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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 >> Beaumont v Ministry of Defence [2009] EWHC 1258 (QB) (20 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/1258.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1258 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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BEAUMONT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MINISTRY OF DEFENCE |
Defendant |
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101 Finsbury Pavement London EC2A 1ER
Tel No: 020 7422 6131 Fax No: 020 7422 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR DAVID MANKNELL (Instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HOLROYDE:
"4. The Claimant suffers from dyskinetic cerebral palsy following a profound period of hypoxia immediately prior to his birth at 21-15 on 23.01.89. He suffers from significant physical and communication difficulties but has retained his intellect. Wing-Commander Forbes was the obstetric consultant who attempted a forceps delivery in the delivery room and, following a cord prolapse, delivered the Claimant by way of an emergency Caesarean section in theatre.
5. The central allegations of negligence are as follows:
i) Attempting a forceps delivery in the delivery room as opposed to in theatre (where a prompt Caesarean delivery could be achieved if instrumental delivery failed). Alternatively, failing to proceed straight to a Caesarean section.
ii) Failing to identify that the fetal head was probably not engaged and the potential pelvic capacity difficulties. Both these factors were contraindications for a forceps delivery.
iii) Causing the cord prolapse during the course of the attempted forceps delivery.
iv) Failing to alleviate pressure on the cord by way of digital elevation of the fetal head in the period between the cord prolapse and delivery in theatre.
6. All the aforesaid allegations of negligence are denied by the Defendant. It is common ground that the Claimant's condition at birth was caused by a period of profound hypoxia due to compression of the cord following the prolapse. The precise period of hypoxia is in dispute.
7. One unusual aspect to the claim is contained in Paragraph 5(d) of the Defence. It is contended that the hospital in question (an RAF hospital in Wegberg, Germany) was a small unit without a dedicated maternity theatre with theatre staff on call and it was therefore standard practice not to attempt forceps delivery in theatre.
That summary was, I think, prepared prior to the amendment of the Particulars of Claim, but I think I have by now sufficiently covered the broad allegations in the case.
1. "I bear in mind that this is a case of significant value. It is said that it would be over £1 million. Of course, I bear in mind the importance of this case to the claimant, and indeed to the defendant and Mr. Forbes in particular. But ultimately I ask myself what are the exceptional circumstances in this case, which take it away from the usual case, where it is one expert on each side? I am not persuaded that Mr. Forbes' medico-legal work, and indeed the assistance he gives to the Medical Protection Society, are features which make this case so exceptional that a second expert must be engaged. It does seem to me that an expert for the defendant, should be able to deal properly and fully with the expert issues in this case, no doubt each of them making assumptions of fact and expressing opinions, bearing in mind those assumptions. So on balance, I have come to the conclusion that it is not appropriate and necessary for me to make an order giving the claimant permission to have a second expert in this field."
"17. The governing rule, therefore, limits expert evidence to that which is reasonably required to resolve the proceedings in issue. What is reasonable in any particular context will inevitably be fact sensitive. It would be wrong to approach this question with the predetermined belief that to instruct more than one expert in the same discipline will always be excessive. In addition to considering the facts, the court will need to remind itself in any contentious case of the principles underlying the overriding objective in CPR 1.1. In the present context the most important of the considerations set out in CPR 1.1.(2) appear to be:
(a) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
(c) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate -
(i) to the amount of money involved;
(ii) to the importance of the case;
(iii) to the complexity of the issues;
(iv) to the financial position of each party.
18. While the other considerations listed in CPR 1.1(2) are always important, in a case like the present they are likely to be subordinated to the particular items I have listed.
19. It would be difficult to under-estimate the importance of the case to the parties. To those who are used to handling heavy clinical negligence cases it might appear to be just another cerebral palsy case, but to the claimant and her family on the one hand and to the medical staff of the hospital, whose standard of professional care is being impugned in a matter which resulted in catastrophic consequences, the case is very important indeed. This was not disputed by either counsel.
20. As I have said, the claim is valued at £1.5 million. This places it, so far as money is concerned, close to the top of the range in heavy multi-track litigation which does not have a commercial ingredient of some kind. So far as personal injury cases are concerned, it is a very large claim.
21. The issues are complex, not because it may not be relatively easy for the judge to understand the main features of the processes of obstetric care immediately before a baby is born, but because he will be invited to make a judgment on the appropriate standard of care when consultant obstetricians are in disagreement.
22. Both the defendants and the claimant are in receipt of public funds for this litigation, so that there is nothing in CPR 1(2)(c)(iv) which creates particular difficulties for the procedural judge to consider.
23. Above all, however, for a case of this importance, high monetary value and complexity the parties will not be on an equal footing if Master Ungley's order is to stand. The master appreciated that it was inevitable that a witness who happened to be a professional will give evidence of his actions based upon his or her professional expertise, but he thought that it was possible to isolate this evidence from the evidence on the 'vital question of whether those decisions fell short of the required standard', on which he was permitting only one expert on each side. In my judgment he was clearly wrong to do this on the facts of this case.
