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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Haxton v Philips Electronics UK Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 4 (22 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/4.html Cite as: [2014] WLR(D) 19, [2014] PIQR P11, [2014] 1 WLR 2721, [2014] 2 All ER 225, [2014] WLR 2721, [2014] EWCA Civ 4 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
MR DAVID PITTAWAY QC
Sitting as A Deputy Judge of the High Court (Queen's Bench Division)
Claim No HQ 13X00594
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
DAME JANET SMITH
____________________
MRS MONICA HAXTON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PHILIPS ELECTRONICS UK LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms Catherine Foster (instructed by Wragge & Co LLP) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
"When the first Fatal Accidents Act was passed in 1846, its purpose was to put the dependants of the deceased, who had been the bread-winner of the family, in the same position financially as if he had lived his natural span of life…..
Today the assessment of damages in fatal accident cases has become an artificial and conjectural exercise. Its purpose is no longer to put dependants, particularly widows, into the same economic position as they would have been in had their late husband lived. Section 4 of the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 requires the court in assessing damages to leave out of account any insurance money or benefit under national insurance or social security legislation or other pension or gratuity which becomes payable to the widow on her husband's death, while section 3(2) forbids the court to take into account the re-marriage of the widow or her prospects of re-marriage. Nevertheless, the measure of the damages recoverable under the statute remains the same as if the widow were really worse off by an annual sum representing the money value of the benefits which she would have received each year of the period during which her husband would have provided her with them if he had not been killed. This kind of assessment, artificial though it may be, nevertheless calls for consideration of a number of highly speculative factors, since it requires the assessor to make assumptions not only as to the degree of likelihood that something may actually happen in the future, such as the widow's death, but also as to the hypothetical degree of likelihood that all sorts of things might happen in an imaginary future in which the deceased lived on and did not die when in actual fact he did."
"… where an injury is to be compensated by damages, in settling the sum of money to be given…you should as nearly as possible get at the sum of money which will put the party who has been injured, or who has suffered, in the same position as he would have been in if he had not sustained the wrong …"
"How, then, does one identify a plaintiff's 'true loss' in cases of tort? This question has generated a vast amount of legal literature. I take as my starting point the commonly accepted approach that the extent of a defendant's liability for the plaintiff's loss calls for a twofold inquiry: whether the wrongful conduct causally contributed to the loss and, if it did, what is the extent of the loss for which the defendant ought to be held liable. The first of these enquiries, widely undertaken as a simple 'but for' test, is predominantly a factual inquiry. The application of this test in cases of conversion is the matter now under consideration. I shall return to this in a moment.
70. The second inquiry, although this is not always openly acknowledged by the courts, involves a value judgment ('.. ought to be held liable ..'). Written large, the second inquiry concerns the extent of the loss for which the defendant ought fairly or reasonably or justly to be held liable (the epithets are interchangeable). To adapt the language of Jane Stapleton in her article 'Unpacking "Causation"' in Cane and Gardner (Ed) Relating to Responsibility (2001), page 168, the inquiry is whether the plaintiff's harm or loss should be within the scope of the defendant's liability, given the reasons why the law has recognised the cause of action in question. The law has to set a limit to the causally connected losses for which a defendant is to be held responsible. In the ordinary language of lawyers, losses outside the limit may bear one of several labels. They may be described as too remote because the wrongful conduct was not a substantial or proximate cause, or because the loss was the product of an intervening cause. The defendant's responsibility may be excluded because the plaintiff failed to mitigate his loss. Familiar principles, such as foreseeability, assist in promoting some consistency of general approach. These are guidelines, some more helpful than others, but they are never more than this."
"31. Under Fatal Accidents Act claims, principles have developed in the case law which enable dependants to recover damages for loss of future dependency. The methodology developed provides for the deceased's income to form part of the assessment of loss of dependency during his or her predicted life expectancy, had the deceased not died as a result of a culpable act of a third party. Similarly from early times the claim for loss of future dependency has been restricted to the actual period of the dependency determined by reference to the dependant's own life expectancy. What Mr Steinberg seeks to do is to find a way by which Mrs Haxton can avoid that latter restriction on the scope of the claim for future dependency in the first proceedings by asserting in the second proceedings that the dependency claim would have been larger if her own life expectancy had not been reduced by the defendant's negligence. In the situations referred to by Lords Wilberforce and Scarman in Pickett no such issues were envisaged or, indeed, considered.
32. I have concluded that Mrs Haxton should not be entitled to claim in the second proceedings what she was not entitled to claim in the first proceedings as a dependant. Whilst I accept the general principles I have been referred to regarding the compensatory nature of damages in personal injury actions, I consider that it would be wrong as a matter of principle for me to permit the use of the second proceedings to enable Mrs Haxton to recover what she was not entitled to claim for loss of future dependency in the first proceedings.
33. I do not accept that Mrs Haxton has lost a valuable legal right in the first proceedings as a result of the defendant's negligence. The information before me is that Mrs Haxton has recovered in the first proceedings the future loss of dependency she was entitled to do, restricted to her own predicted life expectancy. There is no future dependency on her husband to which she is entitled beyond her predicted life expectancy. I accept the force of Mr Glynn's submissions that Mrs Haxton has made fully recovery in the second proceedings of what she was entitled to, including her own claim for "lost years". I should add that it seems to me immaterial that it is the same defendant in both sets of proceedings."
Discussion
"In the present case the plaintiff's left leg was already damaged at the date of the second accident but he had a right to recover damages for the resultant loss. In meal or in malt he had the equivalent of a good leg. If the effect of the obliteration of his injury by the second accident has been to deprive him of both his injured leg and the money differential between an injured leg and a sound one, why should he not recover from the second tortfeasor in respect of both elements of his loss? The second tortfeasor cannot complain at losing the fortuitous advantage which might otherwise flow from injuring a disabled man rather than a sound one – he takes his victim as he finds him."
Similar observations were made by Fenton Atkinson LJ (p.482D) and Harman LJ (p.483E-F).
"I believe that the law would be seriously defective if an employee were unable to claim compensation where such rights were adversely affected as a result of a wrong merely because the subject-matter of the right was a payment to be made to a third party; and all the more so since the potential beneficiaries of such a payment would themselves have no claim. I see no reason why that should be the case. In my view it reflects reality to treat the loss, or the diminution in the value, of the benefits in question as a pecuniary loss suffered by the claimants themselves. As Tudor Evans J emphasised in Auty, "the rights under the Scheme attach to the member". In that case the rule that A cannot recover for a loss suffered by B is not engaged."
Remoteness
"I doubt whether that would be an admissible head of damage. It looks too remote."
I respectfully disagree that a loss of this kind would in principle be too remote. Moreover, it is relevant to note that in Lagden v O'Connor [2003] UKHL 64; [2004] 1 AC 1067 the House of Lords departed from the approach adopted in the Liesbosch. Lord Hope of Craighead described the test of remoteness as it should now be applied in the following terms (para 60):
"It is not necessary for us to say that The Liesbosch was wrongly decided. But it is clear that the law has moved on, and that the correct test of remoteness today is whether the loss was reasonably foreseeable. The wrongdoer must take his victim as he finds him: talem qualem, as Lord Collins said in the Clippens Oil case [1907] AC 291, 303. This rule applies to the economic state of the victim in the same way as it applies to his physical and mental vulnerability."
Lord Justice Beatson:
Dame Janet Smith: