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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 >> Aviva Insurance Ltd v Kovacic [2017] EWHC 2772 (QB) (07 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/2772.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2772 (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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Aviva Insurance Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Aleksandar Kovacic |
Defendant |
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The defendant appeared in person
Hearing dates: 16th and 17th October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Spencer :
Introduction and overview
(a) variability of his condition
(b) his ability to walk
(c) his use of walking aids
(d) his ability to bend
(e) his use of his arms
(f) his care for himself and others
(g) his driving and cars.
Lack of representation
The relevant legal principles
(i) the defendant deliberately set out to deceive the doctor or expert in question by falsely representing the extent of his continuing symptoms, either in the physical manner of his presentation or by lies told by the doctor or expert, or both;
(ii) the defendant must have intended thereby to interfere with administration of justice ;
(iii) the conduct complained of must have had a tendency to interfere with the administration of justice.
For examples of contempts of this nature, see Airbus Operations Ltd v Roberts [2012] EWHC 3631 (Admin), and Homes for Haringey v Fari [2013] EWHC 3477 (QB).
"(1) Proceedings for contempt of court may be brought against a person if he makes, or causes to be made, a false statement in a document verified by a statement of truth without an honest belief in its truth."
CPR part 22 provides that among the documents which must be verified by a statement of truth are a statement of case (which includes particulars of claim), a schedule of expenses and losses in a personal injury claim, and a witness statement. The contempts alleged in this case include examples of false statements in all three such documents.
(i) the statement in question was false;
(ii) the statement has, or if persisted in would be likely to have, interfered with the course of justice in some material respect;
(iii) at the time it was made the maker of the statement
(a) had no honest belief in the truth of the statement; and
(b) knew of its likelihood to interfere with the course of justice.
These principles are well established on the authorities, and were confirmed (for example) in AXA Insurance UK plc v Rossiter [2013] EWHC 3805 (QB).
The factual context of the injuries and continuing disability
"21. At the time of the accident, Mr. Kovacic was employed as a senior support worker with Community Care Solutions Ltd. He worked with autistic adults with learning disabilities. The following summary of injuries were identified on his admission to the accident and emergency department. This can be seen from Mr. Morley's report, trial bundle 1, p. 13: Fracture of the right scapula; fractures of the right second rib; a proximal segmental fracture of the right ulna; Comminuted supracondylar fractures of both femurs; compound left tibial plateau fracture; rupture of the patella tendon in the left knee; avulsion of the right perineal retinaculum; right subtalar dislocation; fractures of the transverse processes between L2 and L4 in the spine; soft tissue trauma, particularly around the left knee.
22. The claimant was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit. On the same day, he was then taken to the theatre where his wounds were excised, debrided, and the left femoral condyles were fixed internally. He was then immobilised in an external fixator. The femoral condyles were reduced and compressed with clamps and held together with a screw. The same approach was taken with the tibial plateau. The left patella tendon was partially repaired and the knee joint covered and closed. There were then further extensive procedures in theatre the next day, when the distal femurs, left and right were plated. There was an open reduction and internal fixation of the left tibial plateau. The left patella tendon was repaired, and a flap covering the left knee was undertaken by the plastic surgeons, with a split skin graft from the left thigh.
23. A further operation was carried out on 31st March 2013, when the right ulna fracture was reduced and fixed with a locking plate. He was transferred to Bedford hospital where he stayed for two weeks before returning home, non weight bearing at that stage. His surgical wounds had healed by 27th May 2010, though there were some infections at the thigh donor site. The fractures, however, were in good position. Nerve conduction studies, which have taken place in this case, revealed a left perineal nerve palsy.
24. On 1st July 2010, he was reviewed and referred to physiotherapy. It was also noted that the right elbow was stiff. In August 2010, it was noted that the femoral fractures were consolidating and he was allowed to start weight bearing on the right side and partial weight bearing on the left.
25. As at 28 September 2010, he was able to walk into the clinic, fully weight bearing on the right leg, and partially weight bearing on the left. That, in itself, was a remarkable achievement, due to the claimant, and also due to the expert medical treatment that he had received. In November 2010, the metal work was removed from the left tibia. On 8th March 2011, he was said to have been able to walk into the clinic with a normal gait and no inflammation. In July 2011, his right elbow was re explored and was released.
26. By the time Mr. Morley saw him, on 16th April 2013, he had been discharged from hospital, was receiving physiotherapy and some psychological report, and had been seen by an orthotist by whom he had been given an above knee stocking.
27. When Mr. Kovacic was returned home, after being released from hospital, he suffered very great pain upon being carried into his home by the ambulance staff. There was a delay in providing him with special equipment to help him get up and downstairs. Initially he was forced to use the bedroom he shared with his wife, for bathing toileting, and sleeping, and his children were also sleeping in the same room in cots. Later, he slept in a single bed in the lounge. He used a commode. He had infections in his lower legs.
