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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Morris v Richards [2003] EWCA Civ 232 (27 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/232.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 232 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BASINGSTOKE COUNTY COURT
(DISTRICT JUDGE CARNEY)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
____________________
MORRIS | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
RICHARDS | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
David Sanderson (instructed by Shoosmiths Solicitors) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Schiemann :
"25.1. Remoteness and New Intervening Cause
It cannot be the law than an injured person loses all right to recovery on the grounds of remoteness, as soon as she finds another job, however short the duration of that job may be. It must be the case that the Court of trial can consider whether the Claimant's claim for loss of earnings survives if the replacement job proves of short duration. If that was not the case, the law would be seriously deficient in leaving uncompensated a person whose replacement job was of short, possibly very short duration. In my view, it is a matter of fact and degree and often crucially of duration, as to whether the replacement employment itself triggers the application of remoteness as new intervening cause. I find that the accident was a sufficiently direct cause of the loss of earnings both before and after the Claimant's employment with Toshiba. The Claimant was still, in effect, in the grip of the accident in that her lack of capacity for employment was caused by the accident. The test of reasonableness then applies to eliminate unmeritorious cases .
25.2. Remoteness and Mitigation
25.2.1. I find assistance in the case before me in the test to distinguish between remoteness and mitigation set out at paragraph 123 of McGregor on Damages. ["It remains to distinguish between remoteness and mitigation : this is also difficult. It is suggested that damage in this context may be too remote if the conduct of the plaintiff subsequent to the wrong separately increases the original damage as opposed to failing to reduce the future loss which would flow from the original damage."] Applying that test, I do not consider the Claimant's conduct in leaving Toshiba separately increased the original damage. I find that starting the job at Toshiba was a reasonable step taken in mitigating the Claimant's loss. If it had succeeded it would have eliminated the Claimant's claim for future loss of earnings. When it failed, the reduction of the future loss ceased and the loss continued in principle as it did before Toshiba. I find this is the proper analysis.
25.2.2. I am fortified in this interpretation by the illustrations in the applicable case law. The resignation from the Toshiba post was not the sustaining of an additional injury such as a second collision (in the shipping cases); a collision on the way to the hospital after a road traffic accident (Scrutton LJ's illustration) in The San Onofre [1922] P 243), or falling down a staircase due to an injury sustained in a previous accident (as in McKew V- Holland and Hannen and Cubitts (1969 3 All ER 1621). The resignation was part of a chain of events which began with the accident causing the injury which caused the loss of the radiographer's career, in turn causing the duty to mitigate, resulting in the search for a new career, the commencement of the job at Toshiba, the job proving in service her incapacity for that second career and her losing the job (as I find as fact) through that incapacity. The only thing that can break the chain of causation in mitigation is if the Claimant's conduct were considered to be objectively unreasonable. I find no such unreasonable conduct in her behaviour in that chain of events.
25.2.3. Accordingly, I find that remoteness is not the category to describe or apply to the Claimant's leaving Toshiba. I find the correct categorisation of that act to be one relating to mitigation of loss. On that finding, the burden of proving a failure to mitigate falls on the Defendant. I further find that the Defendant has not satisfied that the burden of proof.
25.6. The Claimant resigned earlier than she could have done but she only jumped because she was about to be pushed. By so doing she preserved her record for the future that she had resigned and had not been sacked. That is itself a reasonable step in mitigating the loss to her future career. That step also, eventually, occasioned a substantial compensation payment of £10,000 exceeding the amount (as I find to be the case) that she would have received by way of earnings if she had waited for Toshiba to dismiss her.
25.7. Where the Defendant's wrongful act causes the Claimant to act in a way that safeguards her interest and therefore the Claimant suffers damage, the Claimant can recover the damage from the Defendant (paragraph 180 of McGregor). In Ms Morris's case, the proximity is not so great in time between the collision and the new act as it was in The Metagama (1927) 29 Ll LR 253. But it is instructive to observe that this was her first permanent job since leaving radiography at the John Radcliffe. Paraphrasing Lord Haldane in The Metagama: "mistaken judgment may be a natural consequence for which (the Defendant) .is responsible . Reasonable human conduct is part of the ordinary course of things, which extends to the reasonable conduct of those who have sustained the damage and who are seeking to save further loss" (in this case by getting another job at Toshiba).
25.8. The job failed. I find that the Claimant did not have the required qualities for it. It was not her fault that she made a false start on a new career. Many persons at the outset of a new career on leaving school, college or university make a false start. Originally, in choosing radiography Ms Morris made the correct choice first time. In being forced by the accident to choose a second career, the chances of making a false start are if anything magnified. It was reasonable for her to choose the Toshiba job and it was reasonable for to leave it when it proved to be beyond her capabilities. The capability was not physical. I find that she was just not a commercial person capable of operating at this level in that marketing job at the time.
25.9. Accordingly the cases of unreasonable conduct at paragraph 188 of McGregor are not relevant to this enquiry because I find the Claimant's conduct was reasonable. Even though she could have persisted in the job until her employers dismissed her, I still consider it reasonable in her circumstance (including the circumstances of her vulnerability due to the accident) for her to have resigned from Toshiba before she was pushed out. I find also that there was insufficient time for her to find another job before leaving Toshiba.
25.10. The most instructive reference I have found in McGregor is that of Scrutton LJ in The San Onofre to the effect that the question whether damage is a sufficiently direct consequence of negligence to be recoverable, or is too remote, is rather a question of first impression. I regard this issue as a matter of impression on the particular facts. My carefully considered finding here is that the occasion of the Claimant's loss in leaving Toshiba is sufficiently caused by the accident. She was at Toshiba because she could no longer work as a radiographer. She would never have left radiography but for the accident. She left Toshiba because she was incapable of doing the job to her employer's reasonable satisfaction. It was a false start but a reasonable false start.
25.11. The Claimant acted reasonably in mitigating her loss on leaving Toshiba.
25.12. In argument the Defendant posed a conundrum. Either the Claimant's behaviour was reasonable in leaving Toshiba because they hade breached her contract or it was not. If she was reasonable, Toshiba or her employment lawyers are liable. If she was not behaving reasonably, she was liable for leaving when she should have stayed. I answer that conundrum by stating that these are not the only possibilities. A third possibility is this: it emerged that, despite her best efforts, she was incapable of holding down the post at Toshiba. I find on a balance of probabilities on the evidence that this third view is the correct one."
"The question for consideration is whether the claimant should have mitigated the damage he suffered by taking a job which would have brought him in an extra £3 a week but would have involved him in night work on alternate weeks. He has never in his life before done night work and has a strong distaste for it. It also involved repetitive work of a type of which he had not previous experience and to which many people are averse.
As between a claimant and a tortfeasor the onus is on the latter to show that the former has unreasonably neglected to mitigate the damages. The standard of reasonable conduct required must take into account that a claimant in such circumstances is not to be unduly pressed at the instance of the tortfeasor. the claimant's conduct ought not to be weighed in nice scales at the instance of the party which occasioned the difficulty. "
Lord Justice Keene :
"Looking retrospectively, I believe that the job at Toshiba demanded levels of skill and experience that I did not have."