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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 >> JR v Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2017] EWHC 1245 (QB) (25 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/1245.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 359, [2017] EWHC 1245 (QB), [2017] 1 WLR 4847, [2017] WLR 4847 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JR (A Protected Party by his Mother and Litigation Friend JR) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SHEFFIELD TEACHING HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Defendant |
____________________
Margaret Bowron QC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26th to 28th April, 2nd to 4th May 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice William Davis:
The Claimant's progress to date and continuing condition
The issues to be resolved
- Loss of earnings and pension.
- Costs of care.
- Aids and equipment.
- Physiotherapy.
- Accommodation.
- Assistive technology.
- Travel and transport.
- Court of Protection.
In respect of most of these areas of dispute, the question is whether a particular piece of expenditure is necessary or reasonable. In relation to two matters – loss of future earnings and accommodation – there is an issue as to the proper legal principles to be applied. I shall deal with those two matters first.
"….. the aim of an award of damages for personal injuries is to provide compensation. The principle is that 'full compensation' should be provided. … This principle of 'full compensation' applies to pecuniary and non-pecuniary damages alike. … The compensation must remain fair, reasonable and just. Fair compensation for the injured person. The level must also not result in injustice to the defendant, and it must not be out of accord with what society as a whole would perceive as being reasonable".
In Whiten Swift J said that determining what was reasonable involved consideration of all relevant circumstances, including the requirement for proportionality as between the cost to the defendant of any individual item and the extent of the benefit which would be derived from that item by the claimant. I agree with that proposition. It is to be applied in the way set out in the judgment of Warby J in A v University Hospitals of Morecambe Bay NHS Foundation Trust [2015] EWHC 366 (QB) at paragraphs 9 to 15.
Loss of earnings and pension
"To the argument that " they are of no value because you will not be there to enjoy them " can he not reply, " yes they are: what is of value to me is not only my opportunity to spend them enjoyably, but to use such part of them as I do not need for my dependants, or for other persons or causes which I wish to support. If I cannot do this, I have been deprived of something on which a value—a present value—can be " placed"?......
…..Future earnings are of value to him in order that he may satisfy legitimate desires, but these may not correspond with the allocation which the law makes of money recovered by dependants on account of his loss. He may wish to benefit some dependants more than, or to the exclusion of, others—this (subject to family inheritance legislation) he is entitled to do. He may not have dependants, but he may have others, or causes, whom he would wish to benefit, for whom he might even regard himself as working. One cannot make a distinction, for the purposes of assessing damages, between men in different family situations…….
....My Lords, in the case of the adult wage earner with or without dependants who sues for damages during his lifetime, I am convinced that a rule which enables the " lost years " to be taken account of comes closer to the ordinary man's expectations than one which limits his interest to his shortened span of life. The interest which such a man has in the earnings he might hope to make over a normal life, if not saleable in a market, has a value which can be assessed. A man who receives that assessed value would surely consider himself and be considered compensated—a man denied it would not. And I do not think that to act in this way creates insoluble problems of assessment in other cases. In that of a young child (c.f. Benham v.Gambling) neither present nor future earnings could enter into the matter: in the more difficult case of adolescents just embarking upon the process of earning (c.f. Skelton v. Collins, infra) the value of " lost" earnings might be real but would probably be assessable as small.
Lord Wilberforce at 149E and 150A-E.
"One of the factors which, however, the common law does not, in my view, take into account for the purpose of reducing damages is that some of the earnings, lost as a result of the defendant's negligence, would have been earned in the " lost years ". Damages for the loss of earnings during the " lost years " should be assessed justly and with moderation. There can be no question of these damages being fixed at any conventional figure because damages for pecuniary loss, unlike damages for pain and suffering, can be naturally measured in money. The amount awarded will depend upon the facts of each particular case. They may vary greatly from case to case. At one end of the scale, the claim may be made on behalf of a young child or his estate. In such a case, the lost earnings are so unpredict- able and speculative that only a minimal sum could properly be awarded. At the other end of the scale, the claim may be made by a man in the prime of life or, if he dies, on behalf of his estate; if he has been in good employment for years with every prospect of continuing to earn a good living until he reaches the age of retirement, after all the relevant factors have been taken into account, the damages recoverable from the defendant are likely to be substantial. The amount will, of course, vary, sometimes greatly, according to the particular facts of the case under consideration.
