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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 >> Howe v Motor Insurers' Bureau [2016] EWHC 640 (QB) (22 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/640.html Cite as: [2016] WLR(D) 171, [2016] EWHC 640 (QB), [2016] 1 WLR 2707, [2016] WLR 2707, [2016] Lloyd's Rep IR 359 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2016] WLR(D) 171] [Buy ICLR report: [2016] 1 WLR 2707] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Michael Howe |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Motor Insurers' Bureau |
Defendant |
____________________
Marie Louise Kinsler & Luka Krsljanin (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7, 8, 9 & 10 March 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stewart:
Introduction
Chronology
EU Legislation
- The first Motor Insurance Directive: 72/166/EEC of 24/02/1972
- The second Motor Insurance Directive: 84/5/EEC of 30/12/1983
- The fourth Motor Insurance Directive: 2000/26/EEC of 16/05/2000
[The Directives were consolidated in 2009. This sixth Directive made no material changes. The 2003 Regulations (see below) continue to refer to the earlier Directives. Therefore, I also shall do so in this judgment]
UK Legislation
The Preliminary Issues
1. Is the MIB's liability to compensate the Claimant pursuant to the 2003 Regulations dependent upon the similar fund in France, the Fonds de Garantie ("FDG"), being liable to compensate the Claimant in respect of his accident if he made a claim against it?
2. If so, has the limitation period expired such that the Claimant is statute barred from bringing a claim against the FDG?
3. If not, is the claim by the Claimant against the MIB statute barred?
4. If the answer to 3 is yes, is the MIB precluded from relying upon a limitation defence by reason of estoppel by convention/representation?
(i) There is no challenge to the jurisdiction of this court.(ii) It is common ground that French law would govern the issue of the liability of the driver of the unidentified lorry to the Claimant. It is also common ground that the driver would have been liable to the Claimant and therefore that, subject to the issue of limitation, the FDG/MIB are liable to compensate the Claimant.
(iii) The applicable law in relation to damages is not before this court. There is a leapfrog appeal on that issue in the case of Moreno v MIB[2]. Moreno is due to be heard by the Supreme Court in July 2016.
The First Issue: Is the MIB liable only if the FDG is liable?
The Motor Insurance Directives
The MIB's liability for untraced drivers is restricted under the 1972 Agreement to accidents occurring in Great Britain and, for uninsured drivers, to judgments obtained in a British Court.[4] Article 1(4) of the second Directive also enables a victim to apply directly to the Guarantee Body[5]. Article 1(7) required each country to apply its laws, regulations etc to the payment of compensation by this body. Therefore, prior to the fourth Directive a person injured in a Member State could claim against the Guarantee Body in that state and in accordance with the laws of that state.
"(a) Where the insurance undertaking cannot be identified: against the Guarantee Fund provided for in Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC in the Member State where the vehicle is normally based;
(b) In the case of an unidentified vehicle: against the Guarantee Fund in the Member State in which the accident took place;
(c) In the case of third country vehicles: against the Guarantee Fund of the Member State in which the accident took place."[7]
(i) It is clear that a compensation body in the home Member State is an intermediary and not ultimately liable.(ii) The purpose of the fourth Directive was to enable victims to sue at home in respect of accidents in other Member States.
(iii) The compensation body provisions in Article 6 and 7 are additional to the main proposals which are aimed at proper access to insurers in insured claims. In those claims reference to "the compensation to which he is entitled"[8] means the claim the victim has against the foreign insurer or driver and, in unidentified insurance or vehicle claims, against the Guarantee body of the Member State where the accident occurred. According to the MIB, the fourth Directive, in this regard, merely permits such claims to take place in the home court of the victim.
(iv) The intermediary role of the compensation body/Guarantee Fund is clear from a number of provisions[9].
(i) The resolution by European Parliament in 1995.[10] This dealt at this stage with foreign insurer cases. Recital D provides:"Whereas a satisfactory solution can be found only if the victim of an accident occurring outside his country of origin is able to bring a claim for damages against a duly authorised representative of the insurer of the other party to the accident established in his own Member State."(ii) The Commission proposal[11] reflected the European Parliament's resolution as follows:
"Explanatory Memorandum"2. Purpose of the ProposalThe purpose of the European Parliament's resolution is to improve the present remedies available to persons who are temporarily in a Member State other than their State of residence and suffer loss or injury in that Member State caused by a vehicle registered and insured in a Member State other than their State of residence."In paragraph 3 under the heading "Content of the Directive" it was said that the victim's position may be improved by providing an intermediary: "this can be done without changing the rules on liability and jurisdiction that currently apply in the Member State."A little later when commenting on the Articles of the Directive and Article 2 (Right of Action) it said:"…the whole point of the Directive is that, since visitors suffering an accident are in practice at a disadvantage, their legal position should be strengthened outside their state of residence, in comparison with "domestic" victims. "It also proposed a new Article dealing with cases where the insurer could not be identified stating:"If the insurer proves impossible to identify, the system set up (direct right of action, claims representative, compensation body) cannot operate. The objective of this Article is therefore to ensure that, although one of the conditions for the operation of the arrangements established by the Directive is not fulfilled, the victim will in any event be compensated. In this case the guarantee fund in the Member State where the victim resides will be responsible for compensating the victim. Subsequently, when that guarantee fund applies, the guarantee fund in the Member State where the vehicle is normally based will have ultimate liability for the compensation paid to the victim…… it is important to distinguish between the case in view in this Article (the vehicle is identified but the insurer is unidentified) and the case where the vehicle is unidentified. The latter cases are specifically dealt with by the existing green-card arrangements and it is logical that, under Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC, ultimate liability for payment should rest with the guarantee fund of the State where the accident occurred."(iii) The European Parliament then reported on the proposals.[12] In the explanatory statement the following appears:
"1.2 The Solution
The solution proposed by Parliament to the problem of "visiting motorist" victims is based on the following considerations:
The proposed Community Directive is pragmatic and does not interfere in either national liability law or the rules governing Member States' jurisdiction (international private law). To do so would have been neither easy nor absolutely necessary, as the actual problem is not so much the differing levels of protection of traffic accident victims but the assertion of their claims in other Member States….
By Directive 72/166/EEC the Member States were obliged to introduce compulsory motor vehicle insurance covering the entire Community. It is now a matter of making the insurer who is financially liable to meet a given claim more accessible to the victim. This will be done in three stages:
- first of all the introduction in national laws of a direct right of action, i.e. a right enabling the victim to make a direct claim and if necessary take legal action against the insurer providing cover for the vehicle as well as the driver responsible for the accident and the vehicle owner. This is the only point affecting substantive law in the Member States associated with this proposal for a directive.
- Secondly, every insurance undertaking operating in the Community must be required to appoint a representative in each other Member State, responsible for settling claims on its behalf of and for its account, and in the language of the respective countries. This ensures that the victim can deal with somebody in his own country.
- And thirdly, the establishment of information centres will enable victims at any time to identify the appropriate claims representative."
(iv) The Commission's amended proposal[13] in dealing with the (then) proposed Article 6 said:
"..However, contrary to the suggestion in Amendment No. 34,[14] concrete reference to the mechanism provided for in Article 1(4)…is maintained in the text to make clear that in case of unidentified or uninsured vehicles the responsibility for compensating the injured party lies with the guarantee fund and not with the compensation body established by the present Directive. Nevertheless, the idea included in amendment no. 33 i.e. to give the injured party the possibility to present a claim even in cases where the insurer cannot be identified is acceptable provided that, afterwards, the mechanism of compensation bodies does not intervene anymore but the final responsibility for reimbursing a compensation body in the Member State of the injured party's residence are the responsible guarantee funds (of Member State of the accident or of the Member State of registration of the responsible vehicle)."
The 2003 Regulations
"Entitlement to compensation where a vehicle or insurer is not identified
13(1) This regulation applies where –
(a) an accident, caused by or arising out of the use of a vehicle which is normally placed in an EEA State, occurs on the territory of –
(i) an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, or
(ii) a subscribing State,
and an injured party resides in the United Kingdom,
(b) that injured party has made a request for information under regulation 9(2), and
(c) it has proved impossible –
(i) to identify the vehicle the use of which is alleged to have been responsible for the accident, or
(ii) within a period of two months after the date of the request, to identify an insurance undertaking which insures the use of the vehicle.
(2) Where this regulation applies –
(a) the injured party may make a claim for compensation from the compensation body, and
(b) the compensation body shall compensate the injured party in accordance with the provisions of Article 1 of the second motor insurance directive as if it were the body authorised under paragraph 4 of that Article and the accident had occurred in Great Britain."[18]
"These Regulations give effect to Articles 5, 6 and 7 of the Fourth Motor Insurance Directive."[19]
The MIB submits that the "body authorised" is FDG. The Claimant submits that it is MIB itself.
Therefore MIB's case is that MIB "shall compensate the injured party in accordance with Article 1 of the second Motor Insurers Directive as if it were…(FDG) and the accident had occurred in Great Britain." The Claimant submits that the deeming provision is that the MIB's liability is "as if it were… (MIB) and the accident had occurred in Great Britain."
"It is for Member States to decide how to achieve that end and they are entitled, if they wish, to put in place legislation that goes beyond the minimum requirements, provided its effect does not conflict with the object of the Directive. When interpreting the Regulations, however, it must be borne in mind that the scheme established by the Fourth Directive provides that liabilities imposed on the compensation body in the state where the injured person resides will be passed back, usually to the driver's insurer by way of the compensation body in the state where the insurer is established, but in the case of an uninsured or unidentified vehicle to the relevant guarantee fund….The central concept behind the scheme, therefore, is to provide the claimant with easy access to a defendant in his own country while ensuring that the liability ultimately comes to rest with the person or body with whom it ought to reside…."[23]
"[34] Sections 143-145 of the 1988 Act apply to the use of a vehicle in Great Britain and the EEA and the Uninsured Drivers' Agreement is of corresponding scope. The Untraced Drivers' Agreement, however, is limited in its scope to accidents occurring in Great Britain. (Separate arrangements exist for Northern Ireland.) However, not only do the Regulations designate the MIB as the compensation body for the whole of the United Kingdom, they impose on it an obligation relating to accidents occurring abroad. Accordingly, if the Untraced Drivers' Agreement were to be retained for this purpose, it was necessary for the Regulations to bring a wider range of cases within its scope. In my view, therefore, Mr. O'Brien was right in saying that the somewhat complicated language of regulation 13(2)(b) was designed to achieve that result. It does not necessarily follow, however, that it does not have the effect for which Mr. Layton contended.[29] A legal fiction may have consequences beyond its immediate purpose.
[35] The mechanism by which the MIB's obligation to compensate persons injured in accidents occurring abroad involving uninsured or unidentified drivers is established is to treat the accident as having occurred in Great Britain, but in the absence of any provision limiting its scope it is difficult to see why it should not also affect the principles governing the assessment of damages…."
The Court of Appeal then looked at the fourth Directive Recitals and came to the conclusion[30] that compensation was to be assessed on the basis that the accident occurred in Great Britain, this having the merit that compensation recoverable under Regulation 13 was likely to be broadly the same as that recoverable under Regulation 12.
"….I consider that the short answer to that argument is that Regulation 13(2)(b) deems the accident, in which the claimants were injured, to have occurred in England and that leaves no room for Lithuanian law at all in the assessment of compensation. As I have said, that was the conclusion of the Court of Appeal in Jacobs and why Moore-Bick LJ confirmed that no conflict of laws issue was involved."
The third ground of appeal was that the Court was wrong to find that the imposition of a cap under Lithuanian law on the liability of a given domestic guarantee fund did not derive from EU law. The Court recorded[32] the MIB's submission that where a Member State seeks to implement an EU Directive by national legislation, the domestic courts should, if possible, interpret the national legislation in a way that makes it compatible with, and so as to give effect to, the Directive and, secondly, that the role of the compensation fund in a case where the accident occurred in a different Member State was to act as a "post box" for the guarantee fund in the Member State in which the accident occurred. The Court rejected a further submission that the 2002 Agreement can determine the meaning of the fourth Directive or of the Regulations.[33] In paragraph 62 the Chancellor said:
"Regulation 12 provides the clearest possible indication that Parliament did not intend to limit compensation in the way stipulated in the 2002 Agreement. The wording of Regulation 13(2)(b) is different from Regulation 12(4)(b) but, as Moore-Bick LJ observed in Jacobs (at para 34), that is because its purpose was to bring a wider range of cases within the scope of the Untraced Drivers' Agreement, which is limited to accidents in Great Britain."
Finally the Chancellor opined[34] that Article 10.4 of the 2009 consolidated Directive was directly in point in providing that each Member State shall apply its laws regulations and administrative provisions to payment of compensation by the compensation body, without prejudice to any other practice which is more favourable to the victim.
(i) That as a matter of interpretation and because he was bound by Jacobs and Bloy, the effect of Regulation 13 was to create a cause of action enforceable as a civil debt in which compensation would be assessed on the basis of the law of England and Wales.[38](ii) That as regards Rome II, he was bound by the Court of Appeal authorities of Jacobs and Bloy, but could see very considerable force in the MIB's argument.
As I understand it, it is the Rome II point which is to be heard by the Supreme Court in June 2016. That point is not applicable to the present case.
"63. The MIB contends that the FDG is not liable to make payments to Mrs Marshall under French law, and that in these circumstances it is not liable, on a proper construction of regulation 13 to compensate Mrs Marshall. This is because regulation 13(2)(b) of the 2003 Regulations requires the MIB to compensate Mrs Marshall "as if it were the body authorised" under article 1(4) of the second Motor Insurance Directive, which is the FDG, and it is common ground that under French law the FDG has no liability to make a payment in this case…..
66….I do not read Jacobs and Bloy as deciding when the MIB would be liable to the Claimant. This is because in both cases it was common ground that the uninsured driver was liable (as in this case) and that the MIB was liable under the 2003 Regulations (which is not this case).
67. There was consideration in Jacobs about the circumstances in which the MIB would be liable and at paragraph 32 of Jacobs Moore-Bick LJ said that it was "implicit in the scheme of the directive that the victim must be able to establish that the driver is liable to him in respect of his injuries". This is established, and this is because the MIB becomes liable "as if it were" the FDG. The FDG is not liable if there is no liability on the part of the uninsured driver, and (relevant in this case) the FDG is not liable if there are other insurers of motor vehicles who are liable."
The Approach to Construction
(i) Germany v Commission[43]"In order to examine the merits of the arguments put forward by the parties, the court considers it necessary to provide a literal, historical, contextual and teleological interpretation…"This is a helpful statement of the guiding principle.
(ii) In Bloomsbury International Limited v Sea Fish Industry Authority[44] Lord Mance said in the context of the construction of the word "landed":
"[10] In matters of statutory construction, the statutory purpose and the general scheme by which it is to be put into effect are of central importance. They represent the context in which individual words are to be understood. In this area as in the area of contractual construction, "the notion of words having a natural meaning" is not always very helpful…and certainly not as a starting point, before identifying the legislative purpose and scheme."(iii) Unless there is something in domestic legislation which suggests that it was intended to be more generous than that found in a Directive, the domestic legislation is to be construed first to conform with the Directive.[45]
(iv) In Revenue and Customs Commrs v IDT Card Services[46] the Court of Appeal stated that the domestic courts must have regard to the objectives of EU legislation and construe English legislation so far as possible to give effect to EU legislation and to be compatible with it. The domestic courts must ensure that the EU legislation is fully effective.
(v) If there is an inconsistency between a statutory provision and a directly applicable provision of community law, the statutory provision is to be read and take effect as though the statute had enacted that the offending provision was to be without prejudice to the directly enforceable community rights of the person having benefit of such rights. If an inconsistency with directly enforceable community law exists, formal statutory requirements must where necessary be disapplied or moulded to the extent needed to enable those requirements to be applied in a manner consistent with community law.[47]
Discussion on the First Issue
"The whole point of the Directive is that, since visitors suffering an accident are in practice at a disadvantage, their legal position should be strengthened outside their state of residence, in comparison with "domestic" victims."
