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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 >> Irving v Morgan Sindall Plc [2018] EWHC 1147 (QB) (15 May 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/1147.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1147 (QB) |
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SITTING AT LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
1 Oxford Row Leeds, LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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Miss Katherine Ann Irving |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and - |
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Morgan Sindall PLC |
Respondent/ Defendant |
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Steven Turner (instructed by Keoghs LLP) for the Respondent/Defendant
Hearing dates: 8 May 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
i) Can a claimant recover credit hire charges against a defendant even when she has been assured by the credit hire company that she will never have to pay the outstanding sums out of her own pocket?
ii) How badly off does a claimant have to be to satisfy the test of impecuniosity?
THE BACKGROUND
THE HIRE AGREEMENTS
"Q. What about payment? What did you understand you were liable for in terms of payment in this agreement?
A. I believed at the time that of course there would of course be like charges but those charges would be recovered from the third party insurer with like the accident not being my fault.
Q. So, when you signed this agreement, was it your understanding that the charges would be covered by the third party insurer?
A. Yes
Q. Were you told that by this credit hire company when you signed the agreements?
A. I was, yes…"
"Q. Now, you say you were told that the charges would be covered by the third party insurer and that may be the case. What would you do, however, if the court were to say well, those charges aren't going to be paid by the third party insurer? Would you be able to pay the charges yourself?
A. Absolutely not.
Q. Absolutely not. The total charges finished, it went on for quite a significant period of time, didn't it? The total charges come to over £20,000. Yes? There's no prospect of you being able to pay that, is there?
A. No, but I thought that obviously, I wouldn't be in a hire car for that long, I felt because he'd admitted liability, it was a minor accident, it was a minor injury, I thought when I got my cheque for my car within, I don't know, a few weeks and I would be able to purchase my own and then everyone's sorted. At the most, honestly, I thought it would be like two months. Maybe that sounds a bit naïve but I'd never been in a road accident before and I thought because he'd admitted liability, I didn't know I would be in a hire vehicle for 132 days.
Q. Yes. So, if this court today were to say the defendant's insurance company is not liable to pay those charges, you would be presented with that bill for £20,000. You wouldn't be able to pay that, would you?
A. Absolutely not.
Q. Absolutely not. So, you say that you were told that the charges would be covered by the insurer. Were you also told that if the claims didn't succeed against the insurer, those charges would be written off?
A. I was always told that it was a no win, no fee. That, I didn't honestly, I don't remember being told what would happen if I didn't win, what would happen with the charges to be honest.
Q. You mention no win, no fee. Are you saying the hire company mentioned the no win, no fee arrangement?
A. It was the lawyers, Armstrong's Solicitors, who said that".
"Questioned by Judge Saffman
Q. So, let me ask you this. So, if, as regards the hire charges, you did not think you were going to have to pay for these?
A. I didn't, no.
Q. At all?
A. No.
Q. No. Whether you won or lost this case?
A. No. If I lost, I was told there'd be no fees at all like, nothing to pay.
Q. So, you did not, understandably, you did not really care if it was £150 a day or, sorry, whether it was, what was it again? I cannot remember.
MR MADDISON: £152.
JUDGE SAFFMAN: £152 a day or £1,052 a day, it made no difference to you.
MISS IRVING: Well, I did care. I didn't think I would have the car for that long so like, I thought the charges wouldn't be as high as they were.
Q. But it does not make, but it did not matter to you anyway.
A. To be fair, if I wasn't paying for it-
Q. No.
A. -no.
Q. And you did not think you were paying for it.
A. Well, no. I thought it was paid by the third party insurer".
"In order for these hire charges to be recoverable from the defendant I have to be satisfied that the claimant is obliged to pay them. But her evidence, her evidence I emphasise, is that she is not and that is the only evidence I have on this issue… As a result I am satisfied that this credit hire charge falls at the first hurdle…"
CONTINGENT LIABILITY
"I now turn to the wholly distinct question whether the motorists have proved that they have suffered a recoverable loss through the unavailability of their own cars pending repairs. The defendants say that they have not, because the cars were replaced by substitute vehicles which the motorists were able to use free of charge. In essence, it is said that the motorists have mitigated what would otherwise have been a valid claim for general damages reflecting their loss of the opportunity to make use of their own vehicles.
