BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Blake v Mad Max Ltd (Rev 1) [2018] EWHC 2134 (QB) (08 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/2134.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2134 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
DEBORAH BLAKE (EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF PAUL NIGEL BLAKE, DECEASED) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
MAD MAX LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Peter Morton (instructed by BC Legal) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12th July 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Peter Marquand:
Introduction
Background
The issues
i) general damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity;
ii) whether funeral expenses include the cost of a wake;
iii) the value of care provided by the Claimant to Mr Blake during his illness;
iv) the value of services provided by Mr Blake;
v) Mr Blake's level of earnings and likely retirement age;
vi) a claim for servicing a car;
vii) the future income dependency; and
viii) damages for loss of intangible benefits (loss of a spouse)
The evidence
i) a medical report from Professor Maskell, consultant physician;
ii) three witness statements from Mr Blake made before his death and served with a Civil Evidence Act notice; and
iii) a witness statement dated 24 April 2018 from the Claimant.
The Claimant also gave oral evidence before me. I found her to be an honest and reliable witness doing the best that she could to assist the Court.
General damages
Case | Age at death | Duration of illness (years) | Award adjusted for RPI | Life expectancy in years (where available) | Additional features |
Grant v Secretary of State for Transport [2017] EWHC 1663 (QB) | 70 | 3.4 | £94,500 | 12 cycles of chemotherapy, one of experimental treatment and radiotherapy. Ringing in his ears and hallucinations. Swollen feet with oozing fluid. Severe pain for five months uncontrollable in the end. | |
Jones v Robert McBride Homecare Ltd (Lawtel) | 70 | 6 years | £96,000 | 18 | Five courses of chemotherapy and drug trials. |
Wolstheholme v Leach's Of Shudehill Limited [2016] EWHC 588 (QB) | 60 | 2.4 | £96,000 | 15.6 | Secondary condition of polymyalgia rheumatica caused by mesothelioma. Herpes Zoster leading to shoulder pain. Swelling of legs with skin splitting fluid loss and pressure sores. In great pain. Increasing severity of symptoms for the last 29 months. |
John Davey (Lawtel) | 86 | 3.5 years | £93,000 | Massive pleural effusion, surgical procedures, ankle swelling. Unable to go out for the final 18 months and towards the end very severe symptoms. Anxiety. | |
Mosson v Spousal (London) Ltd [2015] EWHC 53 (QB) | 66 | 2.2 years | £91,400 | Infected surgical wounds. Surgery to the chest. Six cycles of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Development of peripheral neuropathy and ringing in the ears. | |
Zambarder v Shipbreaking Ltd (Lawtel) | 70 | 0.6 | £86,400 | 12.6 | Surgery to the chest, radiotherapy and complex pre-existing conditions. |
Knauer v Ministry of Justice [2014] EWHC 2553 (QB) | 46 | 0.5 | £87,000 | Hydro pneumothorax. Radical surgery to the chest. Severe pain. Admitted to hospice because of vomiting and pain. | |
Ghoorah v West Essex CCG (Lawtel) | ? | ? | £94,600 | ||
Dadd v Associated Electrical Industries Ltd and Others (Lawtel) | 66 | 6 | £94,000 | 15.3 | Recurrent pulmonary embolism (blood clots on the lung) caused by the mesothelioma. Chest pains. Loss of taste and smell. Nausea diarrhoea and abdominal pain. |
"Mesothelioma causing severe pain and impairment of both function and quality of life. This may be of the pleura (the lung lining) or of the peritoneum (the lining of the abdominal cavity); the latter being typically more painful. There are a large number of factors which will affect the level of award within the bracket. These include but are not limited to duration of pain and suffering, extent and effects of invasive investigations, extent and effects of radical surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, whether the mesothelioma is peritoneal or pleural, the extent to which the tumour has spread to encase the lungs and where other organs become involved causing additional pain and/or breathlessness, the level of the symptoms, domestic circumstances, age, level of activity and previous state of health, extent of life loss and concern for spouse and/or children following death."
