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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Herring v Ministry of Defence [2003] EWCA Civ 528 (10 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/528.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 528, [2004] 1 All ER 44 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE MASTERMAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
MR JUSTICE WALL
____________________
HERRING | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
MINISTRY OF DEFENCE | Respondent |
____________________
Mr Paul Kilcoyne (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for the respondent
Hearing date : 14 March 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Potter:
Introduction
The Basis of the Damages awarded
"15. I find, to the extent of virtual certainty, that when the time was right the Claimant would have applied to the police. That could not have been before June 1996. Depending on recruitment opportunities at the time, I believe he would have applied fairly soon after that but undoubtedly waiting until he had completed his degree in 1997, had he embarked on that in 1995. The probability is therefore that he would have applied by autumn 1997 at the age of 30.
16. I further find, on a wealth of evidence, that there is a strong likelihood that his application would have been successful. How far he would then have progressed is inevitably less certain although my impression of the Claimant, shared by Mr Pask and Mr Ames [who were employment experts], is that his expectation could not reasonably run higher than attaining the rank of Sergeant, which I find he would have attained within 7 years. Of course one cannot entirely rule out the possibility that he might have gone further, but on statistical grounds, as well as considering his academic background and all the information about him, and my assessment of his character and personality, I think that progress beyond Sergeant is too speculative and therefore sufficiently unlikely not to call for evaluation in percentage terms."
Future Earnings Loss
"32. As for the basis for assessing the Claimant's future loss, Mr Huckle recognised that there cannot be certainty that the Claimant would have joined the police but he submitted that if that is a strong probability, effect should be given to it in the following way. Firstly, that the police career is a reasonable model for the loss of career earnings which the Claimant has suffered. If the aim is to put the Claimant so far as possible into the position he would have been but for the accident, then the police career is a reasonable basis for compensation. Secondly, he points out that if, for example, there is a 75% likelihood of joining the police, then there is a corresponding 25% likelihood of some other career in the alternative, which might be similarly remunerated. So one way or the other, he submits, the Claimant should be assessed as losing career earnings in that bracket because he was the sort of man to set himself goals and then to achieve them. He had demonstrated that when he had wanted to become a life guard, when he wanted to qualify as a sports coach, when he wanted to get into an elite branch of the TA and when he wanted to gain an HND, he was able to achieve all of these. He might well have gone on to obtain a law degree. Furthermore, former colleagues had gone on to achieve good earnings so why not the Claimant?
33. Mr Huckle therefore submitted that the Claimant should be compensated as if he would have become a police officer and that this case is not about the loss of a chance."
"34. … The authorities show that provided a chance is substantial, rather than a speculative one, a Claimant will receive compensation even if he cannot show that it is more probable than not that the chance would have fallen in his favour. That plainly does justice to a Claimant who would otherwise received nothing because he could not show a loss on the balance of probabilities. Does that still apply where the Claimant can show a loss on the balance of probabilities, more so if there is a strong likelihood?
35. This seems to me to be a common enough situation. An employee is injured in the course of his employment. His loss is based on the probability that he would have continued to work for that employer or in that industry or profession but it ignores the fact that the current employer may go out of business or the employee may be made redundant or markets may change and so on. Plainly there is a chance of such things happening, quite apart from the factors which give rise to the Ogden tables. In cases like these a court has to weigh up various factors and attempt to arrive at a fair balance, fair in the sense that it properly compensates the injured Claimant but reflects future uncertainties so that the end result is neither over-compensation nor under-compensation. In the present case there cannot be certainty that the Claimant would have become a police officer, less so that he would have been promoted to sergeant. On the other hand I am satisfied that there is, as I have said, a strong likelihood that he would have succeeded in his application to the police. But would he have remained in the police throughout his career? He might have become disenchanted, or been injured, or found it incompatible with family life. There are inevitably more uncertainties than with a Claimant who is already established in a career and has a 'track record'.
36. In my judgment the fairest way of reflecting the lack of certainty in a case such as this is to calculate the Claimant's loss on the basis that he would have become a police officer, rising to sergeant within seven years and then to discount the normal multiplier to reflect the uncertainties on which I have touched."
"(c) Future Loss
Loss of earnings as a police constable from the date of this judgement to 2 September 2004. I have discounted the normal multiplier (15.54 years) to 11.70 to reflect the uncertainties referred to in the body of this judgement. This future loss should therefore be calculated on the basis of a multiplicand of a current police constable's net earnings including overtime multiplied by 2 years (notionally the remainder of the 7 year period from 2 September 1997). On the assumption that the Claimant would have become a sergeant by 2 September 2004, the multiplicand should then become the current net earnings of a sergeant together with overtime multiplied by the balance of the multiplier, namely 9.70 years."
"It seems likely that if his preferred options had failed, the claimant would have qualified for work of that kind. I draw attention to that as reinforcing my assessment of the claimant as someone who would have found another door to open if the first door had been closed in his face. There is no reason to think he would not have achieved good earnings if he set his mind to it, particularly if by then he had a law degree."
"It is a mistake to suppose that it necessarily involves a 'scaling down'. What it involves depends, not on arithmetic, but on considering what the future may have held for the particular individual concerned. He might have fallen sick from time to time, been away from work and unpaid. He might have become unemployed and unable to get work. He might have been injured in circumstances in which he would receive no compensation of any sort. He might have met an untimely death. Allowance must be made for these 'contingencies' or the 'vicissitudes of life' as they are glibly called. But this ought not to be done by ignoring the individual case and making some arbitrary subtraction."
"I know of no reason for assuming that everyone who is injured and rendered for a period unable to work would probably in any event have been for a quarter of that period out of work or away from work and unpaid. No statistics were presented to justify this assumption. Moreover the generalisation that there must be a 'scaling down' for contingencies seems mistaken. All 'contingencies' are not adverse: all 'vicissitudes' are not harmful. A particular claimant might have had prospects or chances of advancement and increasingly remunerative employment. Why count the possible buffets and ignore the rewards of fortune? Each case depends on its own facts."
Residual Earning Capacity
"From a psychological point of view, he is capable of employment, which his physical condition permits him to carry out. He would find it difficult to tolerate employment which does not conform to his expectations of himself."
Residual Loss After Age 55
Loss of Pension
Conclusion
Lord Justice Tuckey:
Mr Justice Wall: