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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 >> Hicks v Young [2015] EWHC 1144 (QB) (24 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/1144.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1144 (QB) |
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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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KRISTOPHER HICKS (A protected party by his mother and litigation friend Gillian Hicks) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MICHAEL YOUNG |
Defendant |
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Richard Lynagh QC and Suzanne Chalmers (instructed by Weightmans) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23rd March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Edis :
The Facts
"I got out of the taxi. I had a £20 note in my pocket and it was my intention to use that to pay the driver. I hadn't told the driver that I was going to pay the fare, but he looked at me out of his window and could see that I was now holding the £20 note aloft and in his direction."
She then went on to describe how she saw the Defendant shut the rear door and drive off.
The Applicable Law and the Submissions
Negligence
"In the present case, the Defendant submits that until he jumped from the taxi the Claimant had impliedly consented to being taken back to the taxi rank and so was not unlawfully imprisoned.
"Even if it cannot be said that the Claimant consented, the period of unlawful imprisonment was perhaps only a couple of minutes which is de minimis. The Claimant's injuries were not caused by any commission by the Defendant of the tort of false imprisonment. They were caused by the Claimant's own reckless decision to jump out of the taxi."
"Nor is the remote possibility of injury occurring enough; there must be sufficient probability to lead a reasonable man to anticipate it." (Lord Porter at page 858).
In other words, the Defendant was obliged to take precautions against risks which were reasonably likely to happen.
"Before holding that a person's standard of care has fallen below the objective standard expected and so finding that he acted negligently, the court must be satisfied that a reasonable person in the position of the defendant (i.e. the person who caused the incident) would contemplate that injury is likely to follow from his acts or omissions. Nor is the remote possibility of injury enough: there must be sufficient probability of injury to lead a reasonable person (in the position of the defendant) to anticipate it."
"Fairness, baldly stated, might be thought to take things little further than reasonableness. But what it does is to acknowledge that a succession of consequences which in fact and in logic is infinite will be halted by the law when it becomes unfair to continue. In relation to tortious liability for personal injury, this point is reached when (though not only when) the claimant suffers a further injury which, while it would not have happened without the initial injury, has been in substance brought about by the claimant and not the tortfeasor."
"Even if David Ferrer [the driver] should have followed that course and in not doing so was at fault, the failure followed from the criminal intentions and actions of the youths in the taxi, and any degree of fault was simply overwhelmed by those intentions and actions."
"This case raises difficult questions of causation and the impact of illegality. No authority seems to be directly in point. The claimants have suffered devastating injuries. These are "compelling reasons" within CPR 52.3(6)(b) why the claimants should not be shut out from pursuing and appeal even though their prospects of success are not unduly high."
"…assist judges in deciding the circumstances in which a defendant, whose liability to a claimant for a particular occurrence has been established, will not be responsible for certain consequences of an act of negligence and the damages that are claimed to flow from those consequences", see Aikens LJ at paragraph 29.
"..the inquiry is whether the plaintiff's harm or loss should be within the scope of 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."
Trespass/False Imprisonment
"The test of remoteness in trespass to the person is directness of the consequence, not foreseeability of the damage. This stems from the historical development of the writ of trespass, the two most prominent features of which were that trespass was actionable per se, i.e. without proof of damage, and that the interference with the claimant had to be a direct result of the defendant's act. Indirect or consequential harm was the subject of an action for "trespass on the case" later referred to as an action on the case, or simply "case". The traditional example of the distinction between direct and indirect harm is that of a log thrown onto the highway. If the log strikes someone the injury is direct and trespass would lie, but if it simply lies in the road and obstructs the highway and someone trips over it, the injury is indirect and the claimant would have to sue in case, and prove damage. In the modern cases, remoteness of damage is virtually never an issue in trespass to the person, probably because trespass is now seen as a tort of intention (although the defendant's intention relates to an intention to do the act which amounts to trespass; there is no requirement that the defendant intended to harm the claimant)."
"Further, any pecuniary loss which is not too remote is recoverable; there appear to be no modern reported cases. Pecuniary losses fall into two categories in the cases. In the first place, that any loss of general business or employment is recoverable would seem to follow from Childs v Lewis, where the claimant, a company director, had been wrongfully given into custody by the defendant, and his co-directors had demanded his resignation on learning of his arrest. Lush J. directed the jury that they were entitled to hold that the claimant's loss of his director's fees by his acceding to this demand flowed from the false imprisonment. He pointed out that "clearly if the plaintiff had not resigned the other directors would have taken steps to remove him", and that his co-directors would be bound to hear of the claimant's arrest "before the prosecution started, or certainly before the magistrates dealt with it". In the second place, a few 19th century cases show that the claimant's costs incurred in procuring his discharge from the imprisonment may be recoverable as damages. Such costs were recovered in this way in Pritchet v Boevey. There had been no adjudication as to these costs by the judge who ordered the claimant's release; he would have given the claimant his costs if he had undertaken not to bring an action, and on the claimant's refusal no order had been made as to costs. Similarly, in Foxall v Barnett where the claimant, committed to prison for manslaughter by a coroner's warrant, had been admitted to bail and had subsequently got the inquisition under which he had been committed quashed, it was held that in an action against the coroner for false imprisonment he might recover the costs of quashing the inquisition. However, where the claimant has been refused costs in the prior action, as opposed to there being no order as to costs, he has failed to recover them as damages: this was the result in Loton v Devereux which was distinguished in Pritchet v Boevey on this ground. So, too, there will be no recovery in respect of costs unreasonably incurred. Thus Lord Campbell in Foxall v Barnet made it clear that the action must have been one which was necessary to gain release, and it is submitted that the jury's refusal in Bradlaugh v Edwards to award the claimant damages in respect of his expenses in procuring bail before the magistrates and in getting together evidence in defence of the charge is properly explained on the ground that the costs were not considered to have been reasonably incurred."
