BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bloy & Anor v Motor Insurers' Bureau [2013] EWCA Civ 1543 (29 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1543.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 464, [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep IR 75, [2013] EWCA Civ 1543 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2013] WLR(D) 464] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
and
LADY JUSTICE SHARP
____________________
GEORGINA BLOY CHARLIE IRESON (a minor, suing by his mother and litigation friend, GEORGINA BLOY) |
Claimants/Respondents |
|
- and – |
||
MOTOR INSURERS' BUREAU |
Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Fergus Randolph QC (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Defendant/Appellant
Hearing dates : 22 October 2013
Judgment
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor, Sir Terence Etherton :
Introduction
The factual background
The MIB
The Motor Insurance Directives
"Article 20
Special provisions concerning compensation for injured parties following an accident in a Member State other than that of their residence
The object of Articles 20 to 26 is to lay down special provisions applicable to injured parties entitled to compensation in respect of any loss or injury resulting from accidents occurring in a Member State other than the Member State of residence of the injured party which are caused by the use of vehicles insured and normally based in a Member State."
"Article 24
Compensation bodies
1. Each Member State shall establish or approve a compensation body responsible for providing compensation to injured parties in the cases referred to in Article 20(1).
Such injured parties may present a claim to the compensation body in their Member State of residence:
…..
2. The compensation body which has compensated the injured party in his Member State of residence shall be entitled to claim reimbursement of the sum paid by way of compensation from the compensation body in the Member State in which the insurance undertaking which issued the policy is established.
The latter body shall be subrogated to the injured party in his rights against the person who caused the accident or his insurance undertaking in so far as the compensation body in the Member State of residence of the injured party has provided compensation for the loss or injury suffered.
Each Member State shall be obliged to acknowledge this subrogation as provided for by any other Member State.
3. This Article shall take effect:
(a) after an agreement has been concluded between the compensation bodies established or approved by the Member States relating to their functions and obligations and the procedures for reimbursement;
(b) from the date fixed by the Commission upon its having ascertained in close cooperation with the Member States that such an agreement has been concluded."
"Article 25
Compensation
1. If it is impossible to identify the vehicle or if, within two months of the date of the accident, it is impossible to identify the insurance undertaking, the injured party may apply for compensation from the compensation body in the Member State where he resides. The compensation shall be provided in accordance with the provisions of Articles 9 and 10. The compensation body shall then have a claim, on the conditions laid down in Article 24(2):
(a) where the insurance undertaking cannot be identified: against the guarantee fund in the Member State where the vehicle is normally based; …"
"Article 9
Minimum amounts
1. Without prejudice to any higher guarantees which Member States may prescribe, each Member State shall require the insurance referred to in Article 3 to be compulsory at least in respect of the following amounts:
(a) in the case of personal injury, a minimum amount of cover of EUR 1 000 000 per victim or EUR 5 000 000 per claim, whatever the number of victims;
(b) in the case of damage to property, EUR 1 000 000 per claim, whatever the number of victims.
If necessary, Member States may establish a transitional period extending until 11 June 2012 at the latest within which to adapt their minimum amounts of cover to the amounts provided for in the first subparagraph.
Member States establishing such a transitional period shall inform the Commission thereof and indicate the duration of the transitional period.
However, until 11 December 2009 at the latest, Member States shall increase guarantees to at least a half of the levels provided for in the first subparagraph.
…"
"Article 10
Body responsible for compensation
1. Each Member State shall set up or authorise a body with the task of providing compensation, at least up to the limits of the insurance obligation for damage to property or personal injuries caused by an unidentified vehicle or a vehicle for which the insurance obligation provided for in Article 3 has not been satisfied.
…
4. Each Member State shall apply its laws, regulations and administrative provisions to the payment of compensation by the body, without prejudice to any other practice which is more favourable to the victim."
"Article 28
National Provisions
1. Member States may, in accordance with the Treaty, maintain or bring into force provisions which are more favourable to injured parties than the provisions needed to comply with this Directive."
The 2002 Agreement
"Clause 5
The aim of the second part of this Agreement, is to define the tasks and obligations of the undersigned Compensation Bodies and Guarantee Funds within the framework of Article 7 of Directive 2000/26/EC as well as the reimbursement procedures."
