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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Harrison v. West Of Scotland Kart Club & Ors [2008] ScotCS CSOH_33 (21 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_33.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_33, [2008] CSOH 33

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 33

 

A300/01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MENZIES

 

in the cause

 

KENNETH HARRISON

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

(FIRST) WEST OF SCOTLAND KART CLUB AND OTHERS and (SECOND) ROYAL AUTOMOBILE CLUB MOTOR SPORT ASSOCIATION LIMITED

 

Defenders:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

Parties Participating at the Hearing

Pursuer: D Johnston, QC; Digby Brown SSC

First Defenders: Mackay, QC, RG Milligan; Simpson & Marwick WS

Non-participating Party: McGrigor Donald for Second Defenders

 

21 February 2008

 

[1] The pursuer sustained injuries as a result of an accident on about 26 February 1995 when he was test-driving a go-kart on a kart racing circuit belonging to the West of Scotland Kart Club. He was a member of that club at the time of the accident. The second defenders are the governing body of motorsport in Great Britain and are averred to licence and inspect racing tracks such as the first defenders' kart circuit. In this action the pursuer seeks reparation for the loss, injury and damage which he avers that he has sustained through fault and negligence on the part of the defenders, or one or other of them.

[2] The history of the action is a long one, but it has an important bearing on the arguments which were addressed to me at procedure roll debate in January 2008. A claim for damages on behalf of the pursuer was first intimated to the West of Scotland Kart Club on 27 January 1998. This action was raised shortly before the expiry of the triennium, in February 1998. At that time the first defenders were designed as West of Scotland Kart Club, and five named persons at their home addresses, "the office bearers of said club as representing the said club and as individuals". In article 1 of Condescendence it is averred that "the first defenders are the West of Scotland Kart Club and the office bearers thereof. They are designed in the instance." The averments of fault against the first defenders are contained in article 3 of Condescendence of the Summons. There is no attempt in these averments to distinguish between liability as office bearers of the club and liability as individuals. The pursuer avers that his loss, injury and damage "were caused by the fault and negligence of the defenders. It was the defenders' duty to take reasonable care for the safety of persons, such as the pursuer, driving karts on said circuit." This is followed by averments of knowledge, duties and breach of duties.

[3] The action came before the Lord Ordinary in July and August 2000, on the defenders' pleas to relevancy and specification. One of the arguments for the first defenders at debate was that a club could not be liable in delict to a club member and in particular (a) since a club was an unincorporated association, with no legal personality, a member could not sue the club or any other members as representatives of the club, since to do so would be to sue himself; (b) members of a club incur no greater liability simply by being an office bearer; (c) the constitution of a club may allocate responsibility to certain individuals who may then be liable to fellow members in contract or delict, and (d) membership of a club does not provide immunity from being sued by other members for liability which arises independently from membership, but the club cannot be vicariously liable for such liability and the defender in such circumstances would be sued as an individual. The Lord Ordinary held inter alia that the pursuer had pled a sufficiently relevant case against the five named persons as individuals, that the duty of care arose not because the five were office bearers but because of their knowledge and their de facto assumption of the responsibility for taking decisions relating to the safety of the circuit, that there were no relevant averments of fault directed against any club member other than the five, and accordingly the pursuer's averments did not make out a relevant case of fault against the five as representing the club, and that a decree against the first defender would mean that each club member, including the pursuer, would become primarily liable on a joint and several basis, resulting in the pursuer being primarily liable for the wrong for which he sued, contrary to the fundamental principle that a pursuer could not recover damages in respect of his own delict. Other issues were raised at that time, but they are not directly relevant to the arguments before me. The Lord Ordinary's Interlocutor dated 14 November 2000 inter alia dismissed the action so far as directed against (1) the West of Scotland Kart Club and (2) Alfred Murie, Chris Baillie, Bill McDonald, Roseabel Carter and Ina Nelson as representing the said club, and allowed the pursuer, the now first defenders the said Alfred Murie, Chris Baillie, Bill McDonald, Roseabel Carter and Ina Nelson as individuals and the second defenders a Proof before Answer of their respective averments on record. Her Opinion was reported at 2001 SC 367.

