitive and behavioural symptoms she suffered.
71.14 The evidence of Louise Fisher (a friend since 2006) was read, so the details of it could not be explored (especially dates, times and timelines) but she says: "I was very surprised when I heard she was setting up the tea rooms. I thought baking cakes and running a tea room would be something (the claimant) might enjoy doing in the future, but it was not a project that I thought she would take on at this stage of her life." I conclude from this that the idea of a tea room business is something that must have been openly discussed amongst friends, probably before the accident, even if only as a future ambition. This is further support for the conclusion that the business venture was not a sudden or impulsive decision or a necessary, reluctant reaction to the consequences of the accident as the claimant has implied. In her oral evidence the claimant said it was from early 2014 (January – March) that she found it increasingly difficult to cope at school. This is not consistent with the evidence of Emma Espin to the effect that the claimant had expressed her temptation to leave teaching in the run-up to and before the Christmas Holidays in 2013 (entirely consistent with some advanced planning throughout the autumn period).
The claimant's presentation as a witness
Surveillance
Peter Siegel
The claimant's medical case
"In summary, on balance, she has brain injury caused by her accident and the mechanism for this is likely to be diffuse axonal injury, which affects the type of neurocognitive systems that are compromised in her case. This injury has led to cognitive and behaviour deficits that are supported by her cluster of symptom presentation in everyday life and the neuropsychological test results. Whilst the level of brain damage is technically severe, the symptoms can be classified as mild, but it should be stressed that mild symptoms can produce very disabling effects on a person, also in the context of high intelligence and occupational and intellectual expectations. Her particular neuropsychological difficulties have been very disabling in terms of dealing with the demands of teaching, in particular the degree of use of memory, multi-tasking and nuanced decision making required, as well as the degree of stamina and energy required. It seems that Kathryn Hibberd-Little judged correctly that she could no longer function in her role as teacher, having made substantial effort to continue. In my view she had incomplete insight into her difficulties and the effects on her when she made decisions about life changes and this has led to her making perhaps the wrong decision concerning setting up a coffee shop business, something she previously would have been very capable of managing. Loss of insight and judgement are features related to brain damage and on balance she may not have been making aware decisions when she decided to change careers."
DAI – Medical Introduction
'(DAI) is a "stealth" pathology of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Although found throughout the white matter, it comprises primarily microscopic damage, rendering it almost invisible to current imaging techniques. Yet, it is one of the most common and important pathologic features of TBI. It seems ironic that the size and organization of the human brain that allow us to design and drive automobiles are also our greatest liability of producing DAI in the event of a crash. Under the physical forces such as shear that commonly induce TBI, the human brain can literally pull itself apart. In particular, axons in the white matter appear poorly prepared to withstand damage from rapid mechanical deformation of the brain during trauma … The principal mechanical force associated with the induction of DAI is rotational acceleration of the brain resulting from unrestricted head movement in the instant after injury. This inertial loading to the brain induces dynamic shear, tensile, and compressive strains within the tissue leading to dynamic tissue deformation … For the development of DAI, the size of the human brain plays an important role because of the substantial mass effects during injury that result in high strains between regions of tissue. Under normal daily activities brain tissue is compliant and ductile to stretch and easily recovers its original geometry. In contrast, under severe circumstances, when the strain is rapidly applied, such as during an automobile crash, the brain tissue acts far stiffer, essentially becoming more brittle. Thus, rapid uniaxial stretch or "tensile elongation" of axons is thought to result in damage of the axonal cytoskeleton. This classic viscoelastic response to rapid deformation prompts a classification of dynamic injuries, in which the applied forces occur in less than 50 milliseconds. Accordingly, axonal injury is a dependent on both the magnitude of strain and rate of strain during brain trauma.'
'However, in survivors, DAI is virtually invisible to conventional brain imaging techniques, and is only hinted at if it is accompanied by macroscopic changes, such as white matter tears and parenchymal haemorrhage found in severe cases. The predominant pathology of DAI—microscopic axonal swellings—has proven extremely difficult to illuminate with non-invasive methods despite its extensive nature. Accordingly, patients and animal models with little macroscopic injury after diffuse brain injury typically have normal appearing images of the brain. This has led many to believe that axonal pathology is substantially underdiagnosed. Clinically, DAI is often a "diagnosis of exclusion" based on the inability of conventional imaging techniques to detect brain pathology despite overt symptoms, such as prolonged unconsciousness or cognitive dysfunction after brain trauma (Figure 3). Because of this diagnostic deficiency, the relative role of DAI in mild-to-moderate brain injury remains unclear.'