Decision
"67. These authorities suggest that, once liability is established, any question of the remoteness of damage is to be approached along the following lines which may, of course, be open to refinement and development. (1) The starting point is that a defender is not liable for a consequence of a kind which is not reasonably foreseeable: M'Kew v Holland & Hannen & Cubitts (Scotland) Ltd 1970 SC (HL) 20 , 25 per Lord Reid; Bourhill v Young 1942 SC (HL) 78 , 85 per Lord Russell of Killowen; Allan v Barclay (1864) 2 M. 873 , 874 per Lord Kinloch. (2) While a defender is not liable for damage that was not reasonably foreseeable, it does not follow that he is liable for all damage that was reasonably foreseeable: depending on the circumstances, the defender may not be liable for damage caused by a novus actus interveniens or unreasonable conduct on the part of the pursuer, even if it was reasonably foreseeable: McKew v Holland & Hannen & Cubitts (Scotland) Ltd 1970 SC (HL) 20 , 25 per Lord Reid; Lamb v Camden LBC [1981] QB 625 ; but see Ward v Cannock Chase DC [1986] Ch. 546 . (3) Subject to the qualification in (2), if the pursuer's injury is of a kind that was foreseeable, the defender is liable, even if the damage is greater in extent than was foreseeable or it was caused in a way that could not have been foreseen: Hughes v Lord Advocate 1963 SC (HL) 31 , 38, 40 per Lord Reid. (4) The defender must take his victim as he finds him: Bourhill v Young 1942 S.C. (H.L.) at 92 , per Lord Wright; McKillen v Barclay Curle & Co Ltd 1967 S.L.T. 41 , 42, per Lord President Clyde. (5) Subject again to the qualification in (2), where personal injury to the pursuer was reasonably foreseeable, the defender is liable for any personal injury, whether physical or psychiatric, which the pursuer suffers as a result of his wrongdoing: Page v Smith [1996] 1 AC 155 , 197F–H, per Lord Lloyd of Berwick."
"In false imprisonment the prior proceedings in which the now claimant incurs costs are those whereby he procures his discharge. What law there is upon the recovery of such costs is very old, being contained in a few mid-19th century cases. These together sketch out the rule that recovery is allowed subject to three provisos: that the action brought to gain release was necessary, that the costs had not been refused by the court in that action, and that the costs incurred were reasonable ones. Pritchet v Boevey is the case which established that costs incurred in procuring discharge from a false imprisonment are recoverable; it would seem that all three provisos were satisfied. As to the second proviso, there had been no adjudication as to these costs by the judge who ordered the claimant's release; he would have given the claimant his costs if he had undertaken not to bring an action, and on the claimant's refusal no order had been made as to costs. Similarly, in Foxall v Barnett where the claimant, committed to prison for manslaughter by a coroner's warrant, had been admitted to bail and had subsequently got the inquisition under which he had been committed quashed, it was held that in an action against the coroner for false imprisonment he might recover the cost of quashing the inquisition, Lord Campbell insisting that the first proviso had to be shown to be satisfied. By contrast, with the second proviso not satisfied in Loton v Devereux, where the claimant had been refused costs in the prior action as opposed to there being no order as to costs, the claimant failed to recover them as damages. And it is submitted that a failure to satisfy the third proviso gives the proper explanation of Bradlaugh v Edwards. The jury not having awarded the claimant damages in respect of his expenses in procuring bail before the magistrates and in getting together evidence for the defence of the charge, Erle C.J. indicated that these costs may have been unreasonably incurred."
"ibid. at 384: "Where a party has been illegally imprisoned, and has been put to expense in procuring his discharge, he may very well urge that fact before the jury as an aggravation: but he has not right to demand to be reimbursed ex debito justitiae. It is in the discretion of the jury to give him such damages as they may consider a sufficient compensation for the wrong the party has sustained, irrespective of any expense he may, perhaps needlessly, have incurred in his defence."
"It is in the discretion of the jury to give him such damages as they may consider a sufficient compensation for the wrong the party has sustained, irrespective of any expense he may, perhaps needlessly, have incurred in his defence."
It may, therefore, be that there is little assistance on this issue to be derived from that decision which has a theological aspect to its ratio which is not of relevance to the present case. What it does suggest is that the steps taken to bring unlawful imprisonment to an end will not invariably result in an award of damages.
"It seems to me that the most natural and reasonable action on the part of someone who finds herself undesignedly confined is to seek the means of escape. Those who are responsible for the unjustifiable detention can hardly, either with good grace or sound reason, be entitled to be astute in offering criticism of the actions of the unfortunate victim"