In the opinion of the economic and social committee[49] the difficulties of foreign victims are identified as language and communication problems, difficulties in identifying the person responsible for damage and his/her insurer, differences in the conditions for admitting the liability of the person causing an accident and different laws on procedure and compensation in different countries (Clause 3.1). These difficulties are similarly set out in Recital 6 of the fourth Directive.
(a) This appears to be the effect of the Recitals and earlier Articles of the Directive relating to the paradigm case of an identified insured driver.
(b) The Commission's Amended Proposal.[53] Here the Commission rejected a suggested Amendment No. 34. In so doing they wanted "the text to make clear that in the case of unidentified or uninsured vehicles the responsibility for compensating the injured party lies with the Guarantee Fund and not with the compensatory body established by the present Directive." This would be consistent with the aim to make Member States responsible via their Guarantee Funds for uninsured/untraced vehicles causing an accident in that State.
(i) The issue to be determined was strictly whether compensation was payable by reference to the law of England where the Claimant lived or the law of Spain where the accident occurred.[57](ii) The Court of Appeal helpfully set out the background to the Directives, the 2003 Regulations and the scheme of the fourth Directive.[58] No issue is taken with this and the Court of Appeal correctly referred to the following principles:
(a) "The 2003 Regulations must be interpreted, as far as possible, in a way that gives effect to the Directive."[59](b) The "Member States are entitled if they wish, to put in place legislation that goes beyond the minimum requirements, provided its effect does not conflict with the object of the Directive."[60](c) "The central concept behind the scheme…is to provide the Claimant with easy access to a defendant in his own country while ensuring that the liability ultimately comes to rest with the person or body with whom it ought to reside."[61](iii) As to liability, Regulation 12 cases (identified insured drivers) are governed by the law of the country of accident. This is also the case in respect of Regulation 13 cases.[62]
(iv) So far as Regulation 12 cases are concerned, the Court was wrong to assume that there may have been a policy decision "to ensure that compensation paid to a resident of the United Kingdom by the domestic compensation body is no less generous than would be payable under domestic law."[63] This is because (as is common ground in the present case) there are Member States where in certain circumstances personal injury claimants are more generously compensated than in the UK.[64] MIB submits that although a Member State may "gold plate" a provision by bringing in to force provisions which are more favourable than are necessary to comply with the Directive[65], what is impermissible is that English law may bring into effect provisions which, in relation to any individual Claimant, may compensate him less generously than the Directive requires. So the Court of Appeal was wrong to say[66] "Conversely, where the law of the country in which the accident occurred provides more generous compensation, the injured person resident in the United Kingdom can recover from the MIB no more than the amount he would have been able to recover under English law." To the extent that Regulation 12 was found helpful by the Court of Appeal in construing Regulation 13, this was erroneous[67].
(v) Further, in relation to Regulation 12, the Court determined that the words of Regulation 12 in their natural meaning meant that the assessment of damages was to be in accordance with English law.[68] Out of context the MIB may not dissent from that proposition. Similarly, out of context it would not dissent from the proposition that the words in Regulation 13(2)(b) deem the MIB in effect to be in the shoes of the FDG and also deem that the accident had occurred in Great Britain. However MIB says this is contrary to the canons of instruction set out above by Lord Mance in the Bloomsbury International case. Insofar as Jacobs permits, in certain circumstances, an English resident Claimant to recover less in an accident abroad than another national would recover in an accident in the same country, such an interpretation conflicts with the fourth Directive such that the principle in the Auto Logic Holdings case should be applied.
(vi) Finally the MIB submits that the deeming provision affecting the principles governing the assessment of damages[69] should not necessarily follow in any event, especially as liability is governed by the country of accident.
(i) That the first and second grounds of appeal there relied upon to distinguish Jacobs are not relied upon now.
(ii) That ground three[70] is in substance the ground upon which the MIB submits that Jacobs is wrong in relation to assessment of damages.
(iii) In paragraph 62 the Court of Appeal fell into the same error as the Court of Appeal did in Jacobs by the wrong approach to construction of the 2003 Regulations i.e. by giving words their natural meaning.
(iv) Paragraph 65 of the reasoning is incorrect factually, because it is based on the premise that Regulation 13(2)(b) represents a coherent policy of Parliament to provide UK residents with a more generous level of compensation than would have been recoverable in the foreign Member State where the accident took place. It is not always the case that there is a more generous level of compensation here than in another Member State. This also undermines the Chancellor's reliance upon Article 10.4 of the consolidated Directive[71].
"The ratio decidendi of a case is any rule of law expressly or impliedly refuted by the judge as a necessary step in reaching his conclusion, having regard to the line of reasoning adopted by him, or a necessary part of his direction to the jury."
This statement was approved by the Court of Appeal in Deane v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions[73] where the Court added "To follow the line of reasoning, one must start with the issue the court had to decide."
- The issue the Court had to decide in Jacobs was whether MIB is obliged to pay compensation in accordance with the law of England or the law of an EEA State where an accident occurs.
- A necessary step in the reasoning is that there needs to be liability, determined by the law of the place of country of accident. This is because of Article 1(4) of the fourth Directive.
- The Court of Appeal in Jacobs considered the deeming provision of Regulation 13(2)(b) in the context of the assessment of compensation and not on liability.
- Nevertheless, as appears from paragraph 35 of Jacobs (including the backdrop of paragraphs 33 and 34), it was a necessary step in the reasoning that "The mechanism by which the MIB's obligations compensate persons in accidents occurring abroad involving uninsured or unidentified drivers is established is to treat the accident as having occurred in Great Britain, but in the absence of any provision limiting its scope it is difficult to see why it should not also affect the principles governing the assessment of damages…" (my underlining)
- As if this were not enough, Bloy paragraph 44 specifically states "Regulation 13(2)(b) is a deeming provision with all the consequences that follow, including that the assessment of compensation is governed entirely by the law of the relevant part of Great Britain:…" (my underlining).
- Further, in Bloy, MIB specifically argued that it was a "post box" for the foreign guarantee body[74]; also that the right of recoupment/reimbursement from the foreign compensation or guarantee fund was intended to mirror so far as practicable the situation in an identified insured driver case[75]. Despite this argument the Chancellor said, paragraph 62 "its (Regulation 13(2)(b)) purpose was to bring a wider range of cases within the scope of the Untraced Drivers' Agreement, which is limited to accidents in Great Britain."
- Therefore, as a matter of authority, I find that I am bound by Jacobs and Bloy as to the effect of the deeming provision in Regulation 13(2)(b).
The Second Issue: Would the claim be statute barred under French law against the FDG?
- For the Claimant: a statement from Mr Timothy John Hughes, an English solicitor and Advocate at the Bar of Lyon. His report is dated 28 January 2016.
- For the Defendant: a statement from M. Jerome Charpentier. He is a lawyer specialising in bodily injuries. His report is dated 27 January 2016.
- The time limit applicable to this case is fixed by Article R421-12 of the Insurance Code. It is a "foreclosure" time limit running from the date of the accident or from the date when those concerned have knowledge of the damage, if they prove that they were unaware of it until then.
- Foreclosure is not prescription. Foreclosure extinguishes the right to claim.
- The Claimant accepts that if he were suing in France against the FDG then subject to arguments about (i) impossibilité d'agir (ii) estoppel and (iii) waiver, his claim would be barred because more than five years had expired from the date of the accident without him taking the necessary steps. He also accepted this if, as the MIB submit, his claim is merely one against the FDG brought in England against MIB. I therefore consider each of the three possible exceptions to the five year period in turn.
Impossibilité d'agir
Estoppel
(i) There is no case which governs the present situation.(ii) I was referred to 4 cases which, according to Mr Hughes, set out the arc of development in estoppel in French law.[79] To these I now turn.
"No party being able to contradict itself to the detriment of others, the Court of Appeal declaring inadmissible the claims made against a company that takes advantage before it of the circumstance that it was devoid of legal personality at the time of the proceedings having led to the decisions criticised violate this principle, while this company had itself lodged and investigated the appeal having given rise to a referral after a partial overturning…Legal texts applied: the principle according to which no party can contradict itself to the detriment of others."
Waiver
The Third Issue –is the Claim Barred by Limitation under English Law?
- 1(1)…
"Applicant means the person who has applied for compensation in respect of a debt, bodily injury or damage to property (or the person on whose behalf such an application has been made)and "application" means an application made by or on behalf of an applicantor any person who has notified, or requested compensation from, the MIB in writing in relation to an accident in an EEA state other than Great Britain as a result of which death, bodily injury or damage to property has occurred, and "application" means any such notification or request in writing made by or on behalf of an applicant."
- 4(3) The conditions referred to in paragraph (1)(f) are that:
…
"(c) The applicant, or a person acting on the applicant's behalf, must have reported that event to the police in the state where the accident occurred –
(i) In the case of an event from which there has arisen a death or bodily injury alone, not later than 14 days after its occurrence…"
(i) All the correspondence relied upon in purported compliance with making an application to MIB was at a time when it is patent (and confirmed by Mr Rigby on oath) that both parties believed MIB were acting as agents for FDG and the liability was that of FDG. The Defendant's responses (e.g. 28 September 2007, 21 July 2008) were similarly predicated upon that basis. Therefore even if the Claimant's letters were claims under the Untraced Drivers Agreement (which they were not), then the responses made it clear that the MIB was not liable but rather the FDG. In those circumstances it is difficult to see how there could have been any application against the MIB under the Untraced Drivers' Agreement (as allegedly modified).(ii) If there was a rejection by MIB, then at worst for the Defendant[87] there would be a six year limitation bar from the date of rejection i.e. to 2013. The claim would therefore be time barred.
"Section 10(4) provides expressly that where the local authority opts to take summary proceedings to recover their expenses, the limitation period runs from the date of service of the demand or, if there is an appeal, the date when the demand becomes operative. Again, by implication, since no such provision is applied to proceedings in the High Court or County Court, time in those proceedings does not run from the date when the demand is served or becomes operative. It will run from the accrual of the cause of action which, ex hypothesi, is a different time."
The ultimate question is whether, if the Claimant has not served a Regulation 9(2) request for information as required by Regulation 13(1)(b), the claim could have been struck out as disclosing no cause of action. In my judgment it could not. For the reasons I have already given this could not sensibly be a necessary ingredient in the cause of action.
(i) That the cause of action is a statutory cause of action arising under Regulation 13 of the 2003 Regulations.(ii) Therefore the limitation period is six years from the date when the cause of action accrued – section 9 of the 1980 Act.
(iii) In untraced motorists' claims[90] the requirement in Regulation 13(1)(b) is not a necessary ingredient of the cause of action.
(iv) Therefore the Claimant's claim is statute barred under English law.
The Fourth Issue: Is the MIB precluded from relying upon its limitation defence in English law by reason of estoppel by convention/representation?
"It appears to us that the affect (sic) of this decision is to confirm that, pursuant to Regulation 13(2)(b)…in a case such as our clients, where a UK resident is injured abroad by an unidentified driver, the MIB is obliged to compensate the victim as if the accident had occurred in the UK.
In Mr Howe's case the MIB have effectively been delegating its compensation obligation to the Fond de Guarantie (sic) of France presumably on the basis of Mr Howe's compensation was to be assessed in accordance with French law. This is the construction of the relevant Directives and Regulations, contended for by counsel for the MIB in Jacobs, and is now established as being incorrect.
The result is that the evidence of various experts instructed by the French compensation body is irrelevant.
We look forward to discussing with you your proposals for assessing an award to Mr Howe on the basis of UK law which is what we understand should have occurred in the first place."
"Would you please also point out to your contacts the fact that, in virtue of the provisions of Articles R421-12 Insurance Code, when the third party is unknown, the victim must, within a period of five years with effect from the date of the accident, have come to an arrangement with the Fonds de Garantie or brought against them the action provided for in Article R421-14 of the aforementioned code.
I therefore wait to hear what Mr Howe's position is and to receiving all those documents which we have been asking for since 2009."
"Ms Crawford – Okay, it sounds complicated but you can do it but limitation is as per the limitation period in France and according to their own Untraced Agreement, should one exist. It is all quite complicated but, just for future reference, you can issue against MIB on its own as compensation body on a cross-border case where you have an English Claimant who is abroad in a foreign country because that is what the 4th Directive says.
Mr Rigby – Do you happen to know the limitation period?
Ms Crawford – No I don't. But I have already had an email from Irene yesterday, saying it has passed. I will read out what she said. Hang on a minute (it's muffled).
No sorry scrub round that. Scrub round that. That is wrong. Sorry, Scott. It's because it's untraced. No, you are right. You are right. I thought you could as you could just sue MIB as compensation body…
Mr Rigby – sure…
Ms Crawford…without having a named defendant but it seems you can't. Yeah…
Mr Rigby – Well that makes my heart stop beating a little faster. I can tell you.
Ms Crawford – Yes, so we can all calm down…"
The conversation continued and ended with discussion about the possibility of getting another €20,000 interim payment fairly quickly from the FDG.
"The position, as we understand it, is that you made a claim on behalf of Mr Howe against MIB as compensation body, in accordance with the 2003 Regulations. Proceedings were not commenced within the six year limitation period and you are now out of time to do so. You may try to persuade a court otherwise, and if indeed proceedings are issued, we will instruct Weightmans solicitors to accept service. However, the limitation point will be raised in our defence."
(i) It is not enough that the common assumption upon which the estoppel is based is merely understood by the parties in the same way. It must be expressly shared between them.(ii) The expression of the common assumption by the party alleged to be estopped must be such that he may properly be said to have assumed some element of responsibility for it, in the sense of conveying to the other party an understanding that he expected the other party to rely upon it.
(iii) The person alleging the estoppel must in fact have relied upon the common assumption, to a sufficient extent, rather than merely upon his own independent view of the matter.
(iv) That reliance must have occurred in connection with some subsequent mutual dealing between the parties.
(v) Some detriment must thereby have been suffered by the person alleging the estoppel, or benefit thereby have been conferred upon the person alleged to be estopped, sufficient to make it unjust or unconscionable for the latter to assert the true legal (or factual) position.[92]
"… all estoppels may be regarded as requiring some manifest representation which crosses the line between representor and representee, either by statement or conduct… There cannot be any estoppel unless the alleged representor has said or done something, or failed to do something, with the result that – across the line between the parties – his action or inaction has produced some belief or expectation in the mind of the alleged representee, so that, depending on the circumstances, it would thereafter no longer be right to allow the alleged representor to resile by challenging the belief or expectation which he has engendered. To that extent at least, therefore, the alleged representor must be open to criticism."
"… no authority has been cited to us…whereby a party has been held disentitled from relying on a limitation defence merely because he has continued to negotiate with another party about the claim after the limitation period had expired and without anything being agreed about the manner in which the claim was to be resolved if negotiations broke down…
60…There has to be more to establish a convention than simply a request for details of ARC's claim. Where parties are acting on the basis of some generally assumed view of the law, which turns out to be wrong, more is needed than simply an assumption as to the legal position if a party is to be estopped from taking a defence which he then discovers is available to him.
…
62. A shared assumption is not on the authorities sufficient to establish an estoppel unless it is communicated. It follows that if in this case there was no shared assumption to the effect that ARC had a valid claim that was not time-barred, there could be no communication by LBH that it was making any such assumption. It also follows from what we have said above that the communication required would in any event be not simply that ARC had a valid claim but also that LBH would not take any defence that might be open to it on the basis of a statutory limitation period."
(i) There was no shared assumption in April 2013 that MIB would not take any defence that might be open to it on the basis of a statutory limitation period.(ii) Nor was there any such shared assumption arising from the telephone conversation of 10 July 2014. It is clear that Ms Crawford (unsurprisingly) was confused and wavered in her understanding of the legal position. However, at most, she was acting on the basis of a view of the law which turned out to be wrong. Further and in any event, between then and August 2014 there was no detriment suffered by the Claimant or benefit conferred upon the MIB sufficient to make it unjust or unconscionable for MIB to assert the true legal position and to take the limitation defence.