'The forces required to cause the tissue deformation inducing DAI are often misunderstood. A common cause of confusion is the types of forces required to induce axonal injury because DAI has been observed in cases of falls and assaults, as well as in victims of motor vehicle accidents. The contact forces that are produced when the head is struck by or strikes a hard object often produces focal effects alone (e.g., isolated focal contusion). However, in some circumstances, these contact loads may also rapidly accelerate and/or decelerate the brain, thereby inducing inertial forces throughout the brain. Alternatively, inertial forces such as those produced by rotational acceleration of the head during automobile crashes often culminate in the contact force of the head's striking the interior of the automobile. Thus, although the formation of DAI is produced by inertial forces, contact forces often cause the levels of acceleration necessary to produce DAI.'
Imaging
94.1 "Ms Hibberd-Little has not had any brain imaging but it is likely to be 'normal'. The published literature has shown that attempts to correlate visible lesions on any currently available routine imaging modality to clinical symptoms in patients with DAI have proved disappointing. The explanation offered in the literature is that the clinical deficits relate to a "more general compromise of the integrity of underlying white matter, which may connect topographically distinct regions".
94.2 "Even if Ms Hibberd-Little were to undergo 3T susceptibility weighted MRI, it is unlikely that this would demonstrate visible lesions. Susceptibility weighted MRI has a specificity of approximately 90%, which means that when it is positive there is a 90% chance that the patient does have diffuse axonal injury. However, it is important to note that it only has a sensitivity of 20%, which means that it only identifies 20% of patients who do have diffuse axonal injury."
Neurologists (Allder[2] and Heaney[3])
96.1 "[The claimant] sustained a head injury at the time of the accident, with associated brain and psychological injuries. She has also sustained an audio-vestibular injury."
96.2 "… the published data relating to this area conclude that the specific trigger for a traumatic brain injury which could lead to diffuse axonal injury is a rapid onset, forward acceleration of the brain. The chance of such an injury causing significant DAI is exacerbated if there is any element of rotation. This is a potential injury mechanism in this case."
96.3 "In my opinion, the presence of the neurogenic, physical and neuro-cognitive symptoms listed below (experienced acutely and sub-acutely) suggest a probability that [the claimant] suffered a subtle closed brain injury secondary to diffuse axonal injury" (there then follows a list of 17 bullet points of symptoms).
98.1 The diagnosis of traumatic brain injury ("TBI"), including DAI, is ultimately a matter for the neurologists, albeit informed by other specialists, including psychologists. Diagnosis is a matter of clinical judgment by medically qualified clinicians.
98.2 Even apparently trivial accidents might cause TBI and DAI.
98.3 A diagnosis of DAI depends on the veracity of a patient's history across the whole range of symptoms affecting that patient and an overall consistency and coherence in the presentation of the patient is sought. Without a reliable history, a diagnosis "does not get off the ground" (Allder).
98.4 Structural scanning (however sophisticated) will not necessarily reveal anything of relevance.
98.5 One should be looking for a clear, temporal link between an accident and the reported symptoms.
98.6 Each case presents differently for each patient and none of the common symptoms of DAI is unique to DAI. There is a wide range of possible outcomes. Whiplash and DAI may be triggered by the same mechanism but are not related, even though symptoms may be common to both in some cases.
98.7 A wide variety of factors have to be considered in approaching a diagnosis, especially in the context of looking for a clear, temporal link. Those factors are:
(1) The pre-accident health of the patient (including memory) and in this case the neurologists agree that the claimant was healthy before the accident.
(2) The claimant did not lose consciousness.
