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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Yin v. Rapian Bin Suhaili and Others (Brunei Darussalam) [1996] UKPC 10 (20th May, 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1996/10.html Cite as: [1996] UKPC 10 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 17 of 1995
Fong Moi Yin (suing as the Administrator of the
Estate of Tan Ah Ngun) Appellant
v.
(1) Rapian Bin Suhaili @ Mohd
Sofian Suhaili and
(2) Sia Leong Ai Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF BRUNEI DARUSSALAM
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 20th May 1996
------------------
Present
at the hearing:-
Lord Keith of Kinkel
Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle
Lord Nolan
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Steyn
·[Delivered
by Lord Steyn]
-------------------------
1. This is an appeal from a judgment dated 7th
December 1994 of the Court of Appeal of Brunei Darussalam which allowed an
appeal on quantum of damages from a judgment of Sir Denys Roberts C.J.
dated 25th April 1994.
2. For the purposes of the appeal to the Board the
nature of the claim can be sketched quite briefly. On 4th April 1990 Tan Ah Ngun was killed in a motor car
accident. The respondents on the
present appeal are liable in damages for having negligently caused the
deceased's death. The deceased's widow
sued the respondents. She brought her
claim for damages under the Fatal Accidents Act 1846-1908, and the Law Reform
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934, which at the relevant time permitted a
"lost years claim". In
England such a way of assessing a dependants' claim was abolished in 1982.
The
undisputed facts were as follows. At
the time of the accident the deceased was aged 44. His wife was aged 39. They had two children: a daughter aged 11 and a son aged 9. The daughter died some months after the
accident. The deceased, his wife, their
children and the deceased's parents lived in the home of the deceased's sister
and brother-in-law. Altogether 12
persons lived in the house. The
deceased did not pay rent but instead he paid household expenses. He had been a car salesman for 25
years. He was paid a commission in
respect of new and second hand cars sold by him. He also earned commissions from finance and insurance companies.
3. There was a substantial difficulty about
calculating the claims. There was no
record whatever of the deceased's actual earnings. The explanation is that no income tax is payable in Brunei. Moreover, there was no documentary record of
the deceased's expenditures.
4. The trial judge was asked to assess the income
of the deceased on the basis of the cumulative effect of three sources of
evidence, viz.
(1)oral evidence regarding the deceased's
expenditure on his family;
(2)evidence that a reasonably successful salesman
could expect to earn $150,000 per year;
(3)evidence regarding savings in bank accounts.
5. In the result the trial judge assessed damages
on the basis that the deceased's income was $12,000 per month. For present purposes that was the critical
feature of his judgment. That figure of
$12,000 per month was made up as follows:-
(a)the amount which according to the judge's
findings the deceased spent on household expenses i.e. $6,350 per month;
(b)half of the deceased's deposits into his
current account made over 15 months prior to his death: $4,200 per month;
(c)half the deceased's savings over a period of
15 months prior to his death: $1,600 per month.
6. Doing his calculations on the basis of a gross
multiplicand of $12,000 per month, reduced by a "conventional 25%",
the judge awarded to the widow a sum of the order of $1.5 million.
7. On appeal to the Court of Appeal the main issue
was the deceased's income and the multiplicand. The Court of Appeal was alive to the evidential difficulties
which confronted the trial judge. The
Court of Appeal accepted that it was only possible to work backwards from
proved outgoings. The Court of Appeal
proceeded on the basis that the figure of $6,350 in respect of monthly
household expenses was realistic. But
the Court of Appeal did not accept the figures of $4,200 and $1,600. The trial judge had been wrongly asked to
work on a savings figure derived from bank statements which did not take into
account withdrawals. For these figures
the Court of Appeal substituted sums of $1,000 and $650. That amounted to a total of $8,000, compared
to the trial judge's total of $12,000. Like the trial judge, the Court of Appeal reduced its figure by 25% in
respect of the deceased's living expenses. In the result the Court of Appeal reduced the widow's damages to
$864,000.