"Clause 6
The function of each signatory Compensation Body, in its capacity as the Compensation Body recognised by the Member State where it is established, is to compensate injured parties following an accident which comes within the scope of Directive 2000/26/EC as defined in Article 1 of that Directive, where one of the following two situations arises:
6.1. where identification of the vehicle is not possible;
6.2 if, within a period of two months following the accident, it is impossible to identify the insurance undertaking."
"Clause 7
7.1 In either of the situations referred to in Clause 6 above, the compensation Body which has received a claim must immediately inform, depending on the circumstances, either the Guarantee Fund defined in Article 1 of Directive 84/5/EEC of the Member State in which the accident took place or the Guarantee Fund of the Member State in which the road traffic vehicle which caused the accident is normally based.
7.2 When it makes a compensation payment to an injured party, the Compensation Body shall;
- reply to requests for information enabling the claim to be assessed, which it receives from the final paying body for reimbursement (Guarantee Fund),
- apply, in evaluating liability and assessing compensation, the law of the country in which the accident occurred.
- comply with the provisions of Article 1 of Directive 84/5/EEC."
The 2003 Regulations
"Response from the compensation body
12. (1) Upon receipt of a claim for compensation under regulation 11, the compensation body shall immediately notify—
(a) the insurer of the vehicle the use of which is alleged to have caused the accident, or that insurer's claims representative;
(b) the foreign compensation body in the EEA State in which that insurer's establishment is situated; and
(c) if known, the person who is alleged to have caused the accident,
that it has received a claim from the injured party and that it will respond to that claim within two months from the date on which the claim was received.
(2) The compensation body shall respond to a claim for compensation within two months of receiving the claim.
(3) If the injured party satisfies the compensation body as to the matters specified in paragraph (4), the compensation body shall indemnify the injured party in respect of the loss and damage described in paragraph (4)(b).
(4) The matters referred to in paragraph (3) are—
(a) that a person whose liability for the use of the vehicle is insured by the insurer referred to in regulation 11(1)(c) is liable to the injured party in respect of the accident which is the subject of the claim, and
(b) the amount of loss and damage (including interest) that is properly recoverable in consequence of that accident by the injured party from that person under the laws applying in that part of the United Kingdom in which the injured party resided at the date of the accident.
(5) …"
"Entitlement to compensation where vehicle or insurer is not identified
13. (1) This regulation applies where—
(a) an accident, caused by or arising out of the use of a vehicle which is normally based in an EEA State, occurs on the territory of—
(i) an EEA State other than the United Kingdom, or
(ii) a subscribing State,
and an injured party resides in the United Kingdom,
(b) that injured party has made a request for information under regulation 9(2) , and
(c) it has proved impossible—
(i) to identify the vehicle the use of which is alleged to have been responsible for the accident, or
(ii) within a period of two months after the date of the request, to identify an insurance undertaking which insures the use of the vehicle.
(2) Where this regulation applies—
(a) the injured party may make a claim for compensation from the compensation body, and
(b) the compensation body shall compensate the injured party in accordance with the provisions of Article 1 of the second motor insurance directive as if it were the body authorised under paragraph 4 of that Article and the accident had occurred in Great Britain."
"so long as the compensation in question does not exceed the amount payable by the guarantee fund in the Member State in which the vehicle causing the accident was normally based".
The proceedings
"whether the Defendant is liable to pay compensation to the Claimants assessed in accordance with Lithuanian Law".
The Judgment of HH Judge Platts
"1. The ruling on the preliminary issue is that the defendant is liable to pay compensation to the claimants assessed in accordance with English and not Lithuanian law and such compensation is not limited by reference to the amount that the defendant might recover by way of reimbursement from the Motor Insurers Bureau of the Republic of Lithuania."
The Appeal
Ground 1
"The Court was wrong to find that the decision of the Court of Appeal in Jacobs was directly applicable to the facts of the present case – see paragraph 32 of the judgment – having found earlier that the issue for determination in the present case: that of the lawfulness of the cap on MIB's liability, was not an argument considered by the Court of Appeal in Jacobs."
Ground 2
"The Court was wrong to dismiss MIB's submissions on private international law and in particular that the cap on its liability, being a matter of substantive law, was governed by the lex causae – here Lithuanian law – rather than the lex fori, that would only be appropriate to procedural matters such as the assessment or quantification of damages. In particular, the learned judge's reliance on the Court of Appeal's decision in Jacobs was erroneous given his admission that the Jacobs decision did not concern or otherwise relate to such a liability cap."
