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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Hendry v. Alexander Taylor & Sons & Anor [2007] ScotCS CSOH_178 (09 November 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_178.html
Cite as: [2007] CSOH 178, [2007] ScotCS CSOH_178

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 178

 

PD1643/07

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MALCOLM

 

in the cause

 

LEANNE HENDRY

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

(FIRST) ALEXANDER TAYLOR & SONS and

(SECOND) NIG INSURANCE LIMITED

 

Defenders:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Pursuer: G Clarke; Thorntons LLP

Defenders: Sheldon; DLA Piper Scotland LLP

9 November 2007

 

[1] This is a personal injuries action under chapter 43 of the Rules of Court in which the pursuer seeks damages for injuries sustained in a car accident, for which she blames the first defenders' employee. The second defenders are the road traffic insurers of the first defenders. Liability is admitted. The only issue in the case is quantification of damages. The pursuer avers that she has developed a psychological injury as a result of the accident. She seeks damages for, amongst other things, future wage loss. The pursuer avers that she could not continue in her pre-accident employment which involved a lot of driving, and that her new employment offers a lower salary. The defenders have lodged a specification of documents and applied for a commission and diligence in terms thereof. The first call is not opposed, but calls 2 and 3 are resisted by the pursuer. They are in the following terms:

"(2) The records of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, relating to the pursuer,
except insofar as prepared in contemplation of litigation in order that excepts may be taken therefrom at the site of the Commissioner of all entries showing or tending to show the nature and extent of the injuries or conditions from which the pursuer was suffering when she received treatment to the current date, and all reports upon, charts of, and X-rays and other photographs showing her injuries or conditions whilst receiving said treatment and the certificate of discharge, if any.

(3) The records of Dr Ross Langlands, Newton Port Surgery, Haddington, relating to the pursuer except insofar as prepared in contemplation of litigation in order that excerpts may be taken therefrom at the site of the Commissioner of all entries showing or tending to show the nature and extent of the injuries and conditions from which the pursuer was suffering when receiving treatment from her general practitioner to the present date, and all reports upon, charts of and X-rays and other photographs showing her injuries and conditions to date."

[2] The objection to the calls is that they are not limited to medical records dating from the accident. In asking for approval of the specification as lodged, Mr Sheldon for the defenders explained that the intention is to recover the pursuer's pre and post accident medical records. The future loss claim might be limited by a pre-existing condition which would have restricted future income even if there had been no accident. Whether the pursuer did or did not have such a pre-existing condition is material to the proper quantification of her future loss claim. Mr Sheldon continued by submitting that approval of the disputed calls would facilitate and promote the desirable objective of early settlement of claims. He relied upon a decision of the Court of Appeal in Dunn v British Coal Corporation [1993] ICR 591, in which an appeal against a refusal of a similar request for discovery of pre-accident medical records was upheld. In the course of his judgment, with which the rest of the court agreed, Stuart Smith LJ said at 517:

"In my opinion the documents in question are relevant to the second broader issue which I have defined (the financial loss resulting from the accident), whether or not they actually contain information that leads to the conclusion that the employee would not, but for the accident, have worked until normal retiring age. The employee must prove that the loss of future earnings or earning capacity was caused by the accident. The onus is on him. Strictly speaking therefore he must prove that he is in normal health and does not suffer from any condition which might cut short his working life. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, this is usually not contested by defendants at trial. But the claim for damages is in issue on the pleadings, and documents which show that the employee has never suffered anything more serious than an attack of influenza are relevant to this issue, just as much as documents which show that he is suffering from some condition or disease which is likely to cut short his working life. If that is correct, then this is not 'fishing' discovery at all, although the employer will only be interested if the documents disclosed the latter condition. This consideration only applies where there is a claim for continuing loss of earnings or impaired earning capacity. It will not apply in a great number of cases where a plaintiff has made a full recovery."