8. Turning now to the grounds of appeal counsel
for the appellant in a lucid and helpful argument did not invite their
Lordships to enter upon the minutiae of the evidence. Instead he invited their Lordships to
conclude that, on a broad brush approach to the cumulative effect of the
available evidence of the deceased's income, this was a proper case for the
Board's intervention. He squarely faced
the fact that this particular assessment essentially depended on the
reliability of different categories of evidence. Unless there has been a misdirection of law, or the amount is
inordinately low or high, the Board does not generally interfere: see Nance
v. British Columbia Electric Railway Co. Ltd. [1951] AC 601, at 613 per
Viscount Simon L.C. Counsel invited
their Lordships to say that the Court of Appeal misdirected itself in law in
two material respects and that those misdirections flawed the approach of the
Court of Appeal to the evidence. First,
he submitted that in saying that a moderate award (should) always be made, Mr.
Commissioner Huggins, giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal, was guilty of
a misdirection. Counsel said there was
no such principle. In their Lordships'
view the Court of Appeal was merely enunciating the truism that an award must
be fair to both sides. There was no
misdirection on this point. Secondly,
counsel for the widow reminded their Lordships of remarks of Lord Denning M.R.
in Chapman v. Copeland (1966) C.A. 121 (unreported, see Bingham, The
Modern Cases on Negligence, 3rd Edn. (1978) page 31). Lord Denning said:-
"When a man is dead and cannot give
evidence, I am ready to make every reasonable assumption in his favour."
9. Counsel argued that the Court of Appeal
misdirected itself in failing to approach the case in this way. Lord Denning's observation, although no doubt apposite to the case before him,
contains no proposition of law. It is no more than a relevant factor in
assessing evidence, and a rather conservative one in view of the fact that it
refers to making every reasonable assumption. Again, there is no misdirection in the judgment of the Court of
Appeal. It follows that in order to
succeed counsel must persuade their Lordships that the award of $864,000 (about
,450,000) was inordinately low.
10. Counsel for the widow advanced as the principal
point of his case the argument that the Court of Appeal underestimated the
deceased's income. First, he submitted
that the figure of $6,350 in respect of household expenses failed to do justice
to the evidence of the deceased's sister. The judge rejected the sister's evidence as exaggerated. The Court of Appeal sustained this
finding. It is impossible for the Board
to reverse this finding on reliability. In any event the attack of counsel on the figure of $6,350 cannot be
sustained because this is a concurrent finding of fact of the trial judge and
the Court of Appeal. The argument of
counsel under this heading must therefore be rejected. Secondly, counsel argued that the trial
judge and the Court of Appeal ought to have accepted the evidence about the
comparator's salary. If reliable such evidence
is logically probative of income. Unfortunately, after a lengthy trial, the trial judge found this
evidence to be unreliable. The Court of
Appeal upheld this finding. It is
impossible for the Board to base any calculations on this evidence. Thirdly, counsel argued that evidence of
moneys in the deceased's bank account and in other family members' accounts
justified a higher estimation of the deceased's income. The trial judge rejected this evidence as
inherently unreliable. The Court of
Appeal upheld his finding. This
argument is also one that cannot realistically be entertained on this
appeal. It follows that the major
arguments advanced by counsel for the widow must be rejected.
11. That leaves one issue which did trouble their
Lordships somewhat. The trial judge,
and the Court of Appeal, reduced the gross multiplicand by a
"conventional" figure of 25%: see Harris v. Empress Motors Ltd.
[1984] 1 W.L.R. 212. It is by no means
clear that this percentage was apposite on the facts of the present case. On the other hand, even if the percentage is
on the high side, it must be borne in mind that it was adopted by the trial
judge after a trial lasting more than two weeks. It involves an assessment of fact and degree. And the Court of Appeal also adopted
it. There is no case for a drastic
reduction of the 25% figure. And it
must be viewed against the context of the award as a whole. An error in estimation on one aspect will
generally only justify an increase of the award if the award as a whole is too
low. The reason for this approach is
that there is no injustice if the award as a whole is in the right
bracket. The Board was told that
the award, as reduced by the Court of Appeal,
was by far the highest award ever made in such a case in Brunei. The award, as reduced by the Court of
Appeal, was certainly not too low.
12. Their Lordships will advise His Majesty the
Sultan and Yang Di-Pertuan that the appeal ought to be dismissed with costs.
© CROWN
COPYRIGHT as at the date of judgment.