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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Browning & Anor v Messrs Brachers (a firm) [2004] EWHC 16 (QB) (13 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/16.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 16 (QB), [2007] Lloyd's Rep PN 24 |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) William Browning (2) Maureen Browning |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Messrs Brachers (A Firm) |
Defendant |
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Ian Croxford QC and Stephen Worthington (instructed by Barlow, Lyde & Gilbert) for the Defendant
Hearing dates : 26 November – 15 December 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Jack:
Introduction
Johne's Disease
Negligence in the conduct of the action brought by Mr Gilham
The approach to the assessment of loss
'1. The legal burden lies on the plaintiff to prove that in losing the opportunity to pursue his claim (or defence to counter-claim) he has lost something of value i.e. that his claim (or defence) had a real and substantial rather than merely a negligible prospect of success. …..
2. The evidential burden lies on the defendants to show that despite their having acted for the plaintiff in the litigation and charged for their services, that litigation was of no value to their client, so that he lost nothing by their negligence in causing it to be struck out. Plainly the burden is heavier in a case where the solicitors have failed to advise their client of the hopelessness of his position and heavier still where, as here, two firms of solicitors successively have failed to do so. If, of course, the solicitors have advised their client with regard to the merits of his claim (or defence) such advice is likely to be highly relevant.
3. If and insofar as the court may now have greater difficulty in discerning the strength of the plaintiff's original claim (or defence) than it would have had at the time of the original action, such difficulty should not count against him, but rather against his negligent solicitors. It is quite likely that the delay will have caused such difficulty and quite possible, indeed, that that is why the original action was struck out in the first place. That, however, is not inevitable: it will not be the case in particular (a) where the original claim (or defence) turned on questions of law or the interpretation of documents, or (b) where the only possible prejudice from the delay can have been to the other side's case.
4. If and when the court decides that the plaintiff's chances in the original action were more than merely negligible it will then have to evaluate them. That requires the court to make a realistic assessment of what would have been the plaintiff's prospects of success had the original litigation been fought out. Generally speaking one would expect the court to tend towards a generous assessment given that it was the defendant's negligence which lost the plaintiff the opportunity of succeeding in full or fuller measure.
"….the court should, as I see it, assess the likely level of damages which the claimant would have recovered had the action proceeded to judgment, and then apply an appropriate fraction to that sum to reflect the uncertainties."
"In my judgment, the proper approach to the court to an issue of law which would have arisen in the action, which the claimant has been deprived of the opportunity to bring, is the same as in relation to an issue of fact or opinion which the claimant would have established in the action. However, at least in general, the court should in my judgment be far more ready to determine that the claimant would have failed or succeeded on a point of law than to determine that the claimant would have failed or succeeded on a point of fact or, even, opinion. That conclusion appears to me fair and practical, as well as consistent with the approach of the Court of Appeal in the three cases to which I have referred (albeit that they are not, as I have mentioned, determinative of this issue).
…….
However, it is, I think, arguably implicit in the third and fourth numbered principles in the judgment of Simon Brown LJ in Mount that, at least in an appropriate case, it is right to assess damages on the "loss of a chance" basis even where the issue in the action would be one of law. At the end of his third numbered paragraph, Simon Brown LJ said that the assessment of the claimant's claim may not be more difficult than in the action itself "where the original claim … turned on questions of law or the interpretation of documents"; his fourth numbered paragraph (quoted above) seems to apply to all types of cases encompassed within the previous paragraph. However, it would be wrong for me to place much weight on that, because, as I have mentioned, it does not seem to me that the Court of Appeal in Mount had to consider the aspect which I am now discussing."
He went on to hold that, although in some loss of chance cases the court would adopt a "broad brush" approach to the chances of success, in others it might be appropriate to look at the issues more closely. That would be the case where the time gone by between the date of the notional trial and the actual trial was comparatively short. It will, in my view, also be highly relevant how far the evidence which is available at the trial of the action against the solicitors is the same as that which might have been heard at the notional trial.