(3) Dr. Allder's neurological examination of the claimant had been normal;
(4) The mechanism of the injury: if there are significant rotational forces involved in the trauma mechanism, DAI is more likely than if there is no such rotation (though what degree or extent constitutes "significant" rotational forces remains obscure). Rotational forces might be associated with the collision itself or as a result of a patient's position within the vehicle or both;
(5) The presence of associated impact injuries (none present);
(6) Consideration of contemporaneous medical assessments and clinical examination. In this context it is common ground that a Glasgow Coma Scale ["GCS] test is nothing more than a starting point and too crude on its own to exclude DAI (the claimant's GCS was 15/15);
(7) The onset of relevant symptoms and the trajectory of recovery (symptoms would not be expected to deteriorate over time);
(8) The presence of post traumatic amnesia ("PTA"). DAI should never be diagnosed on the strength of a PTA assessment alone but it is a necessary tool. It is better if a prospective PTA assessment can be undertaken, but if it has not been done, the closer to the time of an accident a retrospective assessment can be made, the better (due to the passage of time and confusion caused by received information). Retrospective assessment of PTA is nonetheless viable and helpful when undertaken carefully with a recognised diagnostic tool and in such circumstances, can be just as useful as a prospective assessment – assuming the history given is accurate and consistent. The first retrospective PTA assessment is likely to be the most informative, if carried out appropriately and this can be the best single indicator of the severity of a closed head injury.
102.1 When assessing PTA retrospectively, the consistency of the history is important. Dr. Allder does not disagree. Dr. Savundra also said the history given by the patient was important (but thought that consistency could be compromised in someone with a brain injury).
102.2 Variations or lack of consistency in a history would cause concern that a patient's problems were not PTA or a DAI, but something else. Dr Allder agreed that inconsistencies and contradictions were relevant to the overall coherence of a patient's presentation, and he accepted that overall coherence was important.
102.3 There was a lack of consistency or coherence between the claimant's reporting of symptoms in the early stages and her later rPTA assessments, including that undertaken by Gillian Levett.
102.4 He concludes: "there is no contemporaneous evidence of PTA". He doubts Dr. Allder's contrary conclusion reached at an assessment 3 years after the accident. (Dr. McCulloch was of the view that the 4 years that had elapsed prior to her interviewing the claimant was too great to warrant any formal PTA assessment on her part).
102.5 Driving home, as the claimant did, for 20 minutes in a state of PTA, would be exceptional because of the level of confusion a patient would be expected to display.
102.6 Someone with the prolonged PTA claimed by the claimant would usually also suffer from some degree of loss of consciousness and would not be expected to score 15/15 on the Glasgow Coma Scale. He was not aware of any paper which recorded such a prolonged PTA without loss of consciousness.
102.7 Whereas he had seen patients who consulted their GP after losing two hours of memory, it was "odd" and "remarkable" that someone who had lost between two and three weeks should not have consulted her GP. Two to three weeks of PTA in a case such as this was anomalous and "did not look right".
102.8 Two to three weeks of PTA was likely to prompt questions in the afflicted person, such as "Why am I here?" There is no evidence of any reported episodes of this nature.
102.9 The onset and trajectory of the claimant's injuries was not right. It appeared from the pattern of reporting in the early medical appointments as well as histories given later, to be a deteriorating one and was not consistent with someone who had suffered a brain injury in the accident.
102.10 On meeting the claimant, it was clear to Dr. Heaney that she was a very competent person. He had the impression that she had already given her history several times to other practitioners and he noted her use of the description, "snapshots of memory", which was a phrase used in the medical literature. Dr. Heaney was rightly puzzled that the claimant seemed not to have knowledge (irrespective of any recall) of a trip to Brighton on 14 April 2013 until this was brought up with Ms. Levett in August 2015. The puzzlement derives from the fact that the claimant reports that "her habit is to use Facebook every day or every other day" and images relevant to the Brighton trip were on Facebook and yet the Brighton images went apparently unnoticed for 28 months.
102.11 Usually, in cases of DAI, a patient's mental processing speed would be affected. He considered this a more stringent marker for brain injury than loss of memory but he was prepared to defer to the neuropsychologists on this. It is agreed that testing indicates that the claimant's processing speed has been unaffected by the accident. (Although Ms. Levett thought otherwise in her Report dated 9 July 2016).
102.12 If there was injury to the fornix, this could, in some cases, be visible on scanning (even though the absence of a positive scan result far from conclusive). No scans were available.
