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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Slessor v. Vetco Gray UK Ltd & Ors [2007] ScotCS CSOH_130 (13 July 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_130.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSOH_130, [2007] CSOH 130

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 130

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD EMSLIE

 

in the cause

 

GAVIN SLESSOR

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

VETCO GRAY UK LIMITED AND OTHERS

 

Defenders and Third Party:

 

 

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Pursuer: Smith, Q.C., R Milligan; Anderson Strathern

Defenders and Third Party: Dewar, Q.C., Gardiner; Simpson & Marwick; HBM Sayers

 

 

13 July 2007

Introduction

[1] The present action of damages arises out of an accident on 13 May 2003 in which a heavy control module fell from a crane and struck the pursuer. This resulted in traumatic amputation of his right leg and forearm, followed by a range of continuing disabilities and losses. On 23 March 2007, on a motion for summary decree, the court found the defenders (as employers) liable to make reparation to the pursuer, and at the same time reserved for further inquiry the issues of (i) contributory negligence, (ii) quantum and (iii) the defenders' claim against the third party by whom the control module and an associated lifting adaptor were supplied. Reservation of the last mentioned issue was, however, in error because the defenders and third party had by then reached agreement as to the consequences inter se of any finding of liability against the defenders.

[2] A debate has now taken place before me on the motion roll, with the pursuer asking for the allowance of issues and the defenders and third party maintaining that what remains of the case is unsuitable for jury trial. Over and above the matter of contributory negligence, the competing submissions concern the complexity or otherwise of the pursuer's claims in respect of inter alia future loss and accommodation costs, and in particular the complexity of the calculations necessary for their determination.

 

Submissions for the defenders and third party
[3] Senior counsel submitted that special cause existed for withholding the case from jury trial. On the issue of contributory negligence, to begin with, the lifting operation was complex, with both the defenders and third party involved, and identifying the precise role and responsibility of the pursuer in such circumstances would not be an easy task. Moreover, the precise mechanism by which the control module came to fall was neither plainly averred by the pursuer nor admitted by the defenders or the third party on Record. There was thus real uncertainty as to the facts on which summary decree was pronounced against the defenders on 23 March 2007, and hence as to the basis on which liability might now be apportioned in a question with the pursuer.

[4] As regards the quantification of the pursuer's claim, attention was drawn to two main areas which were said to involve too many levels of complexity for the case to be suitable for determination by a jury. One of these areas was the pursuer's claim for future loss, and the other his claim in respect of the cost of obtaining specially adapted accommodation. As to the former, the pursuer's averments confirmed a state of considerable uncertainty as to the pursuer's residual working capacity following the accident, and by reference to the new 6th edition of the Ogden Tables it was clear that the necessary calculations would tax the abilities of a trained and experienced judge, far less those of the members of a jury. The averments in question were in the following terms:

"The pursuer has suffered and continues to suffer a loss of earnings. He was off work until January 2005. He now works part-time in the Quality Assurance Department at a lower rate of pay. He will never be fit to work as a Mechanical Fitter again. The pursuer has great difficulty in carrying out his current duties. It is likely that he will have to seek alternative employment. But for the accident the pursuer would have worked to normal retirement age. ... The pursuer is at a substantial disadvantage on the labour market. Even with a prosthesis, the pursuer has very little function in his right arm."

[5] Calculation of the pursuer's lifetime earnings potential if the accident had not occurred would of itself be a difficult task, involving the application of multipliers and of adjustments to reflect contingencies of life other than mortality. One possible approach to the making of such adjustments was discussed and provided for within the Tables (at paragraph 31 ff. of the explanatory notes), but other possible approaches were not. An off-set calculation would also be required to reflect the pursuer's future earning capacity in his injured state, and here the averred uncertainty would render the calculation more complex still. In addition, as paragraphs 22-24 of the explanatory notes made clear, job changes, wage rises, promotions and other anticipated developments would require identification of different periods in the future to which separate multipliers and adjustments must be applied. All in all, when taken along with the pursuer's claim for pension loss, there was a constellation of difficulties which rendered trial by jury unsuitable and inappropriate in this case. Deletion of the sixth sentence of the passage quoted above, as proposed by the pursuer, would make matters even more uncertain and confusing.