I recognise that there is a comparatively small minority of cases in which a man whose life, and therefore his capacity to earn, is cut short, dies intestate with no dependants or has made a will excluding dependants, leaving all his money to others or to charity. Subject to the family inheri- tance legislation, a man may do what he likes with his own. Certainly, the law can make no distinction between the plaintiff who looks after dependants and the plaintiff who does not, in assessing the damages recoverable to compensate the plaintiff for the money he would have earned during the " lost years" but for the defendant's negligence. On his death those damages will pass to whomsoever benefits under his will or upon an intestacy.
I think that in assessing those damages, there should be deducted the plaintiff's own living expenses which he would have expended during the " lost years " because these clearly can never constitute any part of his estate. The assessment of these living expenses may, no doubt, sometimes present difficulties, but certainly no difficulties which would be insuperable for the courts to resolve—as they always have done in assessing dependancy under the Fatal Accidents Acts."
Lord Salmon at 153F to 154D.
"For our present consideration relates solely to the personal entitlement of an injured party to recover damages for the " lost years ", regardless both of whether he has dependants and of whether or not he would (if he has any) make provision for them out of any compensation awarded to him or his estate. With respect, it appears to me simply not right to say that, when a man's working life and his natural life are each shortened by the wrongful act of another, he must be regarded as having lost nothing by the deprivation of the prospect of future earnings for some period extending beyond the anticipated date of his premature death."
Lord Edmund-Davies at 162C-E.
"I do not read those passages in the speeches of their Lordships in Pickett's case and Gammell v. Wilson [1981] 2 W.L.R. 248 in which they stress the difficulty of assessing an award of damages for the lost years in the case of a child as having general application to the claims of all children whose earning capacity has been diminished. In attempting to assess the value of a claim for the lost years, the court is faced with a peculiar difficulty. Not only does it have to assess what sum the plaintiff might have been earning, but it also has to make an assessment of the sum that would not have been spent upon the plaintiff's own living expenses and would have, therefore, been available to spend upon his dependants. In the case of a living plaintiff of mature years whose life expectation has been shortened and who has dependants, there are compelling social reasons for awarding a sum of money that he knows will be available for the support of his dependants after his death. It was this consideration that led to the result in Pickett's case. As a consequence of the decision in Pickett's case, the House of Lords in Gammell's case felt compelled to apply the same principle to a claim brought on behalf of the estate of the deceased person. If it could be shown that part of the deceased's income was available to be spent on his dependants, then a claim for that part of the income was available to cover the lost years of working life. In the case of a child, however, there are no dependants, and if a child is dead there can never be any dependants and, if the injuries are catastrophic, equally there will never be any dependants. It is that child that will be dependent. In such circumstances, it seems to me entirely right that the court should refuse to speculate as to whether in the future there might have been dependants for the purpose of providing a fund of money for persons who will in fact never exist. It was this consideration that led me in Kandalla v. British European Airways Corporation [1981] Q.B. 158 to refuse to assess a sum for the lost years in respect of two unmarried doctors by speculating as to whether or not in the future they would have married and set aside some part of their income for husbands or children. I refused to enter into the realm of speculation about an impossible and hypothetical situation.