28. In his statement, he says that it was not until early 2011 that he began to use crutches around his house. As at his statement on 27th June 2013, he said that he was still suffering from a nerve palsy which caused foot drop. He is ambidextrous. He writes with his left hand but plays all games with his right hand. His employment was terminated on 1 March 2012.
29. As to his background, he qualified as a teacher in Belgrade, specialising in challenging behaviour, and he worked there as a teacher for about four years before coming to England. Prior to the accident that I have indicated, he worked in a residential home for adults. He took care of those clients, organised their day, and arranged for them to attend schools and day centres. He organised cooking, gave out medication and looked after the books.
30. In his statement, he said that he loved his job very much. He claims that had it not been for the accident, he would have achieved the role of deputy manager and later, manager. By the age of 50 he contends that he would have become an area manager. He told Mr. Morley that he would like to retrain and work as a social worker. Before the accident, he used to enjoy playing tennis but has not returned to that.
31. Importantly, he told Mr. Morley, at his examination on 16th April 2013, that he his condition had not improved in the past one to one and a half years. Neither did he indicate that his condition had worsened. In other words, he had reached a plateau from about mid October 2011 to mid April 2012, and as the balance of the evidence strongly establishes, was as fully recovered as he was going to be by the end of 2011.
32. As he accepted in cross examination, at an examination on 20th February 2012, he told Dr Reid, the psychiatrist instructed on his behalf, that his recovery had plateaued, see trial bundle 1, p. 237. He also told Mr. Reid that he was concerned that his pain was plateauing and might be worsening, but reported that there had been no improvement in his physical condition over the last three to four months. Again, he told Mr. Osborne, the orthopaedic surgeon, instructed on his behalf, at an examination on 31st May 2012 that he did not feel that there had been any improvement in his condition since October 2011. Mr. Osborne noted that he had undergone surgery to his right elbow in June 2011, which had resulted in an increased range of right elbow movement. There is, therefore, and I have not quoted all of it, consistency in the evidence that in the period from mid October 2011 to mid April 2012, and most probably by the end of 2011, his physical state had improved as much as it was going to. The real question is to what extent had it really improved.
33. On the basis of that evidence, there really should be very little difference between the condition of the claimant on the video surveillance evidence, taken from March to August of 2013, and that which it was in December 2011.On the balance of probabilities, I find that there was indeed no significant difference."
(a) Mr Osborne (orthopaedic surgeon) on 26th November 2011
("Osborne 1")
(b) Dr Read (psychiatrist) on 20th February 2012 ("Read 1")
(c) Mr Osborne (orthopaedic surgeon) on 31st May 2012 "Osborne II")
(d) Mr Jenkins (vascular surgeon) on 26th June 2012
(e) Ms Gowings (care expert) on 11th October 2012
(f) Mr Miller (accommodation expert) on 12th December 2012
(g) Dr Cockerell (neurologist) on 30th January 2013
(h) Mr Morley (orthopaedic surgeon) on 16th April 2013 (instructed by the insurers)
(i) Dr Leng (neuropsychologist) on 9th May 2013
(j) Dr Read (psychiatrist) on 9th July 2013 ("Read II")
(k) Ms Makda (care expert) on 5th August 2013 (on behalf of the insurers)
(l) Dr Master (psychiatrist) on 14th August 2014 (on behalf of the insurers)
(m) Mr Osborne (orthopaedic surgeon) on 20th August 2013 ("Osborne III")
The defendant admits making to these doctors and other experts all the statements which they attribute to him, as set out in their various reports.
The surveillance evidence
"45. It is now important that I should summarise the DVD surveillance evidence and give my view on the claimant's credibility. The DVD is described accurately in a summary of surveillance evidence prepared on behalf of the defendants. Apart from the video on 16th April 2013 and only in the afternoon of that day, when the claimant is filmed walking he does so without a stick. He has a noticeable but not heavy limp. He walks with his feet splayed with a rather wide gait. From time to time, particularly starting from a standing position and moving to walking, he rather jerks into motion. There is no obvious sign he is in pain, but I remind myself that that might not be obvious on his face. He rarely smiles in the video, but that, having seen him in court, and I observed him talking to his wife on numerous occasions, is his normal demeanour.
46. On a number of occasions, he walked back and forward to his young daughter's school. There was no obvious gap between his arrival there and his return. He told me, in evidence, that from his house to the entrance door of the school was some 40 metres so that the overall journey was 80 metres. Again, on a number of occasions, he was shown getting into an out of and driving his Volkswagen hatchback. He got in and out of that car completely easily with no apparent stiffness or awkwardness. He chose, on occasions to take the car to do some light shopping at two separate supermarkets. He can be seen inside the stores carrying a supermarket basket, selecting items and looking comfortable walking around the supermarkets and queuing patiently without shifting awkwardly on his legs.