[6] Over and above that, according to senior counsel, an unusual and complex calculation would be required for the claimed cost of specially adapted accommodation. The averments here were as follows:

"The pursuer has incurred costs of г2,000 in converting his bathroom. He will require to move to single level accommodation with appropriate alterations. The pursuer has bought a new house for г263,000 that has been adapted for his needs. He is selling his current accommodation for about г100,000."

In England, the Court of Appeal in Roberts v Johnstone 1989 Q.B. 878 had devised a calculation whereby the net capital cost of acquiring appropriate accommodation had to be annualised before application of a multiplier. Unless the choice of property was extravagant and unreasonable, any betterment to the pursuer fell to be ignored. By contrast, any betterment from adaptation works would require to be deducted from their cost. Such calculations were again complex and difficult, involving multiple steps, and it would be unreasonable to entrust such matters to an untrained and inexperienced jury.

[7] Senior counsel also drew attention to certain productions which suggested that much of the pursuer's continuing trouble was due to his own feelings of anger at the extent of his disability, and to the imagined insensitivity of the defenders subsequent to the accident. As in Graham v David A Hall Ltd 1996 SLT 596, this issue of causation would complicate the pursuer's claims for solatium and patrimonial loss, and it was undesirable to have such issues determined by anyone other than a judge.

[8] In the whole circumstances, it was submitted, the obvious complexities inherent in this case militated strongly in favour of a proof before answer. In Easdon v A Clarke & Co (Smithwick) Ltd, Lord Kingarth had withheld the case from jury trial by reason of cumulative complexities affecting quantification of the pursuer's claim. While acknowledging that all cases must turn on their own individual features, senior counsel maintained that Lord Kingarth's case was less complex than the present. He also invited me to follow Lord Kingarth's lead in attaching weight to the difficulty which a trial judge would face in seeking to charge a jury, bearing in mind that claims for serious physical and psychological injuries often contained elements which would be "... notoriously difficult even for a judge properly to assess".

 

Submissions for the pursuer
[9
] In a robust reply, senior counsel for the pursuer insisted on what he called his client's statutory right to a jury trial. This was not a case in which special cause for withholding trial by jury had been made out, and the defenders' submissions were illegitimately based on theoretical possibilities rather than on points of any real substance. Ingenious though they might be, such arguments could not be allowed to deprive the pursuer of his statutory right.

[10] On the matter of contributory negligence, this was now the defenders' problem since the onus of averment and proof lay upon them. If (as appeared to be the case) the precise reason why the control module fell was not specified on Record, that was of no concern to the pursuer who already held a summary decree against the defenders. Indeed, the logical consequence of any lack of specification in this area should be a refusal to remit the defenders' case of contributory negligence to probation.

[11] As regards loss of earnings, the issues were in fact simplified by the 6th edition of the Ogden Tables. Recent research had shown that the only worthwhile factors for adjustment were employment status, educational attainment and the presence or absence of disability. The Tables contained clear guidance as to how such factors should be applied, and there was no additional complexity in a case like this. Many cases involving the application of multipliers had been successfully tried by jury, and the ability of a jury to deal with such matters had been eloquently acknowledged by Lord McCluskey in Reid v BP Oil Grangemouth Refinery Ltd (8 May 2001, unreported).

[12] More fundamentally, perhaps, the defenders' criticisms were founded on a misconception as to the role of pleadings in a personal damages action under Chapter 43 of the Rules of Court. As Lord Carloway correctly observed in Baird v Cowie 2006 CSOH 168, the whole point of the exercise had been to do away with detailed pleadings in such cases. Failing transfer to the ordinary roll, the briefest of outline pleadings were to be expected, and Chapter 43 envisaged that specification might additionally be provided by way of inter alia productions, witness lists, statements of valuation and pre-trial meetings. The defenders therefore had no right to found on apparent uncertainties in the pursuer's pleadings, but for the avoidance of doubt the pursuer now wished to delete by amendment the sentence "... It is likely that he will have to seek alternative employment". The claim for future loss could now be simply valued, as in the pursuer's valuation statement, and there was nothing in the calculations which a jury could not readily master.

