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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd v Handy [2015] EWHC 1175 (TCC) (06 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/1175.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1175 (TCC) |
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HT-13-23, HT-13-70 and HT-13-130 |
QUEEN''S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
NETWORK RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SIMON HANDY |
Defendant |
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NETWORK RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ANDREW JAMES INGRAM |
Defendant |
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NETWORK RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROB HATFIELD LIMITED |
Defendant |
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NETWORK RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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RHIANNON PARRY |
Defendant |
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NETWORK RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DAVID CHARLES GODLEY |
Defendant |
____________________
Andrew Bartlett QC and Isabel Hitching (instructed by DWF) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 20-22, 26-29 January and 26-27 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Akenhead:
The Background
(i) Every year, there are in Great Britain a significant number of road accidents on bridges over and under railways, on railway crossings and otherwise on railtrack. In 2008-9, the Court was told that there were 1,365 such incidents on bridges affecting railway services and a significant number of other incidents on level crossings. A number of these accidents will involve negligence by one or more drivers involved. Typically, as in the current cases, the accidents will involve physical damage to the bridges, damage to the railway lines, physical remedial work and greater or less disruption to the rail services. Mr Kenney produced the figures for road related, level crossing incidents and bridge strikes from 2005 to 2012, the average each year being for the three types of incident being 134, 2,794 and 1,395 respectively, producing on average 16,147, 78,535 and 190,550 minutes delay to the running of rail services. Some of the level crossing incidents are pedestrian as opposed to vehicle related. Against this, there are said to be some 800,000 delay related incidents a year.
(ii) In 1996, the railways and the rail track system were privatised, coming out of nationalised public ownership. The privatisation involved the setting up of Railtrack as the body responsible for the rail track system and the introduction of companies who would operate the trains on that system. The system was effectively divided up into different areas or lines such as the East Coast Main Line and the West Coast Main Line, with GNER and Virgin being the companies which respectively secured the franchises. There were various checks and balances whereby the interests of the public and the government were sought to be protected. Thus, there was the Office of the Rail Regulator (and since 2004 the Office of Rail Regulation (""ORR"") which, amongst other things, tried to ensure that Railtrack and the TOCs were encouraged or ""incentivised"" to do their respective jobs properly. There came a time when Railtrack went back into effective government ownership in 2002 and it has since been known as Network Rail.
(iii) In broad terms, the TAAs operate as a form of licence by Network Rail to the TOCs to use the track in return for what are annually often very substantial nine figure sums. However, there is in place in practice pursuant to the TAAs an accounting system whereby, when the track is not available through no fault of a particular TOC, it is compensated by Network Rail through what are called Schedule 8 payments or allowances. Because some parts of the rail track system are used by more than one TOC or some TOCs are affected by the activities of other TOCs on other parts of the system, Network Rail can recover some of the Schedule 8 payments from any TOC which has caused the track in question to be unavailable. There are however some incidents for which other TOCs are not to blame. For instance, the non-availability of the track may be the responsibility of Network Rail. Furthermore, as in the current cases, there may be incidents for which Network Rail can not be said to be at fault, such as damage caused by negligent road users, but for which it assumes the risk and responsibility as between it and the TOCs.
A. Simon Handy
Date | Tuesday 22.03.05 |
Time | 6.45 am |
Type of incident | Line incursion. |
Summary of incident |
Car driven onto line. Damage to track-side ducting but no other damage to NR property in doing so. Thereafter collision with train leaving wreckage fouling up line. |
Damage | Fouling to up line. |
Location |
Great Bowden - between Market Harborough and Leicester. |
Line | St. Pancras to Leicester, Nottingham, Derby and Sheffield. |
Classification of line | London inter urban. |
Time of resumption of reduced speed services. | Reduced speed services resumed on down line by 9.50am, and on up line by 1.32pm. Whilst only down line was open bi-directional working adopted (i.e. trains travelling in both directions on single line) |
Time of resumption of full speed services | Full speed services resumed on down line by 1.31 pm and on up line by 1.32 pm. |
TOCS (and numbers of Service Groups) affected | 5 TOCs affected: Midland Mainline (2), Thameslink (2), Central Trains (5), Virgin Cross Country (1) and South West Trains (1) |
Inspection and Repair costs | £6,707.04. |
Pleaded Quantum of Schedule 8 Claim | £259,733.64 |
Main TOC affected | Midland Mainline. Total claimed £255,632.83. |
Most affected Service Group of that TOC for Schedule 8 Claim purposes | Midland Mainline HI01 (£186,273.15) |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that Service Group | 1573 |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that TOC | 2091 |
Number of trains cancelled (in full or in part) for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 38 |
Number of trains affected for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 92 |
B. Andrew Ingram
Date | Thursday 13.10.05 |
Time | 3.46pm |
Line incursion/bridge strike | Bridge Strike |
Summary of incident |
Lorry too tall to pass under bridge carrying a railway line (two tracks). Hit bridge and became trapped under it. |
Damage | Bricks dislodged in structure of bridge. |
Location |
Bursnall's Bridge, Wickwar - between Bristol and Gloucester. |
Line | Line from Bristol to the North of England via Cheltenham and from Bristol south to Plymouth. |
Classification of line | Non-London inter urban. |
Time of resumption of reduced speed services. | Northbound line at 4.39pm. Southbound not resumed reduced speed services. |
Time of resumption of full speed services | Southbound line at 4.39pm. Northbound line at 6.35pm. |
TOCS (and numbers of Service Groups) affected | 6 TOCs: Wessex (3), First Great Western (4), Central Trains (3), Virgin West Coast (2), Virgin Cross Country (1) and Northern Rail (2) |
Inspection and Repair costs | £1,844.33 |
Main TOC affected | First Great Western: Total claimed £18,064.54 |
Pleaded Quantum of Schedule 8 Claim | £26,452.24. |
Most affected Service Group of that TOC for Schedule 8 Claim purposes | First Great Western HJ02 (£10,964.81) |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that Service Group | 64 |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that TOC | 118 |
Number of trains cancelled (in full or in part) for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 0 |
Number of trains affected for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 10 |
C. Rob Hatfield Ltd (driver Mr Sudds)
Date | Thursday 25.5.06 |
Time | 9.57am |
Type of incident | Bridge strike. |
Summary of incident |
Lorry too tall to pass under bridge carrying a railway line (two tracks). Lorry collided with and became stuck under bridge. |
Damage | 7 rivet heads sheared off bottom flange of bridge and 2 rivet heads sheared off second cross girder of bridge. |
Location | Strood, Kent |
Line | Kent to London. |
Classification of Line | South East outer urban. |
Time of resumption of full speed services | 11.26am on both up and down lines. |
TOCS (and numbers of Service Groups) affected | 3 TOCs: Thameslink (3), Southern (1) and South-Eastern (5) |
Inspection and Repair costs |
£1,708.00 (Claim abandoned) |
Pleaded Quantum of Schedule 8 Claim | £41,550.36 |
Main TOC affected | South-Eastern: Total claim £38,814.81 |
Most affected Service Group of that TOC for Schedule 8 Claim purposes | South-Eastern HU01 (£29,313.06 ) |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that Service Group | 1199 |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that TOC | 1590 |
Number of trains cancelled (in full or in part) for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 16 |
Number of trains affected for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 121 |
D. Rhiannon Parry
Date | Tuesday 26.9.06 |
Time | 1.10pm |
Type of incident | Line incursion |
Summary of incident |
Car crashed through boundary fence, travelled across down line and came to rest on its roof on up line. Thereafter clipped by a train travelling on down line. |
Damage | Boundary fence damaged, rail of up line bent out of shape and wreckage of car fouled up line. |
Location | Ffynnonngroyw, Flintshire. |
Line | Holyhead and Manchester Piccadilly. |
Classification of line | Non-London inter urban. |
Time of resumption of reduced speed services. | 1.55 pm on both up and down lines, although running suspended 15.13 to 15.26 to remove vehicle. |
Time of resumption of full speed services | 2.40 pm on down line and 07.07 am the next morning on up line. |
TOCS (and numbers of Service Groups) affected |
7 TOCs affected: Central Trains (1), Arriva Trains Wales (4), Trans-Pennine Express (3), Virgin West Coast (5), Northern Rail (1), Virgin Cross Country (1) and Silverlink (1) |
Inspection and Repair costs | £4,221.30. |
Main TOC affected | Virgin West Coast: Total claim: £8,002.06. TOC next most affected: Arriva Trains Wales Total claim £6,869.25 |
Pleaded Quantum of Schedule 8 Claim | £16,161.91. |
Most significant Service Group for Schedule 8 Claim purposes | Virgin West Coast HF02 (£6,480.88 of the £8,002.06 for Virgin West Coast in total) |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that Service Group | 160 |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that TOC | 190 |
Number of trains cancelled (in full or in part) for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 2 |
Number of trains affected for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 10 |
E. David Godley
Date | Thursday 7.4.11 |
Time | Before 1.50 pm |
Type of incident | Line incursion |
Summary of incident |
Sewage tanker driven across railway track (four lines) through lowered level crossing barriers on both sides. Barriers damaged. Wreckage from barriers fouled lines. |
Damage | Damage to barriers, wreckage fouling lines. |
Location | Manningtree, Essex. |
Line | London to Norwich. Also affects Colchester, Ipswich / Harwich. |
Classification of line | Outer suburban and partly London inter urban and South East outer suburban. |
Time of resumption of reduced speed services. | Neither line opened at reduced speed. |
Time of resumption of full speed services | Both lines at 5.00 pm. |
TOCS (and numbers of Service Groups) affected | 1 TOC - National Express East Anglia (5). |
Inspection and Repair costs | Settled pre-action at £9,000.00. |
Pleaded Quantum of Schedule 8 Claim | £28,815.90 (now reduced to £26,917.90 after errors identified). |
Most affected Service Group of that TOC for Schedule 8 Claim purposes | National Express East Anglia EB04 Off Peak (originally thought to be £22,306.13 of the total claimed; which Network Rail has agreed should be subject to a reduction of £1,898) |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that Service Group | Originally thought to be 136; now considered to be 128.5 after errors identified |
Minutes delay attributed to the incident for Schedule 8 purposes for that TOC | Originally thought to be 268; now considered to be 256.5 after errors identified |
Number of trains cancelled (in full or in part) for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 8 |
Number of trains affected for that TOC on account of the incident, according to attribution for Schedule 8 purposes | 32 |
References to Service Groups relate to the fact that TOCs operate different groups of trains.
The Proceedings
“"1. The extent to which the Schedule 8 losses suffered by and claimed by the Claimant are recoverable from the Defendants. This includes the following sub-issues:
a. Whether (as the Claimant contends) the payment adjustments required under Schedule 8 reasonably estimate revenues likely to be lost by the TOCs as a result of an individual incident of disruption to the rail network as occurred in the present cases.
b. If the payment adjustments under Schedule 8 do reasonably estimate revenues likely to be lost by the TOCs as a result of an individual incident of disruption to the rail network, what (if any) legal consequences follow, and in particular whether as a result they are recoverable from the Defendants.
c. Whether (as the Defendants contend) the payment adjustments required under Schedule 8 do not accurately, reasonably or genuinely estimate or reflect the actual lost revenue suffered by the TOCs caused by an individual incident of disruption to the rail network as occurred in the present cases.
d. If the payment adjustments under Schedule 8 do not accurately, reasonably or genuinely estimate/reflect the actual lost revenues suffered by the TOCs caused by such an incident, what (if any) legal consequences follow, and in particular whether as a result they are irrecoverable from the Defendants.""
The Background to Schedule 8
""1.2.1 to use the track comprised in the Routes…for the provision of the Services using the Specified Equipment;
1.2.2 to make Ancillary Movements…
1.2.4 for the Train Operator and its associates to enter on that part of the Network comprising the Routes, with or without vehicles; and
1.2.5 for the Train Operator and its associates to bring things onto that part of the Network comprising the Routes and keep them there…""
By Clause 3, Network Rail granted the Train Operator permission to use the Routes.
""Operation and Maintenance of Trains
6.1.1 The Train Operator shall ensure that the Specified Equipment is maintained and operated to a standard which will permit provision of the Services in accordance with the Working Timetable…
6.2 Track Charges
Each of the parties shall perform its obligations set out in Schedule 7.
6.3 Operation and Maintenance of the Network
6.3.1 Network Rail shall ensure that adequate and suitably qualified personnel are engaged in the operation and maintenance of that part of the Network comprising the Routes.
6.3.2 Network Rail shall ensure that the Network is maintained and operated to a standard which shall permit the provision of the Services using the Specified Equipment in accordance with the Working Timetable and the making of Ancillary Movements…
6.5 Possessions and Services
Each of the parties shall perform its obligations, if any, set out in Schedules 4 and 5""
“"8.3 Liability for Late Trains
The rights and obligations of the parties set out in Schedules 4 and 8 represent the parties’' sole entitlement as between themselves to any compensation in respect of any damage, losses, claims, proceedings, demands, liabilities, costs, damages, orders and out of pocket expenses arising from cancellations, interruptions or delays to trains.
8.5 Exclusion of Claims for Consequential Loss
Neither party to this Agreement may recover from the other party any loss of revenue (including fare revenue, subsidy, access charges, Track Charges and incentive payments) or other consequential loss in connection with the subject matter of this Agreement caused to it by the other party, save to the extent otherwise provided in this Agreement or any other agreement between them.""
“"Responsibility for Minutes Delay on any day in respect of a Service Group [a ""collection of Services provided by the TOC”"]”" caused by incidents which are unidentified…shall be allocated as follows:
(a) if there are any Minutes Delay in respect of the Service Group recorded as being caused by incidents which Network Rail or the Train Operator are allocated responsibility:
(i) 50% of the unidentified Minutes Delay…shall be allocated to Network Rail, the Train Operator and joint responsibility incidents pro rata to the aggregate Minutes Delay for that Service Group respectively recorded as being their responsibility under this paragraph 5 for that day; and
(ii) the balance of the Minutes Delay…shall be allocated to Network Rail…”"
Systems and procedures are provided for to produce this allocation and a Delay Attribution Board provided for.
“"RPS = (RPP-RWAML) x BF x RPR
Where:
RPP is the Network Rail Performance for that Service Group specified in Column B of Appendix 1 for the year in which that Period falls;
RWAML is the aggregate for all Monitoring Points in the Service Group of the weighted average minutes late allocated to Network Rail in accordance with the following formula:
RWAML= S (MLR x MPW)/SP
where:
S is the sum across all Monitoring Points in the Service Group;
MLR is the Minutes Late allocated to Network Rail in respect of each Monitoring Point in that Period, in accordance with paragraph 7;
MPW is the weighting attributable to that Monitoring Point, as specified in Column O of Appendix 1; and
SP is the aggregate number of stops to set down passengers at that Monitoring Point scheduled for the Period in the Applicable Timetable for which a stop or Cancelled Stop is recorded in accordance with paragraph 4.1 (a) and (b) except that if SP = 0 for any Monitoring Point, then for that Monitoring Point it shall be deemed that (MLR x MPW)/ SP shall equal zero.
BF is the relevant busyness [sic] factor estimated for the Period according to the following formula:
BF = S (MPW x SD/AS)
S is the sum across all Monitoring Points in the Service Group;
MPW is the weighting attributable to that Monitoring Point, as specified in Column O of Appendix 1;
SD is the aggregate number of stops to set down passengers at that Monitoring Point scheduled in the Applicable Timetable for that Period for that Service Group; and
AS is the average number of stops per day at the Monitoring Point schedule in the Bi-Annual Timetable in respect of that Period except that if AS= 0 for any Monitoring it should be deemed that (MPW x SD/AS) shall equal zero; and
RPR is the relevant Network Rail payment rate for that Service Group specified in Column E of Appendix 1 (being the sum of the amount for the marginal revenue effect specified in Column C of Appendix 1 and the amount for the societal rate specified in Column D of Appendix 1) as indexed in accordance with the provisions in Paragraph 13.”"
There was a corresponding provision in Clause 10 with a formula to establish what sum was due for each Period in respect of the TOC’'s performance.
""(a) In respect of any and all Performance Sums for which Network Rail and the Train Operator are liable in any Period, the aggregate liabilities of Network Rail and the Train Operator shall be set off against each other. The balance shall be payable by Network Rail or the Train Operator, as the case may be, within 35 days after the end of the Period to which the payment relates.
(b) Subject to paragraph 12.2, and save as otherwise provided, all other sums payable under this Schedule 8 shall be paid within 35 days after the end of the Period to which such payment relates.""
“"The effect of timetabled journey time on demand has been well researched by the industry. The effect is usually expressed in terms of:
“"a 1% change in journey time leads to a X percent change in demand""”"
He goes on to say, uncontroversially, in Paragraphs 116-119:
“"116. The value “"X”" is known in economic terms as the ""elasticity"" of rail demand to journey time. A typical value of X might be -0.9; that is, a 1% increase in timetabled journey time typically leads to a 0.9% decrease in demand (and hence revenue) on the relevant services.
117. In fact there is a little more to it than this. Rather than using the journey time between two stations, the industry uses a concept called ""Generalised Journey Time"", or GJT. This is a measure of timetable quality that takes into account not only the journey time between two stations, but also the frequency of services and (if applicable) the need to change trains as well.
118. Put simply, GJT is calculated by adding, to the average journey time between two stations, a number of minutes reflecting service frequency and the need to change trains. The less frequent the service, the more minutes are added; and the more interchanges are needed, the more minutes are added. Thus GJT can be reduced, and demand by implication increased, either by increasing the journey time (making the journey faster); or by increasing service frequency; or by reducing or eliminating the need to change trains. Elasticities of demand are then measured with respect to GJT, rather than to journey time.
119. The elasticity of demand to GJT varies between different types of service. The choice of the elasticities, based on available industry research, is one of the key issues in calculating MREs”".
There was much talk in this case about elasticities and GJT.
MRE = (1/GJT) x elasticity x revenue x delay multiplier
Mr Angus, helpfully gives an example based on total fares revenue of £10,000 per day, a GJT of 100 minutes (being roughly equivalent to a half hourly service taking 1 hour 20 minutes to make the journey), an elasticity of -0.9 and delay multiplier of 2.5, producing an MRE calculation as follows:
1 extra minute of timetabled journey time would be (1/100) = 1% of GJT
1% increase in GJT per day would give rise to a loss of 0.9% of revenue = £90 per day
With a delay multiplier of 2.5, the loss per minute of average lateness per day is 2.5 x 90 = £225 per minute of average lateness per day.
The Law
“"It is said by the respondent, and by the majority below [in the Court of Appeal] that the appellant must fail as its loss was pure economic loss. Whether that is so depends upon questions of both fact and law. On the facts as agreed, the road was blocked by the negligent actions of the respondent. It ceased to be a road in the sense of a traffic-carrying facility. Whether the respondent achieved this result by deliberately tearing up a section of the surface, or by negligently operating his vehicle so as to drop a large load of rocks on the road, or so as to strew broken auto parts, debris and gasoline on the road, as was here the case, makes no difference in fact. The road, by reason of the respondent’'s wrongful acts, ceased to be a road.
The appellant as the owner of the road has thereby suffered damage to its property. The appellants suffered this direct damage in the same manner as any other property owner, and unless there is some disqualifying law operating in these circumstances (which will be discussed later), the appellant would be entitled to recover these as direct damages so suffered.""
He then went on to consider a number of the English and other authorities before concluding at page 545:
“"In this proceeding it is unnecessary, in my view, to settle this issue because, for reasons given above and illustrated in my view by the cases aforementioned, this is not a case of economic loss but of direct damage to property of the plaintiff occasioned by the negligence of the respondent.""
“"…the deposit of dust is capable of giving rise to an action in negligence. Whether it does depends on proof of physical damage and that depends on the evidence in the circumstances. Dust is an inevitable incident of urban life and the claim arises on the assumption that the defendants have caused excessive deposits. Reasonable conduct and a reasonable amount of cleaning to limit the ill-effects of dust can be expected of householders. Subject to that, if, for example, in ordinary use the excessive deposit is trodden into the fabric of the carpet by householders in such a way as to lessen the value of the fabric, an action would lie. Similarly, if it follows from the effects of excessive dust on the fabric that professional cleaning of the fabric is reasonably required, the cost is actionable and if the fabric is diminished by the cleaning that too would constitute damage. Excessive dust might also be shown to have damaged electrical apparatus and there could no doubt be many other examples. The damage is in the physical change which renders the article less useful or less valuable. On the assumptions we are invited to make, that rather than any general concept of loss of utility is the appropriate test…”"
“"54. Thus it is that one can safely conclude that there is no reason in principle why loss of use, loss of profit or loss of revenue can not be recovered as damages for physical damage negligence, subject to causation being established and provided that it is demonstrably consequential upon the physical damage in question and closely associated with the physical damage.
55. It almost goes without saying that all losses recoverable in negligence must be of the kinds or types, which, judged objectively, would be reasonably foreseeable by a person in the position of the tortfeasor as the result of the negligence.
56. Additionally, concepts of reasonableness, justice and fairness, together with policy can assist in the determination of whether any, and if so what, duty of care is owed…
57. Drawing all these threads together, the following is established in the context of the current case:
(a) in negligence cases which involve physical damage to property owned by a claimant, loss of use, loss of profit or loss of revenue can be recovered as damages, subject to causation being established and provided that it is demonstrably consequential upon the physical damage in question and closely associated with the physical damage and the work done to repair or replace the damaged property.
(b) Causation is established on the facts and the evidence.
(c) The fact that the loss of use, profit or revenue arises because a contract between the claimant and a third party makes the claimant liable to pay or allow it to the third party does not stop it being recoverable…
58. There can be no doubt that the Schedule 8 sums paid or allowed to the TOCs arose as the direct result of the railway lines in question being closed as a result of the physical damage caused by the Defendants'' respective negligence and by what is accepted by all parties as the necessary or reasonable time taken to repair and replace what was required to be remedied…
59. One then needs to analyse what the scope of the duty of care was in this case. Given that this is a negligence case involving physical damage to a claimant''s property, the scope of the duty is to exercise reasonable care and skill in and about driving the heavy motor vehicles concerned so as not to cause physical damage to the property of others on or by the highway. The scope must cover all those heads of loss and damage which are and have been accepted judicially in the past as recoverable; that includes the costs of and occasioned by reasonable and necessary repairs and the loss of profit, use or revenue demonstrably consequential on the damage and concomitant repair of the damaged property.
60. The Defendants have through their Counsel argued strenuously, and with no little skill, that, to determine whether the scope of any duty of care covers consequential losses and whether the sums paid or allowed to the TOCs were demonstrably or truly consequential upon the two sets of carelessness and physical damage, one must analyse and determine with precision what those sums represent. If, they argue, those sums represent categories of loss which are not consequential, they can not be recovered and are not within the scope of any duty of care.
61. I said earlier in this judgement that I would return to reach conclusions on the evidence, particularly that of Mr Angus and the documentary evidence. I can summarise those conclusions as follows:
(a) The bulk of the formula in Clause 9 of Schedule 8 of the TAA involves the determination of the delay for which Network Rail was responsible to the TOC in question in a given Period. The result is applied to the Payment Rate set out in Column E of Appendix 1.
(b) There is no evidence as such about how the MRE and Societal rates which make up the Payment Rate were themselves calculated.
(c) It is probable that the product of research and experience on a best assessment basis was put in to the calculation of the MRE rate so that some elements of the loss of fare revenue on the day or days when the railway lines in question were closed or had a restricted use were allowed for. It is probable that a larger element was for the loss of future revenue from passengers'' future unwillingness to travel on particular lines affected by any incident which had disrupted travel times…
(e) Again, there is no doubt that the MRE and the Societal rates were in place in a broad sense to provide incentives or corresponding disincentives to Network Rail and to the TOCs to avoid or limit disruptions to the rail services. The better that Network Rail performed, the greater was the chance that the TOCs would pay them under the Performance Regime in Schedule 8; the better that the TOCs performed, the greater was the chance that Network Rail would pay them. Of course, as between Network Rail and the TOCs, Network Rail took the risk and responsibility under this Performance Regime for damage to its bridges caused by the negligence of drivers which in turn cause disruption to the rail services.
62. The issue arises however whether any of this really matters. I have formed a clear view that it does not, for the following reasons:
(a) One has to analyse what the loss to Network Rail actually is.
(b) On any proper analysis, the sums payable to the TOCs were payable for the loss of use or availability of the rail tracks in question. This was the price, contractually agreed between Network Rail and the TOCs, which was payable in circumstances amongst others in which the rail tracks could not be used by reason of the negligence of drivers who damaged bridges or electricity cables over those rail tracks. One of the main uses to which Network Rail put the rail tracks was to license the TOCs to operate them.
(c) It cannot be said, and indeed it has not been argued as such, that the sums payable to the TOCs pursuant to the TAAs represented a penalty or were unreasonable or did not represent anything other than a best assessment basis of the loss to the TOCs of the use of the rail tracks for the period in question. It is a material fact that the Rail Regulator approved and endorsed not only the TAAs but also during the review process the Payment Rates, and their constituent elements, the MRE and Societal rates. Obviously, if the sums payable to the TOCs under Schedule 8 were a penalty, unenforceable in law pursuant to such authorities as Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge & Co Ltd [1915] AC 847, the law would find an appropriate way to ensure that the Defendants were not liable for them; that way could be for example that the loss does not flow from the breach or that the scope of the duty of care does not extend to the avoidable payment of unenforceable penalties. Similar considerations would apply if the sums claimed were otherwise demonstrably unreasonable.
(d) The loss of use can also legitimately be considered as a loss of revenue because in reality, by having to pay or allow the licensee TOCs the Schedule 8 sums, Network Rail''s revenue from the TOCs was being reduced by exactly the same amount.
(e) A key factor in the calculation under Schedule 8 is the amount of rail track or train delay caused in these cases by the negligently caused damage. That delay is made of the times reasonably taken for initial assessment by the emergency services and Network Rail of the accidents and damage and for the necessary and reasonable associated remedial works…
(f) The Defendants'' negligence (that is, their breaches of duty causing physical damage and the need for the concomitant remedial works) therefore directly caused the delays which directly led to Network Rail not being in a position to make available the rail tracks in question for the periods of the delays, the direct financial consequence of which was that Network Rail had to pay or allow their licensees the Schedule 8 sums.
(g) The fact that within the calculation of those allowances there may have been or were included sums which the TOCs could not have claimed in negligence as against these Defendants is immaterial because it is necessary to consider in this case the position of Network Rail which clearly did have the right to sue for negligence in respect of the physical damage to its property. The reality is that, under the law as it now stands and has stood for many years, these Defendants would never have been liable in negligence to the TOCs for those losses because no property of the TOCs was physically damaged. The losses would therefore never have been recoverable directly by the TOCs. If the Defendants'' arguments are right, the one innocent party, Network Rail, cannot recover its very real losses incurred directly in consequence of the Defendants'' carelessness…
(i) Where one has, as here, a duty of care the scope of which includes losses demonstrably consequential upon the physical damage, it must, objectively speaking, have been reasonably foreseeable by tortfeasors in the position of these defendants that, if they seriously damaged bridges over rail tracks or overhead electric cables providing electricity to the railways, the railway services could or would be disrupted for a period of time whilst remedial work was being done. Thus, a loss of use and of revenue was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the negligence in this case. It is argued that objectively speaking the tortfeasors in this case could not reasonably have foreseen either that payments would be due to the TOCs for the loss of use or that the payments would include incentives. However, this is not material in circumstances where a loss of use is reasonably foreseeable and the loss of use is readily quantifiable in money terms. It is not necessary for the precise loss or machinery by which the loss is ascertainable to be foreseen or foreseeable. In any event, it can hardly be said that a loss of use or indeed a loss of revenue was not objectively speaking reasonably foreseeable by tortfeasors in the position of these Defendants; as was said in the Metrolink case, there was nothing unusual about the facts that Network Rail would receive payment and revenue for providing the rail track for use by rail companies or that it would lose revenue if it did not provide the track. The fact that Schedule 8 provides a somewhat complex formula for determining the value or cost for the non-provision of the rail track is immaterial.
(j) There is nothing as a matter of policy which can readily be deployed to gainsay either a duty of care existing or the scope of that duty extending to compensation for the loss of use, particularly in circumstances in which previous cases establish an entitlement to loss demonstrably consequential upon the physical damage…
(k) It is argued by the Defendants that in effect the parties to the TAAs agreed to forego any entitlement by Clause 8.3 and 8.5 to exclude liability for loss of revenue or for losses and liabilities arising from interruptions or delays to trains and that therefore the type of loss, whatever it was, encompassed by Schedule 8 could not have included any (what would otherwise have been) recoverable heads of loss. That in commercial terms ignores the fact that Clauses 8.3 and 8.5 clearly envisage that all such losses shall or may be encompassed within Schedule 8 (or elsewhere in the contract). The parties have agreed that there shall be no freestanding claims for loss of revenue or train disruptions but have effectively agreed that all such entitlements are to be mutually considered as being covered by the entitlements and financial adjustments set out in Schedule 8 and elsewhere. Schedule 8 is either or akin to a liquidated damages or demurrage clause which relates to certain types of delays on the rail tracks to the train services. The rates payable where there is delay attributable to one party or the other were negotiated to reflect what the parties thought realistically represented the likely losses which each should reasonably bear in the case of delay.
(l) I can not see any or much significant difference in principle between the current case and the negligent driver who drives into a building which houses a shop which is licensed by the owner to a third person. The owner can sue the negligent driver for damages which would include the loss of the sums due from the licensee or compensation payable for the licensee not being able to trade from the premises whilst the requisite reasonable remedial works are done.
(m) In my view, the Defendants too often in their arguments have confused the losses actually suffered by the TOCs with the losses actually suffered by Network Rail. The former are substantially immaterial in the context of cases brought by Network Rail against the defendants such as those in this case. It is necessary to analyse the losses actually suffered by Network Rail and to determine whether they are truly consequential upon and closely associated with the physical damage which these Defendants negligently inflicted upon Network Rail.
63. It follows from the above that, in my judgement, the losses representing the sums paid or allowed to the TOCs in relation to the delays caused by the two accidents in question are recoverable by Network Rail from these Defendants. The type of loss was within the scope of the duty owed by both these Defendants and was the reasonably foreseeable consequence of the negligence in these cases; the loss was certainly not too remote. The losses were actually caused by and otherwise demonstrably consequential upon the physical damage to the electrical cables and the bridge respectively and upon the remedial works carried out to put that damage right.”"
“"26. Mr Bartlett submitted that the appellants owed the respondents no duty in respect of their financial position under their contract with TOCs, or in respect of the reputation of the railways for reliability in the minds of the travelling public. These include policy-based penalties for lateness and predictions of losses to be suffered by TOCs over an indefinite period anywhere on the rail network by reason of customer reaction to the incident. The sums do not fairly or reasonably relate to the physical loss of use of their tracks suffered by the respondents.
27. The appellants should not have to pay for the financial consequences of ""knock on"" effects of the incidents on a range of companies across the rail network, some of which did not even run trains on the damaged track. Moreover, loss dependent on future customer choices driven not by the incident itself but by fear of future incidents was too remote to be recoverable. To define the kind of loss as the respondents'' loss of revenue under the contract is too broad. The court has a responsibility to ensure that the scope of liability is kept within proper bounds. That was particularly important when, the respondent being in a monopoly position, there was no market by which the reasonableness of the amounts claimed can be judged.”"
“"32. The incidents for which the appellants were responsible undoubtedly triggered the payments the respondents were required to make to TOCs under contracts with them. The payments were the direct consequence of the incidents. The contractual loss by the respondents is a direct consequence of the injury to the tracks, as the judge found at paragraph 58 of his judgment. To hold that in itself as establishing liability on the appellants would, however, be to go back to Re Polemis [1921] 3 KB 560. That approach has been rejected. In Overseas Tankship (U.K.) Ltd v Morts Dock & Engineering Co., Ltd. (The Wagon Mound No.1), Viscount Simonds stated, at page 422:
""For it does not seem consonant with current ideas of justice or morality that for an act of negligence, however slight or venial, which results in some trivial foreseeable damage the actor should be liable for all consequences however unforeseeable and however grave, so long as they can be said to be ''direct''"".
Foreseeability is the starting point but, as later cases show, other concepts are involved…
36. In Voaden v Champion (The Baltic Surveyor) [2002] 1 Lloyds LR 623, Rix LJ, with whom Schiemann LJ and Hale LJ agreed, cited with approval the statement of May J in CR Taylor (Wholesale) Ltd v Hepworths Ltd [1977] 1 WLR 659, at 667:
""But secondly, the damages to be awarded are to be reasonable, that is as between the plaintiff on the one hand and the defendant on the other.""
37. Lord Justice Rix added, at paragraph 88:
""I do not see why in the realm above all of remedies the common law cannot mould its principles flexibly to the needs of the situation, and as so often the test of reasonableness lies to hand as a useful tool.""…
49. Foreseeability and remoteness are, in my judgment, to be considered together. Foreseeability, as an abstract concept, is not determinative. An imaginative person may foresee extremely broad consequences as potentially resulting from his actions. In considering whether consequences are too remote to create a liability in negligence, reasonableness has a part to play…
68. The losses claimed satisfy the requirement of being a direct consequence of the tort. The liability of the respondents to pay sums to the TOCs is the direct consequence of the tort which occasioned the damage to the tracks. However, it has also to be considered whether the appellants are bound by the assessment of damages in the contracts between the respondents and the TOCs and, if not, whether the damages claimed are reasonably foreseeable (Wagon Mound).
69. Attractive as is the simplicity of a solution by which the tortfeasor is liable to pay whatever the respondents and the TOCs agree as between them to be reasonable compensation, such an agreement does not, in my judgment, necessarily bind the appellants, as tortfeasors, to pay the agreed sum to the respondents. It is not open to a party to dictate to the whole world the extent of tortious liability and what is reasonably foreseeable and not too remote in order to achieve what it regards as a satisfactory contract with a third party. It could lead to ever more ingenious attempts to attribute possible losses to a tort and would be inimical to the simple solution desired. There could be sound contractual reasons for providing passengers with compensation, for example, for the consequences of lost business, or medical appointments, or job interviews but such consequences are likely to be too remote to charge to a third party in tort.
70. Making a contract does not confer a licence on the respondents to charge to a tortfeasor whatever types of financial loss, and whatever quantification of financial loss, is included in the agreement provided it is reasonable between the contracting parties. That is particularly so when the terms of the contract are influenced by ""government policy aims"", as stated by Mr Angus. A policy to impose wide ranging damages on tortfeasors on the roads could be provided by statute but should not be imposed by a contract between a government agency and a third party.
71. Courts have been prepared to analyse contractual arrangements between the victim and a third party when deciding the extent of the tortfeasor''s liability...With differing results, that was done in Dimond and Sandeman. In Dimond, for example, the claimant chose to contract with a specialist vehicle hire company. The additional cost could not be recovered from the tortfeasor. It makes no difference, in my judgment, that the respondents are monopoly suppliers of the use of railway tracks and there cannot be said to be a market. The courts will intervene to assess the reasonableness, as between the claimant and the tortfeasor, of the losses specified in the contract between the claimant and a third party.
72. The extent of the appellants'' liability should be determined on ordinary tortious principles. The issue is not concluded because the loss to the respondents is a direct consequence of the tort. The requirement of reasonable foreseeability must also be established (Wagon Mound). In deciding whether the damage claimed is reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances of a particular case it is necessary to analyse the scope of the duty incumbent on the defendant and the remoteness of the damage claimed. What is reasonably foreseeable cannot in my judgment be determined without having regard to remoteness. The two must be considered together because remoteness is a factor in deciding what is reasonably foreseeable. Whether a particular head of damage is reasonably foreseeable depends in part on how remote it is.
73. It is in my judgment too simplistic in circumstances such as the present to say that, if a kind of loss, financial loss, is reasonably foreseeable to one who causes physical damage, all financial loss foreseeable is recoverable. Whether one conducts the analysis by considering what is ""reasonably"" foreseeable or by other tests specified in the cases cited in this judgment, analysis is necessary, and a judgment made.
74. Differing tests appear in the cases. The scope or extent of the duty was considered in Caparo Industries and Heyman, a value judgment considered in Kuwait Airways, the demands of justice in Naxos, reasonableness in Peabody and Voaden, policy in Metrolink and Spartan Steel. Analysis is required and a judgment made. The court is the arbiter of what loss should be imposed. As Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest stated in Dorset Yacht Co Ltd v Home Office [1970] AC 1004, at 1039C:
""If the test as to whether in some particular situation a duty of care arises may in some cases have to be whether it is fair and reasonable that it should so arise the Court must not shrink from being the arbiter.""
75. That applies equally to decisions on reasonable foreseeability and remoteness. In performing that task, an objective test is applied to what is reasonably foreseeable. The answer should not depend on how imaginative a particular tortfeasor is, or on whether the driver was the haulage manager, or, for example, a recent immigrant who may have little idea about denationalisation and its effects.
76. When making that judgment, Rust and West Leigh are the cases most helpful to the appellants because losses claimed to result from fear of the risk of future events was held not recoverable. However, such a principle cannot inflexibly be applied in wholly different circumstances (Ehmler). The courts have been prepared, in appropriate circumstances, to consider loss of income from a loss of reputation resulting from the tort (Andreae) and loss of profit on intended sales (Muirhead).
77. Circumstances not dissimilar from the present case were considered in Metrolink and the different conclusions reached, following what was, with respect, careful reasoning on each side, illustrates the difficulty of deciding on which side of the boundary the present case falls.
78. It is in my judgment too simplistic in circumstances such as the present to say that because a kind of loss, financial loss, is reasonably foreseeable to one who causes physical damage, all financial loss agreed between the victim and a third party is reasonably foreseeable. Had there been no such contract, analysis of the headings under which the alleged loss is claimed, and the manner in which it is calculated, would be necessary. The existence of the contract does not, in my judgment, remove the need for such analysis.
79. It is accepted that the sums claimed are, as between the respondents and the TOCs, reasonable. It does not follow that the figures must be accepted because the respondents are monopoly suppliers of the use of rail tracks and there is no market against which to judge the reasonableness of the figures. However, schedule 8 has obviously been drafted responsibly and with a view to achieving a fair result, in the public interest, as between the parties to it. There is a public interest in a punctual and reliable train service.
80. The care taken with the exercise must weigh substantially in the balance when deciding whether the public interest in making just provision for compensation by tortfeasors is also served. On the other hand, there are, in my judgment, limits to the influence that ""government policy aims"" (Mr Angus) reflected in an agreement made between Network Rail, a public body, and a third party should be imposed upon a tortfeasor not party to the contract. Policy aims, as so expressed, do not necessarily determine the extent of tortious liability.
81. I have come to the conclusion that the appellants should be liable for each of the heads claimed, that is the societal rate component and the MRE component.
82. It was reasonably foreseeable that, if the respondents'' apparatus was damaged, the services of the TOCs, and their value to the public, would be diminished and that arrangements would have been put in place by the franchising authority to penalise the TOCs for the diminution in their services. Two contracts are involved, the contract between the respondents and the TOC, and the franchising arrangement between the franchising authority and the TOC, but the complexity does not render the resulting loss to the respondents too remote from the physical damage.
83. The MRE component is, in my judgment, also recoverable in the circumstances. It depends on a medium to long term assessment of passenger choices over the network. Whether the ""tipping point"" of deterring potential rail passengers is reached depends not only on the disruption caused by the tort itself but, as claimed, on an assessment of potential passengers'' fears that there will be further disruptions in the future. Provided a genuine attempt has been made to assess future loss of income from this cause, and on the evidence I am satisfied it has, a bar is not placed on recovery by reliance on passenger psychology with its fears of a repeat of the index event. That is enough to decide the issue in this case.
84. To put it in that way does, however, demonstrate the door that is opened by claims of this kind. When deciding on the ""tipping point"" for passengers, should account also be taken of other aspects of passenger psychology, for example, the greatly increased price of petrol which would discourage transfer from rail to road or to overcrowding on trains, which would create for passengers a tipping point quite unconnected with the tort? Moreover, if schedule 8 included, in the context of good customer relations, provision for payment of compensation to TOC passengers for the financial consequence of their missing a business appointment or a job interview,, that would not normally be recoverable from a tortfeasor. Analysis of schedule 8 may be required to determine the extent of tortious liability.
85. In this case, the appellants have not sought to challenge the detail and further issues do not arise. I mention these to demonstrate the problems that arise from a principle that parties to contracts, such as Track Access Agreements, can themselves determine the extent of the tortious liability to one of them of a third party. I consider the appellants'' arguments on remoteness to be far from absurd. They are soundly based and cogent but, accepting the care with which calculations have been made, the MRE component in schedule 8 of the Track Access Agreements falls on the side of recoverability.”"
97…the submission that Network Rail is not entitled to recover in respect of the kind of losses that the Schedule 8 payments represent, namely, a future loss of revenue resulting from a decline in passenger confidence and an obligation to make payments under the franchise agreements in respect of poor performance. In effect, he sought to treat the losses in respect of which the TOCs were entitled to be compensated as if they were Network Rail''s own losses. Indeed, one of his submissions was that Network Rail would not be entitled to recover in respect of a future loss of business if it were operating rail services for its own account, especially if that were based on a rather speculative assessment of a reduction in public confidence in the reliability of the railways. It should therefore not be better placed simply because it is providing the infrastructure which enables the TOCs to do so. He also relied on the fact that since, as was common ground, the TOCs could not themselves have recovered damages in respect of pure economic loss of that kind, it would not be right to enable Network Rail to render such a loss recoverable simply by entering into contracts with the TOCs to indemnify them.
98. I think it worth reminding oneself at this point that it has been accepted by all concerned, including the appellants, that the Schedule 8 payments represent the best assessment in financial terms that can be made of the commercial damage caused to the TOCs by disruption to rail services…In other words, as the judge observed, they [the Schedule 8 payments] are similar to liquidated damages provisions of the kind that are commonly found in commercial contracts relating to areas of activity in which the effects of delay or the interruption of performance are difficult to quantify in financial terms. That is important, because it means that the extent of Network Rail''s liability to the TOCs, and therefore of this head of loss, cannot be regarded as too remote on the grounds that it exceeds any reasonable assessment of the amount of loss actually caused by the loss of availability of the track. That some financial loss would be likely to result from the suspension of services, whoever was operating them, is, I think, obvious.