102.13 The claimant's reference to the stigma attached to brain injury did not apply, since she said that she did not think that she had a brain injury, but that her problems were related to the whiplash injury.
102.14 Having been in court throughout the factual evidence and standing back to look at the entire case he concluded that the claimant's case was "full of oddness" such that an exclusionary diagnosis of a DAI was less than probable.
PTA Assessment
"The duration of PTA is still commonly assessed retrospectively by asking the individual with TBI to recall their first memory following the injury after the return of full consciousness. Although one study comparing retrospective estimate with prospective monitoring on the GOAT did not find a significant difference between methods in PTA duration, the reliability of retrospective estimation for a given individual is dependent upon the accuracy of recall, which can be confounded by recounts of others, confabulation, stress associated with trauma, and sedation or other injuries" (Ponsford: 2014).
This must be seen in the light of King et al: 1997 (bearing in mind that this paper concerns comparative, successive results of PTA assessments by different, independent practitioners):
"the retrospective assessment of post-traumatic amnesia has reasonable reliability with a correlation coefficient of 0.79 and with 79% of patients being allocated to the same grade of severity by both assessors. This applied to all levels of severity and at various time points after injury … however … a significant minority of patients can be misclassified, with 2% being allocated to widely differing categories of severity by two different assessors. As would be expected, table 2 indicates that measurement was more reliable for longer durations of post-traumatic amnesia and when time intervals between assessments were shorter … The findings highlight some of the risks associated with relying solely on post-traumatic amnesia as a measure of severity in individual patients and in using it to define rigid taxonomies of severity. Certainly, post-traumatic amnesia should be used as a major factor when considering the severity of a patient's head injury, but it should not necessarily be the sole determining factor…
"In conclusion, measuring post-traumatic amnesia by retrospective questioning had a good reliability when the explicit method described in this study was used. The Rivermead post-traumatic amnesia protocol may therefore be a useful way of measuring the duration of post-traumatic amnesia in clinical practice. The protocol standardises the procedure of assessment that is associated with a 21% misclassification rate. In only 2% of cases however, is this category change of unequivocal clinical significance (a change of over more than one category). This is probably as good as can be achieved in routine clinical practice".
"Although the length of post traumatic amnesia [has been described as the 'gold standard'], it is one of a number of means by which an estimation (no more than that) can be made as to whether an individual has suffered a head injury, and if so, and of what likely severity it is. I can understand the importance of it for the purposes of treatment. What is a good servant for those purposes becomes in my view a poor master in a compensation claim. I do not think there is any inherent magic … to the process of assessing the length of post traumatic amnesia … The task is a relatively simple one: identifying what memories an individual actually has following an accident, until the time of return of 'normal' memory".
Psychologist and Neuropsychiatric evidence: Brain Injury (Levett[4] & Grace[5])
"I do not treat as an expert. Being an expert rules me out as a treating physician. It can be very complex to do both and it is not an acceptable position to be in".
Professor Morris (neuropsychologist), when asked about it, appeared to be visibly appalled at the very idea of adopting a dual role, but was confident that the situation would not arise for him and he could see no reason for his ever departing from the guidance issued by the BPS.
120.1 Ms. Levett alone among the experts identifies a period of retrograde amnesia. She reports that the claimant did not recall driving home on the day before the accident in her new car, what she did on that evening, waking up on the 29 March or any of her activities on the morning of the accident. However, the claimant told Dr. Allder that she had "… a very good memory of all of the details up to the accident." Retrograde amnesia is not a prerequisite of DAI but this highlights an important discrepancy in the claimant's recollection given separately to two different clinicians and is concerning when it comes to consider her reliability as a historian. Ms. Levett's functional analysis did not indicate that there was any cause to query the claimant's history in this regard. It is likely that Ms. Levett was over-eager to ascribe to the claimant's history of the day before a significance it did not deserve. She would not have had Dr. Allder's version of events when she wrote her reports but I did not detect any sign on the part of Ms. Levett that her conclusion might even be worth revisiting given the obviousness of the inconsistency once it emerged from totality of the evidence.