[4] The pursuer reclaimed and the second defenders cross-appealed. The pursuer's argument was that he could convene his own club as defenders, basing the argument on the Occupiers Liability (Scotland) Act 1960 and on the responsibility of the club for the negligence of the committee acting as its agents. On 22 December 2000 the cause was appointed to the Summar Roll for hearing. In due course a date for the hearing was fixed for 5 February 2002 and the two ensuing days. On 19 December 2001 the Inner House allowed a Minute of Amendment for the pursuer to be received and allowed the defenders to lodge answers thereto and granted warrant for service of a copy of the reclaiming print and a copy of the Minute of Amendment on 16 named individuals. This was the first occasion on which the pursuer sought to attach fault to these 16 named individuals for their own allegedly negligent acts or omissions. The Minute of Amendment sought inter alia to convene these 16 persons as additional defenders, as the officer bearers and committee members of the club as representing the club and as individuals.

[5] It was noted at a By Order hearing on 4 January 2002 that at that time service of the Minute of Amendment had not been effected and it was doubtful whether the Summar Roll hearing fixed for 5 February 2002 could proceed. On 18 January 2002 the Inner House discharged the diet of Summar Roll set down for 5 February 2002 and the two ensuing days. In December 2002 the Inner House directed that the debate on the Minute of Amendment and Answers thereto should be reserved to the Summar Roll diet. A fresh Summar Roll diet was eventually set down for 17 February 2004 and the three following days. On 11 February 2004 the First Division pronounced an interlocutor in the following terms:

"The Lords, having heard Counsel for the parties, the case having called By Order, and on the motion of the pursuer made at the Bar, there being no opposition thereto in respect that parties are agreed (1) that the time bar plea contained in each of the answers hereinafter referred to will in due course be remitted to the Outer House, and (2) that counsel for the first named defenders will in the course of the Summar Roll diet set down for 17 February 2004 and the three following days make no submissions on behalf of the additional first defenders referred to in the Minute of Amendment hereinafter referred to, allow the Closed Record to be opened up and amended in terms of the Minute of Amendment and Answers, Nos. 36, 41 and 42 of process, all as adjusted, and this having been done, of new closes the Record...."

[6] The reclaiming motion was heard by the First Division on 17 February 2004 and the three following days, and by interlocutor dated 30 March 2004 the First Division refused the reclaiming motion of the pursuer and the cross-appeal for the second named defenders and adhered to the terms of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor dated 14 November 2000.

[7] The First Division held that the Lord Ordinary was correct to dismiss the action against the club "including its office bearers and the other members of the committee. It is not in dispute that enquiry should be allowed to the pursuer's case directed against the five named persons as individuals." (see paragraph [1] of the Lord President's Opinion). The Opinions of the First Division are reported at 2004 SC 615.

[8] It was noted on the interlocutor of 30 March 2004 "when expenses disposed of, case will require to be remitted to Lord Ordinary." Expenses were considered on 17 December 2004 and again on 28 June 2005, and on the latter date the case was remitted to the Lord Ordinary to proceed as accords. On 15 November 2006 on the motion of the first defenders, of consent of the second defenders and the pursuer, the cause was appointed to the Procedure Roll on the defenders' pleas-in-law. The matter came before me for debate on the Procedure Roll in January 2008.

 

Submissions by junior counsel for the first defenders
[9]
Counsel pointed out that the issue of time bar was expressly reserved by the First Division in their interlocutor of 11 February 2004, even though the record was allowed to be amended in terms of the Minute of Amendment and Answers. The pursuer's pleadings as they presently stood were somewhat confusing, because no steps had been taken to amend them to take account of the decisions by the Lord Ordinary or the First Division. For example, the instance still referred to the First Defenders as West of Scotland Kart Club, together with 21 named persons designed as "the office bearers and committee members of said club as representing the said club and as individuals". The averments in Article 6 of Condescendence (at page 22C of the Closed Record as further amended) confused representatives' liability with individual liability. What was meant by the term "the first defenders" in the pursuer's pleadings? It cannot mean the club, as the action directed against the club has been dismissed. It cannot mean named individuals in a representative capacity, because again the action against office bearers and other members of the committee as representing the club has been dismissed. It must mean the five named persons as individuals, in respect of whom a Proof before Answer was allowed. Under reference to Lord Marnoch's Opinion in the Inner House, counsel submitted that there was a distinction between suing the club, suing members as representing the club, and suing members for their individual delictual liability. It was inconceivable that the persons added by the Minute of Amendment were involved as individuals from the outset - there was no hint in the original Closed Record of any involvement by additional defenders.