99. In my view it is wrong to approach the question that arises in this case through an analysis of the Schedule 8 payments, as if the claimants in these cases were the TOCs (who have suffered no damage to their property), rather than Network Rail (which has). The judge was right, therefore, to hold in paragraph 62 of his judgment that the way in which the Schedule 8 payments have been calculated is irrelevant. All that matters for present purposes is that they represent a genuine and reasonable attempt to assess the damage caused to the TOCs by the closure of the lines and the consequent disruption to services. It was not in dispute that economic loss resulting from physical damage is recoverable and in any event that is well established by existing authorities. This court accepted as much in SCM v Whittall and subsequent cases, despite its insistence on the irrecoverability of ""pure"" economic loss. In my view the judge was right, therefore, to approach the case by asking himself whether a loss in the form of a liability to make Schedule 8 payments to the TOCs under the Track Access Agreements was within the scope of the appellants'' duty and not too remote in law to be recoverable.
100. Any asset of a commercial nature is capable of being used to generate revenue, either by being put to use directly by the owner or by being made available for use by others in return for payment. Buildings, lorries, ships and aircraft are just examples of a type whose variety is endless. That is part of everyday experience. Whether an ordinary member of the public can be taken to be aware of the particular arrangements established for the use of the rail network is in my view immaterial, since he can certainly be expected to be aware that the rail network is a commercial asset which can be used to generate revenue for its owner in one way or another. It might be by running its own services, or by allowing others to do so for a fee, or a combination of the two. Under the current arrangements Network Rail generates revenue by making the network available to the TOCs for a fee and any payment it is liable to make to the TOCs in respect of periods when the network is unavailable represents a net loss of revenue. It is immaterial for these purposes whether the fee is reduced or suspended in respect of periods during which the track is unavailable, whether part of it has to be refunded or whether payments have to be made under provisions broadly similar to a liquidated damages clause. In each case it suffers a net loss of revenue.
101. I think it is clear, therefore, that two types of loss flow naturally from any damage to the infrastructure that renders the track itself unavailable for use: the cost of repair and the loss of revenue attributable to the loss of availability of the track itself. Both are in my view within the scope of the duty of the motorist, or indeed anyone else, to exercise reasonable care not to cause physical damage to the infrastructure. Subject to the limitations imposed by the rules relating to remoteness, therefore, all such loss is in principle recoverable from the person who caused the damage. The rules concerning remoteness of damage confine the scope of the tortfeasor''s liability to that which was reasonably foreseeable as the consequence of his wrongful act: Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v Morts Docks & Engineering Co. Ltd, The ''Wagon Mound'' (No.1) [1961] AC 388…
104. For the reasons I have given I do not think that it is relevant to enquire into the precise nature of the loss incurred by the TOCs as a result of the disruption to services caused by these incidents, provided (as is accepted to be the case) that the compensation to be paid in respect of it represents a genuine estimate of its amount…
113… However, if the wrongdoer can reasonably foresee that the property in question may be used by the owner to generate revenue, the kind of loss he can reasonably foresee as resulting from a wrongful act which causes damage to that property is loss of revenue.
114. By way of reinforcing his primary submissions Mr. Bartlett relied on a number of cases in which it has been said that damages should be reasonable as between claimant and defendant. These, he submitted, support the proposition that it would be unfair in the present case to require the careless drivers, who probably had no inkling of the details of the arrangements between Network Rail and the TOCs, or between the TOCs and the franchising authority, to bear the substantial losses represented by the Schedule 8 payments…
117. Perhaps the best case from Mr. Bartlett''s point of view is Voaden v Champion (The ''Baltic Surveyor'') [2002] EWCA Civ 89, [2002] 1 Lloyd''s Rep 623, in which Rix L.J., with whom Schiemann and Hale L.JJ. agreed, referred with approval to the dictum of May J. in Taylor (C.R.) (Wholesale) Ltd v Hepworths Ltd [1977] 1 W.L.R. 659, that ""damages ought to be reasonable as between claimant and defendant"". The question facing the court in ''The ''Baltic Surveyor'' was how to assess damages in a case where a partly worn piece of equipment that has been damaged by the defendant''s wrongful act cannot be replaced otherwise than by the purchase of a new one. In such a case the claimant may be substantially better off if damages are awarded at a rate which reflects the full cost of the replacement, an outcome that can quite properly be described as unreasonable. The equipment in that case was a pontoon which had been sunk by the defendant''s vessel. It could be replaced only by fabricating a new pontoon which had a much longer life than remained in the one that had been lost. The court approved the approach of assessing damages by discounting the cost of a new replacement pontoon by an amount sufficient to reflect the age and wear of the original.
118. The real challenge in all such cases is to identify the true measure of the loss suffered by the claimant for which he is entitled to be compensated. That does not depend on broad notions of how much the defendant should be called upon to pay, but upon a fair assessment of what the claimant has actually lost and the application of established principles relating to scope of duty and remoteness of damage. The authorities do not in my view support the existence of an independent or overriding principle that damages must be reasonable as between the claimant and the defendant, although that broad concept underlies and is reflected in the principles of causation, remoteness of damage and the right to full compensation as they have been developed through the cases. It is perhaps not surprising, therefore, that Mr. Bartlett was in some difficulty when invited to explain the nature and scope of the principle for which he was contending. The correct application of established principles enables the courts to ensure that the liability of the wrongdoer is limited to that which he ought fairly and reasonably to bear: see the observations of Lord Nichols in Kuwait Airways Corpn v Iraqi Airways Co. (Nos 4 & 5) [2002] 2 AC 883 at paragraphs 69-70.”"
145. The common law rules and principles which regulate the recoverability and assessment of damages form a vast and rippling skein, to which many judges and jurists have contributed over the last two centuries. I would not presume to offer a comprehensive review of that skein. I do, however, suggest that four principles relevant to the present appeal can be discerned from the authorities:
i) Economic loss which flows directly and foreseeably from physical damage to property may be recoverable. The threshold test of foreseeability does not require the tortfeasor to have any detailed knowledge of the claimant''s business affairs or financial circumstances, so long as the general nature of the claimant''s loss is foreseeable.
ii) One of the recognised categories of recoverable economic loss is loss of income following damage to revenue generating property.
iii) Loss of future business as a result of damage to property is a head of damage which lies on the outer fringe of recoverability. Whether the claimant can recover for such economic loss depends upon the circumstances of the case and the relationship between the parties.
iv) In choosing the appropriate measure of damages for the purposes of assessing recoverable economic loss, the court seeks to arrive at an assessment which is fair and reasonable as between the claimant and the defendant.
146. Judges and jurists recognise the impossibility of formulating any single set of rules defining the extent to which loss and damage caused by torts should be recoverable. Thus, they sometimes invoke ""common sense"" or ""policy"" or the consideration of what is ""fair and reasonable"" as explaining the restrictions upon recovery imposed in an individual case: see, for example, S.C.M, Spartan Steel or Kuwait Airways. Although Hart and Honoré on ""Causation in the Law"" (2nd Edition, 1985) was not cited by counsel, it can be seen that the role of common sense is analysed in chapter 2 of that work. It seems to me that the occasional appeals by judges or scholars to ""common sense"" or ""policy"" or what is ""fair and reasonable"" underline that no single set of rules is comprehensive or can be inflexibly applied.”"
“"149. It is plainly foreseeable that if railway lines are damaged, Network Rail will suffer a loss of revenue. There is nothing remarkable about the revenue losses which occurred in this case. If the main line running from London Kings Cross to the North of England and Scotland is put out of action for most of the day, it is hardly surprising that Network Rail suffers a loss of revenue of about £1 million. Nor is it surprising that if a smaller railway line is put out of action for five days, Network Rail suffers a loss of revenue of about £127,000.
150. In my view, this action should be characterised as a simple claim for loss of income consequent upon damage to revenue earning property. This is a well established category of recoverable economic loss. Network Rail''s loss is the direct consequence of physical damage and it is a type of loss which is readily foreseeable.
151. Obviously a negligent driver approaching a railway bridge or level crossing, or the employer of such a driver, will know nothing of the detailed arrangements existing between Network Rail and the TOCs. Nor does he need to possess such knowledge, in order to be fixed with liability for Network Rail''s loss of revenue while the rail track is unusable as a result of negligent driving.
152. The present litigation has involved a minute scrutiny of the formulae and calculations which are used to assess compensation for TOCs in respect of periods when railway lines are unavailable. There is nothing unusual or untoward in any of those formulae or calculations. It is hardly surprising that they are complex.
153. Absent some exceptional circumstance or obviously unreasonable feature in the claimant''s business arrangements, in my view it is not appropriate for the court to explore in detail the build-up of any loss of revenue following damage to revenue generating property. It is sufficient for the claimant to prove that the loss of revenue has occurred.
154. The law of tort should, so far as possible, be clear and simple. This court should not superimpose a requirement for expensive legal inquiry upon categories of case where there is an established entitlement to recover economic loss.
155. The exploration of the build-up of Network Rail''s revenue loss in the present case has not revealed any exceptional circumstance or unreasonable feature of Network Rail''s business arrangements. The resultant figures do not appear surprising or disproportionate. It is now accepted that Network Rail''s schedule 8 payments to the TOCs are arrived at on the basis of a reasonable assessment of the TOCs'' losses flowing from the temporary closure of the lines. It is true that Network Rail''s payments under schedule 8 include compensation for the TOCs'' future loss of fares. That circumstance, however, cannot detract from Network Rail''s claim against the defendants for loss of revenue.”"
(a) The Schedule 8 losses represented a loss of income to Network Rail.
(b) That loss of income was both caused by the negligence of the Defendants in those cases and reasonably foreseeable by such defendants.
(c) That loss of income was not too remote and was within the scope of the duty owed by the Defendants.
(d) The loss of income (as well as the cost of and occasioned by the relevant repairs of physical damage) represented a true and proper measure of the recoverable loss.
(e) The fact that the Schedule 8 assessment included compensation for the TOCs’' future loss of fares did not militate against the award of damages by reference to that assessment.
(a) In considering the extent to which an arrangement such as Schedule 8 is reasonable or not unreasonable, one can have regard to whether (i) as between Network Rail and the TOCs (in this case) the sums claimed are reasonable, (ii) Schedule 8 has been drafted responsibly and with a view to achieving a fair result, (iii) Schedule 8 produces a fair result in the public interest, there being a public interest in the punctual and reliable train service and (iv) whether care was taken in the exercise of drawing up the relevant version of Schedule 8 (see Pill LJ Paragraphs 79 and 80).
