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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Walther v The Police Medical Appeal Board & Anor [2010] EWHC 3009 (Admin) (23 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/3009.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3009 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PETER DAVID WALTHER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE POLICE MEDICAL APPEAL BOARD (1) - and - THE METROPOLITAN POLICE AUTHORITY (2) |
Defendants |
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Mr Timothy Pitt-Payne QC (instructed by The Metropolitan Police Authority) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: Tuesday 2 November 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Irwin :
Factual Background
"Certainly caused the acute exacerbation of his back pain…the specific new injury in April 2006 was the major contributor to his ongoing pain and disability. Based on his previous MRI in 2004 and his subsequent recovery to operational duties I [would] not expect him to be in this degree of pain and disability purely on the basis of some relatively mild degenerative changes that existed prior to April 2004."
"My opinion is that his problems are long standing resulting from progressive degeneration and that his condition was merely accelerated by the event of 2006. It could not therefore be considered as an injury on duty, the principle of which is laid down in Russell Jennings –v- Humberside Police (2002) ….The only issue for the Board, I believe, is the question of causation. It is my opinion that his disability does not result from an injury received in the execution of duty ….."
Dr Baxendine was in no doubt as to the Claimant's level of disability and as to his being permanently disabled from carrying out the ordinary duties of a member of the police force. The issue was causation.
"The index injury [i.e. that of 2006] has resulted in an acceleration such that he has now developed chronic and persistent symptoms of fluctuating severity."
The Board concluded that the effect of the index injury was to bring about a "permanent worsening of a prior condition."
The Regulations
"11 – (i) This regulation applies to a person who ceases or has ceased to be a member of a police force and is permanently disabled as a result of an injury received without his own default in the execution of his duty (in Schedule 3 referred to as "the relevant injury").
(ii) A person to whom this Regulation applies shall be entitled to a gratuity and, in addition, to an injury pension, in both cases calculated in accordance with Schedule 3….."
"8.For the purposes of these Regulations disablement ……shall be deemed to be result of an injury if the injury, has caused or substantially contributed to the disablement …"
"7 – (1) subject to paragraph (2) a reference in these Regulations to a person being permanently disabled is to be taken as a reference to that person being disabled at the time when the question arises for decision and to that disablement being at that time likely to be permanent.
……
(4) subject to paragraph (5) disablement means inability, occasioned by infirmity of mind or body, to perform the ordinary duties of a member of the force……..
(5) where it is necessary to determine the degree of a person's disablement it shall be determined by reference to the degree to which his earning capacity has been affected as a result of an injury received without his own default in the execution of his duty as a member of police force……"
"30-(1) subject to the provisions of this part the question whether a person is entitled to any, and if so what, awards under these Regulations shall be determined in the first instance by the police authority.
(2) subject to paragraph (3) where the police authority are considering whether a person is permanently disabled, they shall refer for decision to a duly qualified medical practitioner selected by them the following questions –
(a) whether the person concerned is disabled;
(b) whether the disablement is likely to be permanent
…..and, if they are further considering whether to grant an injury pension, shall … refer the following questions –
(c) whether the disablement is the result of any injury received in the execution of duty, and
(d) the degree of the person's disablement."
"..there can be cases where a decision that an officer is permanently disabled is taken…many months and perhaps years before a decision is taken whether such permanent disability is the result…of an injury received without his own default in the execution of his duty."
The Issue in this Case
The Claimant's Position
The Defendant's position
"(c) whether the disablement [and its permanence] is the result of an injury received in the execution of duty."
Mr Pitt-Payne argues that the disablement referred to in Regulation 30 must be fully consistent with the phrase "permanently disabled" in Regulation 11(1), what he describes as the "master provision".
"In my judgment the issue of whether an officer is within or without Regulation B4-(1) cannot depend upon the chance of when the various constituents elements of B4-(1) are decided. Put another way, assuming that the evidence as to whether or not an officer is disabled, whether or not the disability is permanent and whether or not it results from an injury remains constant, the answer to the question of whether an officer is entitled under B4 should be the same whether consideration is given to all of the elements of B4-(1) at the same time or on separate occasions. If that is the true analysis, then one has to look at the words of B4-(1) in light of A12-(1) and (2) and A13. When one does that, in my judgment, one is forced to conclude that the disability can only be said to be "the result of any injury if the injury has caused or substantially contributed to the disablement". Upon that test, this Appellant's disability was neither caused nor substantially contributed to by the relevant injury."
"The SMP draws us to the principle laid down in Russell Jennings –v- Humberside Police of 2002 in which the index event merely accelerated long standing progressive degeneration. The SMP concludes that this [meaning Mr Walther's case] is not aggravation like in the case of Fiske but acceleration like in the case of Jennings."
The approach thus taken by Dr Baxendine, supported by the Board, was that if it was "an acceleration case", then without more it fell outside the ambit of an award under the Regulation.
"In my view [Jennings] did not lay down any general principle that police authorities or medical referees were obliged to find that an injury that accelerates the onset of symptoms in an already degenerate part of the body cannot substantially contribute to the disablement …….the causation question is essentially a medical question to be determined by doctors. Jennings has not affected the role of the decision-maker under the scheme to determine, in the light of the medical evidence in a particular case, where the qualifying injury has made a substantial contribution to the infirmities."
"There is …..no one answer to the questions which I have posed. Each case must depend upon its own facts and be left to the assessment of the medical jury. If the injury is trivial it will be open to a Board to conclude – as the Judge did in the Jennings case – that the necessary causal link between the injury and the infirmity has not been made out. Likewise, if, for example, the affected joint had begun to show signs of arthritis before the qualifying injury occurred. On the other hand, it does not follow that, because the injury has merely accelerated the onset of symptoms a causal link cannot be made out. It is common ground that it will be made out in a case where the condition has been aggravated by the injury, but there is not, in my judgment, any bright line between cases of acceleration and cases of aggravation."
i) "The action, fact, or state of lasting or remaining; continued or enduring existence or duration; continuation, persistence"ii) "The quality of being permanent; durability, lastingness, permanency."
Perhaps the two distinct governing notions to be found in both of those consistent and indeed overlapping definitions, are "long-lasting" and "unending". But the term does not merely mean "unending". A man dying of a gunshot wound is suffering from a physical condition which will end only with his death, but one would not naturally use the term "permanent" to describe his disability between the shooting and the death. Whichever synonym is chosen from the dictionary definitions, the length of time over which the condition is borne is relevant, when assessing a contribution to a "permanent disability".