(i) It was not necessary to explore what if any differences there were between estoppel by representation, promissory estoppel, estoppel by convention or waiver. On the facts of the case it was most likely to be a case of promissory estoppel, for there was no representation of existing facts and no shared assumption supporting an estoppel by representation or by convention respectively.(ii) The promise or representation must be clear and unequivocal.
(iii) It may be made by conduct or implied but mere inactivity is not normally sufficient and it is difficult to imagine how silence and inaction can be anything but equivocal.
(iv) It is important to emphasise that the unequivocal and ambiguous promise/representation has to be that the party did not intend to enforce its strict legal rights.
(v) The promise/representation must be made intending to affect the legal relations between the parties and the promisee or representee must rely upon it and alter his position.
(i) That at no stage, pre or post limitation period expiry, did the MIB make such an unequivocal or unambiguous promise or representation.(ii) In any event, there was no reliance or altering of position by the Claimant upon any alleged promise or representation. In particular, post limitation period expiry, I repeat the words of the Court of Appeal in paragraph 59 of Seechurn:
"After the limitation period had expired it is difficult to see how the Claimant could have altered his position to his detriment. His claim was doomed. He could not be worse off. "
Summary
(i) I am bound by the cases of Jacobs and Bloy to find that MIB's liability to compensate the Claimant pursuant to the 2003 Regulations is not dependent upon the Claimant establishing that the FDG is liable to compensate him or be so liable to compensate him if a claim were made against it.(ii) If I am wrong about that the Claimant is statute barred under French law from bringing a claim against FDG.
(iii) Based on my ruling in (i) above, the Claimant's claim fails because it is time barred under the 2003 Regulations.
(iv) The Claimant cannot rely upon estoppel by convention or estoppel by representation or waiver so as to prevent the MIB from relying upon its limitation defence under the 2003 Regulations.
ANNEX A
Date | Event |
6 December 1946 | Claimant's Date of Birth |
30 March 2007 | The accident |
10 September 2007 | Claimant writes to MIB, informing MIB of accident with an untraced driver |
25 March 2008 | FGF writes to the Claimant, confirming that it is examining the compensation due to the Claimant |
1 April 2008 | MIB writes to the Claimant confirming its authority to handle the claim on FGF's behalf |
21 July 2008 | MIB (Ms Crawford) writes to the Claimant confirming that FGF have approved the interim payment of £30,000 |
24 July 2008 | The Claimant receives the first interim payment of £30,000 by cheque |
1 December 2008 | Telephone conversation in which MIB (Ms Crawford) informed the Claimant (Ms Goodyer) that FGF requested that the Claimant be examined by their own medical expert |
4 December 2008 | The Claimant (Ms Goodyer) writes to MIB requesting a further interim payment of £15,000 |
2 February 2009 | MIB (Ms Crawford) emails the Claimant (Ms Goodyer) confirming that FGF approved the interim payment of £15,000 |
4 February 2009 | The Claimant receives the second interim payment, of £15,000, by cheque |
13 May 2009 | The Claimant is visited by Dr Sulzer, representative from Laboratoire D'accessibilite |
8 June 2009 | The Claimant's GP updated records and updated records from Salisbury District Hospital are sent to MIB |
16 June 2009 | MIB (Ms Crawford) writes to the Claimant (Ms Goodyer) asking for an indication of the Claimant's losses to date |
17 July 2009 | The Claimant's DART records are sent to MIB |
13 August 2009 | Dr Sulzer's report sent to the Claimant |
28 September 2009 | FGF make offer, relayed to the Claimant by MIB |
27 October 2010 | Jacobs v MIB decided |
10 November 2009 | MIB (Ms Crawford) wrote to the Claimant enclosing the report from Laboratoire D'accessibilite (dated 28 September 2009) and the FGF's offer |
19 March 2010 | The Claimant (Ms Goodyer) confirms agreement to the valuation of €139,460 for general damages |
18 June 2010 | FGF seeks response from the MIB to their offer of compromise dated 28 September 2009 |
9 November 2010 | The Claimant (Ms Goodyer) writes to MIB (Ms Crawford) drawing attention to the judgment in Jacobs and seeking proposals from MIB for settlement on the basis of UK Law |
12 April 2011 | The Claimant (Ms Goodyer) serves the Claimant's Schedule of Loss and Damage, together with expert evidence, on MIB |
23 May 2011 | The Claimant (Ms Goodyer) requests an interim payment of £50,000 |
28 June 2011 | FGF write again to the MIB, seeking a response from the Claimant as to their offer of compromise dated 28 September 2009 |
4 August 2011 | The Claimant rejects FGF's offer dated 28 September 2009 |
5 September 2011 | MIB writes to the Claimant, confirming FGF has approved the interim payment of £50,000 |
8 September 2011 | The Claimant receives a third interim payment, of £50,000, by cheque |
30 March 2012 | Fifth anniversary of the accident |
20 August 2012 | The Claimant (Ms Goodyer) requests an interim payment of £20,000 |
1 March 2013 | FGF write to MIB "We are waiting for this documents, but our offer of 2009 is always valid" |
28 March 2013 | Andrew Dinsmore takes over conduct of the Claimant's case |
30 March 2013 | Sixth anniversary of the accident |
28 May 2013 | MIB (Ms Crawford) forwards to the Claimant (Mr Dinsmore) a letter received by MIB from FGF (Monsieur Gonzalez) dated 17 April 2013, in which Monsieur Gonzalez states that certain documentary evidence was not sent to the FGF |
6 August 2013 | The Claimant (Mr Dinsmore) writes to MIB (Ms Crawford) enclosing documentary evidence of the Claimant's past losses and reiterates the request for an interim payment of £20,000 |
September 2013 | Scott Rigby takes over conduct of the claim |
23 September 2013 | MIB informs the Claimant (Mr Rigby) FGF has agreed to pay the interim payment of £20,000 |
26 September 2013 | The Claimant receives a fourth interim payment, of £20,000, by cheque |
29 October 2013 | Records from HMRC sent to MIB |
13 May 2014 | The Claimant (Mr Rigby) requests an interim payment of £15,000 |
27 May 2014 | The Claimant's request for an interim payment is declined on the basis that the amount already received by the Claimant (£115,000) virtually matches FGF's offer of €143,000 |
18 June 2014 | The Claimant attempts to send a translated copy of the Schedule of Loss to FGF by email |
2 July 2014 | Translated copy of the Schedule of Loss sent to FGF by fax |
10 July 2014 | Telephone conference between the Claimant (Mr Rigby and Chris Deacon) and FGF (Monsieur Gonzalez and colleague) |
10 July 2014 | Telephone call between MIB (Ms Crawford) and the Claimant (Mr Rigby) |
8 August 2014 | FGF writes to the Claimant, stating that the claim is time barred |
12 August 2014 | Telephone call between the Claimant (Mr Rigby) and MIB (Ms Crawford) |
20 November 2014 | The Claimant (Mr Rigby) writes to MIB (Ms Crawford), requesting disclosure of all relevant information, pursuant to Regulation 9 of the 2003 Regulations |
27 November 2014 | MIB (Paul Broadbridge) writes to the Claimant (Mr Rigby) in response to the latter dated 20 November 2014 stating that there is a £10 charge |
2 December 2014 | Proceedings issued in the High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division |
4 December 2014 | Claim Form and Particulars of Claim served on MIB |
10 December 2014 | The Claimant send a £10 cheque to MIB for information request, which is cashed |
29 January 2015 | Defence served on the Claimant, following an agreed extension of time |
10 February 2015 | Reply served on MIB |
7 July 2015 | Costs and Case Management Conference before Master Leslie, which, inter alia, ordered this trial of a preliminary issue on limitation |
1 March 2016 | Claimant serves proposed Amended Particulars of Claim |
8 March 2016 | Claimant serves Re-amended Particulars of Claim |
APPENDIX B
The First Directive
COUNCIL DIRECTIVE of 24 April 1972 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles, and to the enforcement of the obligation to insure against such liability (72/166/EEC)…….
Article 3
1. Each Member State shall, subject to Article 4, take all appropriate measures to ensure that civil liability in respect of the use of vehicles normally based in its territory is covered by insurance. The extent of the liability covered and the terms and conditions of the cover shall be determined on the basis of these measures.