[13] The same applied to the pursuer's accommodation claim. The approach identified in Roberts (which had incidentally been followed in Scotland) was quite straightforward, and with appropriate evidence, submissions and charge there was no reason to believe that a jury would find it unduly difficult or complex.

[14] Finally, as regards the pursuer's alleged problem with anger, the defenders' argument ignored the decision of the House of Lords in Simmons v British Steel plc 2004 SC HL 94. There, the pursuer had been held entitled to damages in full where his accident caused or materially contributed to the anger itself. So long as that contribution was not de minimis, only a novus actus interveniens could break the chain of causation. In any event, unlike the situation in Graham, the defenders here were not alleged to have done anything since the accident to bring on the pursuer's psychological state. Once more, the defenders' point was without substance.

[15] For all of these reasons, senior counsel for the pursuer invited me to grant his motion for the allowance of issues in this case.

 

Discussion
[16
] Having taken time to consider the parties' competing submissions, I have reached the conclusion that this case is unsuitable for trial by jury, and that special cause for withholding issues has been made out for the purposes of section 9(2) of the Court of Session Act 1988. Clearly the fact that the Ogden Tables will require to be applied is not, of itself, a sufficient reason for denying trial by jury. Indeed counsel for the defenders made no such suggestion. On the other hand, looking at matters on a practical commonsense basis, it seems to me that even a personal damages action may involve such a degree of complexity that only a proof before answer in front of an experienced judge would be appropriate. At a proof the judge would have the benefit of full submissions on both legal and factual issues, including the proper application of different parts of the Tables and the treatment of matters which these Tables do not address. A judge would also be in a position to derive the fullest assistance from the explanatory notes in the Tables themselves, and would have the facility of taking time to consider all issues carefully before pronouncing a reasoned, and thus reviewable, decision. Trial by jury would, I think, have none of these advantages.

[17] Without going into unnecessary detail, I am satisfied that in the particular circumstances of this case application of the Ogden Tables would be a source of real difficulty in the context of a jury trial. Over and above the fact that complex actuarial evidence might be difficult for a jury to follow, I am struck by the multiplicity of calculations which would need to be attempted, the difficulty of identifying appropriate multipliers, and above all the difficulty of dealing with the many variable and uncertain contingencies for which allowance would have to be made. Whatever evidence might be led on such matters, the necessary assessments would remain within the province of the jury and all decisions would be theirs to take. While "one approach" to the task of adjusting for certain contingencies finds expression within the Tables themselves, other possible approaches are not discussed, and the Tables are silent as to the basis on which additional contingencies (such as for example redundancy, dismissal or cessation of an employer's business, or alternatively an employee's supervening injury or illness) might be factored in. The trial judge would in my view have to be very careful, in such circumstances, not to usurp the jury's function by removing any part of their legitimate discretion on the facts, and this in turn could easily result in the jury falling into error through the absence of necessary guidance. Senior counsel for the pursuer suggested that a jury might be given copies of the Tables themselves, but even he recoiled at the possibility of a jury being let loose on the explanatory notes which the authors of the Tables clearly regarded as essential reading.

[18] In this case, separate and different multipliers would in my view need to be considered in order to calculate (i) the pursuer's likely earnings potential if the accident had not occurred, (ii) the necessary offset for residual post-accident earning capacity, (iii) the claim for pension loss, and (iv) the range of other claims advanced on a lifetime basis or for shorter periods. As regards future earnings in particular, the first two calculations would require consideration of split multipliers in terms of the Tables, for instance where job changes, promotions, wage rises or other such developments were in contemplation. Over and above that, contrary to the submission by senior counsel for the pursuer, I do not consider that the task of adjusting for contingencies would be an easy one, bearing in mind inter alia the existence of commonplace contingencies for which the Ogden Tables do not provide.