(b) If a genuine attempt has been made within or by Schedule 8 to assess future loss of income, it may reasonably form the basis of an assessment of loss of income damages attributable to the negligence of a defendant; analysis may be required to determine the extent to which and whether losses not attributable to the negligent defendant are included in the assessment (see Pill LJ at Paragraphs 83 and 84). The complexity inherent within Schedule 8 does not render the resulting loss to the respondents too remote from the physical damage (see Pill LJ at Paragraph 82).
(c) It is wrong when analysing Schedule 8 in the context of a claim between the parties such as Network Rail and the Defendants in these cases to have regard to what the TOCs would or will not be able to recover in actions in negligence against the Defendants; in this regard, it is not relevant to look into the precise nature of the loss incurred by the TOCs as a result of the disruption to services caused by the negligence of the defendants. The way in which the Schedule 8 payments have been calculated is irrelevant (see Moore-Bick LJ at Paragraph 99).
(d) Schedule 8 losses are recoverable from negligent defendants provided that and to the extent that compensation payable represents a genuine estimate of the loss suffered by Network Rail. (See Moore-Bick LJ at Paragraph 99)
(e) Provided that there is nothing unusual or untoward in the formula in Schedule 8 or the calculations arising therefrom and provided that there are no exceptional circumstances or obviously unreasonable features in Network Rail’'s business arrangements with the TOCs, it will generally be inappropriate for the Court to explore in detail the build-up of any loss of revenue which follows the implementation of such formula and calculations. In those circumstances it is sufficient for a claimant such as Network Rail to prove that the loss of revenue has occurred and has been caused by the negligence in question (see Jackson LJ Paragraphs 152-3).
(g) In considering the recoverability of Schedule 8 type losses, the Court can have regard to the extent to which, if at all, the figures resulting from the Schedule 8 exercise appear surprising or disproportionate to the delays or damage caused in any individual negligence case ((See Jackson LJ Paragraphs 155)
Discussion
Assessment of Witnesses
“"One (for SDG/ATOC) [which] investigated the reasons why the demand for rail travel was higher than that forecast by the PDFH models. It identified four key weaknesses in the existing approach”".
He accepted in evidence that he had simply attended a workshop which was part of the study and that he played no part in the report or a later update. Apart from the fact that the report was not nearly as helpful to his thesis as he suggested, it is clear to me that he was pretending to experience which he did not have, such that, although not deliberately disingenuous, his evidence in this respect was misleading. He spoke in his first report of a 1995 report, “"Big Delays”", without having read it, going on to give evidence that there was no evidence in a number of respects on various topics when that report gave some such evidence against his thesis; this points, if not to incompetence, to a lack of basic knowledge about the subject in issue in the case. In too many respects, he had to make concessions that what he had said was wrong. This was partly from one report to another; these reports were heavily corrected (and not just with typing errors) which suggests that they were inadequately or at least carelessly prepared; for instance he withdrew a criticism of performance benchmarks which related to the Schedule 8 loss calculation and later he conceded that he could no longer support his assertion that Schedule 8 could be criticised as being both for compensation as well as a penalty type incentive purpose (see his first report, Paragraph 2.1 Paras 55, 57, 84 and 119 and Day 6 Transcript Page 81); he tried, somewhat unsuccessfully to meet the criticism by saying that his initial views were based on “"uneasiness”"; the problem for him was there is nothing added into the Schedule 8 formula for incentive purposes and he did not seem to have picked that up until giving evidence. He referred to reliance on anecdotal information from work colleagues (not referred to in his reports), which was unhelpful and represented an amateur approach to a serious subject. There were numerous inadequacies in his evidence listed in the Closing Submissions of Mr Onions QC and Mr Drake, the large bulk of which I agree with.
The General Approach
The Detailed Approach
“"1. Exaggeration because of use of unrealistic lateness multipliers.
2. Exaggeration because [it is] not appropriate to use Schedule 8 for [a] single incident.
3. Exaggeration because road on rail incidents are very infrequent in passenger experience.""
In addition, although this does not go directly to Schedule 8 itself, there are challenges because there is said to be ""unfairness to the motorist in the systems of attribution and claim formulation"". I will address each in turn, although they partly overlap and the reasoning and findings which I adopt and make below in relation to the Headline Points should be read together.
Exaggeration because of use of unrealistic lateness multipliers
“"Schedule 8 exaggerates the true loss generated in the long term by a deterioration in the general level of reliability, because the AML elasticities implied by the conventional approach of applying a lateness multiplier tend to be much larger [reference: Wardman & Batley 2014], or very much larger [reference: Mr Palmer, having regard to Batley 2011 with Batley 2008 in the context of the other RP [Revealed Preference] evidence], than directly-estimated AML elasticities. The lateness multipliers are largely derived from SP [Stated Preference] research, which provides information on people’'s ‘'valuations’' (how they say they regard the matter, not how they actually behaved). Econometric RP research and analysis derives directly-estimated AML elasticities from observations of people’'s actual behaviour when the general level of reliability has changed.""
If one had not participated in the trial, one would be no wiser as a result of this amplification. AML is an acronym for ""Average Minutes Lateness"". ""Elasticities”" are changes in demand, relating to journey time, usually expressed by way of a percentage (as indicated in Paragraphs 115 to 116 of Mr Angus’' first statement to which the Court was referred for definition). The lateness multiplier comes into the MRE calculation (for which see earlier in this judgment – Paragraphs 20-24); the MRE figure produced by the calculation for any given Service of Group is part of the Schedule 8 formula. Mr Angus explained lateness multipliers as in effect being “"how much worse – how many times worse – is lateness compared with an equivalent amount of timetabled journey time?”" (Paragraph 113 of his first statement).
“"The MRE component is, in my judgment, also recoverable in the circumstances. It depends on a medium to long term assessment of passenger choices over the network. Whether the ""tipping point"" of deterring potential rail passengers is reached depends not only on the disruption caused by the tort itself but, as claimed, on an assessment of potential passengers'' fears that there will be further disruptions in the future. Provided a genuine attempt has been made to assess future loss of income from this cause, and on the evidence I am satisfied it has, a bar is not placed on recovery by reliance on passenger psychology with its fears of a repeat of the index event. That is enough to decide the issue in this case.”"
It is of some relevance that, although the recoverability of the MRE and the concept of the tipping point (for which see elsewhere in this judgment) were clearly raised by the Defendants in the earlier case (by the same solicitors and insurers, and on appeal the same leading Counsel, solicitors and insurers) and addressed by the Court, these self same points are raised again in the current proceedings by seeking to delve down deeper than they were willing to go in the last set of proceedings.
“"Network SouthEast undertook a major research project in 1988/9 and this was included in the significant updating of the PDFH in November 1989. It broadly confirmed earlier conclusions but also suggested that commuters are more sensitive to the variability of delays than to the average delay itself. Whilst plausible, some inconsistencies were found in its application and so these results have been removed from the PDFH. Since 1994, the PDFSS has undertaken a number of research projects to develop the area. In particular, in February 2000, the seminal work of Bates et al appeared…”"
It is clear that the PDFH, as updated from time to time, has been based on genuine research from reliable sources and academics. Elsewhere in the Handbook there are listed all the research and other papers relied upon and they are explained. For instance so far as reliability is concerned, the evidence relied upon is considered and analysed in Chapter C4 where the Introduction states as follows:
“"Evidence from surveys has consistently suggested that passengers value reliability very highly. Commuters in the South East have put it at the top of the list of priorities. Yet it has been found to be one of the more difficult areas in the PDFH to research.
Nearly all of the evidence is based on stated preference studies because of the difficulties in isolating and observing the effects of actual changes and the service reliability. The first study of InterCity service reliability undertaken in 1984 by the Cranfield Institute of Technology…suggested that passengers value each minute late as equivalent to 2.5 minutes of in-vehicle time. Subsequent studies have broadly confirmed this finding. Attempts have been made to value the variability of delay and big delays. And the one revealed preference evidence has looked at the effects of runs of poor reliability at Euston. From these, questions have been raised about the approach to assessing reliability. In February 2000, the seminal contribution of Bates et al appeared which attempted to answer many of these questions. Subsequently a further study by MVA has been produced…”"
“"Of our sample of customers who had suffered a big delay, 3-4% subsequently stopped using rail altogether and a further 5% reduced their use of rail following the incident.
Taking a weighted average of responses, this converted to a loss of 5-6% of rail trips which the sample would have made without the incident.
The experience had also had the effect of worsening the customers perceptions of the operator with 39% saying that because of the incident they now think of the operator a little or a lot less.
This reflects a generally poor opinion of the way problems are dealt with. Typically, 40-50% of customers said they thought the problems were dealt with not very or not at all well, though this appears to vary substantially from operator to operator.
As further evidence, in the SP & Attitude Survey, information on disruption and the staffs’' ability to cope with disruption were the worst rated of eleven quality of service factors.
There was also strong evidence that how well the delay is dealt with affects the customers subsequent response as illustrated below. Length of delay, where the delay occurs (on the train or at the station) and the reason for the delay or also have their effects on customers’' subsequent response to the delay.
In terms of the longevity of the impact of the big Delay, there was no real evidence that the effect on customers had lessened even after two years have passed since the incident.""
“"- Almost any attributes can be included in the survey provided it is something that the respondents will trade…
- The survey can be designed to ensure a large amount of trading, meaning that precise estimates of parameter values can be achieved at modest cost;
- Checks can be included to test for game playing and illogical responses;
- It can capture data on passenger characteristics such as journey purpose, gender, income and hence estimate values for each market segment.""
“"- The survey gives respondents specific information which they may not have in real life; this may distort responses and certainly means that SP cannot be used to estimate lags in response;
- There is a risk of over-sensitising respondents to elements which they would not normally notice or pay much attention;
- Even genuine responses may not be accurate, as how people think they would behave may not be how they would behave in practice;
- It is essential that respondents are given realistic choices; if they are given the choice between option A and option B when they would really decide not to travel in this context, then the not travel option should be given.""
“"The continued use of SP for transport applications from 1980s up to the current day demonstrates that in the view of the industry, if properly designed it is a powerful tool giving robust results.""
I accept that observation as logical and right.