2. Each Member State shall take all appropriate measures to ensure that the contract of insurance also covers: - according to the law in force in other Member States, any loss or injury which is caused in the territory of those States;
- any loss or injury suffered by nationals of Member States during a direct journey between two territories in which the Treaty establishing the European Economic Community is in force, if there is no national insurers' bureau responsible for the territory which is being crossed ; in that case, the loss or injury shall be covered in accordance with the internal laws on compulsory insurance in force in the Member State in whose territory the vehicle is normally based……
Article 7
1. Every vehicle normally based in the territory of a third country or in the non-European territory of a Member State must, before entering the territory in which the Treaty establishing the European Economic Community is in force, be provided either with a valid green card or with a certificate of frontier insurance establishing that the vehicle is insured in accordance with Article 6.
2. However, vehicles normally based in a third country shall be treated as vehicles normally based in the Community if the national bureaux of all the Member States severally guarantee, each in accordance with the provisions of its own national law on compulsory insurance, settlement of claims in respect of accidents occurring in their territory caused by such vehicles.
3. Upon having ascertained, in close cooperation with the Member States, that the obligations referred to in the preceding paragraph have been assumed, the Commission shall fix the date from which and the types of vehicles for which Member States shall no longer require production of the documents referred to in paragraph 1……
The Second Directive
SECOND COUNCIL DIRECTIVE
of 30 December 1983
on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles
(84/5/EEC)……
Whereas it is necessary to make provision for a body to guarantee that the victim will not remain without compensation where the vehicle which caused the accident is uninsured or unidentified; whereas it is important, without amending the provisions applied by the Member States with regard to the subsidiary or non-subsidiary nature of the compensation paid by that body and to the rules applicable with regard to subrogation, to provide that the victim of such an accident should be able to apply directly to that body as a first point of contact…..
Article 1
1. The insurance referred to in Article 3 (1) of Directive 72/166/EEC shall cover compulsorily both damage to property and personal injuries……
4. Each Member State shall set up or authorize a body with the task of providing compensation, at least up to the limits of the insurance obligation for damage to property or personal injuries caused by an unidentified vehicle or a vehicle for which the insurance obligation provided for in paragraph 1 has not been satisfied…..
The victim may in any case apply directly to the body which, on the basis of information provided at its request by the victim, shall be obliged to give him a reasoned reply regarding the payment of any compensation….
The Fourth Directive
Directive 2000/26/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council
of 16 May 2000
on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles and amending Council Directives 73/239/EEC and 88/357/EEC
(Fourth motor insurance Directive)
……
Whereas…
(8) It is in fact appropriate to supplement the arrangements established by Directives 72/166/EEC, 84/5/EEC(7) and 90/232/EEC(8) in order to guarantee injured parties suffering loss or injury as a result of a motor vehicle accident comparable treatment irrespective of where in the Community accidents occur; for accidents falling within the scope of this Directive occurring in a State other than that of the injured party's residence, there are gaps with regard to the settlement of injured parties' claims.
(9) The application of this Directive to accidents occurring in third countries covered by the green card system, affecting injured parties resident in the Community and involving vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State does not imply an extension of the compulsory territorial coverage of motor insurance as provided for in Article 3(2) of Directive 72/166/EEC.
(10) This entails giving the injured party a direct right of action against the insurance undertaking of the responsible party.
(11) One satisfactory solution might be for injured parties suffering loss or injury as a result of a motor vehicle accident falling within the scope of this Directive and occurring in a State other than that of their residence to be entitled to claim in their Member State of residence against a claims representative appointed there by the insurance undertaking of the responsible party.
(12) This solution would enable damage suffered by injured parties outside their Member State of residence to be dealt with by procedures familiar to them.
(13) This system of having claims representatives in the injured party's Member State of residence affects neither the substantive law to be applied in each individual case nor the matter of jurisdiction.
(14) The existence of a direct right of action against the insurance undertaking for the party who has suffered loss or injury is a logical supplement to the appointment of such representatives and moreover improves the legal position of injured parties of motor vehicle accidents occurring outside that party's Member State of residence…..
(17) The appointment of representatives responsible for settling claims should be one of the conditions for access to and carrying on the activity of insurance listed in class 10 of point A of the Annex to Directive 73/239/EEC(9), except for carriers' liability; that condition should therefore be covered by the single official authorisation issued by the authorities of the Member State where the insurance undertaking establishes its head office, as specified in Title II of Directive 92/49/EEC(10); that condition should also apply to insurance undertakings having their head office outside the Community which have secured an authorisation granting them access to the activity of insurance in a Member State of the Community; Directive 73/239/EEC should be amended and supplemented accordingly.
(18) In addition to ensuring that the insurance undertaking has a representative in the State where the injured party resides, it is appropriate to guarantee the specific right of the injured party to have the claim settled promptly; it is therefore necessary to include in national law appropriate effective and systematic financial or equivalent administrative penalties - such as injunctions combined with administrative fines, reporting to supervisory authorities on a regular basis, on-the-spot checks, publications in the national official journal and in the press, suspension of the activities of the company (prohibition on the conclusion of new contracts for a certain period), designation of a special representative of the supervisory authorities responsible for monitoring that the business is run in line with insurance laws, withdrawal of the authorisation for this business line, sanctions to be imposed on directors and management staff - in the event that the insurance undertaking or its representative fails to fulfil its obligation to make an offer of compensation within a reasonable time-limit; this should not prejudice the application of any other measure - especially under supervisory law - which may be considered appropriate; however, it is a condition that liability and the damage and injury sustained should not be in dispute, so that the insurance undertaking is able to make a reasoned offer within the prescribed time-limit; the reasoned offer of compensation should be in writing and contain the grounds on the basis of which liability and damages have been assessed….
(25) It is necessary to make provision for a compensation body to which the injured party may apply where the insurance undertaking has failed to appoint a representative or is manifestly dilatory in settling a claim or where the insurance undertaking cannot be identified to guarantee that the injured party will not remain without the compensation to which he is entitled; the intervention of the compensation body should be limited to rare individual cases where the insurance undertaking has failed to comply with its duties in spite of the dissuasive effect of the potential imposition of penalties…
(30) This system can be made to function by means of an agreement between the compensation bodies established or approved by the Member States defining their functions and obligations and the procedures for reimbursement.
(31) Where it is impossible to identify the insurer of the vehicle, provision should be made so that the ultimate debtor in respect of the damages to be paid to the injured party is the guarantee fund provided for in Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC situated in the Member State where the non-insured vehicle, the use of which has caused the accident, is normally based; where it is impossible to identify the vehicle, provision must be made so that the ultimate debtor is the guarantee fund provided for in Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC situated in the Member State in which the accident occurred.
HAVE ADOPTED THIS DIRECTIVE:
Article 1
Scope
1. The objective of this Directive is to lay down special provisions applicable to injured parties entitled to compensation in respect of any loss or injury resulting from accidents occurring in a Member State other than the Member State of residence of the injured party which are caused by the use of vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State.
Without prejudice to the legislation of third countries on civil liability and private international law, this Directive shall also apply to injured parties resident in a Member State and entitled to compensation in respect of any loss or injury resulting from accidents occurring in third countries whose national insurer's bureaux as defined in Article 1(3) of Directive 72/166/EEC have joined the Green Card system whenever such accidents are caused by the use of vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State….
Article 3
Direct right of action
Each Member State shall ensure that injured parties referred to in Article 1 in accidents within the meaning of that provision enjoy a direct right of action against the insurance undertaking covering the responsible person against civil liability.
Article 4
Claims representatives
1. Each Member State shall take all measures necessary to ensure that all insurance undertakings covering the risks classified in class 10 of point A of the Annex to Directive 73/239/EEC, other than carrier's liability, appoint a claims representative in each Member State other than that in which they have received their official authorisation. The claims representative shall be responsible for handling and settling claims arising from an accident in the cases referred to in Article 1. The claims representative shall be resident or established in the Member State where he is appointed…
Article 5
Information centres
1. For the purposes of allowing the injured party to seek compensation, each Member State shall establish or approve an information centre responsible:
(a) for keeping a register containing the following information:..
