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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Cooley v Ramsey [2008] EWHC 129 (QB) (01 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/129.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 129 (QB), [2008] ILPr 27 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Shane Anthony Cooley (by his father and litigation friend Mr Peter Anthony Cooley |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Thomas Richard Ramsey |
Defendant |
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Mr Howard Palmer QC & Ms Marie Kinsler(instructed by DFW LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: January 24th 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"Whilst it is true that expert and lay witnesses are likely to be resident in England…. It is very unusual in cases of this nature for any but a few of the expert witnesses to need to be called to a hearing to give oral evidence. Equally, I would not anticipate that more than one or two of any lay witnesses would not be agreed by the parties. Any expense in travelling such witnesses would of course have to be born by the defendant and therefore the Claimant should not be concerned by such matters".
CPR Part 6.
"6.20… a Claim Form may be served out of the jurisdiction with the permission of the court if –
General grounds
(1) a claim is made for a remedy against a person domiciled within the jurisdiction…
Claims in tort
(8) a claim is made in tort where-
(a) damage was sustained within the jurisdiction; or
(b) the damage sustained resulted from an act committed within the jurisdiction".
"(2A) the court will not give permission unless satisfied that England and Wales is the proper place in which to bring the claim".
JURISDICTION
"1 The claimant in this action is Mrs Margaret Booth, the widow of Clifford Booth who was employed as chief engineer on the MV Maysora. On 2 March 2001 he died whilst working on board the vessel in Egypt.
2 The first defendant was the master of the vessel at the material time and one or more of the second to fourth defendants are the owners and managers of the vessel. The defendants say that the third defendants are the owners and that the fourth defendants are the managers.
3 The claimant, in her own right and as executrix of the estate of her husband, claims against the first defendant in negligence and against the second to fourth defendants in negligence and for breach of the Mr Booth's contract of employment
4 The court has jurisdiction over the first defendant because he resides within the jurisdiction. However, he applies to the court for an order that the proceedings against him be stayed on the grounds that there is another forum, namely the court of Jordan, which is clearly or more distinctly more appropriate for the trial of the action against him. By an order dated 28 November 2003 Master Miller gave permission to serve proceedings out of the jurisdiction on the second, third and fourth defendants pursuant to CPR r 6.20. They apply to set aside that order on the grounds that there no grounds for exercising jurisdiction over them and that, if there are such grounds, this is not an appropriate case for the exercise of such jurisdiction….
6 … the vessel sailed from Singapore before a problem with the loading ramp and associated winch was remedied. …. In Egypt a problem again developed with the winch mechanism. Mr Booth, … was seeking to remedy the fault when the ramp fell causing parts of the equipment to disintegrate. Mr Booth was struck by one or more pieces of metal and died as a result.
7 The claim against the first defendant is put in negligence. It is said that he ought not to have departed from either Singapore or Fremantle with a defective winch mechanism. The claim against the second to fourth defendants is put in negligence and in contract. It is said that the accident was caused by a breach of an implied term of the contract of employment that Mr Booth would be provided with a safe place and system of work.
Grounds for jurisdiction
8 The claimant can sue the first defendant as of right because he is within the jurisdiction. But as against the second to fourth defendants she must establish that there is a ground for the court to exercise jurisdiction over them within CPR r 6.20.
9 It is submitted on behalf of the claimant that there are three grounds for exercising jurisdiction against the second to fourth defendants. I shall deal with each in turn."
WHAT TEARE J DECIDED
"It is said that in this case the claimant sustained damage within the jurisdiction in her own right, namely the loss of her dependency upon her husband, and in her right as executrix of his estate, namely, his funeral expenses."
"34 The issue between the parties is therefore one of construction of the rule. I am told there is no English authority which determines the matter but that there are Australian and Canadian cases which support the claimant's construction.
35 I shall start (and perhaps ought to finish) with the words of the rule themselves. CPR r 6.20(8)(a) refers to a claim in tort where "damage was sustained within the jurisdiction"… It should be given its ordinary and natural meaning, namely, harm which has been sustained by the claimant, whether physical or economic. Further, it is to be observed that CPR r 6.20(8)(b) refers to a claim in tort where "the damage sustained resulted from an act committed within the jurisdiction". The definite article is used here whereas it is not used in CPR r 6.20(8)(a). This suggests that it is sufficient for the purposes of sub-paragraph (a) that some damage (not all of the damage) is sustained within the jurisdiction. …
44 In the present case the claimant sues in her own right and as executrix of her husband's estate.
[a] Her claim in her own right stems from the Fatal Accidents Act 1976. It is accepted by the second to fourth defendants that her claim is in tort. She seeks to recover in respect of "the injury resulting from the death" of her husband (see section 3 of the Fatal Accidents Act 1976) which is the loss of her financial dependency upon him. Such financial detriment is, in my judgment, damage (within the meaning of that word as used in CPR r 6.20(8)(a)) which was sustained in England where she lives.
[b] One element of her claim [under the 1934 Act] as executrix of her husband's estate is, I am told, the expenses of her husband's funeral, which were incurred in England. That was also damage sustained in England.
[c] For these reasons the claimant has established another ground for seeking permission to serve out of jurisdiction."