“"Although we could have opted for a direct elasticity approach, given the evidence that has emerged, we feel that on balance the current approach using late time multipliers driven off the GJT elasticity should be retained since it provides slightly more differentiation between markets. ""
They looked at many of the previous studies (many of which were considered in some detail during this trial) and it is quite clear that they were and are prepared to go along with the PDFH approach and indeed the use of the requisite multipliers and other data which were to go into the latest version of the PDFH. This is apparently in spite of the interpretation put on and the conclusions drawn by the Defendants’' team about an earlier paper in 2011 by Dr Batley (contributed to by Professor Wardman). It is said that a later paper in 2014 by them contains evidence which significantly or seriously undermines the reasonableness or reliability of the PDFH and Schedule 8 approach. It would be quite wrong to speculate what their views are or would be on the applicability of MREs to serious delays caused by road or rail incidents for the reasonableness or otherwise of the Schedule 8 regime.
“"To date, forecasts of the demand impacts of lateness and reliability have been derived largely from individual-level models taken at a snapshot in time. The contribution of this paper is to develop a dynamic model of rail demand at the market-level, yielding short and long-run elasticities with respect to lateness. Whereas individual-level models have suggested a high valuation of lateness and reliability, our market-level models indicate a relatively [muted] demand response. Reconciling these findings, we reason that, whilst rail travellers show considerable disdain for experiences of lateness, such experiences will not necessarily dissuade them from travelling by train.""
Stated as blandly as that, it may well be that many passengers and indeed the majority of passengers, although irritated and annoyed if trains are late for any reason, will continue to travel on the trains and ""just put up with it"" in some sort of classic bulldog fashion. It is obviously the case that many people do not actually have a choice; for instance, many commuters to London in the South East, well outside the areas served by London Bus and Underground, Overground or Dockland Railway systems, who have to be in London for work, say between 7 and 9.30 a.m. every weekday throughout most of the year, may well in practice have little choice than to go by rail, partly because going by car means hitting rush-hour traffic and involves expensive car parking and congestion charges and partly because commuters who often suffer from train delays can just take an earlier train than they might otherwise take to avoid being late at work or for appointments. However, this Abstract does not suggest that there will not be a not insignificant minority of passengers overall who will not be willing to use the train service in question again as a result of a particularly disruptive and lengthy delay. In Chapter 2, the authors acknowledge that there may well be a ""diverse range of behavioural responses that could potentially arise"".
“"The primary objective of this paper was to report estimates of the elasticity of demand for rail with respect to changes in service performance…This discussion confirmed the relevance of the lateness distribution as an appropriate measure of performance, but drew an important distinction between the first and second moments of that distribution. Whereas the first moment, namely average lateness, has attracted the focus of many analyses of rail performance (both in Great Britain and in other countries), this has been to the neglect of the second moment, which arguably represents the most theoretically-valid measure of reliability. In this way, the discussion exposed significant limitations in British methods, both with the recording and collation of performance data and the specification of models. Last but not least, the discussion of concepts and definitions serve to clarify the focus of the present analysis which, constrained by the scope and detail of British industry data, was directed more at lateness and less at reliability.
Our analysis involved the development of a dynamic econometric model relating rail demand (in terms of ticket sales…) to performance (in terms of…ALM and the Average Performance Minutes (APM), at service group level; and the Public Performance Measure (PPM) at TOC level)…
Lateness and reliability, as characterised by the metrics used, were found to have only a marginal effect on rail demand. This was true for both static and dynamic model specifications. The long-run elasticities for ALM and APM obtained from the dynamic models were slightly greater than those obtained from the static models, whilst the opposite was the case for PPM. There was no significant difference between ticket type for the ALM and APM elasticities…
In drawing this paper to a close, we note that policy advice on the value of lateness and reliability, and its implications for rail demand, has hitherto been heavily driven by SP research conducted at the individual-level. The evidence emerging from that body of research has tended to suggest that rail travellers place a relatively high valuation against performance (at least when compared to other drivers of demand such as scheduled journey time and waiting time). Given the manner in which this valuation is implemented within standard forecasting frameworks, particularly in Great Britain, a working proposition has evolved that changes in performance could have a marked effect on rail demand. Our own analysis, which yields a dedicated elasticity of demand with respect to performance, would seem to refute this proposition. We find that, at the market-level, the effect of changes in lateness and reliability on rail demand is trivial, both in the short-run and and the long-run.
Why then do the messages from individual-level and market-level analyses diverge? Whilst acknowledging that, on the face of it, the market arises simply from the aggregation of the individuals, we suggest that the two analyses capture quite different behavioural responses to performance. Individual-level analyses tend to restrict behavioural response to an arbitrary service choice, whereas the short-run market-level model could possibly encompass a range of responses including changes to departure time, ticket type, route, operator and/or mode. In the long-run, the market-level could extend to an even wider range of response, such as residential location, car ownership and employment. Moreover, the degree of correspondence between individual-level and market-level analyses of performance will depend on the extent to which these behavioural responses are available to travellers, and the extent to which the available responses are in practice exercised.
In other words, we suggest that the relatively high evaluation of lateness at the individual-level is not necessarily inconsistent with the trivial demand response at the market-level. Another way of putting this would be to say that rail travellers show considerable disdain for experiences of lateness, but that such experiences would not necessarily dissuade them from travelling by train"".
“"This paper provides an extensive review and reconciliation of British and European evidence relating to the value of, and demand responses to, rail reliability. In particular, we compare the elasticities implied by stated preference valuations of late time with directly estimated lateness elasticities. We find that the implied lateness elasticities are substantially greater than those directly estimated. A possible explanation for this is that lateness has been over-valued, but more sobering explanations would be to suggest that, whilst rail travellers dislike unreliability, they may be unwilling or unable to reduce their rail travel in response to experiences of poor performance, or else conventional economic approaches to deducing elasticities are not appropriate. The findings have been used to update the recommendations of the UK rail industry’'s Passenger Demand Forecasting Handbook.""
Again, like the 2011 Abstract in their earlier joint paper, this is not exactly prescriptive and merely suggests possible explanations for the difference between SP valuations of late time (which produce implied lateness elasticities) and RP analysis (which produces directly estimated lateness elasticities. There is no suggestion that the PDFH (to which they have materially contributed) is wrong, unreasonable or unfair.
“"Turning to the implied elasticities based on our UK review evidence, these are often larger than those implied by PDFH, and some exceed the directly estimated elasticities (substantially in some instances). And where the UK elasticities are less than those from PDFH, it is actually where the latter corresponds well with the direct evidence. Moreover, the review-based evidence seems to be inferior for the purpose of forecasting reliability effects than using the rather crude wAML of 3 throughout. On this basis, we might conclude that the PDFH’'s current recommendations are (relatively speaking) defensible.""
“"The directly-estimated elasticity evidence is also diverse, and a particular issue is that insignificant coefficient estimates for reliability measures are commonplace. These elasticities are unlikely to be zero in practice and hence this adds a significant element of uncertainty into our review. A further issue is that a number of studies used the PPM measure of reliability instead of the preferable Average Minutes Late. Nonetheless, the evidence suggests that reliability does impact on rail demand and we have recovered limited variation by flow type. Noticeably, the elasticity evidence based on mean lateness is more robust than that based on PPM.
We are in the fortunate and original position of being able to compare significant amounts of evidence relating to directly-estimated and implied late time elasticities. Although there are assumptions and approximations involved in this process, it is perhaps the most important aspect of this paper. We find that the late time multipliers imply elasticities somewhat larger than the directly-estimated elasticities. This is consistent with other aspects of the paper, in particular the proposition that the SP-based late time valuations are too large, but we have also discussed other reasons why the implied elasticities might exceed directly-estimated ones.
Although we have covered a significant amount of material, it points to a need for further work in this area. Firstly, the SP values might be too large, but this needs to be tested by obtaining values from well-defined RP choice contexts offering clear trade-offs between reliability and other variables and essentially with large sample sizes. Secondly, the other reasons why the direct and implied elasticities might differ, generalising to other similar contexts, need to be further examined. Finally, it is clear that much further work is needed on obtaining robust directly-estimated late time elasticities. This should not be treated as a ‘'side-issue’'-, routinely entering some readily available reliability variable alongside other terms in a rail demand model. This review demonstrates that studies which enter the more appropriate mean lateness rather than PPM are more successful in recovering significant effects, as are studies that pay attention to detail in terms of selecting suitable flows and detailed data that supports reliable estimates. In due course, suitable measures representing the variability of lateness in addition to mean lateness as should be entered into these demand models…""
Exaggeration because not appropriate to use Schedule 8 for a single incident
“"Schedule 8 is not designed to estimate the revenue loss resulting from a single incident. When misused for that purpose, it exaggerates the true loss generated by the single incident. The calculation is based on long-run elasticity and ignores the phenomenon of lag. There is a real difference between a permanent change (sustained for long enough to fully overcome lagging factors) and a temporary change (not sustained for long enough to fully overcome lagging factors). Lagging factors make short-run elasticity lower than long-run elasticity. This phenomenon is known from research evidence and explained in PDFH v5.1 and elsewhere. The analogy between timetable changes and changes in the level of reliability (upon which the Schedule 8 calculations depend) breaks down at the level of individual incidents.""
""The elasticities in PDFH are all intended to be long-term. That is the eventual impact once any transitory effects had been complete”".
He accepted that the elasticities provide the answer as to when transitory effects are completed and equilibrium is reached, namely when any given lag is resolved.
(a) The leisure traveller may fall into different sub-categories: they may be for instance holidaymakers, people on a shopping trip, people going to visit friends or relations or sports fans going to support their team. There might be the following permutations, amongst many others:
(i) Holidaymakers in, say, Wales (for example affected by the Parry incident) may have planned to use the railway on six days of their two-week holiday to go and visit sites of interest; the Parry incident might have occurred on the sixth day planned and the holidaymakers never intended to come back to Wales. They experience a 2 hour delay and are very annoyed but there is no loss to the business of the relevant TOC because they make no claim for refund and they were never going to travel on that railway again. However, it might have occurred on the first day of the planned railway trips and they might come every year to Wales for their holidays: the experience might result in them deciding to use their car for the next five planned trips and indeed all future trips over the next few years because they do not want their holiday ruined by the sort of experience which they have had as a result of Ms Parry’'s negligence. In that example, there is a loss of revenue to the TOC and it is spread over a number of years. The ""lag"" continues over the rest of their holiday that year as well as over the following years.
(ii) The people on a shopping trip or going to see friends may only be occasional travellers on the relevant train line, say, once a quarter or once a year. As a result of the incident, they may just shrug their shoulders and forget the incident and the delay and disruption and use the same train line 3 or 12 months later for the same purpose: there is therefore no revenue loss. However, it may be that they are so annoyed and/or disrupted that they decide not to travel for the next 4 occasions. The lag for the quarterly traveller will be over the next four quarters (one year) and for the yearly traveller over the next four years.