3. The Member States shall ensure that the injured party is entitled for a period of seven years after the accident to obtain without delay from the information centre of the Member State where he resides, the Member State where the vehicle is normally based or the Member State where the accident occurred the following information:
(a) the name and address of the insurance undertaking;
(b) the number of the insurance policy; and
(c) the name and address of the insurance undertaking's claims representative in the State of residence of the injured party.
Information centres shall cooperate with each other.
4. The information centre shall provide the injured party with the name and address of the owner or usual driver or the registered keeper of the vehicle if the injured party has a legitimate interest in obtaining this information. For the purposes of this provision, the information centre shall address itself in particular:
(a) to the insurance undertaking, or
(b) to the vehicle registration agency….
Article 6
Compensation bodies
1. Each Member State shall establish or approve a compensation body responsible for providing compensation to injured parties in the cases referred to in Article 1.
Such injured parties may present a claim to the compensation body in their Member State of residence:
(a) if, within three months of the date when the injured party presented his claim for compensation to the insurance undertaking of the vehicle the use of which caused the accident or to its claims representative, the insurance undertaking or its claims representative has not provided a reasoned reply to the points made in the claim; or
(b) if the insurance undertaking has failed to appoint a claims representative in the State of residence of the injured party in accordance with Article 4(1). In this case, injured parties may not present a claim to the compensation body if they have presented a claim for compensation directly to the insurance undertaking of the vehicle the use of which caused the accident and if they have received a reasoned reply within three months of presenting the claim.
Injured parties may not however present a claim to the compensation body if they have taken legal action directly against the insurance undertaking….
2. The compensation body which has compensated the injured party in his Member State of residence shall be entitled to claim reimbursement of the sum paid by way of compensation from the compensation body in the Member State of the insurance undertaking's establishment which issued the policy…..
Article 7
If it is impossible to identify the vehicle or if, within two months following the accident, it is impossible to identify the insurance undertaking, the injured party may apply for compensation from the compensation body in the Member State where he resides. The compensation shall be provided in accordance with the provisions of Article 1 of Directive 84/5/EEC. The compensation body shall then have a claim, on the conditions laid down in Article 6(2) of this Directive:
(a) where the insurance undertaking cannot be identified: against the guarantee fund provided for in Article 1(4) of Directive 84/5/EEC in the Member State where the vehicle is normally based;
(b) in the case of an unidentified vehicle: against the guarantee fund in the Member State in which the accident took place;
(c) in the case of third-country vehicles: against the guarantee fund of the Member State in which the accident took place.
APPENDIX C
Motor Vehicles (Compulsory Insurance) (Information Centre and Compensation Body) Regulations 2003/37
…………..
2.— Interpretation
(1) In these Regulations—
……………
"foreign compensation body" means a person or body established or approved (by virtue of Article 6(1) of the fourth motor insurance directive) in an EEA State other than the United Kingdom to fulfil like functions to the compensation body;
"foreign information centre" means a person or body established or approved as an information centre in an EEA State other than the United Kingdom by virtue of Article 5(1) of the fourth motor insurance directive;
…….
"information centre" means the body named in regulation 3(1);
……
3.— The information centre for the United Kingdom and its duties
(1) MIIC is approved as the information centre for the United Kingdom for the purposes of the fourth motor insurance directive
……
9.— Supply of information by the information centre
(1) This regulation applies where—
(a) an accident, caused by or arising out of the use of a vehicle which is normally based in an EEA State, occurs in the United Kingdom;
(b) an accident, caused by or arising out of the use of a vehicle, occurs on the territory of—
(i) an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, or
(ii) a subscribing state,
and that vehicle is normally based in the United Kingdom;
(c) an accident, caused by or arising out of the use of a vehicle which is normally based in an EEA State, occurs on the territory of—
(i) an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, or
(ii) a subscribing state,
and an injured party resides in the United Kingdom.
(2) Where this regulation applies, an injured party may request the information centre to provide to him the information described in paragraph (4) in respect of every vehicle involved in the accident which is normally based in an EEA State.
(3) The information centre shall provide the information requested if the request is—
(a) made in writing,
(b) received by the information centre no later than seven years after the date of the accident, and
(c) contains sufficient information to identify the vehicle in respect of which the information is being sought.
(4) The information which may be requested in respect of a vehicle is—
(a) the name and address of any insurer who has issued a UK insurance policy or European insurance policy covering the use of that vehicle at the time the accident occurred;
(b) the number of that policy;
(c) the name and address of that insurer's claims representative in the state of residence of the injured party; and
(d) where the information centre is satisfied that the injured party has a legitimate interest in obtaining that information, the name and address of the registered keeper of the vehicle or, where the territory in which the vehicle is normally based is an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, the person having custody of the vehicle.
…….
12.— Response from the compensation body
(1) Upon receipt of a claim for compensation under regulation 11, the compensation body shall immediately notify—
(a) the insurer of the vehicle the use of which is alleged to have caused the accident, or that insurer's claims representative;
(b) the foreign compensation body in the EEA State in which that insurer's establishment is situated; and
(c) if known, the person who is alleged to have caused the accident,
that it has received a claim from the injured party and that it will respond to that claim within two months from the date on which the claim was received.
(2) The compensation body shall respond to a claim for compensation within two months of receiving the claim.
(3) If the injured party satisfies the compensation body as to the matters specified in paragraph (4), the compensation body shall indemnify the injured party in respect of the loss and damage described in paragraph (4)(b).
(4) The matters referred to in paragraph (3) are—
(a) that a person whose liability for the use of the vehicle is insured by the insurer referred to in regulation 11(1)(c) is liable to the injured party in respect of the accident which is the subject of the claim, and
(b) the amount of loss and damage (including interest) that is properly recoverable in consequence of that accident by the injured party from that person under the laws applying in that part of the United Kingdom in which the injured party resided at the date of the accident.
…….
13.— Entitlement to compensation where vehicle or insurer is not identified
(1) This regulation applies where—
(a) an accident, caused by or arising out of the use of a vehicle which is normally based in an EEA State, occurs on the territory of—
(i) an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, or
(ii) a subscribing State,
and an injured party resides in the United Kingdom,
(b) that injured party has made a request for information under regulation 9(2), and
(c) it has proved impossible—
(i) to identify the vehicle the use of which is alleged to have been responsible for the accident, or
(ii) within a period of two months after the date of the request, to identify an insurance undertaking which insures the use of the vehicle.
(2) Where this regulation applies—
(a) the injured party may make a claim for compensation from the compensation body, and
(b) the compensation body shall compensate the injured party in accordance with the provisions of Article 1 of the second motor insurance directive as if it were the body authorised under paragraph 4 of that Article and the accident had occurred in Great Britain.
…….
15.— Reimbursement of foreign compensation body where insurer is unidentified
(1) This regulation applies where—
(a) an injured party is resident in an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, and
(b) that person has been compensated by the foreign compensation body of the State where he resides.
(2) Where this regulation applies, the MIB shall be liable to indemnify the foreign compensation body in the following cases—
(a) where the accident took place in the United Kingdom and it was caused by or arose from the use of—
(i) an unidentified vehicle, or
(ii) a vehicle normally based in a territory which is not an EEA State or a subscribing state or part of any such state;
(b) where the accident was caused by, or arose from the use of, a vehicle normally based in the United Kingdom but it has proved impossible to identify the insurer of that vehicle within 2 months from the date when the request for compensation was lodged with the foreign compensation body.
16. Civil Liability
Any sum due and owing pursuant to these Regulations shall be recoverable as a civil debt.
Explanatory Note
These Regulations, which are made under section 2(2) of the European Communities Act 1972, give effect in part to the Directive of the European Parliament and the Council of 16 May 2000 on the approximation of laws of the member States relating to insurance against civil liability in respect of the use of motor vehicles and amending Council Directives 73/239/EEC and 88/357/EEC (Fourth Motor Insurance Directive) (No. 2000/26/EC) (OJ) No. L181, 20/07/2000, p. 65). The Fourth Motor Insurance Directive supplements the arrangements established by Directives 72/166/EEC, 84/5/EEC and 90/232/EEC.