However, when one is considering the case of a gravely injured child who is going to live for many years into adult life, very different considerations apply. There are compelling social reasons why a sum of money should be awarded for his future loss of earnings. The money will be required to care for him. Take the present case; the cost of future nursing care has been assessed upon the basis of nurses coming in to care for him for part of the day and night. It is not a case where damages have been awarded which will provide a sufficient sum for him to go into a residential home and be cared for at all times. Damages awarded for his future loss of earnings will in the future be available to provide a home for him and to feed him and provide for such extra comforts as he can appreciate. It cannot be assumed that his parents will remain able to house, feed and care for him throughout the rest of his life. If, of course, damages have been awarded upon the basis of the full cost of residential care so that they include the cost of roof and board, any award for future loss of earnings will be small because there will be a very large overlap between the two heads of damage. The plaintiff must not be awarded his future living expenses twice over; this would be unfair to the defendants.
I would, therefore, award this child a sum to compensate him for his loss of earnings during the period that he will live but I would not award any additional sum to compensate him for the lost years."
The defendant's submissions can be summarised as follows. First, it is submitted that a claim for the lost years by a young claimant with no earnings record and no dependants is too remote to be capable of being compensated by an award of damages. Secondly, such a claim is not justified by the decision of the House of Lords in Pickett . Thirdly, in any event, the trial judge, and it is submitted this court, are bound by the decision of this court in Croke v Wiseman 1982 1WLR 71 which it is contended held impermissible a claim for lost years in respect of a young child.
The claimant's submissions are as follows. First, since Pickett claims for lost years are permissible. Secondly, such claims are not restricted to adult claimants with or without dependants. Thirdly, the principle of 100% recovery of damages for a victim of a tort enables a child to recover compensation for loss of earnings in the lost years. Fourthly, neither the judge nor this court is bound by Croke v Wiseman .
"….the effect of Pickett is to hold that claims for loss of earnings in the lost years are permissible and that such claims are not restricted to adult wage earners with dependants. A claim by the estate of an adult or adolescent wage earner without dependants can clearly be made. I also have no doubt that Pickett does not as a matter of principle rule out claims made by the estate of deceased young children. The decision does however point to the difficulties of proof and assessment of such claims but those difficulties do not alter the underlying principle. These conclusions are in my judgment reinforced by the observations of Lord Scarman in Gammell v Wilson 1982 AC 27.
"The correct approach in law to the assessment of damages in these cases presents, my Lords, no difficulty though the assessment itself often will …. The loss is pecuniary. As such, it must be shown, on the facts found, to be at least capable of being estimated. If sufficient facts are established to enable the court to avoid the fancies of speculation even though not enabling it to reach mathematical certainty, the court must make the best estimate it can. In civil litigation it is the balance of probabilities which matters. In the case of a young child, the lost years of earning capacity will ordinarily be so distant that assessment is mere speculation. No estimate being possible, no award — not even a "conventional" award — should ordinarily be made. Even so, there will be exceptions: a child television star, cut short in her prime at the age of five, might have a claim: it would depend on the evidence. A teenage boy or girl, however, as in Gammell's case may well be able to show either actual employment or real prospects, in either of which situations there will be an assessable claim. In the case of a young man already in employment (as was young Mr. Furness), one would expect to find evidence upon which a fair estimate of loss can be made. A man well established in life, like Mr Pickett, will have no difficulty. But in all cases it is a matter of evidence and a reasonable estimate based upon it …. My Lords, the principle has been settled by the speeches in this House in Pickett's case. The loss to the estate is what the deceased would have been likely to have available to save, spend, or distribute after meeting the cost of his living at a standard which his job and career prospects at time of death would suggest he was reasonably likely to achieve. Subtle mathematical calculations based as they must be on events or contingencies of a life which he will not live, are out of place: the judge must make the best estimate based on the known facts and his prospects at the time of death."
"Mr Spencer accepts, as he must, that Gammell demonstrates that in the case of adolescents and young men there is no reason in principle why damages for the lost years cannot be awarded. He accepts that in each of the two cases considered by the House of Lords there was no evidence of any prospective dependants. However, he submits that in each case with which the House of Lords was concerned the deceased men were sufficiently launched on their earning careers for the court to make some assessment of the pecuniary loss. He contrasts this with the case of a young child so grievously injured that there can never be any dependants.