47. On 7th May, he is seen carrying, using both arms, respectively a child's car seat and possibly another car seat, it is not entirely clear from the video, from his car, and later a large wooden board, a large and heavy looking sheet of glass, and in evidence he confirmed it was heavy, and a metal table frame.He subsequently fills the car with petrol, using his right hand. He later drives his children to the seaside at Skegness, a journey of some 90 miles. This was a treat on his birthday. He is, on this day, seen bending easily into the car to the ground and quickly and instinctively to the ground to pick up something which falls from the door pocket of the car. He walks to and along the beach and is seen lying down, though there is no film, I confirmed this with Mr. Featherby, of his getting down on to the beach, a point which the claimant contended was suspicious of selective filming by the surveillance experts. He walks slowly and behind his family up a quite steep sand dune. He later, drives back to his home from Skegness.
48. On one shopping journey, he is seen to carry easily, in his left hand and transferring it for a couple of steps to his right hand, a six pack of two litre plastic bottles of mineral water, back to his car, a weight of about 12 kilos.
49. Generally speaking, the ability of the claimant to walk without a stick, to go out regularly and unaccompanied, to bend, to carry quite heavy weights with both hands and arms to go shopping for modest amounts of shopping, to drive out of choice, getting in and out of his car with ease, is at very striking contrast with his description of his capacity to every expert who examined him at around or after the time the videos were taken.
50. The most obviously striking piece of observation is on the afternoon of 16th April 2013. That afternoon he had an appointment to see Mr. Morley in his Harley Street surgery. The defendants organised a taxi at the claimant's request, to collect him and his wife, to take them to London to the appointment. He is filmed being collected by the taxi near his home and getting into the taxi. He is a walking with a very heavy limp, holding and using a stick in his left hand. He gets into the taxi with great difficulty, on the rear passenger side, with much apparent difficulty in putting his left leg into the taxi. He is accompanied by his wife.
51. At Harley Street, he walks with a heavy limp, and also when the taxi stops for about half an hour at a service station again he gets into the taxi awkwardly.
At no other stage in the lengthy surveillance, can he be observed to act in a way remotely similar to that shown on the afternoon of 16th April 2013.
52. When I invited him at the start of his evidence to supplement his witness statements by commenting on the video evidence, the claimant told me that the DVDs, which, in his words and I quote, "look as if nothing was wrong with me" were unrepresentative. He said he did not take a stick with him when accompanying his children because he did not want his children to see him using a stick. He said he had to sit down before and after the visits to the school.
53. He was not shown actually getting to a lying down position on the beach and that had that been done it would have shown him doing and I quote "very strange acrobatic moves which might appear laughable or awkward."The videos did not show his wife's brother in law, Mr. Grbic and children helping him put the large table and other objects into his VW.
54. The day he drove to Skegness was his birthday and was not a
normal day. He had difficulties in driving, in operating the clutch and in sitting in one position for a long time, and with pain in his left arm."
The evidential status of the judge's findings
"For the avoidance of doubt, the findings of HHJ Bidder QC in his judgment delivered on 19th February 2015 shall stand and be admitted as evidence in the application, and to the standard of proof required for a finding of contempt of court for the purposes of the application to commit the defendant to prison. To that end the transcript of the judgment… shown to the court today shall be admitted as evidence as Judge Bidder's judgment."
"… the exaggeration which I have described falls within the bounds of familiar and understandable attempts to make sure that doctors and lawyers do not underestimate a genuine condition, rather than indicating an outright attempt to mislead in order to increase the value of her claim beyond its true worth."
That dictum of Bell J was drawn to the attention of Judge Bidder in the present case and he made his adverse findings notwithstanding that cautionary advice, so strong was the evidence before him.
Analysis of the alleged contempts
(a) Variability of the defendant's condition, counts 1-7
"On questioning, Mr Kovacic said that the majority of the time he has good days but maybe twice a week he has a bad day when he will be in bed all day…"
To prove the falsity of this statement the insurers rely upon the frequency of random video surveillance over a total of nine separate days. Reliance is placed on the judge's conclusion, at paragraph 80 of the judgment:
"Virtually all of that is contradicted by the video surveillance. That surveillance is extensive. All the video material has been disclosed. It is significantly more than I have seen in other serious cases. All the experts looking at it have felt able to draw safe conclusions from it. It is simply not an answer to it to say, as the claimant frequently has, that it is unrepresentative. It is not. It has not, I am sure, been deliberately taken to put him in a bad light. The chances against the surveillance team happening to film him on nine good days and no bad days are huge."
44. However, the difficulty with this allegation is that the judge was not specifically addressing any of the statements pleaded in counts 1-7, made to the experts, but was addressing the defendant's more general assertion that the video surveillance evidence was unrepresentative.
The defendant's ability to walk, counts 8-20
"He estimated his maximum walking distance on a good day as approximately 30 metres before needing to sit to rest."
"His mobility remains substantially restricted - he is able to walk only approximately 30 yards and with the use of a stick."