[10] Counsel referred me to Johnston on Prescription and Limitation at paragraphs 5.09 and 10.74, which stated that in terms of section 17(2) of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973 (as amended) the action has to be commenced within a period of three years after the date ascertained according to the provisions of the section, and that an action commences on the date of citation of the defender. In relation to these additional individuals this must mean after December 2001. I was referred to Boslem v Paterson 1982 SLT 216 in which Lord Ross quoted Thomson & Middleton, Manual of Court of Session Procedure, page 66, "Citation is the step which brings an action into existence by giving the defender notice of it in the formal manner which the law has appointed." The present action was raised against an unincorporated association and five persons said to represent it. There was no mention that any other individuals were or might be at fault themselves. As a matter of fair notice, it could not be said that the 16 newly named individuals had any notice of a claim that they had been negligent until the Minute of Amendment was served on them. Counsel referred me to Kirkcaldy District Council v Household Manufacturing Limited 1987 SLT 617 and observed that, although that case was distinguishable from the present because it was concerned with prescription rather than limitation, it did demonstrate how important it was that an action should be raised against the proper defenders. The classic illustration of this was Pompa's Trustees v Edinburgh Magistrates 1942 SC 119. That case was concerned with the substitution of the proper representative of the true defenders for the wrong representative - the true defenders throughout being the ratepayers. The present case was in a quite different position - the pursuer is trying to attribute personal liability to 16 new individuals. I was referred to the well-known passage in Lord Justice Clerk Cooper's Opinion at page 125:

"Further, our reports contain many decisions showing that the Court will not in general allow a pursuer by amendment to substitute the right defender for the wrong defender, or to cure a radical incompetence in his action, or to change the basis of his case if he seeks to make such amendments only after the expiry of a time limit which would have prevented him at that stage from raising proceedings afresh."

That is what the pursuer seeks to do in the present action - unlike Pompa's Trustees, he is not merely seeking to substitute the correct representatives for the wrong ones, but to introduce liability against 16 new individuals. This was not an example of correcting the defenders' designation, as was the subject of consideration in the reclaiming motion by the Gray Aitken Partnership & Others (unreported) [2006] CSIH 4. If one looked at the original pleadings in the present action there was no question that the pleader intended to blame the 16 individuals added by the Minute of Amendment for their individual fault. This was therefore a clear example of a pursuer seeking to introduce new defenders outwith the triennium, contrary to the provisions of section 17(2) of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973.

[11] Counsel turned to consider the court's power to override the time limit provided for in section 17(2), contained in section 19A of the 1973 Act (as amended). He referred me to the Scottish Law Commission Report No 207, published in December 2007, and to the review of the current legal position at paragraphs 3.9-3.14 of that report. (See in particular B v Murray (No 2) [2005] CSOH 70; 2005 SLT 982, affirmed at [2007] CSIH 39; 2007 SLT 605). Counsel submitted that the key point in the present case was that the pursuer has alternative remedies against the existing defenders. There was no explanation as to why he should have a stronger case against the new defenders than against the original defenders - indeed, two of the five original defenders are (and always have been) specifically targeted for individual blame. It is inconceivable that the pursuer could succeed against the new defenders and not against the original five defenders. The present case is therefore stronger for the defenders, and less easy to justify the exercise of the court's discretion in favour of the pursuer, than was Fleming v Keiller [2006] CSOH 163. It should be remembered that the action was only served against the club and the original five named individuals days before the expiry of the triennium, and there had been lengthy delays since then. Moreover, in terms of paragraph 3.14 of the Scottish Law Commission Report, counsel reminded me that the conduct of the parties was also a relevant consideration, and the pursuer was required to provide a reasonable explanation for his failure to raise his action within the limitation period. In the present case, the pursuer was a member of the club, and had all the knowledge necessary to direct averments of fault against whomsoever he considered to be at fault; there was no question of the defenders or their agents having contributed to any delay.