"8. In determining the meaning of the word "procedure" the context in which the word is being used is of the greatest significance. In section 14(3)(b) "procedure" is used in conjunction with "rules of evidence, pleading or practice". In that context it is natural to regard the assessment of damages as being a matter of procedure rather than substance.
9. The fact that the present context is one in the field of conflicts of law does not mean that "procedure" is being used in a special sense rather than in the sense in which you would expect it to be used having regard to the context in which it appears. It makes good practical sense to draw a distinction between the treatment of questions of procedure and questions of substance; the former to be dealt, as you would expect in accordance with the procedure normally applied by the court in which the proceedings are brought.
10. This does not however mean that a cap on the amount of damages is obviously a question of procedure rather than a question of substance and if I had been left in doubt as to the correct answer I would certainly have been prepared to apply Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593."
"The broad principle should surely be that a person should not be permitted to claim in England in respect of a matter for which civil liability does not exist, or is excluded, under the law of the place where the wrong was committed. This non-existence of exclusion may be for a variety of reasons and it would be unwise to attempt a generalisation relevant to the variety of possible wrongs. But in relation to claims for personal injuries one may say that provisions of the lex delicti, denying, or limiting, or qualifying recovery of damages because of some relationship of the defendant to the plaintiff, or in respect of some interest of the plaintiff (such as loss of consortium) or some head of damage (such as pain and suffering) should be given effect to."
"46. … Cope v Doherty [(1858) 4 K & J 367, 384-385 and (1858) 2 De G & J 614, 626] is authority for the proposition that a contractual term which limits the obligation to pay damages for a breach of contract or a tort, or a statutory provision which is deemed to operate as such a term, qualifies the substantive obligation. It is not part of the rules of the lex fori for the assessment of damages. "
"50. … I could add other possible uncertainties which have not yet come before the courts. For example, there may be rules of foreign or domestic law, under which a tort or other wrongful act gives rise to a liability to pay a conventional sum of money, which make it impossible to separate the concept of actionable damage from the concept of a remedy for that damage. It might be more realistic to say that the rule simply lays down the conditions under which the claimant is entitled to payment of a prescribed sum of money. But I do not propose to explore this or other hypothetical cases because they do not arise in this case and, so far as I know, have not arisen in the past."
"24. In applying this distinction to actions in tort, the courts have distinguished between the kind of damage which constitutes an actionable injury and the assessment of compensation (ie damages) for the injury which has been held to be actionable. The identification of actionable damage is an integral part of the rules which determine liability. As I have previously had occasion to say, it makes no sense simply to say that someone is liable in tort. He must be liable for something and the rules which determine what he is liable for are inseparable from the rules which determine the conduct which gives rise to liability. Thus the rules which exclude damage from the scope of liability on the grounds that it does not fall within the ambit of the liability rule or does not have the prescribed causal connection with the wrongful act, or which require that the damage should have been reasonably foreseeable, are all rules which determine whether there is liability for the damage in question. On the other hand, whether the claimant is awarded money damages (and if so, how much) or, for example, restitution in kind, is a question of remedy."
"39. My Lords, the next question is whether the provisions of MACA to which I have referred should be characterised as relating to the actionability of the economic and non-economic damage suffered by Mr Harding or to the remedies which the courts of New South Wales provide for such damage. On this point we could not have better authority than that of the High Court of Australia in Stevens v Head (1993) 176 CLR 433. The majority (Brennan, Dawson, Toohey and McHugh JJ) analysed the equivalent damages-limitation provisions of the Motor Accidents Act 1988, at pp 454-460, and concluded that they were concerned with quantification rather than heads of damage. Although MACA is more restrictive of the court's power to award damages than the 1988 Act, the character of the relevant provisions is in my opinion the same."
Ground 3
"This system of having claims representatives in the injured party's Member State of residence affects neither the substantive law to be applied in each individual case nor the matter of jurisdiction."
Ground 4
"The Court was wrong to refuse to order a preliminary reference to the Court of Justice of the European Union given that on its own admission it found that its decision would lead to (a) inconsistency with an agreement specifically referred to in the relevant EU legislation and (b) an incompatibility with certain stated aims of that legislation.
As the relevant facts were agreed and the issue before the Court was one of interpretation of EU legislation, the issue should have been subject to a preliminary reference."