"Although on a strike out the judge may not have to investigate whether or not an issue or issues can still be fairly tried in great detail I think his conclusion that no such trial is possible must be the starting point for the judge who later has to make an assessment of the claimant's prospects of success. He cannot and therefore should not attempt to try the issue or issues himself, particularly on the evidence of the negligent solicitor's former clients' opponent in the original proceedings. In a case like the present where the legal burden is on the claimant to show that he would have succeeded on the issue or issues in question, I do not go so far as to say that they must be assumed against the solicitor, but the application of the second and third principles in Mount's case may in practice produce this result. So, in such a case one would normally expect the claimant to be able to show that he had real and substantial prospects of success. This will not produce unjust results; what would be unjust is for the judge to try an issue which has already been held to be untriable because of the solicitor's negligent delay.
The judge then has to evaluate those prospects applying the fourth principle in Mount's case. This is a difficult task but no more difficult than many others involved in the assessment of damages where the court has to predict the unknown. Here, the judge is having to put a value on the claim. This is not a science, but is a task which lawyers are used to performing. The judge will obviously need to consider all the relevant material which was available up to the time when the original claim was struck out, including documents disclosed and witness statements exchanged by the other side. If he is asked to hear the evidence which the other side would have called, or expert evidence of the kind called in this case, he may agree to do so but I do not think he should feel bound to do so if he thinks he can otherwise make a fair evaluation. If he does hear such evidence, it would simply be for the purpose of enabling him to form a better broad view of the merits of the claim."
Those last two sentences are important here.
'39. With regard to the first stage the evidential burden rests on the negligent solicitors: they, after all, in the great majority of these cases will have been charging the claimant for their services and failing to advise him that in reality his claim is worthless so that he would be better off simply discontinuing it. The claimant, therefore, should be given the benefit of any doubts as to whether or not his original claim was doomed to inevitable failure. With regard to the second stage, the Armory v Delamirie (1722) 1 Stra 505, [1558-1774] All E.R. 121 principle comes into play in the sense that the court will tend to assess the claimant's prospects generously given that it was the defendant's negligence which has lost him the chance of succeeding in full or fuller measure.'
40. The particular question raised by this appeal concerns the extent to which it is appropriate for the court hearing the loss of opportunity claim (a) to entertain primary factual evidence and (b) to reach clear conclusions whether of fact or of law. The question arises here in the context of the original claim having been struck out in April 1992 for want of prosecution on the ground that the witnesses' memories had faded and 'it would be impossible to investigate such matters [as the availability of alternative insurance cover] now.
41. The judge below seems to have tried this claim for all the world as if he were seised of the original action against the insurance brokers. Not only did he hear live evidence from the brokers - called, somewhat unattractively, by the defendant solicitors – but he treated the lack of oral evidence from the claimants in precisely the same way as if he had been deciding the original action.'
The Notional trial
The chances of success on liability
Misrepresentation, collateral warranty and negligence
The purchaser acknowledges that he has not entered into this Agreement relying upon any representations made by or on behalf of the Vendor except those made in writing by the Vendor or notified to him in writing as being representations upon which reliance is placed.
What damages might Mr and Mrs Browning have recovered against Mr Gilham?
1988 | 1989 | 1990 | 1991 | |
Gross income | £8,224 | 14,057 | 36,391 | 74,688 |
(Loss) | (18,898) | (23,366) | (13,898) | (18,188) |
Bank borrowing | 57,833 | 89,413 | 125,119 | 188,833 |
Interest | 6,211 | 11,852 | 18,933 | 27,198 |
Drawings/ (capital put in) | 6,360 | (1,421) | 9,378 | 5,697 |
Year | Measures figure | 60% | Avoidable loss% | Avoidable loss |
1994/5 | £21,325 | £12,795 | 10% | £1,279 |
1995/6 | 27,300 | 16,380 | 25% | 4,095 |
1996/7 | 33,019 | 19,811 | 33.3% | 6,603 |
1997/8 | 45,366 | 27,219 | 60% | 16,331 |
£28,308 |
I take 75 per cent of that to get the figure to be deducted from £82,002 (the loss caused by the Bowyers Court goats), namely £21,231, giving £60,771.
The value of the lost chance
The further consequences of Brachers' negligence
Interest on the damages
The Gilham costs