"I still cannot walk very far I am wobbly on my feet… I could walk approximately 30 metres with a walking stick on a good day."
"On questioning, Mr Kovacic said he can walk 25-30 minutes [which should read metres] and that he has to sit and rest…."
"I asked Mr Kovacic how his physical injuries affected his every day activities. He told me he carries a stick in his left hand and he said "I know it is should be right". Mr Kovacic told me that he never goes out without his stick and he never goes out unless he is accompanied."
"60. I am afraid, that having seen the claimant giving evidence in relation to that interview, and having seen the video, I am driven to the conclusion that he deliberately exaggerated his condition to Ms. Gowings. He can be seen in the video walking outside far more than 30 metres without a stick and without any time for a rest. He certainly did not need a stick to help him walk in March 2013 and I do not believe he needed either a stick or any support to help him walk in October 2012. Even at that stage, his maximum walking distance was far more than 30 metres……
78. Later in his report, Dr Masters said that Mr. Kovacic had told him he had tried to drive on one occasion only and he confirmed that orally to me. I accept that he had a clear memory of that. It can, therefore, be seen, that on this issue of driving, the claimant has persistently told experts and included in a statement he knew would form the basis of his claim to the court, a succession of very similar, quite calculated lies which are entirely disproved by the video surveillance. On that basis alone, I would have had great difficulties accepting his evidence generally, without corroborating, but it did not stop there. In his particulars of claim, dated and signed by him on 16th January 2013, only two months before his first surveillance video, at p. 5 of the bundle, under "Particulars of Injuries" he stated:
"His mobility remains substantially restricted. He is able to walk only approximately 30 yards and with the use of a stick."
The context shows that he was talking of a good day…..
81. To Ms. Makda, in August 2013, he said he could walk 25 to 30 metres and then had to sit and rest. Her report mistakenly reads "25 to 30 minutes." That is a mistake which the claimant seized upon when at a low point in his cross examination. Her notes were checked and she wrote "mts". Clearly metres were intended. It is clearly the same lie told by the claimant. He went to see her, as he did to see Mr. Master, with a stick, when the video showed that he does not need it at all. In fact, the video surveillance on 16th April 2013 is particularly significant. In the morning of that day, he is seen walking perfectly well with a slight limp, with his children. In the afternoon of that day, when he knows he is to be picked up by a taxi driver, paid for by the defendants, and take to an appointment with the defendants' orthopaedic surgeon he is videoed walking with a heavy limp and using a stick."
The defendant's use of walking aids, counts 21-34
"I have absolutely no doubt that he was play acting on that afternoon".
"79. As I have indicated, I am satisfied his condition was the same in April 2012 as it was in March 2013, and it was certainly no different in January 2013. As the claimant well knew, he regularly walked 80 metres or so without a rest and without a stick, taking his children to the school. The Skegness outing shows him walking on sand and up a sand dune without a stick, and for far greater distances than 30 yards, and without a stick. What he said in his particulars of claim was simply untrue. Similar lies about the restriction of his ability to walk and the necessity of using a stick are repeated to a number of experts. He told Mr. Morley that he needed to use a stick and came to the appointment with a stick…."
"His mobility remains substantially restricted - he is able to walk only approximately 30 yards and with the use of the stick."
That was plainly untrue as the defendant well knew. The video surveillance gives the lie to the statement.
"I can walk approximately 30 metres with a walking stick on a good day."
For the same reason that was plainly false. At paragraph 42 of the witness statement he said:
"I carry a stick in my left hand to help me walk."
That was also untrue, for the same reason.
"Mr Kovacic told me that he never goes out without his stick and he never goes out unless he is accompanied."
That was plainly a lie. The video surveillance demonstrates that he regularly went out with no stick. The last video surveillance was only a week before the defendant saw Dr Master. However, this statement to Dr Master has already been covered in count 20, which I have found proved.
The defendant's ability to bend, counts 35-38
"He has difficulty in bending and can not access low level cupboards in the kitchen. He advised that he would use the kitchen if it was accessible to him as he did cook before the accident."
This led Mr Miller to recommend that the kitchen be fitted out with accessible units, although in the event there was no claim in the schedule of loss for the cost of providing replacement units. Nevertheless it is plain that the defendant was closely cross-examined upon this statement to Mr Miller and the judge made clear and trenchant findings about the defendant's ability to bend:
" 47. On 7th May…. [h]e later drives his children to the seaside at Skegness, a journey of some 90 miles. This was a treat on his birthday. He is, on this day, seen bending easily into the car to the ground and quickly and instinctively to the ground to pick up something which falls from the door pocket of the car…
49. Generally speaking, the ability of the claimant to… bend… is at very striking contrast with his description of his capacity to every expert who examined him at around or after the time the videos were taken….