[12] Counsel turned to the list of factors given at paragraph 3.36 of the Scottish Law Commission Report, identified as potentially relevant to the exercise of the court's discretion. He dealt with these in turn:-

(a) No attempt was made to bring the new 16 individuals into this action until almost seven years after the accident, and there was no explanation for this delay. This factor weighed heavily against the pursuer.

(b) There was nothing in the pleadings to explain the delay.

(c) With regard to the effect that the passage of time has had on the defenders' ability to defend the action and generally on the availability and quality of evidence, 13 years had already passed since the accident. It was likely that at least one further year would elapse until a proof. This will inevitably impact on the recollections of what was said at meetings, particularly with regard to individuals who appeared to have had no (or little) involvement.

(d) With regard to the conduct of the pursuer and in particular how expeditious he was in seeking legal or other expert advice and intimating a claim for damages to the defenders, there was nothing by way of explanation or justification in the pleadings, either with regard to the period between the accident in February 1995 and service of the summons in February 1998, or with regard to the period between February 1998 and service of the Minute of Amendment in about January 2002.

(e) There was nothing to suggest that any legal or other advice may have contributed to the delay.

(f) There was nothing in the pleadings to suggest that any of the defenders (whether the original five or the new 16) had contributed to the delay by their bad conduct.

(g) As already indicated, the pursuer clearly has an alternative remedy against the existing five individual defenders. Moreover, although he avers that he has no remedy against his legal advisers, he does not aver why this is so. Counsel accepted that it was open to the pursuer to supplement his averments by ex parte statements at the bar. Finally, with regard to any other relevant matter, the strength (or otherwise) of the pursuer's claim against the new 16 defenders was a relevant factor. It was clear from the Opinion of the First Division that the pursuer's case based on occupiers liability was doomed to failure. The case against the new defenders must be weaker (or in any event could not be stronger) than the case against the existing five defenders, and this was particularly so for those individuals who only became members of the committee in 1995. It was impossible to conceive of circumstances whereby the new defenders might be liable but the original five named individuals were not liable.

 

Submissions for the pursuer
[13]
Senior counsel for the pursuer moved me to repel the first plea-in-law for the first defenders and to allow a Proof before Answer with all remaining pleas left outstanding. He submitted that it was not a correct categorisation of the circumstances of this case that "new" defenders were brought in in 2002. All the defenders were members of the club, and were properly convened as defenders when the summons was served on the club and five members as representing it in 1998. Although it was correct that none of the 16 individuals were named as defenders when the action was raised, neither was the pursuer himself - yet the effect of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor, affirmed by the First Division, was that the pursuer was found to be suing himself. It must therefore follow that when the summons was served on the office bearers, it was effectively served on all members of the club.

[14] Counsel suggested that the defenders were trying to have their cake and eat it. As the Lord Ordinary observed at paragraph [31] of her Opinion,

".... by suing the 'West of Scotland Kart Club' the pursuer is in effect suing himself. While it is permitted to use a descriptive club name in the instance of a writ (see Renton FC v McDowall, Bridge v South Portland Street Synagogue, and the Sheriff Court Ordinary Cause Rules), to do so is no more than a useful procedural device or shorthand method of referring to everyone who was a member of the club at the relevant time".

It follows that service of the original summons on the club amounted to service on all the individual members, including the "new" 16 defenders. Service of the summons therefore interrupted the running of the limitation period against these defenders. In answer to a question from the court as to whether one could interrupt the running of time by a misconceived writ, senior counsel replied that only if the writ was radically incompetent or a nullity would it not interrupt the limitation period. The pursuer could therefore raise an action against any of the members of the club at any time after dismissal of his action against the club itself, because limitation was distinct from prescription, and one only needed to raise an action in order to stop the running of the limitation period.

