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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> West v Burton [2021] EWCA Civ 1005 (08 July 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/1005.html Cite as: [2021] Costs LR 693, [2021] EWCA Civ 1005, [2022] WLR 742, [2021] RTR 35, [2021] WLR(D) 379, [2022] 1 WLR 742 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LIVERPOOL
HH Judge Graham Wood QC
Claim No F08LV675
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DINGEMANS
and
SIR NIGEL DAVIS
____________________
Anthony Mitchell West (Executor of the Estate of the late Kenneth Morriss) |
Respondent/Claimant |
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- and - |
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Peter Burton |
Appellant/Defendant |
____________________
Benjamin Williams QC (instructed by PM Law Limited, Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 15 June 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Nigel Davis :
Introduction
Background Facts
The Legal Framework
(a) Civil Procedure Rules
"45.9
…..
(2) This Section applies where –
(a) the dispute arises from a road traffic accident occurring on or after 6 October 2003;
(b) the agreed damages include damages in respect of personal injury, damage to property, or both;
(c) the total value of the agreed damages does not exceed £10,000; and
(d) if a claim had been issued for the amount of the agreed damages, the small claims track would not have been the normal track for that claim."
It is common ground that all such matters were satisfied here. But by r.45.9(3) it is in the relevant respect provided as follows:
"(3) This Section does not apply where-
….
(b) Section III or Section IIIA of this Part applies."
"45.29A – Scope and interpretation
(1) Subject to paragraph (3), this section applies—
(a) to a claim started under—
(i) the Pre-Action Protocol for Low Value Personal Injury Claims in Road Traffic Accidents ("the RTA Protocol"); or
(ii) the Pre-Action Protocol for Low Value Personal Injury (Employers' Liability and Public Liability) Claims ("the EL/PL Protocol"),
where such a claim no longer continues under the relevant Protocol or the Stage 3 Procedure in Practice Direction 8B; and
(b) to a claim to which the Pre-Action Protocol for Resolution of Package Travel Claims applies.
(2) This section does not apply to a disease claim which is started under the EL/PL Protocol.
(3) Nothing in this section shall prevent the court making an order under rule 45.24."
"45.29B Application of fixed costs and disbursements – RTA Protocol
Subject to rules 45.29F, 45.29G, 45.29H and 45.29J, and for as long as the case is not allocated to the multi-track, if, in a claim started under the RTA Protocol, the Claim Notification Form is submitted on or after 31st July 2013, the only costs allowed are—
(a) the fixed costs in rule 45.29C;
(b) disbursements in accordance with rule 45.29I."
(b) The Protocol
"(6) 'claim' means a claim, prior to the start of proceedings, for payment of damages under the process set out in this Protocol;
(7) 'claimant' means a person starting a claim under this Protocol unless the context indicates that it means the claimant's legal representative;"
Paragraph 1(10) defines "defendant" in the following way:
"(1) 'defendant' means the insurer of the person who is subject to the claim under this Protocol, unless the context indicates that it means-
(a) the person who is subject to the claim
(b) the defendant's legal representative
….."
"2.1 This Protocol describes the behaviour the court expects of the parties prior to the start of proceedings where a claimant claims damages valued at no more than the Protocol upper limit as a result of a personal injury sustained by that person in a road traffic accident. The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 enable the court to impose costs sanctions where it is not followed."
Paragraph 3.1 then sets out (and importantly so) the aims of the Protocol. Those aims include ensuring that the defendant pays damages and costs using the process set out in the Protocol without the need for legal proceedings and that the claimant's lawyers receive the fixed costs at each appropriate stage. Paragraph 4.1 then sets out, by way of scope, the circumstances where the Protocol applies. It is common ground that those circumstances as set out in that sub-paragraph applied in the present case. Paragraph 4.3 goes on to state that the Protocol ceases to apply where, at any stage, the claimant notifies the defendant that the claim has now been revalued at more than the Protocol upper limit. (In paragraph 7.76 it is further provided that a claim will no longer continue under the Protocol where a claimant gives notice that it is unsuitable for the Protocol.)
"4.5 This Protocol does not apply to a claim—
(1) in respect of a breach of duty owed to a road user by a person who is not a road user;
(2) made to the MIB pursuant to the Untraced Drivers' Agreement 2003 or any subsequent or supplementary Untraced Drivers' Agreements;
(3) where the claimant or defendant acts as personal representative of a deceased person;
(4) where the defendant is a protected party;
(5) where the claimant is bankrupt; or
(6) where the defendant's vehicle is registered outside the United Kingdom."
"5.11 Claims which no longer continue under this Protocol cannot subsequently re-enter the process."
This, in the present case, is also to be read in the light of paragraph 6.15 of the Protocol, which among other things provides that the claim will no longer continue under the Protocol where the defendant does not, within the relevant specified period, admit liability. It has always been common ground that that was the position here. Accordingly, by reason of the non-admission of liability the claim no longer continued under the Protocol as from 8 July 2016 and could not thereafter re-enter the process.
(c) Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, on the death of any person after the commencement of this Act all causes of action subsisting against or vested in him shall survive against, or, as the case may be, for the benefit of, his estate."
It is plain from this wording that s.1(1) does not of itself create any cause of action; rather, it causes a pre-existing cause of action to survive death. Those provisions are also reflected in CPR r.19.8.
Legal Authorities
The judgments below
Submissions
Disposal
Conclusion
Lord Justice Dingemans :
Lord Justice Singh :
I also agree.