69. In the even later report on accommodation, by Mr. Miller, based on an interview on 12th December 2012, only about three months before the start of the videos, he told Mr. Miller, see p. 536, paragraph 6.6, that he had difficulty in bending and cannot access low level cupboards in the kitchen.
"He advised that he would use the kitchen if it was accessible to him as he did cook before the accident."
That is a direct quotation from Mr. Miller's report.
It is very obvious from that quotation that I have made that the claimant was aware that what he was saying about bending would be likely to be reflected in a claim for compensation relating to add adaptations for the kitchen at his house.
70. Having seen the video of his bending quickly to pick up something that fell from his car door, I am satisfied that what he told Mr. Miller was not true and was a deliberate exaggeration in order to obtain a larger amount of compensation. When cross-examined about this, he said he did not take things from lower down in the kitchen, and when asked what happened if he dropped something on the floor, he eventually said, and there were long pauses in his evidence at this stage, that his children might pick it up or he would pick it up if it was paper, or someone else if it was a plate. It was at this point when he was in obvious difficulties finding an answer to the question of what he would do if he dropped something in the kitchen, that his wife intervened from where she was sitting, at my request, at the back of the court and clearly and audibly prompted him with an answer.
71. He was wholly unconvincing when questioned about his ability to bend, unsurprisingly, when what is shown on the video entirely contradicts any suggestion that he had any difficulty in bending……
89.However, after seeing the surveillance evidence [Mr Morley's] conclusions were…and again I am grateful for Mr. Featherby's accurate summary….3. he bends over easily without obvious limitation and no evidence of pain…"
The defendant's use of his arms, counts 39-42
"…he cannot lift anything heavy in the right arm because of elbow pain. He tends to drop anything that he is holding."
Count 40 alleges that when interviewed by Ms Gowings, the care expert, on 11th October 2012 he told her:
"Lifting and carrying - he can carry a small, light item such as a newspaper but nothing heavier…. Shopping - he cannot carry heavy bags."
"….precluding the claimant from lifting any significant weight without aggravating pain"
"I cannot carry heavy things."
I note that later in the statement, at paragraph 42 he dealt in more detail with the consequences of the injury to his right elbow and said:
"I cannot lift anything with my right arm because this causes pain and I feel as though my arm will drop off and I tend to drop things."
46……He told me that he mainly used his left arm and that is consistent with the video evidence where he is often seen carrying shopping, including heavy items such as a pack of two litre bottles of mineral water in his left hand. However, he is ambidextrous and is seen in the video carrying what looked to be heavy items, using both arms. He demonstrated to me that he could use his left arm to make fine movements, such as doing up buttons. The surgery that he had had meant that his hand was no longer clawed….
47. On 7th May, he is seen carrying, using both arms, respectively a child's car seat and possibly another car seat, it is not entirely clear from the video, from his car, and later a large wooden board, a large and heavy looking sheet of glass, and in evidence he confirmed it was heavy, and a metal table frame….
48. On one shopping journey, he is seen to carry easily, in his left hand and transferring it for a couple of steps to his right hand, a six pack of two litre plastic bottles of mineral water, back to his car, a weight of about 12 kilos.
49. Generally speaking, the ability of the claimant to… carry quite heavyweights with both hands and arms…. is at very striking contrast with his description of his capacity to every expert who examined him at around or after the time the videos were taken….
50. I should also add, without the need to narrate all the evidence in cross examination, that he similarly misled experts and exaggerated his inability to carry with both arms, which plainly is contradicted by the surveillance footage, of his shopping, carrying the heavy bottles of mineral water in both hands and unloading his car."
77. I have approached these allegations with a degree of caution, because there is undoubtedly some disability in the right arm, and the statements made to Mr Osborne and Ms Gowings significantly pre-date the video surveillance. However, in his witness statement dated 27th June 2013 (count 42) the assertion that he could not carry heavy things was plainly false. It was designed to give the impression that there was a continuing significant disability far greater than was in fact the case. The statement made to Ms Gowing's (count 40), which he does not deny making, was designed to give the same impression.
The defendant's care for himself and others, counts 43-57
"He said he needed regular help".
Mr Featherby invited me to approach such general allegations, and allegations of activity within the home, on the basis of inference from the judge's adverse findings. Whilst that is, in theory, a permissible approach, it a step too far in the present case. It is necessary to concentrate on the most serious allegations, where the evidence is clear. There are two such areas: the extent of his ability to do the shopping, and the extent of his ability to help with the children at least by walking them to school.
"he needs help with … shopping…"
This was in response to Dr Leng's enquiry about his level of independence. Count 56 alleges that the defendant told Ms Makda on 5th August 2013 that his wife did the weekly shopping and, if he accompanied her, he would sit while she did the shopping. The full quotation from Ms Makda's report (para 9.2) is:
" Mr Kovacic said that his wife does the weekly shopping as well as any other shopping that needs to be done. If he accompanies her, he will sit in the café while she does the shopping"
"Once the children are out of the house, his wife attends to him and his care needs, slowly getting him up. .."