120.2 There are other inconsistencies that emerge from the various histories taken from the claimant by other experts. None of these different versions appeared to give Ms. Levett any pause for thought before or during the trial, so confident was she that her rPTA methodology was unimpeachable (or nearly so). I find that Ms. Levett had closed her mind to:
(1) the potential importance of inconsistencies in the claimant's history and reporting of symptoms;
(2) the need for reconsideration of her opinion in the context of an analysis of the comparative importance of the inconsistencies that there were;
(3) the need for a reflective re-evaluation of the claimant's history as given to Ms. Levett in the light of all the factual and expert evidence including these inconsistencies.
121.1 The claimant says in her first witness statement: "My first memory after the accident is being stood outside the car at the back, shouting at the other driver that it was only a day old". She gave the same recollection to Dr Allder and Professor Morris. Ms. Levett, however, records the claimant's recollection at this point being of asking the defendant if she (the defendant) was alright. Much later the claimant made a further witness statement in which she said that she did not recall shouting at the defendant.
121.2 Despite telling Ms. Levett that she had no recall of the collision itself or the immediate aftermath, the claimant discussed the accident with Amy Arnold, a friend, a "few days" after the accident and described the mechanics of the accident. Even though Amy Arnold would not be expected to differentiate between recall and knowledge, it is of concern that this conversation about the mechanics of the accident apparently revealed no memory problems (to Amy Arnold) during the course of the discussion, particularly as even at that stage Amy Arnold was astute enough to notice that the claimant "wasn't the same person" (which I conclude is consistent with whiplash and post-accident headaches).
121.3 In her first witness statement the claimant says: "I know that I rang my father, but I have no memory of that either." Ms. Levett records being told that the claimant did recall (i.e. had a memory of) phoning her father from the scene of the accident. Dr. McCulloch was given a similar history. Another variant was given to Dr Grace where the claimant said she recalled being on the phone to her father, but not calling him.
121.4 Ms. Levett records the recollection that the claimant told the man in the hi-vis jacket that her neck was very sore. That is inconsistent with the claimant's later accounts that she had no personal recollection of the onset and development of symptoms during the first two weeks after the accident. In the context of Dr. O'Connor's appointment, she had said "I have no memory of that period of time" (talking about the development of her symptoms).
121.5 Ms. Levett records that the claimant had no recollection of being driven to A&E by her mother. The claimant told Dr Allder that she did recall this.
"Mechanism of injury, clinical history, and presence of brief retrograde amnesia and of post traumatic amnesia of over two weeks and possibly over one month, indicates that she has suffered at least a very severe head injury, with associated cerebral injury".
The problem with this is that:
124.1 The mechanism of the injury is difficult to be precise about save to the extent that it involved acceleration-deceleration to the head and upper body on a rear-end collision;
124.2 The clinical history Ms. Levett refers to cannot have included proper account of the clinical history as recorded up to the early part of 2014 (i.e. up to about the first anniversary of the accident) and I conclude that Ms. Levett has overlooked the important, potentially negative, effect this has on an assessment of the claimant's consistency and the coherence of her overall presentation;
124.3 There is only non-specific, general factual evidence from family, friends and colleagues supporting some of the enduring symptoms and several are not mentioned at all;
124.4 The presence of retrograde amnesia is a feature unique to the opinion of Ms. Levett (significantly absent on the conclusions of both neurologists), and in my judgment, it is indicative of the claimant's unreliability as a historian rather than a demonstration of any unique qualities enjoyed by Ms. Levett as a functional analyst and assessor.
124.5 Although not part of the clinical history, there is no substantial discussion about the claimant's career change despite the length of time Ms. Levett had in assessment and in treatment and claims to adopt a robust methodology. I cannot accept that the claimant's career history could not be cued, but more to the point, the claimant must have remained largely silent on the topic.
126.1 "I can say with confidence that [the claimant] has not suffered a brain injury … I can't go any further than that … I was focused on the presence or absence of brain injury".
126.2 "[the claimant] presented with many non-specific symptoms … but she was not able to date the onset of her symptoms with any clarity … it is probably not a brain injury due to this lack of clear indications about onset…" "I see this sort of cluster of complaints all the time and it is not specific to DAI" and some of the symptoms presented can be present in the "normal" population.
126.3 In the context of the "buffering effect" and patients self-blaming and regarding seeking help as a sign of weakness: this might happen but it happened "vanishingly rarely".