In my judgment, Gammell makes quite clear, what might be said to be less clear from Pickett , that the age of a victim is not as a matter of principle relevant to the issue of whether or not a claim can be made for the lost years. Further, the lack of dependants cannot be a factor which defeats a claim for damages for loss of earnings in the lost years. When it comes to the assessment of damages for the lost years the issues are evidential and not matters of principle. In my view Gammell assists, by way of further explanation, the speeches of the House on this topic in Pickett."
"In my judgment, on any fair reading of the whole of the passage which I have cited above, Griffiths LJ was holding that claims for the lost years by a young child are not permissible. It seems to me that this is a statement of principle. The reason given for doing so is that the injuries are so catastrophic that there can never be any dependants. In my view, it is clear that Griffiths LJ regarded the absence of the prospective existence of dependants in the case of a young child as fatal to a claim for damages for loss of earnings in the lost years. Accordingly, it seems to me that this must be interpreted as a holding of principle and not a matter of evidence to be considered when assessing such damages.
Having reached the above conclusion, and after paying all due deference to the decision of such a distinguished constitution of this court, in my opinion the decision in Croke v Wiseman is not consistent with the decisions of the House of Lords in Pickett and Gammell . I would add that I find it difficult to accept that if it is possible to assess prospective future loss of earnings for the lifetime of a young child, even allowing for the difficulty of assessing the surplus, it is not possible to assess damages for the lost years."
Notwithstanding the very clear conclusion reached in relation to the inconsistency between Pickett and Gammell and the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Croke Gage LJ and the other members of the court in Iqbal decided that the statement of principle in Croke was binding on the Court of Appeal. Gage LJ put thus:
"I am quite satisfied that in this case the court ought not to depart from the normal rule. Croke v Wiseman was decided after the court had been referred to both Pickett and Gammell . It is obvious from the judgments that the members of the court had heard full argument on those decisions. Although I have concluded that the decision is inconsistent with both Pickett and Gammell , I am not prepared to hold that the circumstances in this case are so rare and exceptional that this court is entitled not to follow it. Nor, even if permitted to do so, would I hold that the decision in Croke v Wiseman was manifestly wrong. I accept that this claimant may be reluctant to invest in the cost of an appeal to the House of Lords but in my judgment that is not a sufficiently strong reason to depart from the normal rule. In my view, the error, if error it be, must be corrected by the House of Lords".
Self-evidently the principle in Croke is binding on me.
"I think he is unlikely to have a permanent relationship or to get married. I would envisage him having close relationships with friends although I would like to think that with the right support he could have an active social life and the opportunity to mix with other people outside the immediate family particularly once he leaves school. It is important that his carers offer him appropriate support and companionship and clearly he is very sociable in school and college environment."
Particular emphasis is placed on the first sentence in that passage. I am urged to conclude that this evidence must lead to a finding on the balance of probabilities that JR will not have dependants. In that event no "lost years" claim can arise irrespective of the effect of Croke.
Accommodation
"For the plaintiff it has been contended, in the first place, that she should receive as additional damages either the whole or some part of the capital cost of acquiring the bungalow, since it was acquired to meet the particular needs arising from the accident. But this argument, in my judgment, has no foundation. The plaintiff still has the capital in question in the form of the bungalow.