The plain implication of this statement is that he would never be up and about in time to take the children to school, which is wholly contradicted by the video surveillance evidence. Similarly, he told Ms Makda on 5th August 2013 (count 57) that:
"his wife makes him breakfast then she takes the children to school"
Again, the implication is that he would not be available or able to take the children to school himself.
"Now I cannot help with the children at all."
That was simply untrue. Seen in the context of the other statements in counts 53 and 57 to which I have referred, the plain inference is that the defendant deliberately lied in his witness statement in order to exaggerate the extent to which his continuing disability affected his daily life.
The defendant's driving and cars, counts 58-69
"49. Generally speaking, the ability of the claimant to … drive out of choice, getting in and out of his car with ease, is at very striking contrast with his description of his capacity to every expert who examined him at around or after the time the videos were taken…
73. The position in relation to driving becomes even clearer when one compares what the claimant said about it during the time covered by the video evidence. He saw Mr. Morley on 16th April 2013. At p.218, Mr. Morley continues his account of the claimant's present position, his complaints of continued pain, and what he told the doctor he could and could not do. He says in a paragraph in which he tells the doctor he could not do heavy work around the house, "at the present time, he will not drive".
74. In his closing submissions to me, Mr. Featherby cited to me a dictum of Bell J., in Rogers and Little Haven Day Nursery Ltd, an unreported case from 1999, in which his Lordship recognised that there could be, and I quote:
"exaggeration which falls within the bounds of familiar and understandable attempts to make sure the doctors and lawyers do not underestimate a genuine condition, rather than indicating an outright attempt to mislead, in order to increase the value of the claim beyond it is true worth."
75. I have no doubt that there is such exaggeration, but that is not the explanation for what the claimant told Mr. Morley about his driving. It is simply a deliberate lie. When he was cross-examined about that statement, he first told me that what he meant was that he told the doctor he was not driving that day. Then he said he did not enjoy driving. In the course of questioning when he showed increasing signs of desperation, when asked for an explanation of a plain statement by him, he actually volunteered that Mr. Morley had been writing down what he had been telling him at the same time as he was saying it. Having seen Mr. Morley give evidence, I have no doubt that that careful witness was indeed doing that. There is no question of this being a mistake. What I am afraid is also the case is that instead of accepting that that was a lie told at the time, to Mr. Morley, Mr. Kovacic, on oath, told me a series of further lies in order to try to escape from the consequences of that lie.
76. At p.81 of the bundle, in his own statement, made on 27th June 2013, right in the middle of the surveillance, he says at paragraph 53:
"I do not think I will drive again because of my physical symptoms and psychological symptoms. I have tried to drive but I cannot control the clutch with my left leg. I think I might be able to drive an automatic car."
When faced with that stark lie, he said that he had driven to Skegness and it was much easier to drive on the open road. He denied what he had said had been a frank lie, but that was, however, precisely what it was, and it was, as the context makes clear, a lie with the purpose of being compensated for purchasing an automatic car.
77. Similarly, to Ms. Makda, the defendant's care expert, when he was interviewed on 5th August 2013, he said, this is at paragraph 13.2, p. 476:
"he tried to drive two to three times but he could not control the clutch."
At p. 281, a report of an examination by Dr Master, the consultant psychiatrist, instructed by the defendant, this is noted:
"I asked Mr. Kovacic if he has resumed driving. He said: 'I tried in my road but I could not control the clutch because of my foot drop.' However, he also feels anxious in cars. He first tried driving six weeks to eight weeks before I saw him."
78. Later in his report, Dr Masters said that Mr. Kovacic had told him he had tried to drive on one occasion only and he confirmed that orally to me. I accept that he had a clear memory of that. It can, therefore, be seen, that on this issue of driving, the claimant has persistently told experts and included in a statement he knew would form the basis of his claim to the court, a succession of very similar, quite calculated lies which are entirely disproved by the video surveillance…
113. …There are no continuing travel costs as the claimant is perfectly capable of driving the manual car that he drove before and after his accident..."
"I do not think I will drive again because of my physical symptoms and psychological symptoms. I have tried to drive but I cannot control the clutch with my left leg. I think I might be able to drive an automatic car. I am not sure I am ready to drive psychologically. It is to early for me to think about driving both physically and psychologically. I am still preparing myself for each journey I make as a passenger as well as thinking about how I will manage when I get out."
"I asked Mr Kovacic if he has resumed driving. He said "I tried in my road but I could not control the clutch because of my foot drop. However he also feels anxious in cars. He first tried driving 6-8 weeks before I saw him. Mrs Kovacic said that he is very jumpy as a passenger and constantly tells her what to do when she is driving. Mr Kovacic said "when we are going on a motorway I am fine, but when we are going on a single carriageway I am nervous". He told me he has completely lost enjoyment and pleasure in driving. I asked Mr Kovacic why he tried driving a car for the first time 6-8 weeks ago. He told me he felt "obliged" to try to drive because his wife was about to be admitted to hospital to undergo surgery on her foot and he anticipated she might subsequently have problems driving."