Funeral expenses and the cost of a wake
"In consequence, I find that the cost of mourning clothing rather than being a funeral expense was an expense consequent upon the death and was a part of the mourning expenses. It also follows that the cost of the wake, however reasonable it may have been in the circumstances, was not itself a funeral expense. In my view, it was, as with the mourning clothes, the consequence of the death and a part of the expenses of mourning the deceased. If I am held to be wrong in this I should add that whilst as wakes ago, and in the whole of the circumstances, it was not an extravagant one…"
"Receptions are not always held after a funeral. When they are held, there is no invariable practice of providing refreshments. This makes it difficult to suppose that Parliament intended to include them within "funeral expenses" in s. 1(2)(c) of the 1934 Act (or, for that matter, in s. 3(5) of the 1976 Act). I decline to follow the decision of Master Topley to contrary effect in Smith v Bowbelle/Marchioness (unreported, 27 January 1993)."
The value of care provided by the Claimant to Mr Blake during his illness
Period | Dates | Amount of care in hours per day |
1 | April to June 2015 | 1 |
2 | July to December 2015 | 2 |
3 | January to March 2016 | 4 |
4 | April to mid July 2016 | 8 |
5 | Mid-July to 18th September 2016 | 24 |
The value of services provided by Mr Blake
Mr Blake's level of earnings and retirement age
A claim for servicing a car
The future dependency
Damages for loss of intangible benefits (loss of a spouse)
"The awards to NH and PH of £5,000 and £7,000 are challenged by Mr Strachan on the basis that the conventional maximum award is about £5,000, even where the dependent child is very young… Mr Lederman's response is that in other cases there was no evidence as to the value and quality of the services lost. In my judgement that is not a sufficient reason to abandon the bracket, and I would reduce the award in the case of NH to £3,500 and in the case of PH to £4,500."
i) Aside from the bereavement award, there is no award for non-pecuniary loss.
ii) Awards have been made where a pecuniary loss is not adequately compensated by an award for the services dependency. A pecuniary loss meaning one that is conceptually capable of being valued in money or money's worth. For example, increased hours that a mother spent in the evening and weekends when there is no substitute for her services or the value of care a husband would have given to his older wife (taken from the authorities in Regan and Fleet v Fleet [2009] EWHC 3166 (QB) respectively). Martin Chamberlain QC concluded that Garnham J was mistaken in Mosson;
iii) The surviving spouse may have to undertake activities he or she did not have to do previously by virtue of making the arrangements for the commercial provision of the services that would otherwise have been undertaken by the deceased (this being the basis for the awards in Beasley and Wolstenholme v Leach's of Shudehill [2016) EWHC 588 (QB)).
"there are considerable advantages in having jobs around the house and garden done by a husband at his own time and convenience rather than having to go out and to find and choose commercial providers, and to have to work around the hours that suit them for the work in question."
Conclusion
i) I have awarded £90,000 for general damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity;
ii) Funeral expenses do not include the cost of a wake;
iii) The value of care provided by the Claimant to Mr Blake during his illness is as claimed, subject to a deduction of one week's worth of care in the final period before Mr Blake's death;
iv) The value of services provided by Mr Blake is assessed at £750 per annum;
v) Mr Blake's level of earnings to be used for past loss and future dependency calculations is £14,174 and his likely retirement age is 70;
vi) The claim for servicing a car is rejected;
vii) The future income dependency should include the Claimant working at her reduced hours for a period of 5 years in total; and
viii) Damages for loss of intangible benefits of a spouse are recoverable and assessed at £2,500.
The parties should now be able to conclude their calculations and agree a final order. After handing down this Judgment I will deal with any outstanding issues in light of any further submissions.
Note 1 Mr Hogarth stated the Simmons v Castle [2013] 1 WLR 1239 10% uplift is not applicable in this case. [Back] Note 2 Produced in the appendix to Chapter 29 of Kemp and Kemp. [Back]