[15] Senior counsel referred me to Lord Marnoch's Opinion when this case was before the First Division, particularly at paragraph 25. By suing the club, the pursuer sued all its members as primary obligants. Each of the members was sued only in one capacity, ie as individuals who are members of a club - they were not being sued in a special capacity such as trustees, executors or representatives. When asked what the purpose of the Minute of Amendment was if all members of the club had already been convened as defenders, senior counsel replied "for safety's sake". When asked why the First Division discharged the Summar Roll fixed for February 2002 (with the result that it did not take place until February 2004), apparently because service of the Minute of Amendment had not been effected on all the "new" defenders, senior counsel suggested that the argument that he was now advancing may not have been clearly focussed at that time, but in any event, if there was a procedural mishap at that time, it cannot override the provisions of the substantive law. If the Opinions of the Lord Ordinary and the First Division were correct, it follows that all the individuals now designed in the instance were properly convened as defenders when the action was served on the club in February 1998.

[16] Senior counsel referred me to Thomas Menzies (Builders) Ltd v Anderson & Menzies 1998 SLT 794. This was a case involving interruption of the prescriptive period rather than limitation of actions. It was concerned with the meaning of "proceedings" for the purpose of sections 4(2)(a), 6 and 9 of the 1973 Act. However, it was instructive in showing that, in that context, the court would have regard to earlier proceedings which were procedurally flawed but were not so radically or fundamentally defective as to deprive them of the status of "proceedings". In the present case, senior counsel submitted that there was no attempt to set up an entirely new legal basis for the claim (which he accepted would be likely to fall foul of the rule in Pompa's Trustees); all that was sought to be done in the original Minute of Amendment was to make more pointed averments about the involvement of Bill Hay, Ann Davidson, Richard Murray and the other individuals who had not been previously named.

[17] Turning to the equitable discretion of the court in terms of section 19A of the Act, senior counsel pointed out that all the "new" individuals mentioned in the Minute of Amendment were represented by the same solicitors and same counsel as the individuals who had been named since the summons was served. There was nothing to suggest that the information gathered on behalf of the originally named five individuals would not be available to the remaining 16 individuals. There was therefore no prejudice to them as a result of their being named in the action, albeit some years after the expiry of the triennium, because presumably all preparatory work had been done on their behalf as well. The point was made on behalf of the defenders that the pursuer had all necessary relevant knowledge of the workings of the club as he was himself a member - but the same point applies to all of these named individuals. Indeed, not only were they members of the club, they were members of the Committee, so in a better position than the pursuer himself to know the true position. It was therefore artificial to suggest that there was any prejudice to those individuals referred to in the Minute of Amendment.

[18] Turning to the various factors listed in paragraph 3.36 of the Scottish Law Commission Report No 207, senior counsel responded as follows:-

With regard to (a) and (b), while it was correct that almost seven years elapsed between the accident and service of the Minute of Amendment, this was a complex case which involved the solicitors in much work obtaining expert reports, and it was difficult to establish who were the correct defenders. Two commissions were held, in January and September 2001, to recover club documentation with a view to ascertaining who should be identified in the Minute of Amendment.

(c) As already indicated, it cannot be argued that the "new" defenders have suffered prejudice as a result of the passage of time, because they share the same solicitors and counsel as the originally named five individuals.

(d) No criticism can be made of the pursuer's conduct.

(e) and (f) These are not relevant in this case.

(g) With regard to other remedies which the pursuer may have, this case was unusual. The pursuer does not have an alternative remedy. The Minute of Amendment is merely an elaboration of an existing remedy. When asked if he wished to expand or add to the averment at the end of Article 6 of Condescendence that "the pursuer has no alternative remedy against his legal advisers", Senior counsel declined to do so.

 

Submissions by senior counsel for the defenders
[19]
Senior counsel for the defenders adopted the submissions of junior counsel in their entirety, and moved me to sustain the first defenders' first plea-in-law and to dismiss the action insofar as directed against the individuals named in the Minute of Amendment.