WAS BOOTH CORRECTLY ARGUED BEFORE TEARE J?
"33 It is said that in this case the claimant sustained damage within the jurisdiction in her own right, namely the loss of her dependency upon her husband, and in her right as executrix of his estate, namely, his funeral expenses. This is disputed by the second to fourth defendants who say that the "damage" referred to in the rule is the damage which completes the cause of action in tort and that that damage, the death of the claimant's husband, occurred in Egypt."
"3(1) In the action such damages, other than damages for bereavement, may be awarded as are proportioned to the injury resulting from the death to the dependants respectively…
(5) If the dependants have incurred funeral expenses in respect of the deceased, damages may be awarded in respect of those expenses."
"There is no reference to the damage which completes the cause of action. Section 2(7) of the Civil Procedure Act 1997 enjoined the Rule Committee to try "to make rules which are both simple and simply expressed". Having regard to this I do not consider it appropriate to interpret damage in CPR r 6.20(8)(a) as meaning "the damage which completed the cause of action in tort". It should be given its ordinary and natural meaning, namely, harm which has been sustained by the claimant, whether physical or economic."
CASES UNDER ARTICLE 5(3)
"A person domiciled in a contracting state may, in another contracting state, be sued: . . . (3) in matters relating to tort, delict or quasi-delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred; . . ."
"11. In Mines de Potasse d'Alsace [1978] QB 708, 731, paras. 24 and 25, and Shevill [1995] 2 AC 18, 61, para. 20, the court held that where the place of the happening of the event which may give rise to liability in tort, delict or quasi-delict and the place where that event results in damage are not identical, the expression "place where the harmful event occurred" in article 5(3) of the Convention must be understood as being intended to cover both the place where the damage occurred and the place of the event giving rise to it, so that the defendant may be sued, at the option of the plaintiff, in the courts for either of those places."
"The term "place where the harmful event occurred" in article 5(3) of the Convention of 27 September 1968 on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters must be interpreted as not referring to the place where the victim claims to have suffered financial loss consequential on initial damage arising and suffered by him in another contracting state."
"19. There is no basis for interpreting article 5(3) of the Convention by reference to the applicable rules on non-contractual civil liability, as proposed by the German Government. That interpretation is also incompatible with the objective of the Convention, which is to provide for a clear and certain attribution of jurisdiction: see Rösler v. Rottwinkel (Case 241/83) [1986] QB 33, 59, para. 23, and Jakob Handte et Cie. G.m.b.H. v. Traitements mécano-chimiques des surfaces S.A. (TMCS) (Case C-26/91) [1992] ECR I-3967, 3995, para. 19. The delimitation of jurisdiction would then in fact depend on uncertain factors such as the place where the victim's assets suffered subsequent damage and the applicable rules on civil liability.
20. Finally, as regards the argument as to the relevance of the location of the assets when the obligation to redress the damage arose, it must be pointed out that the proposed interpretation might confer jurisdiction on a court which had no connection at all with the subject matter of the dispute, whereas it is such a connection which justifies the special jurisdiction provided for in article 5(3) of the Convention. It would be possible that the expenses and losses of profit incurred as a result of the initial harmful event might be established elsewhere and that, therefore, as far as effective taking of evidence is concerned, that court would be entirely inappropriate."
"36 On behalf of the second to fourth defendants it was objected that if the claimant's construction of the rule were correct then a ground for exercising jurisdiction would exist where accidents causing personal injury or death occurred abroad so long as some damage, e g loss of earnings, was sustained within the jurisdiction. This was said to be an improbably wide construction to give the rule. However, it must be remembered that before jurisdiction is exercised the court must be satisfied that it is appropriate to exercise that jurisdiction, which involves considering whether England is the forum in which the case could most suitably be tried for the interest of all the parties and for the ends of justice. When regard is had to this requirement there does not appear to me to be anything objectionable about the claimant's construction of the rule.
37 For these reasons a consideration of the ordinary and natural meaning of the words used in the rule suggests that the claimant's construction of the rule is to be preferred to that of the second to fourth defendants."
CASES DECIDED UNDER RSC O.11
DIFFERENT JURISDICTIONS WITHIN A SINGLE STATE
"In Canada and Australia, similar wording has been held to apply to consequential pecuniary damage sustained in the forum flowing from physical injury caused outside the forum".
CONCLUSION ON JURISDICTION
DISCRETION
"11-222 … In principle the jurisdiction where the tort is committed is prima facie the natural forum for the determination of the dispute: "If the substance of the alleged tort is committed within a certain jurisdiction, it is not easy to imagine what other fact could displace the conclusion that the courts of that jurisdiction are the natural forum" [words of Goff LJ in The Albaforth [1984] 2 Lloyd's Rep 91, 96 cited in Metall at p484E]. But where the acts or omissions occur, and the damage is sustained in different countries, the forum conveniens may depend on the extent to which the issues are likely to relate to liability or to damage, and the relative importance of the place of acting and the place of damage from the point of view of the convenience of the parties and of witnesses and the other factors which the court takes into account in the exercise of the discretion under CPR r 6.20.
11-149 … The fundamental question … is to identify the forum in which the case can be suitably tried for the interests of all the parties and for the ends of justice".