[19] Another factor here is the confused and confusing picture presented by the pursuer's pleadings. Notwithstanding the amendment deleting express reference to the likelihood of the pursuer having to seek alternative employment, it seems to me that the remaining averments still reflect a state of real uncertainty as to the pursuer's future working potential. To allow issues in such circumstances would in my view be an unwise and inappropriate step for the court to take. Attempts to resolve such uncertainty in the course of a trial could very well lead to objections and adjournments, and the undesirability of such a situation has often been judicially noted.

[20] In addition, with great respect to the Lord Ordinary in Baird, I do not share his perception of the procedure under Chapter 43 of the Rules of Court. It may be that simplified pleadings are now permitted under the rules, but in my view this does not mean that the court's power to withhold jury trial on inadequate and uncertain averments has been taken away. On the contrary, with the interests of justice in mind, it seems to me that the court must be especially vigilant, in proceedings under Chapter 43, to ensure that issues are not per incuriam allowed in foreseeably unsuitable cases. Moreover, I cannot believe that the framers of Chapter 43 thought it appropriate for defenders to have to guddle about in other documents to ascertain the likely nature of the case against them. Expert reports, for example, may be inconsistent with one another, or incompatible with a party's averments, thereby creating an obvious risk of confusion, misunderstanding and prejudice. The basis on which statements of valuation proceed may similarly be unclear, and contentions at a pre-trial meeting may invite more questions than they answer. In any event productions need only be lodged, and such a meeting held, a short time prior to a proof or trial. Can it ever have been intended that parties should remain in the dark as to the case against them until that late stage, or that the court should until then be disabled from ruling on an opposed motion for issues (which I think would be the logical consequence of the Lord Ordinary's approach)? In my judgment it is still primarily to the parties' pleadings that the court must look in order to gain some idea of the nature and extent of the disputed issues, and also in order to judge the suitability of a case for trial by jury. No doubt advantage may be taken of other documents if they are available, and if their content is clear and consistent, but for the reasons already given I suspect that it will rarely be safe for the court to proceed in this way.

[21] In the circumstances of this case, for example, uncertainty regarding the pursuer's working capacity in his injured state is to my mind a major concern. As already discussed, the pursuer's averments appear to me to confirm that uncertainty, and I do not think that the position is much improved by the brief amendment which I allowed senior counsel to make at the Bar. The remaining averments are still to the effect that the pursuer has great difficulty in carrying out his current duties, that he is at a substantial disadvantage on the labour market, and that even with a prosthesis he has very little function in his right arm. If, in line with the approach of the Lord Ordinary in Baird, I were to seek clarification from the productions already lodged, I would find an even more confused picture. A care-needs report (production 6/1, dated January 2005) expresses uncertainty as to whether any return to work with the defenders, even in a different capacity, was feasible. A psychiatric report (production 6/5, dated July 2005), refers to the emergence of the pursuer's anger since the date of the accident, and quotes the pursuer as saying that he did not think he could now go near the shop floor. On the other hand a prosthesis report (production 6/2, dated March 2005) discloses the pursuer's wish for assistance to permit greater activity, and in particular a return to pre-accident sports such as running, jogging, swimming, skiing, cycling and climbing. Further complication is introduced by an employment report (production 6/6, dated April 2006) which opens up the question of the pursuer's fitness for retraining in other fields, setting out multiple tabulated figures and permutations referable to employment as an engineer, draughtsman, administrator and care worker. Details are also included in respect of employment at managerial level, perhaps on the basis (recorded at paragraphs 20 and 22) that promotion within the defenders' organisation would, in the pursuer's view at least, have been achievable, and that earnings must therefore not be frozen at the pursuer's pre-accident level. Quantum valeat these documents seem to me to confirm the very real difficulty which the court will encounter in trying to assess the pursuer's likely future earnings loss in consequence of the accident. I am conscious, however, that all of these documents are now of some antiquity, that their terms are likely to require revision and updating, and that there is as yet no orthopaedic or other medical assessment in process regarding the pursuer's likely fitness to undertake different types of work in the future. Against that background, I do not find the pursuer's statement of valuation to be of much assistance. It does not obviously reflect the content of any of the productions to which I have referred; the source of the figures used remains unclear; the detailed approach to multipliers and adjustments in the 6th edition of the Ogden Tables does not appear to have been followed; and two out of four headings in the section on future wage loss have been left blank. Consideration of other documents in this case thus renders the picture no less confused and confusing than a consideration of the pleadings alone.