[20] Senior counsel submitted that the action as originally raised was more restricted than it subsequently became. The first defenders were the club and the office bearers thereof. There were no averments of fault directed against any individual. The summons was served on the club and five named persons as the office bearers of the club as representing the club and as individuals, but there was no suggestion anywhere in the averments or the pleas-in-law of individual liability of each member of the club nor any hint of individual fault. What the pursuer's submissions amounted to was precisely what was criticised by Lord Marnoch when the case was before the First Division, namely a confusion between matters of procedure and matters of substantive law. None of the additional 16 defenders were named or suggested as being at fault individually until the Minute of Amendment was served; this amounted to a radical or fundamental defect (to use Lord Eassie's words in Thomas Menzies (Builders) Ltd v Anderson & Menzies). It was also quite clearly different from the situation in Pompa's Trustees where the court allowed amendment so that one representative of the right defender should be replaced by a different representative of the right defender; the 16 individuals referred to in the Minute of Amendment were not being sued in a representative capacity on behalf of a "right defender", but rather were being introduced into the action on the basis of averments of their own individual fault, which had never been made before. Senior counsel submitted that it was an indicator in favour of the defenders' position that the Inner House pronounced an interlocutor on 19 December 2001 granting warrant for service of the reclaiming print together with a copy of the Minute of Amendment on the 16 named individuals, and thereafter on 18 January 2002 discharged the diet of Summar Roll set down for February 2002 as service had not been effected on all the named individuals. If, as was submitted for the pursuer, these named individuals had effectively been parties to the action all along by virtue of being members of the club, there was no need for service on them, and the interlocutors of 19 December 2001 and 18 January 2002 (which resulted in a two year delay in the proceedings) were otiose. Senior counsel also pointed out that it had been conceded on behalf of the pursuer before the Lord Ordinary that being a member or office bearer of a club does not per se result in a duty of care being owed by the member or office bearer to other members. (See paragraph [26] of the Lord Ordinary's Opinion). However, the summons as served on the club and the five named members proceeded solely on the basis of liability as members or office bearers of the club. There was no suggestion of fault on the part of any individual, and that remained the case until well after the record closed - see the pleadings in the Closed Record (No 13 of process) which bears the court date stamp 15 February 1999. It is a radical step to move from suing a club and five office bearers on the basis of the club's liability, to suing a further 16 individuals on the basis of their individual fault. Senior counsel submitted that the pursuer's submissions flew in the face of all the authorities.

[21] Turning to the equitable discretion under section 19A, senior counsel suggested that some of the factors identified as relevant in paragraph 3.36 of the Scottish Law Commission Report had not been answered for the pursuer. With regard to paragraph (b), no explanation was given as to why the action had not been brought timeously against the 16 named individuals. Why had the pursuer not identified them earlier as committee members with individual fault? He was a member of the club and it is difficult to understand why he did not know who comprised its committee. With regard to paragraph (c), it was wrong to suggest that there was no prejudice to the 16 persons named in the Minute of Amendment; prior to service of the reclaiming print and the Minute of Amendment on them, it had been unnecessary for the solicitors acting on behalf of the first defenders as originally constituted to investigate the actings of these 16 individuals. A period of nearly seven years elapsed before investigations commenced.

[22] With regard to paragraph (g) of the Scottish Law Commission Report, it was difficult, if not impossible, to see any advantage to the pursuer in having these additional 16 individuals in the action. There was substantial disadvantage to the 16 individuals, because the pursuer was legally aided and the defenders will require to go to the trouble, worry and expense of preparing for a proof and appearing at the proof, with little prospect of recovering all, or even any, of their expenses. The doubts expressed by the First Division regarding the strength of the pursuer's case under the Occupiers Liability (Scotland) Act 1960 were also relevant in considering where the equities lie in terms of section 19A. The convening of 16 additional individuals as additional defenders does not advance the pursuer's prospects of obtaining decree under the 1960 Act at all. There would be inevitable prejudice to the 16 "new" defenders if this action is not dismissed against them. By contrast, it is difficult to see any prejudice to the pursuer if he is confined to suing the first defenders as originally constituted.