126.4 She accepted that she had far less time than Ms. Levett to do a rPTA assessment, but as one who had a memory of the crunching sound of the collision but no memory of the impact itself, it was her opinion that the claimant would be "unique".
126.5 By the time she saw the claimant, the claimant had already seen several clinicians and lawyers and was speaking herself of "PTA". The suggestibility of people should not be underestimated. She was not prepared to say that the claimant was malingering.
126.6 She accepted that the claimant was now presenting a cluster of symptoms that affected her quality of life, but in her opinion, the symptoms taken together or individually were not exclusive to brain injury or a DAI.
126.7 She was asked about checking for brain injury at A&E and said: "any reasonably competent casualty doctor would cover the possibility of brain injury" and she would be worried if memory and orientation had not featured in the examination at A&E.
PTSD and OCD
Neuropsychological (Morris[6] and McCulloch[7])
137.1 PTA is associated with signs of agitation, confusion and disorientation and this was not a recorded feature in the immediate aftermath of the accident and the following weeks. (The only exception to this, I note, is father's evidence about the post-accident 'phone call which I do not regard as significant in the context of the bigger picture and evidence from Trevor about the immediate aftermath of the accident which does not strike me as being an exceptional reaction from anyone after a road traffic accident).
137.2 The claimant's current intellectual functioning is between superior (Dr McCulloch) and very superior (Professor Morris).
137.3 The claimant's Verbal Comprehension Index (language function) is in the superior range and is very superior for vocabulary.
137.4 She does not show performance impairment on the cognitive domains of language, visuo-spatial-non-verbal ability, attention, working memory and processing speed. Her intellectual level is consistent with her likely pre-accident functioning.
137.5 On memory testing, Dr McCulloch's test results were superior for Logical Memory I and high average for Logical Memory II (as opposed, respectively to high average and average on Professor Morris's testing). Dr McCulloch concluded that her memory functioning does not show impairment from her expected ability level of high average to superior as shown on the Test of Premorbid Functioning and her Index Scores.
137.6 Each expert respected the other's testing protocols but preferred their own approach.
139.1 The claimant's memory functioning "tended not to match the higher ranges of her intellectual functioning". He thought there was "significantly reduced memory functioning from likely very good pre-accident level".
139.2 On comparing the importance of memory with processing speed in reaching an exclusionary brain injury diagnosis he said in his oral evidence:
"I put memory on a par with processing speed. Memory is as sensitive in relation to brain damage, and is the most commonly found cognitive difficulty. But if talking about different patients, there are no consistent patterns between patients; one might show impairment on one but not the other. Speed of processing can be affected by DAI but so can memory. Memory relies on the connectivity and communication of information which can be affected by DAI but you get different results in different brain structures. I am not surprised that lower memory function is present but processing speed is preserved".
139.3 On the frontal lobe paradox he said: "those with higher intelligence appear to perform normally on the tests because the tests have to be consistently psychometrically reliable and may not be sensitive for intelligent people". By this I took him to mean that intelligent people can perform better on the battery of tests overall than their actual level of cognitive impairment would imply.
139.4 On the facts, he accepted that he did not know anything about the Siegel case and that it would have been helpful to have had this information (though in what way he did not say).
Audio-Vestibular and Audiology (Savundra[8] and Vanniasegaram[9])
154.1 In my judgment Dr. Savundra is, to a significant degree, working backwards from the brain injury diagnoses of Dr. Allder and Ms. Levett, which I do not accept for reasons I have already given. This implication can be drawn from paragraph 6 of the Joint Statement, suggesting as I find it does that Dr. Savundra is also reasoning backwards from his acceptance that accident-related vestibular problems contributed to the Claimant's change of career. This allows Dr. Savundra to discount the absence of cotemporaneous medical complaints. In the same paragraph it is clear he is relying closely on the claimant's self-reporting of symptoms years after the event. Test results he describes as suggestive of or consistent with these diagnoses do not take matters any further when the preferred evidence of Dr. Heaney is considered. Dr. Savundra had not seen Dr. Heaney's evidence at the time he wrote his Report (although he stood by his own Report at the trial).