[22] Moving on, it seems to me that the calculation of the pursuer's future loss claims is not the only source of complexity and difficulty rendering a jury trial unsuitable. Assuming that I can properly look at them, two of the pursuer's existing productions disclose that his working capacity, especially in the defenders' employment, may be significantly threatened by feelings of anger which have developed since the date of the accident. This is a matter which would affect, not just solatium, but also several aspects of his claim for patrimonial loss, and in my view causation may prove to be a delicate issue for resolution in due course. As regards the cost of accommodation I do not think that, by itself, the necessary calculation could be regarded as so complex or difficult as to justify the withholding of issues, but in a case where a jury would already face multiple assessments of significant complexity I do not think that the burden of this additional calculation can be dismissed as negligible.

[23] Over and above that, it seems to me that a real difficulty arises from the uncertain factual basis on which the pursuer obtained summary decree against the defenders in March of this year. No doubt the onus of proving fault on the part of the pursuer rests with the defenders, but in order to assess the apportionment of liability as between these parties (looking to both blameworthiness and causative potency) it is surely necessary to know the precise basis on which the summary decree proceeded. This matter is further complicated by the fact that in pursuance of his motion for issues in December 2006, senior counsel by amendment deleted all allegations that the defenders were in breach of duty towards the pursuer at common law, and also all allegations that they were in breach of Regulations 4(1) and 12 of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998 and Regulations 4 and 8(1) of the Lifting Operations and Lifting Equipment Regulations 1998. These deleted regulations concerned, respectively, the suitability of construction and adaptation of work equipment; risks to health and safety from the fall, rupture and disintegration of work equipment; the strength and stability of lifting equipment; and the planning, supervision and conduct of lifting operations. Had the pursuer not departed from all these other alleged grounds of liability, in apparent pursuit of a procedural imperative, he might have been in a position to seek summary decree against the defenders on a much less narrow and uncertain basis. By that stage, however, his sole remaining case concerned the appropriateness of the circumstances in which an item of work equipment was used, and it is in that context that I regard the absence of clear factual averments as presenting a real problem. That problem cannot in my view be resolved, ex post facto, by means of such evidence as may be adduced by the defenders in support of their case of contributory negligence against the pursuer. On the contrary, it seems to me that careful legal analysis of the summary decree, and of the pleadings on which it bore to proceed, will be essential. In my judgment, that exercise could not sensibly be entrusted to a jury, and I cannot imagine how it could be made the subject of appropriate directions by a trial judge.

[24] This brings me on to a further point of general application. In a situation like this, it is obviously necessary for the court to consider, on a broad pragmatic basis, how far a jury might reasonably be expected to cope with the complexities of a given case after receiving proper and adequate directions from the trial judge. Over and above that, however, it is in my view necessary to consider how far the circumstances of a given case truly lend themselves to the constraints of jury trial, and in particular how easy or difficult it would be for the trial judge to frame appropriate directions and convey them to the members of the jury within a reasonable timescale. The more complex the issues, the more difficult it may be for the trial judge to react, at short notice, to what emerges in the course of parties' speeches, and the more difficult it may be for him or her to assess the level of detail to which necessary explanations should be taken. Any error in this regard could be damaging or fatal to the outcome of the trial. Excessive prescription would run the risk of usurping the jury's proper function as masters of the facts, and at the other end of the spectrum inadequate assistance could leave the jury confused and unsure as to how to go about their task. It is my judgment that the task of charging a jury in this case would present formidable difficulties for even the most experienced judge, and I do not think that it would be a responsible exercise of the court's powers to allow issues where such problems can readily be foreseen.

 

Disposal
[25] For all of these reasons, especially when they are viewed in combination, I am in no doubt that special cause exists for withholding this case from jury trial. The pursuer's motion is therefore refused, and I shall allow parties a proof before answer of their respective averments on the outstanding issues of (i) contributory negligence and (ii) quantum.


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