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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 >> Hussain v EUI Ltd [2019] EWHC 2647 (QB) (10 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/2647.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2647 (QB) |
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HIGH COURT APPEAL CENTRE BIRMINGHAM
ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT BIRMINGHAM
(HER HONOUR JUDGE WALL)
33 Bull Street, Birmingham, B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
HUMAYUM HUSSAIN |
Claimant / Appellant |
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- and – |
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EUI LIMITED |
Defendant / Respondent |
____________________
Jonathan Hough QC (instructed by Horwich Farrelly) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 31 July 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE PEPPERALL:
THE FACTS
GROUND 1: LIMITING DAMAGES TO THE AVOIDED LOSS OF PROFIT
"30. I have concluded that this taxi was a profit-earning chattel in a true sense. It was not the only family car. The claimant lives with his wife and two small children. His wife owns and drives a Toyota Yaris which is sufficient for four people to use. The claimant says in his witness statement that he used his taxi for work, for family trips and longer journeys. He works, he told me, five to six days each week, but there is no evidence before me that any long journeys or family holidays were planned during this relatively short 18-day period for repair and that is unlikely, in view of the fact that the claimant did hire this very expensive credit-hire taxi.
31. So am I not satisfied on the evidence before me that the claimant has discharged the burden of showing that he had a need for a second car for domestic and social use during the hire period. The need was for a taxi for business use and, where the loss is of a profit-earning chattel, then the measure of damages is kept at the loss of profits and it is unreasonable mitigation to expend more in attempting to make a profit than the profit itself. So here the damages claimed grossly exceed the loss of profit which would have followed for 18 days and so I cap the level of damages at the loss of profits level.
32. The claimant's accounts show that he was self-employed as a taxi driver. I have seen that his net profits in consecutive years were £7,644 for the 2015/2016 year and £6,429 for the 2016/2017 year. I accept the claimant's evidence that he is a very hard worker. He takes little time off work and he often works six days per week. The average net profit for those two years is £7,036.50 and on the claimant's evidence that represents a 50-week year, which would make his loss of profits £141 per week. The 18 days represents three working weeks and so I assess his loss of earnings at £423."
7.1 First, he argues that the judge's approach to need was too exacting and that the judge should have found that Mr Hussain reasonably needed a second car for social and domestic purposes whatever the business need.
7.2 Secondly, he argues that the judge was wrong to limit damages to the profit that Mr Hussain would have lost.
THE NEED FOR A REPLACEMENT CAR
"… it is not a family car and is not a suitable substitute vehicle for me for my work or for family trips and longer journeys and normally we would use my BMW for this."
CAPPING DAMAGES AT THE AVOIDED LOST PROFIT
16.1 The starting point is that the professional driver's vehicle is a profit-earning chattel and that the true loss is the loss of profit suffered while the damaged vehicle is reasonably off the road pending its repair or replacement: Commissioners for Executing the Office of Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom v. Owners of the Steamship Valeria [1922] 2 A.C. 242; Clerk & Lindsell on Torts (22nd Ed), para. 28-121.
16.2 Of course, a claimant might choose instead to hire a replacement vehicle in order to be able to continue trading. Properly analysed, this is a claim for expenditure incurred in mitigation of the primary loss: Lagden v. O'Connor, at [27]; Umerji v. Khan [2014] EWCA Civ 357, [2014] R.T.R. 23, at [37]. Like any other expense incurred in a reasonable attempt to mitigate a claimant's loss, such hire costs are prima facie recoverable. Where, for example, the claimant successfully mitigates his or her loss by hiring a replacement vehicle at a cost lower than the hypothetical loss of profit, the court will award the lower hire charges.
16.3 A claimant cannot recover any additional loss suffered by reason of a failure to take reasonable steps to mitigate his or her loss: British Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. Ltd v. Underground Electric Railways Co. of London Ltd [1912] AC 673, at 689; Dunkirk Colliery Co. v. Lever (1878) 9 Ch D 20, at page 25.
16.4 Claimants cannot, however, be expected to weigh precisely their losses. In Banco de Portugal v. Waterlow & Sons Ltd [1932] AC 452, Lord Macmillan observed at page 506:
"Where the sufferer from a breach of contract finds himself in consequence of that breach placed in a position of embarrassment the measures which he may be driven to adopt in order to extricate himself ought not to be weighed in nice scales at the instance of the party whose breach of contract has occasioned the difficulty. It is often easy after an emergency has passed to criticise the steps which have been taken to meet it, but such criticism does not come well from those who have themselves created the emergency. The law is satisfied if the party placed in a difficult situation by reason of the breach of a duty owed to him has acted reasonably in the adoption of remedial measures, and he will not be held disentitled to recover the cost of such measures. merely because the party in breach can suggest that other measures less burdensome to him might have been taken."
16.5 Accordingly:
a) where a claimant acts reasonably in hiring a replacement vehicle at about the same cost as the avoided loss of profit, the court will not count the pennies and hold the claimant to the hypothetical loss of profit if it turns out to be a little lower; but
b) where the cost of hire significantly exceeds the avoided loss of profit, the court will ordinarily limit damages to the lost profit.
16.6 Even where the cost of hire significantly exceeds the avoided loss of profit, the claimant may still succeed in establishing that he or she acted reasonably:
a) First, any business must sometimes provide a service at a loss in order to retain important customers or contracts. For example, a chauffeur might not want to let down a regular client for fear of losing her. Equally, a self-employed taxi driver might risk being dropped by the taxi company that provides him with most of his work. Properly analysed, these are not, however, exceptions to the general rule since in such cases the claimant is really saying that, but for his or her actions in hiring a replacement vehicle, the true loss of profit would not have been limited simply to the pro rata loss calculated on the basis of the period of closure but that future trading would itself have been compromised. Again, claimants are not required to weigh these factors precisely, and a claimant who reasonably incurs what at first might appear to be disproportionate hire costs in order to avoid a real risk of greater loss, will usually be entitled to recover such hire costs from the tortfeasor.
b) Secondly, many professional drivers use their vehicles for both business and private purposes. Where such a claimant proves that he or she needed a replacement vehicle for private and family use, a claim for reasonable hire charges, even if in excess of the loss of profit that was avoided by hiring the replacement vehicle, will ordinarily be recoverable in the event that a private motorist would have been entitled to recover such costs.
c) Thirdly, it might be reasonable for a professional driver to hire a replacement vehicle even though the cost of doing so was significantly more than the loss of profit because he simply could not afford not to work. The tortfeasor takes his victim as he finds him and impecunious self-employed claimants cannot be expected to be left without any income and forced to look to the state to provide for their families on the basis that they might eventually recover their loss of profit some months or years later.
GROUND 2: BASIC HIRE RATES
CONCLUSIONS
23.1 A professional driver might receive gross income of £2,000 per month from which he has to pay fixed overheads (including interest payable on the loan taken to purchase his car, insurance and road tax) of £250 and variable costs (principally fuel, servicing and tyres) of £500.
23.2 His accounts would show a net profit of £1,250 per month, but the claimant's true loss upon his car being off the road for a full month is £1,500 (being his pro rata loss of net profit plus the fixed overheads that he had to pay even though he was not working).