 

Reply by senior counsel for the pursuer
[23]
Senior counsel submitted that the summons was served in the proper form, ie on the club and specified office bearers. That was the proper way in which to convene a club as a defender. The ratio of the First Division's decision was that the pursuer was suing himself (although he was not named as a defender). It must follow that he was suing every member of the club, and therefore these 16 members were properly convened as defenders from the outset. He renewed his motion that the first defenders' first plea-in-law should be repelled and that a Proof before Answer should be allowed with all remaining pleas outstanding.

 

Discussion
[24]
I consider that this action insofar as directed at the 16 "new" defenders is timebarred by reason of section 17(2) of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973. There are several factors which cause me to reach this view.

[25] The action as originally framed was directed against the club, and its members qua members. There was no suggestion at that time that the pursuer was attributing individual fault to any of the individuals who formed the club. There were five office bearers who were sued, and it is stated in the instance of the summons that they were sued "as representing the said club and as individuals", but there was nothing to suggest that they were individually at fault, and certainly nothing to suggest that any other members of the club who were unnamed in the summons were individually at fault.

[26] By the time that the matter came before the Lord Ordinary for debate in July and August 2000, the pursuer was asserting fault of the club and fault of the five named individuals, but was still not asserting that anyone else had caused this accident by their individual fault. The Lord Ordinary dismissed the action against the club, and against the five members in their representative capacity, but remitted the pursuer's case against the five named persons as individuals to a Proof before Answer. The First Division upheld that decision. From 14 November 2000, there was no action pending against the club nor against anyone representing the club. The pursuer's action was directed against the five named individuals as individuals (and against the second named defenders). It is correct that one of the grounds of the Lord Ordinary's decision, and of the decision of the First Division, was that the pursuer could not sue himself, and that he could not therefore sue the club. However, it should be borne in mind that it was accepted on behalf of the pursuer that being a member of a club (or an office bearer of a club) does not per se result in a duty of care being owed by the member (or office bearer) to other members.

[27] It follows that although the 16 "new" defenders may have had an interest in the action as earlier framed, there was nothing in that action which disclosed that they might have any liability in damages towards the pursuer because of this accident. Insofar as they might be described as defenders to the action, this was only because they were members of the club - and it was conceded that membership of a club does not per se result in a duty of care being owed by one member to other members. It should also be borne in mind that until the Closed Record was allowed to be opened up and amended in terms of the Minute of Amendment, by interlocutor dated 11 February 2004, the pursuer could not have obtained decree against the 16 "new" defenders. He could only have obtained decree against the defenders originally named - see Lord Marnoch's Opinion at paragraph [23] where he observed with regard to the procedure that a club can be convened as defenders through the addition to its name of certain named individuals in a representative capacity:

"The effect of such procedure is nevertheless to convene the club or association as a whole, albeit any decree obtained can only be enforced directly against the named representatives".

[28] The Minute of Amendment which was allowed to be received on 19 December 2001 therefore resulted in a significant and radical change of position for the 16 "new" defenders. Not only was it being alleged in the Minute of Amendment that they were individually to blame for the accident that occurred in 1995, if the pursuer was successful in his action against the first defenders any decree would be enforceable against them individually. Their interest in the action suddenly became fundamental. No doubt it was for this reason that the First Division ordered service of the Minute of Amendment and the reclaiming print on each of them, and when it was apparent that such service might not have been effected on them before the diet of Summar Roll fixed for February 2002, that diet was discharged and a delay of some two years in the procedure resulted.