24. Anybody watching the trial would be bound to be impressed by the fact that there was only one consultant obstetrician giving evidence for the claimant, while there would be three giving evidence for the defendant hospital trust, and those three would cover a much wider spectrum of personal experience than the single expert permitted to the claimant. It is not as if the medical witness of fact for the defendants is a junior hospital doctor. We were told something of Mr Downes' professional history both as a practitioner in a number of hospitals and as a teacher, and his evidence on the reasons why he believed he acted with appropriate care will be supported by two other consultants. Against them there will be a single voice speaking for the claimant, and Mr Wheatley spoke convincingly of the danger that he might appear to a judge to have a 'bee in his bonnet' or an overly academic approach to matters of day by day clinical practice.
25. I do not moreover consider that the extra time and expense that would be introduced into the trial by the calling of a second expert for the claimant would be disproportionate in a case of this monetary value and importance."
Later in his judgment Brooke LJ said:
27. "Nothing in this judgment must be taken to give any sort of green light to the calling of two experts in a single discipline in any case which does not have exceptional features. On this appeal the presence of three consultants on the defendants' side constitutes such an exceptional feature."
Holman J, giving the second judgment of the court, said this at paragraphs 31 to 34:
"31. Before the master, the application for two experts in the field of obstetrics seems largely to have been based on the argument of 'equality of arms'. The master rejected that argument since he drew a sharp distinction between witnesses of fact and expert witnesses. Of course that distinction does exist. It is an important one, and it underpins the scheme of Part 35 of the CPR. But in my view it should not obscure the realities of a case such as this. As the master himself recognised, 'it is inevitable that a witness who happens to be a professional will give evidence of his actions based upon his or her professional experience and expertise...' It is, in my view, not only inevitable but appropriate, for no professional person can explain or justify his or her actions and decisions save by reference to his or her training and experience.
32. In my view this is of particular relevance to an action which alleges professional negligence, governed by the Bolam test. When a court is considering what practices may be adopted by a responsible body of medical opinion, it seems to me impossible to exclude evidence given by two doctors, now both of consultant status, of their own experience, however much they may be labelled and confined as 'witnesses of fact'. The reality is that they have and profess expertise and, if credible, their evidence based on their experience and expertise cannot be ignored. So in my view there is an issue of equality of footing if the claimant is only permitted to call one obstetric expert while the defendants can rely upon two consultants plus an expert. However that is not decisive, for equality of footing is only one of the considerations in the overriding objective.
33. We were told that the overall value of the claim in this case may be around £1.5 million. The case is a very important one to both sides. The claimant is physically impaired for her entire life by cerebral palsy. If that was the result of negligence at the very moment of her birth, the issue in the case is of the utmost importance both to her and to her family. For the doctors who face an allegation of professional negligence the case is obviously very important, too. The estimated additional fees of the second expert is around £8,500 if he attends three to four days of the trial. The estimated added length to the trial (whose overall estimate is five days) is about two hours. In my view the balance of these considerations does make it proportionate and just as between the parties that this claimant is permitted to rely upon the reports of two obstetricians, not one; and the additional costs to public funds and share of the court's resources is also proportionate and just.
34. I wish to stress, as I have already indicated, that I take into account that the action relates to professional negligence and that the Bolam test will apply. I do not wish to give any encouragement at all to the instruction of a second expert in a given field in other types of case which are concerned only with establishing medical facts, not making judgments about professional competence; for example, but only by way of example, in deciding disputed issues of medical fact in public or private family law cases."
And now resuming my judgment, having dealt with what Holman J said in the case of ES, the third judgment in ES was given by Kennedy LJ. Kennedy LJ indicated that he was unimpressed by the Respondent's argument that the Respondent would only be calling one expert witness with the other two being witnesses of fact. Kennedy LJ then went on to say at paragraph 43, which I read in full:
"43. In my judgment the importance of this case is that it affords an opportunity to emphasise that:
(1) the general rule must be as envisaged by Master Ungley, namely that in the vast majority of cases there should be no more than one expert in any one speciality, but -
(2) The court must recognise that it has the discretion to be flexible in response to the facts of an individual case. The underlying question to be asked is whether additional expert evidence will assist the court to do justice, and to be seen to do justice between the parties;
(3) The present case is an appropriate case in which to exercise the discretion, because
(a) the claim is very substantial and is of great importance to the claimant. It is also of considerable importance to Mr Downes;
(b) because time has gone by and Mr Downes has been successful in his career he is no longer a registrar at a non-teaching hospital. He is a consultant, and he and Mr Krishnamurthy are able to provide not only factual but also expert evidence to assist the respondents' case. It is common in this type of litigation to have a clinician and an expert from the same discipline, but it must be rare to have two such senior clinicians being called to give evidence in the first place in relation to the facts;
(c) The additional costs likely to be incurred as a result of the appellant being allowed to call a second obstetrician are, in the context of a claim of this size, unlikely to be significant, and there is no reason to think that today's decision will delay the trial."