An alternative argument advanced was, however, that as a result of the particular needs arising from her injuries, the plaintiff has been involved in greater annual expenses of accommodation than she would have incurred if the accident had not happened. In my judgment, this argument is well founded, and I do not think it makes any difference for this purpose whether the matter is considered in terms of a loss of income from the capital expended on the bungalow or in terms of annual mortgage interest which would have been payable if capital to buy the bungalow had not been available. The plaintiff is, in my judgment, entitled to be compensated to the extent that this loss of income or notional outlay by way of mortgage interest exceeds what the cost of her accommodation would have been but for the accident. She would also, in my judgment, have been entitled to claim the expenses of a move to a new home imposed by her condition and the expense of any new items of furniture required because of that condition, but there was no evidence before the judge under either of those headings. As to the increased cost of accommodation, if any, it was, as I have said, agreed that we should make the best estimate we could on the available material, and the matter can only be approached on a broad basis."
Orr LJ assessed the damages recoverable in the sum of £3,000. This was in addition to care costs and loss of earnings. The assessment took into account the loss of investment income arising from the purchase of the bungalow, expenses which would have been incurred irrespective of the accident and tax liability. Other than identifying what needed to be taken into account, the judgment of Orr LJ provided no arithmetical basis for the eventual award.
"It seems to us, however, that where the capital asset in respect of which the cost is incurred consists of house property, inflation and risk element are secured by the rising value of such property particularly in desirable residential areas, and thus the rate of 2 per cent. would appear to be more appropriate than that of 7 per cent. or 9.1 per cent., which represents the actual cost of a mortgage loan for such a property.
We are reinforced in this view by the fact that in reality in this case the purchase was financed by a capital sum paid on account on behalf of the defendants by way of interim payments, and thus it may be appropriate to consider the annual cost in terms of lost income and investment, since the sum expended on the house would not be available to produce income. A tax-free yield of 2 per cent. in risk-free investment would not be a wholly unacceptable one. Mr. McGregor, for the plaintiff, objects that if a rate of 2 per cent. is adopted then the multiplier of 16 would be far too low and a substantially higher multiplier should be adopted, resulting in much the same anomaly. For our part we would reject this argument, since the object of the calculation is to avoid leaving in the hands of the plaintiff's estate a capital asset not eroded by the passage of time; damages in such cases are notionally intended to be such as will exhaust the fund contemporaneously with the termination of the plaintiff's life expectancy."
"Damages in cases of this sort are notionally intended to provide a fund which will both meet the claimant's life-time needs and be exhausted contemporaneously with the termination of the claimant's life expectancy. Roberts v Johnstone prescribes that the claimant should, in respect of the cost of accommodation, be compensated for the notional loss of investment income on the capital cost incurred in buying a suitable property. The resulting sum awarded will be wholly insufficient to purchase a property, but the theory is that the shortfall and thus the balance of the actual funds required in order to purchase a suitable property can be found in, or borrowed from, the awards made under other heads of damage such as pain, suffering and loss of amenity, loss of earnings, capitalised awards for therapy and other costs. See generally per Swift J in Whiten v St George's Healthcare NHS Trust [2011] EWHC 2066 QB at paragraph 411. In order to reflect the notional loss of investment income a tax free yield on risk-free investment was assessed at 2% in Roberts v Johnstone, although the rate now conventionally applied in the calculation is 2.5%. The theory here is that where the capital asset in respect of which the cost is incurred consists of residential property, the inflation and risk element are secured by the rising value of such property, particularly in desirable residential areas. When the calculation is concerned with the principal home it is conventional and consistent with the underlying theory to apply the lifetime multiplier appropriate to the claimant's life expectancy.
The exercise in which the court is thus engaged is in modern conditions increasingly artificial. The assumption underlying the approach is that the claimant will be able to fund the capital acquisition out of the sums awarded under rubrics other than accommodation. But in modern times residential property prices have increased rapidly while general awards for pain, suffering and loss of amenity have remained at their traditional levels. Whilst Peter is no doubt robbed to pay Paul, it must often be the case that the accommodation assessed by the court as suitable is simply not purchased. A further problem confronts the claimant with immediate and pressing needs but a relatively short life expectancy. The adoption of the appropriate multiplier in his case, when allied to the 2.5% notional return upon investment, will lead to a relatively modest award and a large shortfall between it and the cost of acquiring the property which is acknowledged to be required to meet the claimant's needs during his admittedly short life expectancy. A similar problem confronts the claimant who establishes less than 100% liability in the defendant, as here, where the award is only for 50% of the sums regarded as necessary to meet the Claimant's reasonable needs……..