On the opinion which I have formed of the obligations created by the obscure and incomplete terms of the two agreements this contention admits of a very short answer. In my judgment the motorists do not obtain the replacing vehicle free of charge. If the motorist had simply persuaded a garage to hire her a substitute on credit, without any of the superstructure of the present transaction, it would be no answer to a claim for damages equivalent to the sums due to the garage that these sums would not in practice be paid until a judgment in the motorist's favour had provided the necessary funds: for the amount of the outstanding liability represents the loss suffered by the motorist, and the question whether the motorist intends to apply the damages recovered in satisfaction of the debt, or in some wholly different way, cannot affect his right of recovery.
To distinguish that case from the present the defendants are forced to contend that the consideration for the provision of the cars consisted solely of a right to recoup themselves from the damages for loss of use. As will have appeared, I do not accept this interpretation. The hiring company has no direct right to the damages. The company is not an assignee or chargee of the cause of action or its fruits, although it expects that the damages for loss of use will form part of the assets from which the motorist will in due course pay for the substitute. The liability for the car hire, although suspended as regards enforcement, rests upon the motorist throughout. It is a real liability, the incurring of which constitutes a real loss to the motorist. Whatever the publicity material may have conveyed, the provision of the substitute cars was not "free".
In the light of this conclusion I find it unnecessary to discuss the question, by no means easy, what the position would have been if the use of the substitute car really had been free; as, for example, if it had been lent by a kindly friend. To do so would require a reconciliation of cases such as Harlow & Jones Ltd. v. Panex (International) Ltd. [1967] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 509 , Donnelly v. Joyce [1974] QB 454 , McAll v. Brooks [1984] R.T.R. 99 and Cosemar S.A. v. Marimarna Shipping Co. Ltd. [1990] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 323 . This question, which is of much general importance, is in my view far better left for decision when it actually arises, rather than as a by-product of two schemes which have not, as I suggest, been fully worked out."
"Mr. Dunn correctly summarised the final position by saying that the bargain was that the Russian sellers would only claim against the plaintiffs if the plaintiffs could recover those charges from the defendants in this action. Mr. Dunn argued that an arrangement of that kind barred the plaintiffs recovering in this action. For my part I am unable to see why. The plaintiffs have – and this was not contested - apart from any agreement with the Russian sellers, a perfectly good claim for these storage charges. Why the plaintiffs should not make an arrangement with their own sellers, "We will claim these and hand the proceeds over to you if we recover provided you let us off if we do not", I am unable to see. Nor do I see why the existence of such an arrangement should afford the defendants a defence which they would not otherwise possess. It seems to me an eminently sensible commercial arrangement. I think the storage charges are recoverable."
"Mr. Hamilton's first proposition is that a plaintiff cannot succeed in a claim in relation to someone else's loss unless the plaintiff is under a legal liability to reimburse that other person. The plaintiff, he says, was not under a legal liability to reimburse his mother. A moral obligation is not enough. Mr. Hamilton's second proposition is that if, contrary to his submission, the existence of a moral, as distinct from a legal, obligation to reimburse the benefactor is sufficient, nevertheless there is no moral obligation on the part of a child of six years of age to repay its parents for money spent by them, as in this case.
We do not agree with the proposition, inherent in Mr. Hamilton's submission, that the plaintiff's claim, in circumstances such as the present. is properly to be regarded as being, to use his phrase, "in relation to someone else's loss," merely because someone else has provided to, or for the benefit of, the plaintiff - the injured person - the money, or the services to be valued as money, to provide for needs of the plaintiff directly caused by the defendant's wrongdoing. The loss is the plaintiff's loss."