[3] Mr Sheldon invited me to follow this approach. He also referred to Lord Macphail's decision in Williamson v The Advocate General for Scotland 2006 SLT 611. In that case the Lord Ordinary did not require to address the specific issue before me, but in allowing a commission and diligence emphasis was placed on the new system of abbreviated pleadings for personal injury actions, and that it would be odd if pleadings sufficient to meet the new rules were insufficient to support a specification. I note that Lord Macphail added,

"It is obviously necessary to guard against the granting of a fishing or speculative diligence for the recovery of documents which a party hopes will disclose material for a case he has not averred in his pleadings when he has no reason to believe that the documents exist or that there is any foundation for the unpleaded case."

[4] This passage from Lord Macphail's opinion encapsulates the opposition to the motion presented on behalf of the pursuer by Mr Clarke. He submitted that the disputed calls were no more than a "fishing exercise" and should be refused on that basis. Approval would be an innovation on normal practice, which involves recovery of medical records dating from the accident. The standard form of specification which the new rules allow to be attached to a summons (Form 43.2-B) is consistent with this approach. Mr Clarke submitted that the confidentiality of medical records should be respected unless a party is able to aver specific circumstances which would justify a wider recovery. He invited me to decline to follow the Court of Appeal decision in Dunn. In the course of the discussion I was informed that this matter has been ventilated before Lords Ordinary in the past. Sometimes the call has been allowed, sometimes refused, but no judge has written on the point.

[5] The nature of a fishing diligence was discussed by Lord Justice Clerk Ross in Civil Service Building Society v MacDougall 1988 SC 58. In delivering the Opinion of the Court his Lordship said at 62: "A fishing diligence is one for which there is no basis in the averments or one which involves too wide a search among all the papers of the haver." In Boyle v Glasgow Royal Infirmary and Associated Hospitals 1969 SC 72, Lord President Clyde at 79 described a fishing diligence as "an attempt to recover documents in the hope that they will disclose material which will enable the party to make a case not yet averred on record." The underlying rationale of our procedure is that recovery is allowed in respect of documents if, and only if, they are relevant to an issue raised on record. Thus in Paterson v Paterson 1919 1 SLT 12, Lord Hunter said, "The recovery of documents in a cause is allowed in order that the court may be put in possession of documentary evidence bearing upon the issues of fact that have to be determined." In Dunn, it was observed that when a pursuer in a personal injury action claims future wage loss he is putting in issue his state of health at the time of the accident, since he must prove that any such loss was caused by the accident. Even if the pre-accident records reveal no illness or medical condition of note, that itself is relevant, albeit unhelpful to the defender. I agree with Stuart Smith LJ that this demonstrates that in such claims calls seeking pre-accident medical records are not in the nature of a speculative or fishing diligence. They are aimed at an issue which the pursuer has raised in the pleadings simply by putting forward a future wage loss claim. Thus the present defenders, who presumably have no knowledge whatsoever of the pursuer's state of health before the accident, are not obliged to make averments which ex hypothesi they cannot make unless and until they see the relevant records. This is not limited to cases under the new rules, though plainly the abbreviated pleadings regime under chapter 43 militates against a strict pleadings based approach to the allowance of a commission and diligence for the recovery of documents. Further, the new procedure requires defenders to submit a valuation of the claim at an early stage. This points to early recovery of all relevant medical records. Mr Clarke accepted that if the defenders were the pursuer's employers and were aware of a relevant pre-accident medical history, then, after adding appropriate averments to the record, they could recover her pre-accident medical records. I see no good reason why defenders who are strangers to the pursuer should be at a disadvantage. Insofar as medical records are confidential to the patient and doctor, it is well established that nonetheless it is in the public interest that a third party can recover them if that is necessary for the proper administration of justice in court proceedings. An analogy could be drawn with the obligation of a pursuer to submit to a medical examination by a doctor instructed by the defenders.

[6] For the above reasons I have decided to grant the commission and diligence in terms of all of the calls in the specification. While the norm may have been to limit calls to medical records from the date of the accident, I do not consider that my decision involves any innovation on or extension to the basic principles underlying commission and diligence for the recovery of documents.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_178.html