Whilst the Roberts v Johnstone approach is designed to avoid conferring a windfall upon a claimant's estate, it gives rise to other anomalies. Thus in many instances of adapted accommodation in cases of this sort there is potentially a windfall for the claimant in the event of the death of his parent carers, since he is likely to be left with a home which is larger than necessary for his own requirements……one could mitigate those effects by adopting a different multiplier for that part of the cost which represents the provision of family accommodation over and above that required for the disabled claimant, but there has been little enthusiasm for such a solution."
Tomlinson LJ went on to describe the Roberts v Johnstone approach as "imperfect but pragmatic". The figure of 2.5% referred to in Manna was in line with the discount rate set in 2001 by the Lord Chancellor pursuant to the Damages Act 1996 as representing what was then a three year average of real yields on Index Linked Gilts. That figure was taken as the benchmark of risk-free investment. The approach disadvantaged some claimants particularly in cases of a short life expectancy. Often, the claimant with the short life expectancy would be the claimant with the greatest need for special accommodation. Yet for such a claimant 2.5% of the capital cost taken with a lifetime multiplier would come nowhere near the actual cost of the accommodation. Moreover, given a short life expectancy the capitalised value of the loss of earnings would not provide a fund to make up the difference.
It is high time that the Roberts v Johnstone problem was tackled and a fair and proper solution found and adopted. The Law Commission looked into the matter some time ago but found it too difficult to formulate an acceptable solution and so recommended that the Roberts v Johnstone method be retained. The Ogden Working Party is fully aware that the law needs to be righted and has it in mind to investigate the issue in the near future. What could trigger action on this front is a further reduction in the discount rate, the possibility of which, as we have seen, is very much in the air. It is true that, as the discount rate lowers, the multipliers increase, but an examination of the figures in the tables in Ogden shows that the increases in the multipliers do not come anywhere near to balancing, or off-setting the effect of, the fall in the discount rate. Ironically the injured party will get more for care but less for special accommodation. Indeed should the discount rate move into the negative, which is highly unlikely but did happen in the Guernsey case in the Privy Council of Helmot v Simon, the Roberts v Johnstone method becomes unworkable; it would produce a nil award.
On behalf of JR it is submitted that "the approach in George v Pinnock should be followed and the court should assess accommodation by reference to a multiplicand based upon a positive percentage". The percentage suggested is 2.5% i.e. the current conventional rate for the Roberts v Johnstone formula. To avoid a windfall benefit the sum recovered should be capped at the capital cost of the accommodation to be purchased. Yet this would not avoid a windfall to JR's estate. The estate would include the total value of the property. Moreover, the value of the property almost certainly will have appreciated significantly.
Costs of care
Month | One turn | Two turns | Three or more turns |
July |
17 | 4 | - |
August |
8 | 6 | 9 |
September |
1 | 2 | 9 |
October |
8 | 10 | 2 |
November |
8 | 5 | 8 |
December |
4 | 2 | 9 |
January |
- | - | 25 |
February |
- | 2 | 18 |
March |
1 | 5 | 12 |
The diaries for April 2017 of necessity were incomplete but showed a similar pattern to the other months in 2017 i.e. 11 occasions on which two carers were needed.