Conclusions
Count 14: he said in the particulars of claim, verified by a statement of truth dated 16th January 2013, that his mobility remained substantially restricted and that he was able to walk only approximately 30 yards and with the use of a stick.
Count 17: he said in his witness statement, verified by a statement of truth dated 27th June 2013, that he could not walk very far, was wobbly on his feet, and could walk approximately 30 metres with a walking stick on a good day.
Count 20: he told Dr Master on 14th August 2013 that he could walk 25-30 metres then he needed to sit down, he carried a stick and never went out without it, and never went out unless accompanied.
Count 27: he said in the particulars of claim, verified by a statement of truth dated 16th January 2013, that he was able to walk only with the use of a stick.
Count 29: he dishonestly presented himself to Mr Morley on 16th April 2013 walking with a stick.
Count 36: he told Mr Miller on 12th December 2012 that he had difficulty bending.
Count 42: he said in his witness statement, verified by a statement of truth dated 27th June 2013, that he could not carry heavy things.
Count 51: he told Dr Leng on 9th May 2013 that he needed help with shopping.
Count 53: he said in his witness statement, verified by a statement of truth dated 27th June 2013, that he could not help with the children at all.
Count 66: he said in his witness statement, verified by a statement of truth dated 27th June 2013, that he had tried to drive but could not control the clutch, that he might be able to drive an automatic car, and that it was too early for him to think about driving.
Count 68: he told Ms Makda on 5th August 2013 that he had tried to drive 2 or 3 times but he could not control the clutch.
Count 69: he told Dr Master on 14th August 2013 that he had first started driving 6-8 weeks before he saw him.
Relating to variability of the Defendant's condition
(1) The Defendant said he could walk 50 metres with crutches on a good day; on a bad day he spends the time in bed. [Osborne I p.5](2) He said that on bad days he stayed in bed. [Read I §21]
(3) He said he still had to stay in bed for odd days if symptoms were severe. [Osborne II p. 4]
(4) He said that on bad days he stayed in bed and would not go out. [Gowings p.10, 11]
(5) He said that on a bad day he might remain bed-bound all day. [Particulars of Claim §7]
(6) He said his pain was occasionally so severe that he spent most of his time in bed. [Morley p.7]
(7) He said he had good days but maybe twice a week he had a bad day when he would be in bed all day. [Makda §7.11]
On the contrary, on good days the Defendant has been, at all material times, fully mobile and able-bodied save for a slight limp; on 'bad days' he did not stay in bed.
relating to the Defendant's ability to walk
(8) The Defendant said he could walk 50 metres with crutches on a good day" [Osborne I p.5]
(9) He presented himself as unable to bear his own weight. [Osborne I p.9]
(10) He presented himself walking slowly and with a stick. [Read I §44]
(11) He presented himself walking with a stick. [Osborne II p. 4]
(12) He said he walked with the aid of a stick; he said he could manage about 30 metres. [Jenkins p.9]
(13) He said that on a good day he could walk approximately 30 metres before needing to sit and rest. [Gowings p.11]
(14) He said that his mobility remained substantially restricted and that he was able to walk only approximately 30 yards and with the use of a stick. [Particulars of Claim §7]
(15) He said and/or demonstrated that his mobility was significantly decreased and that he walked with a stick. [Cockerell §3.1.3.2]
(16) He presented himself walking quite slowly with some awkwardness with a stick, and that in the morning he could not walk at all. [Leng §5.1]
(17) He said he could not walk very far and was wobbly on his feet; he said he could walk approximately 30 metres with a walking stick on a good day. [witness statement §40, 41]
(18) He said that, when he was out, he knew the position of every bench so he could sit down. [witness statement §48]
(19) He said he could walk 25 to 30 metres and then he had to sit and rest. [Makda §8.2]
(20) He said he could walk 25 to 30 metres then he needed to sit down. He said he carried a stick, that he never went out without it and that he never went out unless accompanied. [Master §3.2.12]
On the contrary, the distance the Defendant could walk was unlimited, alternatively very much farther than 50 metres
relating to the Defendant's use of walking aids
(21) The Defendant said he could walk 50 metres with crutches on a good day" [Osborne I p.5]
(22) He presented himself walking with a stick. [Read I §44]
(23) The Defendant presented himself walking with a stick, and needed to lean on it so he could be measured. [Osborne II p. 4, 8]
(24) He presented himself walking with the aid of a stick. [Jenkins p.9]
(25) He presented himself walking with the aid of a stick and said that otherwise he could support himself with walls or furniture. [Gowings p.11]
(26) He included a claim for a powered scooter. [Gowings p. 26]
(27) He said he was able to walk only with the use of a stick. [Particulars of Claim §7]
(28) He said and/or demonstrated that he walked with a stick. [Cockerell §3.1.3.2]
(29) He presented himself walking with a stick. [Morley p.7]
(30) He presented himself walking with a stick. [Leng §5.1]
(31) He said he used a walking stick to help him walk. [witness statement §41, 42]
(32) He presented himself as walking with a stick; he said he used a stick but also had a pair of crutches. [Makda §8.2, 16.2]
(33) He said he carried a stick, that he never went out without it. [Master §3.2.12]
(34) He said he still used a stick; he presented himself walking with a stick on which he leant heavily. [Osborne III p.6]
On the contrary, the Defendant did not need walking aids.