[29] This is a far cry from the situation in Pompa's Trustees, in which the pursuer had already identified correctly the party potentially liable to pay compensation (namely the community concerned, or the ratepayers) but had wrongly identified the representatives of that party, and sought merely to substitute one representative of the right defender for a different representative of the right defender. The change sought to be procured by this Minute of Amendment is, to use Lord Eassie's words (albeit in the different context of prescription) in Thomas Menzies Builders Ltd v Anderson & Menzies, both radical and fundamental. Prior to the interlocutor of 19 December 2001 the pursuer had no claim against the club, this claim having been dismissed in November 2000. That dismissal was subsequently upheld on appeal. As at December 2001 the pursuer had a case of individual fault against five named individuals. By virtue of the Minute of Amendment he sought to make a case of individual fault against not only those five individuals but 16 other individuals. Those other individuals had never previously been named in the action, and such involvement as they had in the action was on a basis which had been conceded to be one which did not per se result in a duty of care to other members. I do not consider that the raising of the summons against the club and five office bearers as representing it and as individuals is sufficient to enable the pursuer to bring an action against 16 other named individuals after the expiry of the triennium. I am therefore of the view that the action as directed against the 16 individuals mentioned in the Minute of Amendment No 36 of process is time barred by virtue of section 17 of the 1973 Act.

[30] The question then arises as to whether the action should nonetheless be allowed to proceed against these named individuals, in the exercise of the equitable discretion conferred by section 19A of the 1973 Act. In this regard, while it has no force in the law, both parties appeared to accept that the list of factors contained in paragraph 3.36 of the Scottish Law Commission Report No 207 was a helpful list of factors which might be taken into account by a court. With regard to paragraphs (a) and (b), there was an elapse of almost seven years between the accident in February 1995 and the attempts at service of the Minute of Amendment on the named individuals in January 2002. There was nothing in the pleadings to explain this delay, but averments can for this purpose be supplemented by ex parte statements at the bar. Senior counsel for the pursuer told me that this was a complex case and his instructing agents had experienced difficulties in establishing who were the correct defenders; indeed, two commissions were held in January and September 2001 to recover documentation of the club to identify who should be included in a Minute of Amendment. However, it is not clear to me why these steps were not taken until 2001, the accident having happened in February 1995. No attempt was made to explain this delay, nor to explain why it was so difficult to establish who were the correct defenders.

[31] With regard to the effect that the passage of time is likely to have had on the ability of the 16 "new" defenders to defend the action, it is relevant that they are represented by the same counsel and agents as have represented (and continue to represent) the five persons originally named in the summons. To that extent, therefore, it may be that certain investigations relevant to all defenders have been carried out, or were carried out before January 2002. However, the involvement of each of the "new" defenders is not necessarily the same as that of the original five. Moreover, there is in my view some force in the argument presented by junior counsel for the defenders that the accident happened some 13 years ago and it is likely to be at least another year before any proof takes place. Such a passage of time will inevitably have an adverse impact on the recollections of witnesses, for example, about what was said at meetings, particularly in the case of people who had little or no involvement in the meetings and had no reason to consult their memories nor to consider the matter until about seven years after the accident.

[32] There is no attempt in the pleadings to explain how expeditious the pursuer was in seeking legal and other expert advice and intimating a claim of damages. I was told that the claim was first intimated to the club on 27 January 1998, some 35 months after the accident, and the summons was served on the original defenders only days before the expiry of the triennium. Similarly, there is no attempt to explain why the pursuer has no alternative remedy against his legal advisers. There is a bald averment to this effect, but senior counsel declined to expand on this at all.

[33] There is also considerable force in the argument advanced for the defenders that the pursuer already has a remedy against the five originally named defenders and it is difficult to see what additional remedy he might have against the 16 additional individuals. As counsel for the defenders suggested, it is difficult to conceive of circumstances whereby the pursuer might succeed against the 16 "new" defenders but fail against the five originally named individuals. It is therefore difficult to imagine what prejudice would accrue to the pursuer by the court exercising its discretion under section 19A in favour of the persons named in the Minute of Amendment, and against the pursuer.

[34] Weighing all these factors together, and considering the whole circumstances of this case, I am not persuaded that it would be equitable to allow the pursuer to maintain this action against the 16 individuals named in the Minute of Amendment (No 36 of process). I shall accordingly sustain the first plea-in-law for the first defenders and dismiss the action against the individuals named in the Minute of Amendment for the pursuer (No 36 of process). Quoad ultra I shall allow a Proof before Answer with all pleas standing.

 


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