154.2 The serious gaps in the contemporaneous medical information remain without any remotely satisfactory and acceptable explanation from the audio-vestibular evidence.
154.3 Consistent, accurate self-reporting of symptoms, the tracking of a clear timeline from the accident, is recognised by Dr. Savundra as important but it is absent in this case. Dr. Savundra does not and could not plug this vital link in the chain of causation.
154.4 The factual evidence, considered by Dr. Savundra as part of the paperwork provided to him, was necessarily one-sided and there is nothing in there about the all-important details of the claimant's work and change of career plans and activities throughout the second half of 2013 and 2014. Neither does there appear to be any mention of difficulties watching the television.
154.5 Regard must be had to the inconsistencies between some questionnaire answers provided by the claimant, Dr. Savundra's Report, and what is apparent from other parts of the evidence. Such inconsistencies are important. For example:
(1) Dizziness: the surveillance footage does not support the conclusion that the claimant is unsteady on her feet or subject to any of the balance problems which she relates.
(2) Dr. Radford reports the claimant walking appropriately without any apparent balance or unsteadiness traits and both Dr. Heaney and Dr. Vanniasegaram see nothing on the video surveillance material (the latter's viewing being limited) to corroborate vestibular symptoms.
(3) The indication given to Dr. Heaney that dizziness petered out before the claimant became pregnant (which would have been late summer 2015) is an entirely different version of events to that reported to other experts and is not consistent with her own statement at the same consultation with Dr. Heaney to the effect that dizziness petered out a year or maybe a year and a half after the accident (which would have been by the early autumn of 2014). These are further concerning discrepancies in the claimant's self-reporting.
Orthopaedic (Beavis[10] and Radford[11])
Care Needs Assessment & Costing (Kathy Kirby[12])
Conclusions
Damages
Special Damage
191.1 Ms. Levett's fees for the successful treatment of the psychological injuries. Stripped of those elements of Ms. Levett's charges that relate to cancelled or "no show" appointments as well as the assessments that formed the foundation of her expert evidence, the claimant had 22 hours of treatment sessions at £200.00 per hour yielding a total of £4,400.00.
191.2 An award of damages reflecting the notional cost of gratuitous care is justified but I find that the figures claimed in the Schedule are ambitiously over-optimistic in circumstances where the medical evidence reveals that Trevor did a lot of the housework and domestic chores even before the accident. The Schedule attempts to calculate figures within specific time periods attributing specific hourly rates in circumstances where little time has been spent in the evidence describing with equal precision what was done by whom and when. Even so, I am satisfied that up until January 2016 (the end of the Levett treatment), Trevor and the claimant's parents would have devoted more time and energy to assisting the claimant in a manner that was outside the ambit of ordinary family life after which any impact the accident had in this regard would have fallen away; especially with the birth of Henry in May 2016. I do not attempt an approach as outwardly scientific as that in the claimant's schedule there being too many evidential uncertainties. Accordingly, in my judgment this is a case where it is appropriate to award a single lump sum to reflect what I have concluded for the claimant to hold on trust for Trevor and her parents. That sum is £10,000.00.
191.3 For travel costs; staff cover; the satellite navigation unit and child seat I award £1,194.00 but the claims for removal costs and trading-in the car I find these are not made out.
Note 1 The claimant; her husband; her mother (Susan Hibberd – 3 statements)) and father (Graham Hibberd – 2 statements); Louise Fisher, Jason Griffiths, Emma Espin, Ann Perseh, Amy Arnold, Denise Birkett, Keith Miller – all of which date from mid-2016 onwards. Hayes & Glenn, the surveillance operatives were taken as read. [Back] Note 2 18.07.16, 29.07.17, 17.11.17, 24.11.17, 04.12.17,18.03.18 [Back] Note 3 25.09,17, 24.11.17. [Back] Note 4 09.07.16, 29.09.17, 08.12.17 [Back] Note 5 September 2017 & November 2017 [Back] Note 6 29.09.16, 01.11.17,03.04.18 [Back] Note 7 September 2017 & November 2017 [Back] Note 8 26.03.17, 01.12.17, 09.04.18 [Back] Note 9 27.09.17, 23.11.17, 17.04.18 [Back] Note 10 21.12.15, 23.11.17 [Back]