These Regulations give effect to Articles 5, 6 and 7 of the Fourth Motor Insurance Directive.
Note 2 [2015] Lloyds Rep 535 (QB); [2015] EWHC 1142 (QB) [Back] Note 3 The 1972 Untraced Drivers’ Agreement was thought to be sufficient to comply with the second Directive; the existing Uninsured Drivers’ Agreement was concluded in 1988 between the Department of Transport and the MIB [Back] Note 4 These territorial restrictions are to be found in the updated (2003) Untraced Drivers’ Agreement (Clause 4(1)(a) and the 1999 Uninsured Drivers’ Agreement (Clause 5(1)). [Back] Note 5 See also the sixth Recital [Back] Note 6 E.g. recitals 10 – 14, 17, 18 and 25 [Back] Note 7 Article 6 and 7 cases required an agreement between the compensation bodies. On 29 April 2002 the fourth Directive Agreement was concluded. [Back] Note 9 e.g. Recital 30, Recital 31 and Articles 6 and 7. [Back] Note 10 See 308/108/2011/95 [Back] Note 11 OJ C 20.11.95 p108 [Back] Note 14 of the European Parliament’s proposal A4-0267/98 2 July 1998 [Back] Note 15 Agreement 29 April 2002. AU 2070/MU/2090 (04/02) [Back] Note 16 paragraph 59, [2014] 1 Lloyd’s Rep IR 75 [Back] Note 17 If this is correct then it seems to me that it must follow that the decision in Jacobs and Bloy were wrong. I deal with this later. [Back] Note 18 The mirror provision i.e. reimbursement of a foreign compensation body where the insurer is unidentified, the injured party resides outside the UK and the foreign compensation body of the state where the injured party resides has compensated the victim, is dealt with by Regulation 15. [Back] Note 19 cf The transposition note on the fourth Motor Insurance Directive [Back] Note 20 [2010] EWCA Civ 1208 [Back] Note 21 Judgment paragraph 17 [Back] Note 24 “The amount of loss and damage…that is properly recoverable in consequence of that accident by the injured party from that person under the laws applied in that part of the United Kingdom in which the injured party resided at the date of the accident” [Back] Note 27 paragraphs 31 – 38 [Back] Note 28 This reference is to Article 1(4) of the second Directive. [Back] Note 29 I.e. compensation should be assessed in accordance with English law. [Back] Note 31 [2013] EWCA Civ 1543; [2014] 1 Lloyd’s Rep IR 75 [Back] Note 32 paragraphs 55 and 56 [Back] Note 35 [2015] EWHC 1002 (QB); [2015] Lloyds Rep 535 (QB) [Back] Note 39 [2015] EWHC 3421 (QB) [Back] Note 43 [2007] ECR 11 – 4441, paragraph 92 [Back] Note 44 [2001] 1WLR 1564; [2011] UASC 25 [Back] Note 45 See Alemo-Herron v Parkwood [2011] UKSC 26, paragraphs 28 and 29; see also Risk Management Partners Limited v Brent LBC [2011] UKSC 7, paragraphs 22 – 25 [Back] Note 46 [2006] EWCA Civ.29, paras 71, 75, 79 – 80, 82, 92. [Back] Note 47 Auto Logic Plc v IRC [2005] UKHL 54, paragraphs 16 and 17. [Back] Note 48 97/0264 COD, page 12 [Back] Note 50 Commission proposal OJ C 20.11.95, page 108 – see paragraph 15(ii) above: see also the Commissions Amended Proposal, paragraph 15(iv) above [Back] Note 51 97/0264 COD, page 12 [Back] Note 52 The so called paradigm case referred to in Jacobs, paragraph 24 [Back] Note 53 97/0264 (COD), the relevant extract being set out at paragraph 15(iv) of this judgment [Back] Note 54 paragraph 33 of Jacobs [Back] Note 55 paragraph 70 - 73 [Back] Note 56 See paragraph 42(v) below [Back] Note 57 paragraphs 2 and 5 [Back] Note 58 paragraphs 8 – 23 [Back] Note 62 paragraphs 24 and 32 [Back] Note 64 See also Moreno, paragraph 14 [Back] Note 65 Article 10(4) of the fourth Directive [Back] Note 70 paragraphs 54 - 65 [Back] Note 71 see paragraph 65 [Back] Note 72 Precedent in English Law 4th Edition, page 72 [Back] Note 73 [2010] EWCA Civ 699, paragraph 32 & 33 [Back] Note 76 1 ère civ 8-11-1994 n° 92 – 20.642 [Back] Note 77 12-12-2007, no 06/01219. [Back] Note 78 This is a reference to an email from the MIB to the Claimant’s solicitor in which the FDG’s letter of 17 April 2013 was forwarded. The FDG were continuing to deal with the matter. The MIB wrote that they were not entirely sure what the reference to R421-12 and R421-14 meant. What that paragraph said was “Would you please also point out to your contacts the fact that, in virtue of the provisions of Article 421-12 Insurance Code, when the third party is unknown, the victim must within a period of five years with effect from the date of the accident, have come to an agreement with the Fonds de Garantie or brought against them the action provided for in Article R421-14 of the aforementioned code.” [Back] Note 79 Cour de Cassation Civil Chamber 1, 6 July 2005 Appeal No 01/15912(“the 2005 decision”); Cour de Cassation Plenary Session, 27 February 2009 Appeal No 07/19841 (“the 2009 decision”); Conseil d’état No 334465, 1 April 2010 (“the 2010 decision”); Cour de Cassation Commercial Chamber, 20 September 2011 Appeal No: 10-22888 (“the 2011 decision”). [Back] Note 80 He also pointed out that the 2011 case is the Cour de Cassation Commercial Chamber whereas the present case would go before the Cour de Cassation Civil Chamber and they do not always respect each others decision. However the 2011 decision is the best indication I have. [Back] Note 81 0513111: 5 April 2007 [Back] Note 82 Nîmes CA 5 February 2015, 13/03926 [Back] Note 83 “…un délai de foreclusion est un délai préfixe insusceptible d’interruption ou de suspension; enfin des pourparlers ne constituent pas, même en droit commun, une cause légitime d’interruption ou de suspension des délais pour agir.” [Back] Note 84 Paragraph 19 of the original Particulars of Claim purported to rely upon section 33 of the Limitation Act 1980 to disapply the time limit under section 9 if, contrary to the Claimant’s submission, time ran from the date of the accident. The Claimant in submission accepted that he could not rely on section 33. [Back] Note 85 Defence paragraph 36. [Back] Note 86 Clause 4(3)(a)(i); the 2003 Agreement is said to be made for the purpose of Article 1(4) of the Second Directive and is intended to confer a benefit on an applicant – clause 31(5) [Back] Note 87 the point has not been decided [Back] Note 88 [1992] 3 WLR 123. [Back] Note 89 [1897] 1 QB 702, 709; cited in Swansea Council v Glass at 130 C – F [Back] Note 90 I was not addressed on uninsured drivers’ claims [Back] Note 91 Previous interim payments totalling £95,000 had been made in July 2008 (£30,000), February 2009 (£15,000) and August 2011 (£50,000). [Back] Note 92 Wilken and Ghaly, the Law of Waiver, Variation and Estoppel, 3rd Edition, 2012, paragraph 10.01. The authors say that some care must be taken with the second (2) as estoppel by convention does not require one party to induce or encourage the other to act on the particular assumption. [Back] Note 95 paragraphs 22 and 25. Limitation had expired in 1988. [Back] Note 96 paragraphs 36 and 39. [Back] Note 98 [1985] 2 Lloyds Rep 28 [Back] Note 99 [2002] 2 Lloyds Rep 390; [2002] EWCA Civ 67 [Back] Note 100 paragraphs 17 - 24 [Back] Note 101 This email was written by a French representative of FDG. It may represent a mistranslation of the word “toujours” which in French can mean the English “always” or “still”. However there was no evidence upon this and I do not take it into account. [Back] Note 102 As a matter of fact in this case the MIB says that it will not seek repayment of any interim payments. [Back]