Aids and equipment
Physiotherapy
Accommodation
Assistive technology
Travel and transport
Court of Protection Costs
Year | Claimant £ | Defendant £ | Award £ |
1 | 30,605 plus cost of 2 visits |
14,000 inclusive of 2 visits | 30,000 inclusive of visits |
2 | 21,492 plus cost of 2 visits | 9,000 inclusive of 2 visits | 20,000 inclusive of visits |
3 | 17,040 plus cost of 1 visit | 8,000 inclusive of 1 visit | 15,000 inclusive of visits |
4 | 17,040 plus cost of 1 visit | 8,000 inclusive of 1 visit | 15,000 inclusive of visits |
5 onwards | 11,232 plus cost of 1 visit | 7,000 inclusive of 1 visit | 10,000 inclusive of visits |
To an extent the awards I have made are impressionistic. I have not attempted to apportion the hours as between fee earners or to give a detailed breakdown of the hours recoverable. Since the Defendant's expert took such an approach, I hope that I will not be criticised for doing the same. The essence of my approach is that, whilst I can see some areas in which Ms Bunting has overestimated the involvement of the Deputy or his staff, her assessment of the appropriate level of costs is broadly correct.
Approval of agreed items
- In relation to loss of earnings proper account had to be taken of the fact that, uninjured, JR would not have achieved a significant earning capacity until he was about the age he is now.
- The figure for past care had to take account of the gratuitous nature of the care until the recent involvement of salaried carers.
- In relation to therapy there needed to be some recognition as to the potential irrecoverability of the cost of some of therapy undertaken.
- Some claims could not succeed on a full cost basis because JR would have undertaken the relevant activity at some cost in any event e.g. holidays.
- The cost of a Audi Q3 car, a type of SUV vehicle, could not be attributed to JR's injuries.
Conclusion
HEAD OF LOSS |
CLAIMANT M: 55.06 |
DEFENDANT M: 52.94 |
Amount to be recovered post trial as a result of agreement or finding of the court |
General damages & interest |
TBQ |
TBA |
£300,000 |
Past losses |
|
|
|
Loss of earnings |
106,620.71 |
71,751 |
|
Care & assistance |
665,469.84 |
414,079 |
|
Therapy |
32,542.37 |
28,467 |
|
Aids & equipment |
75,876.96 |
75,877 |
|
Accommodation |
8,505.88 |
8,506 |
|
Miscellaneous |
105,737.70 |
40,728 |
|
Travel and transport |
73,168.45 |
17,300 |
|
AT & camera equipment |
21,932.58 |
12,000 |
|
Court of Protection & Deputy |
54,237.10 |
31,373 |
|
Interest |
660,260.24 |
140,016 |
|
Total of past losses |
£1,771,809.46 |
£840,097 |
£1,112,338.00 |
Future losses |
|
|
|
Loss of earnings & pension |
1,305,102.10 |
880,368 |
£1,194,666.00 |
Care & assistance |
16,449,485.50 |
14,182,527 |
£189,313 |
Equipment |
2,334,562.83 |
717,927 |
£1,189,289 |
Physiotherapy |
722,761.07 (this has been reduced by C to reflect agreed hourly rate & on D's calculation the total should be c. £610,211) |
188,131.20 |
£501,277 |
Occupational therapy |
125,010.60 |
44,702.80 |
£45,000 |
Speech & language therapy |
56,121.60 |
43,172.56 |
£52,290 |
Podiatry |
12,333.44 |
9,529.20 |
£11,000 |
Accommodation |
2,867,030.06 |
540,917 |
£840,000 |
Travel & transport |
2,030,419.83 |
715,458 |
£1,462,474 |
Miscellaneous expenses |
100,481.60 |
81,659 |
£90,000 |
Orthotics |
46,283.74 |
36,463 |
£41,500 |
Court of Protection & Deputy |
1,448,740.10 |
541,212 |
£898,993 |
Total future losses |
£27,498,332.50 |
£17,982,067 |
£6,515,802 |
Grand total |
£29,270,142 |
£18,822,164 |
£7,928,140 |
PP for care and case management from 15.12.17 with first variation 15.12.17 linked to ASHE 6115 80th centile |
|
|
Annual PP: £293,117 |