"The third party's funding in payment of the expenses is irrelevant in law. To rule otherwise would be to discourage settlements and encourage a multiplicity of suits."
"As a general principle it is of course true that a plaintiff's claim for special damage can only succeed to the extent of losses he has actually sustained and liabilities he has actually incurred. But the rule is not absolute: the proceeds of private insurance and charitable benevolence are, for differing reasons, disregarded. Nor, in my view, does it relieve the defendant of liability if the plaintiff's liability to pay charges to a third party is contingent on his recovery against the defendant: that is the effect of Harlow & Jones Ltd. v. Panex (International) Ltd. [1967] 2 Ll.Rep. 509 at 531 and The Mathew [1990] 2 L1. Rep. 323 at 327-8. I further understand Donnelly v. Joyce [1974] QB 454 and McAll v. Brooks [1984] R.T.R. 99 to concentrate attention on the question whether the plaintiff has suffered a loss and away from the question what he will do with any money he may recover. The issue may be tested by asking whether, if these plaintiffs recover reasonable charges reasonably incurred, they will be over-compensated. They will not. Nor will the car hire companies. Neither will enjoy double recovery, or any windfall. The only windfall would be enjoyed by the insurance companies if the plaintiffs did not recover. I regard the insurance companies' submission on this point as unsound."
"A liability owing from A to B can exist notwithstanding that B has agreed not to enforce it directly against A. A non-recourse loan is a good example of that. As Prof Goode observes in his book on Consumer Credit Law and Practice (at para 11.73):
"Whilst an obligation to repay is an essential characteristic of a loan, the manner in which the obligation is to be discharged may be restricted. In particular, it is not necessary that the borrower should incur a personal obligation to repay out of his own monies. It suffices that payment is to be made from a designated fund or from the proceeds of a specified asset. So an undertaking by B to repay an advance with such money (if any) as has come into his hands from T makes B a borrower despite the fact that his repayment liability is limited to the sums received from T."
IMPECUNIOSITY
"The correct analysis would appear to be as follows. A claim for the cost of hire of a replacement vehicle is, strictly, a claim for expenditure incurred in mitigation of the primary loss, namely the loss of use of the damaged vehicle: see the speech of Lord Hope in Lagden v O'Connor at [27]. The burden is thus on the claimant to prove (and therefore plead) that such expenditure was reasonably incurred: see the authorities reviewed by Sir Mark Potter P. in Beechwood Birmingham Ltd v Hoyer Group UK Ltd [2010] RTR 33 at [25]–[28]. There is no doubt a grey area about how much needs to be pleaded and proved to establish reasonableness before the evidential burden shifts to the defendant to show that the expenditure was unreasonable. But in this kind of case it is clearly right that a claimant who needs to rely on his impecuniousness in order to justify the amount of his claim should plead and prove it."
"9 There remains the difficult point of what is meant by "impecunious" in the context of the present type of case. Lack of financial means is, almost always, a question of priorities. In the present context what it signifies is inability to pay car hire charges without making sacrifices the plaintiff could not reasonably be expected to make. I am fully conscious of the open-ended nature of this test. But fears that this will lead to increased litigation in small claims courts seem to me exaggerated. It is in the interests of all concerned to avoid litigation with its attendant costs and delay. Motor insurers and credit hire companies should be able to agree on standard enquiries, or some other means, which in practice can most readily give effect to this test of impecuniosity."
CONCLUSION
Note 1 It may be noted that the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in both Donnelly and McAll was subsequently criticised by the House of Lords in Hunt v Severs [1994] 2 AC 350 and Dimond v Lovell [2002] 1 AC 384 but it is necessary to analyse the status of those two earlier cases as at the time of Lord Mustill’s observations in order to determine the parameters of his concerns in the passage cited. In any event, none of the cases decided since Giles has undermined the established basis of recovery of a contingent debt. Indeed, the opposite is the case (see, for example, Wakeling v Harrington [2007] EWCH 1184 (Ch) below). [Back]