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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 >> Thorp v Sharp [2007] EWCA Civ 1433 (06 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1433.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1433 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM NORWICH COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE O' BRIEN QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE PUMFREY
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THORP |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SHARP |
Respondent |
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Mr A Hogarth QC (instructed by Messrs Keoghs Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Lord Justice Pill:
"The claimant sustained an injury to her right hip; symptoms followed and have continued to date. He accepts that there is no definable orthopaedic cause for the chronic pain. However, the judge accepted on the basis of the witnesses called and her own evidence that she was a genuine and honest witness, though subject to significant exaggeration. In those circumstances it is submitted that the chronic pain which admittedly the claimant suffers flows from the injury to the hip on 3 October 2000. On that date, while working at the defendant's sub-post office and shop, the claimant, when carrying a tray of hot food, tripped on a box of postal bags on the floor. As she fell another member of staff attempted to help her and it was, as the judge put it, quite an awkward sequence of events."
"The pain seems to have coincided with the accident occurring, and except for two periods of three months or so in 2000 and 2001 it has been fairly continuous. However, as Mr Hogarth [that is Mr Hogarth QC who appeared for the defendant at the trial and does so today] points out, first of all the orthopaedic experts say that there is no physical cause for this pain and therefore it is not related, so far as physical matters are concerned, to the accident on 3 October 2000. Secondly, the psychiatrists say that there is no psychiatric illness and there is no psychological cause that they can find for this pain and resultant disability. It is put more simply on the claimant's part that she suffered this accident on this day and her hip has never been right since. I suppose that common sense would say that it must follow from the accident.
61. However, having given the matter a good deal of consideration, I accept Mr Hogarth's submission that the admitted pain cannot on the balance of probabilities be attributed to the accident for which the defendant is responsible, as opposed to some other unknown cause for which the defendant may not be responsible."
"Bearing in mind my learned friend's submissions late last night on the question of the legal principles of tort, I wonder whether your Honour would explain for the purposes of the judgment as to why your Honour says that the continuing pain is not attributable to the defendants."
The judge replied:
"In order for the claimant to succeed, the claimant must satisfy the court, on the balance of probabilities, the consequences claimed for are caused by the accident; that the orthopaedic evidence is that the accident caused consequences for a maximum period of one year and thereafter did not do so. The psychiatric evidence is that there is no psychiatric illness and so -- as the claimant has not established where the pain and disability arises from, the onus being on her -- it cannot be established that it was something caused by the accident."
Mr Grundy persisted:
"Your Honour's finding is the orthopaedic evidence is twelve months and anything beyond that is not to do with the accident and, in the absence of a psychiatric injury, the claimant loses."
The judge replied:
"In the absence of an identifiable cause, a cause identifiable and attributable to the accident, the case fails."
"Even though clinically I believe her pain is coming from her hip, I have not managed to establish a definite diagnosis as of yet and because of this, it is unlikely that surgical treatment would be of benefit to her."
"However I am at a loss to explain the clinical findings under these circumstances and in particular why an injection into her right hip would make such a dramatic difference if the symptoms were coming from her back."
"I do not believe [continued Mr Mann] that we will ever be able to put a name to her diagnosis."
"2. We are of the opinion that this was a low velocity injury and affected soft tissue.
3. We agree that there is a past history of low back pain in 1997, notably in July, August and October of that year."
"7. We agree that the diagnosis remains uncertain and that there are features of both hip and spinal origin of her pain and disability."
"In essence, I do not think there is anything within the hip itself to explain the patient's discomfort. I do apologise that I cannot be any more helpful on the above."
"47. They also gave oral evidence. Firstly, the claimant has not at any relevant time been suffering any psychiatric illness nor any chronic pain disorder in the strict sense of the expression. Considering the question of chronic pain syndrome -- an expression which both of the psychiatrists reviled -- I think it emerged that, in terms of psychiatric illness, there is no chronic pain syndrome because they identify no psychiatric illness. Thirdly, there is the question of whether the claimant is deliberately malingering, which Dr Webb thought the signs were against but Dr Guirguis recognised as a possibility; though both of them recognised that that is a matter for the court to decide."
"My reading of the orthopaedic expert's opinion suggests there is no clear diagnosis of the cause of the claimant's pain nor is there any convincing evidence of pathology that might be responsible. This is, of course, not to say that the claimant's pain does not have its origins in a medical condition or muscular, skeletal or neurological damage. However, in the absence of clear pathology, diagnosis of pain disorder resulting solely from a medical condition cannot be definitively diagnosed. For pain disorder to be formally diagnosed as a mental disorder then psychological factors are judged to have an important role in the onset: severity, exacerbation or maintenance of the pain in diagnostic criteria . . . From my review of her background and her medical notes but summarising the other expert opinion in this case, there is nothing obvious from a psychological viewpoint that suggests a psychological component to her pain, and therefore she does not meet diagnostic criteria for pain disorder, in my opinion."
Mr Spooner added:
"The claimant's significantly elevated disclosure and debasement scores and her very low desirability score are suggestive of the concealment of positive aspects of her functioning and the amplification or exaggeration of negative aspects to her functioning, including pain and related impairment. I have no reason to suspect that this was an intentional or deliberate ploy. Experience of pain is very subjective. Pain consists of physical discomfort, the labelling and cognitive interpretation of the meaning of pain, the consumption of attention resources by pain and a set of strategies that are utilised in coping."
"The conclusion I have formed that she [that is the claimant] is not lying. There is ample evidence, including from medical men, that she is suffering pain. She is plainly a poor historian, which is the way I regard her, completely overlooking the fact that she had returned to work for various periods after the accident because, as I say, I do not think that was a deliberate intention to mislead because it would be perfectly plain that her employment records would be with the defendant, as her counsel submits. But it seems to me to be not inconsistent with the psychologist's assessment of her general IQ. It is perfectly plain that, however unintentionally, the claimant is exaggerating her symptoms of pain. Firstly, there was clearly an apparent resolution after two to three months, (inaudible) [in original] evidence of the account taken by the physiotherapist and later visits to her general practitioner in that period. Secondly, the descriptions given by her in her evidence in court and, indeed, in accounts to the various medical men she has seen are really not borne out by what I have seen on the evidence of her activities on the DVD. Thirdly, Mr Spooner's psychological testing suggested exaggeration and, as I say, I was impressed by his report, and that seemed to tally with the DVD evidence. Of course, the exaggeration may have a considerable effect on any claim for care provided by the family about which I heard evidence, not only from her but also from her husband and her son."
"Whether the discrepancy between her level of functional ability (when she is not aware that she is observed) and that claimed in the medical legal context is sufficient to cast significant doubt on the genuineness of her claim is a matter for the court to decide and not for medical or psychiatric opinion."
Lord Justice May:
"However, as Mr Hogarth points out, first of all the orthopaedic experts say that there is no physical cause for this pain and therefore it is not related, so far as physical matters are concerned, to the accident on 3 October 2000."
Lord Justice Pumfrey:
Order: Appeal dismissed