"1. When a person resident in one Member State has been injured in a road traffic accident in another Member State and that accident was caused by an uninsured driver resident in that latter Member State, are the provisions of the EU motor insurance directives, and in particular Directive 84/5/EEC and Directive 2000/26/EC, which provisions were subsequently incorporated into Directive 2009/103/EC, to be interpreted as permitting the compensation body in the Member State in which the victim resides to limit the compensation due to the victim to the maximum amount payable in the Member State in which the accident occurred, which amount (and no more) will be reimbursed by the compensation body in that latter Member State?
2. Is the answer to the above-mentioned question affected by the fact that the 2002 Inter-Bureaux Agreement, which agreement was specifically envisaged by Directive 2000/26/EC, provides that in circumstances such as those relevant to the present proceedings, the compensation body in the Member State in which the victim resides is to apply, when evaluating liability and assessing compensation, the law of the country in which the accident occurred?"
Conclusion
"(12) Member States' obligations to guarantee insurance cover at least in respect of certain minimum amounts constitute an important element in ensuring the protection of victims. The minimum amount of cover for personal injury should be calculated so as to compensate fully and fairly all victims who have suffered very serious injuries, while taking into account the low frequency of accidents involving several victims and the small number of accidents in which several victims suffer very serious injuries in the course of one and the same event. A minimum amount of cover per victim or per claim should be provided for. With a view to facilitating the introduction of these minimum amounts, a transitional period should be established. However, a period shorter than the transitional period should be provided for, in which Member States should increase these amounts to at least half the levels provided for."
"(14) It is necessary to make provision for a body to guarantee that the victim will not remain without compensation where the vehicle which caused the accident is uninsured or unidentified. It is important to provide that the victim of such an accident should be able to apply directly to that body as a first point of contact. However, Member States should be given the possibility of applying certain limited exclusions as regards the payment of compensation by that body and of providing that compensation for damage to property caused by an unidentified vehicle may be limited or excluded in view of the danger of fraud. "
"(18) In the case of an accident caused by an uninsured vehicle, the body which compensates victims of accidents caused by uninsured or unidentified vehicles is better placed than the victim to bring an action against the party liable. Therefore, it should be provided that that body cannot require that victim, if he is to be compensated, to establish that the party liable is unable or refuses to pay."
"(20) Motor vehicle accident victims should be guaranteed comparable treatment irrespective of where in the Community accidents occur."
"(34) Parties injured as a result of a motor vehicle accident falling within the scope of this Directive and occurring in a State other than that of their residence should be entitled to claim in their Member State of residence against a claims representative appointed there by the insurance undertaking of the responsible party. This solution would enable damage suffered by injured parties outside their Member State of residence to be dealt with under procedures which are familiar to them."
"(35) This system of having claims representatives in the injured party's Member State of residence affects neither the substantive law to be applied in each individual case nor the matter of jurisdiction."
"(47) In order to ensure that the injured party will not remain without the compensation to which he is entitled, it is necessary to make provision for a compensation body to which the injured party may apply where the insurance undertaking has failed to appoint a representative or is manifestly dilatory in settling a claim or where the insurance undertaking cannot be identified. The intervention of the compensation body should be limited to rare individual cases where the insurance undertaking has failed to comply with its duties in spite of the deterrent effect of the potential imposition of penalties."
"(48) The role played by the compensation body is that of settling the claim in respect of any loss or injury suffered by the injured party only in cases which are capable of objective determination and therefore the compensation body should limit its activity to verifying that an offer of compensation has been made in accordance with the time limits and procedures laid down, without any assessment of the merits."
"(50) The compensation body should have a right of subrogation in so far as it has compensated the injured party. In order to facilitate enforcement of the compensation body's claim against the insurance undertaking where the latter has failed to appoint a claims representative or is manifestly dilatory in settling a claim, the body providing compensation in the injured party's State should also enjoy an automatic right of reimbursement with subrogation to the rights of the injured party on the part of the corresponding body in the State where the insurance undertaking is established. This body is the best placed to institute proceedings for recourse against the insurance undertaking."
"(52) This system can be made to function by means of an agreement between the compensation bodies established or approved by the Member States, defining their functions and obligations and the procedures for reimbursement."
"(53) Where it is impossible to identify the insurer of a vehicle, it should be provided that the ultimate debtor in respect of the damages to be paid to the injured party is the guarantee fund provided for this purpose situated in the Member State where the uninsured vehicle, the use of which has caused the accident, is normally based. Where it is impossible to identify the vehicle, it should be provided that the ultimate debtor is the guarantee fund provided for this purpose situated in the Member State in which the accident occurred."
Lady Justice Hallett
Lady Justice Sharp