relating to the Defendant's ability to bend
(35) The Defendant demonstrated reduced movement in forward flexion. [Gowings p.9]
(36) He said he had difficulty bending [Miller §6.6]
(37) He demonstrated only partial movement of his trunk. [Makda §7.5]
(38) He demonstrated leaning on his stick for forward flexion. [Osborne III §9]
On the contrary, the Defendant had full movement from the waist and could bend without restriction.
relating to the Defendant's use of his arms
(39) The Defendant said he could not carry anything heavy in the right arm, and tended to drop anything he was holding. [Osborne II p.4]
(40) He said he could carry a small, light item such as a newspaper but nothing heavier. He said he could not carry heavy shopping bags. [Gowings p.12]
(41) He said that he was precluded from lifting any significant weight without aggravating pain. [Particulars of Claim §7]
(42) He said he could not carry heavy things. [witness statement §40]
On the contrary, the Defendant could use both arms to lift and carry significant weights such as a table top, a table frame and a six-pack of two-litres bottles of water.
relating to the Defendant's care for himself and others
(43) The Defendant said he could not take his daughters out alone and that his wife took them to school. [Read I §23, 25]
(44) He said he needed help dressing himself. [Read I §25]
(45) He said he needed regular help. [Osborne II p.5]
(46) He said he needed help with getting in and out of the bath, drying body, dressing lower body, putting on compression stocking. [Gowings p.16]
(47) With regard to childcare he said he was able to do some sedentary activities only with his children. [Gowings p. 16]
(48) He included a claim for assistance at petrol stations. [Gowings p.22]
(49) He claimed that he needed a case manager [Schedule §37]
(50) He said he needed help with washing and bathing, and that he could not help with the housework, cleaning or cooking. [Cockerell §3.1.3.2]
(51) He said he needed help with shopping. [Leng §5.2]
(52) He said his wife did all household tasks and helped him with personal hygiene and mobility. [witness statement §46]
(53) He said he could not help with the children at all. [witness statement §49]
(54) He said that once the children were out of the house, his wife attends to him and his care needs slowly getting him up. [Read II §24]
(55) He said that his wife took his daughter to school and collected her afterwards. [Makda §4.5]
(56) He said his wife did the weekly shopping and that if he accompanied her, he would sit whilst she did the shopping. [Makda §9.2]
(57) He said his wife took the children to school. [Makda §10.1]
On the contrary, the Defendant did not need assistance, and regularly took his daughters out alone, including taking them to school and helping them.
relating to the Defendant's driving and cars
(58) The Defendant said he had not returned to driving. [Read I §31]
(59) He said he had not driven since the accident. [Jenkins p.9]
(60) He said he was anxious about the idea of driving again. [Gowings p.10]
(61) He said he needed help with outdoor transport; he said he had not returned to driving; he said it was difficult for him to get in and out of car; he included a claim for an automatic cars. [Gowings p. 16, 20, 21, 22]
(62) He said that he does not now drive. [Miller §6.10]
(63) He said that, taxis apart, he had otherwise been driven by his wife; he said he had not returned to driving; he made claims related to this alleged disability. [Schedule §54, 55]
(64) He said he would not drive. [Morley p.7]
(65) He said he needed help with driving. [Leng §5.2]
(66) He said he had tried to drive but could not control the clutch; he said he might be able to drive an automatic car; he said it was too early for him to think about driving. [witness statement §53]
(67) He said it required a lot of effort to get into a car. [Makda §8.7]
(68) He said he had tried to drive two to three times but he could not control the clutch. [Makda §13.2]
(69) He said he had first started driving six to eight weeks before he saw Dr Master but did so only on one occasion and that he was unable to drive. [Master §3.2.13, 4.4]
On the contrary, the Defendant could and did drive a geared car regularly.
In relation to each and every statement or representation set out above (or any of them):-
(A) the statement or representation was false;
(B) the statement or representation, if persisted in, would have interfered with the administration of justice in that it would have caused the Defendant to be awarded more damages than he was entitled to;
(C) when he made the statement or representation, the Defendant had no honest belief in its truth;
(D) when he made the statement or representation, the Defendant knew that it would be likely to interfere with the administration of justice.