(iii) For the sports fans going to see their team play away from home, this may be their first or their tenth time going by train and their ""away"" trips will only be during the particular sports season (football being between August and May). If as a result of the delay they miss the match which they are travelling to attend, they will probably be annoyed at not only a wasted and disrupted journey but also at the wasted expenditure on the match ticket. They may well decide for the rest of the season and indeed for the next two or three seasons to travel by car or by bus. The lag will therefore be over the rest of the season and the next two or three seasons.
(b) The business traveller may miss his or her appointment or the connection to the flight which he or she was planning to make, as a result of the disruption to the train caused by the single incident. Depending on the regularity of the particular traveller’'s use of the particular railway company’'s services, the traveller may on his or her next business trip(s) make other arrangements (taxi, car, lift from spouse, bus or other) or take the risk that significant disruption will not occur again. The lag will relate to and extend over the period covered by the next series of business trips which he or she would be taking and could be over months or years.
(c) Commuters will most often have season-tickets which may be weekly, monthly, quarterly or yearly. Serious disruption caused by a single incident may discourage commuters who do not use season-tickets (one assumes a relatively small minority) or those who acquire shorter period season tickets more than those who have longer period season tickets. There is in logic little doubt that longer term season-ticket holders will be more resilient to change their travel plans even if there is significant disruption to their regular train service caused by a single incident. For these type of travellers, and particularly those for whom there is no practical alternative other than to travel on the particular railway company’'s trains, they may not be deflected from travelling again and again even with such disruption (however much they may grumble about the service).
“"[T]he compensation available through [Schedule 8] of the franchised passenger operators’' track access agreements...provides [a] liquidated damages [regime] which [specifies] payments from one party to the other based on a reasonable pre-estimate of the expected loss to [the TOC] arising from [the incident that causes the relevant service disruption]”" (“"Provisional Conclusions on the Incentive Framework”", ORR, April 2000, Para. 7.16)
“"If the regime is to be effective, it is essential that payments between Network Rail and TOCs reflect, as closely as possible, the impact of changes in the level of performance on TOC revenues.”" (ORR’'s 2005 Performance Regime Review, Final Conclusions Para 2.5)
“"One of the key objectives of the performance regime is to provide appropriate compensation to TOCs for the loss of revenue resulting from lateness and any cancellation of their services. To fulfil this objective effectively, the payment rates from Network Rail to TOCs need to reflect, as accurately as possible, the effect on TOCs’' revenues of changes in Network Rail performance.”" (ibid Para 3.5)
“"A Network Rail payment rate must reflect the effect of one minute change in performance away from the current level. It should therefore reflect the number of passengers associated with a service group and attach a ‘'value’' to each passenger. This value is the marginal revenue effect (MRE). The MRE represents a passenger’'s ticket value and the likelihood that they alter their mode of transport for making a journey based on changes in performance.”"(“"Review of Schedule 8 Payment Rates”" by AEA Technology for the ORR, December 2005, p 5)
“"[T]he Network Rail payment rate is designed to reflect the impact of performance on a train operator’'s long term revenue. It is composed of the estimated average marginal revenue effect (MRE) per passenger journey within a service group multiplied by the number of passenger journeys per day in that service group. The MRE represents the impact of a minute’'s lateness on fare revenue over time.”" (ORR’'s 2013 Periodic Review, Draft Determination Para. 20.60)
“"The Network Rail payment rate sets the basis for compensation payments from Network Rail to train operators when Network Rail’'s performance is worse than benchmark, and bonus payments to Network Rail from train operators when Network Rail’'s performance is better than benchmark. Network Rail payment rates are set at a level to reflect the impact over time of performance on fare revenue.”" (“"Current Compensation Arrangements”" in ORR’'s “"Final determination of Network Rail’'s outputs and funding for 2014-19”" October 2013 Para 20.15)”"
Exaggeration because Road on Rail Incidents are very Infrequent in Passenger Experience
“"Schedule 8 exaggerates the true loss generated by a road on rail incident, because such incidents are unusual in the experience of passengers, so that most passengers would not regard the experience of one such incident as relevant to future travel decisions. (Infrequent travellers, as a class of potential customers on an affected line, are unlikely to experience the event, though some will. Frequent travellers on the line will be more concerned about the general run of relatively frequent delays.) In this respect road on rail incidents differ from delays from causes to which passengers frequently hear delays attributed, such as points failures, signalling problems or train defects.""
Conclusion on the Three Headline Points
“"Lesser Factors”"
“"(a) Schedule 8 ignores crowding effects. Loss of revenue is mitigated or eliminated where a deterred passenger’'s place is quickly taken by another.
(b) Schedule 8 ignores redistribution effects. A passenger lost to one rail line may not represent a loss to the TOC if they transfer to an alternative route operated by the same TOC.
(c) Schedule 8 ignores adverse effects of road on rail incidents on road users. A lorry stuck under a bridge is likely to block the road and cause inconvenience to road users, who may therefore be deterred from road travel and encouraged to use rail.
(d) Schedule 8 ignores lag. If (which the Defendants dispute) there is any significant long tail effect of a single incident, the affected TOC receives accelerated payment from Network Rail.
(e) Schedule 8 ignores franchise termination. The TOC still receives the full payment, even if the supposed long tail effect would occur after the termination of the franchise.”" (Paragraph 111 of Closing Submissions)
(a) This is an illusory point for which there is not any real evidence at all. It presupposes that the trains on which the passengers travelled when affected by the significant road on rail incident were so crowded that there was no room for other passengers. The argument presupposes that the, say, 30 passengers on such a train who are so disenchanted at the delay and disruption that they decide not to travel on that train line for an indefinite future are replaced by 30 new passengers within the timescale catered for in the Schedule 8 assessment of future lost revenue so that the maximum earnable income is achieved again. There is no evidence that any of the trains affected or likely to be affected by such incidents are so overcrowded that such a mechanism is likely to occur. It is most unlikely that the relevant TOCs will advertise on the basis that crowded standing room only has now become available on the given railway line; at best therefore it would be entirely a random matter if there was any effective replacement of passengers in circumstances in which any ""new"" passengers would have the uncomfortable and possibly unpleasant experience of an overcrowded rail journey. I should add that simply because new passengers decide to travel with the TOC in question on the line in question does not mean that there is no revenue loss continuing in respect of the passengers affected by the road on rail incidents and who have decided not to travel with the TOC on that line again because the new passengers would have bought tickets in any event. Mr Segal said, and I accept, that the effect is small. He added, correctly as a matter of common sense, that the immediate impact of a significant road on rail incident is not only cancellations and delays but for all those passengers who do decide to try to keep on travelling on that day many of them will have to face significant crowding on the trains with standing room only which simply adds unpleasant travelling conditions to the other inconveniences caused by the cancellations and delays.
(b) It is, at best, fanciful to suggest that passengers, who have had such an unpleasant experience of rail travel on a given line that they decide not to travel on that line in the future, will then seriously consider using the same TOC with whom they had become disenchanted on a different line. There is no evidence that the TOCs have much, if anything, by way of such alternative travel from and to the same destination, so that this is an option which is extremely unlikely to yield anything significant by way of alternative revenue from the same TOC.
(c) Whilst Schedule 8 relates to revenue lost by the TOC in question and does therefore not account for road users affected by the relevant bridge strike, it is again fanciful to suggest that the same road users affected by the bridge strike will decide to go not only by rail rather than road in the future (for the purposes for which they were travelling on the day in question) but by the TOC and on that line. It is just about conceivable that they might but is a remote possibility. There is no obvious logic in thinking that rail passengers affected by a bridge strike would when deciding whether or not to continue travelling on that particular railway line be saying to themselves: ""If I was to drive to and from work, I might be affected by disruption to road traffic caused by a bridge strike either at the same bridge or elsewhere"". Of course, much of the road traffic (such as drivers of commercial and freight vehicles and bus passengers) will, unsurprisingly, not be transferring to railway either with that TOC or otherwise as a result of the bridge strike.
(d) It is said that Schedule 8 “"ignores lag”"; it does not, in the sense that it does pre-suppose that the loss of revenue will extend up to a four-year period, albeit with the bulk occurring in the early part. What Counsel mean however, I believe, is that other factors (unrelated to the road on rail incident which may have put them off travelling on that railway line) may impinge during the lag period so that the loss envisaged by Schedule 8 may not occur because the other factors may in practice be such that the particular passengers return not only to the railway in general but to the particular TOC in question. I have already addressed the point in general above. It is true that there is accelerated payment by Network Rail of the Schedule 8 sums because they are assessed and credited on a four-weekly basis, rather than spread over the lag period on some initially larger and decreasing curve basis. However, the reality is that this will represent a small factor at best. For instance, the Rob Hatfield Ltd incident produced a loss of some £41,000, some of which might well have been incurred in the first four weeks in any event and so for that period there would be no acceleration of payment; given the timing of that accident, the passengers were probably mostly non-commuting for which the most recent PDFH suggests that 60% of the lost revenue will have occurred by the end of the first quarter after the accident, 85% by the end of Year 1 and 100% by the end of Year 2. Thus, assuming an interest rate of 5% (which would be extremely generous based at least on the last five years interest rates), the financial benefit of receiving the payment or credit of £41,000 in lost revenue say, four weeks after the incident, would be about £500 or 1.2%.
(e) Schedule 8 does assume that the credit for delays is payable at the end of the four-week period after the incident and it is therefore conceivable that a termination of the franchise to the particular TOC could occur before the period in respect of which revenue loss is allowed by Schedule 8 has expired, thus leaving the TOC with what some might call a windfall, because the TOC will not be in receipt of any revenue after the franchise has been terminated. This pre-supposes that the franchisee does not win the franchise again and it seems that a number of franchisees have held on to their franchises again and again. The point ignores the fact that the PDFHs envisaged that much of the loss of revenue occurs by the end of the first quarter (60% for deteriorations in reliability or punctuality for non-commuters and 45% for commuters) and that by the end of Year 1 85% and 70% respectively of the loss will have accrued. Again, it is likely that this accounts for only a relatively small benefit and one which often will not arise at all.
Unfairness to the Motorist in the Systems of Attribution and Claim Formulation
“"(a) The motorist is charged for unidentified minutes not attributable to the incident.
(b) Where a reactionary delay is caused in part by the road on rail incident and in part by a different cause, the higher delay principle attributes the whole reactionary delay to the larger incident. Since road on rail incidents tend to be larger than the average delaying incident, this tends to prejudice the motorist.
(c) RICCS makes no allowance for delays which did not occur but which would have occurred if the incident had not happened.”" (Counsel’'s Closing Submissions – Paragraph 114)
It is fair to say that these points would not so undermine the basis of revenue loss calculation in the five cases that nothing would be recoverable; there would at best be relatively small reductions from the damages otherwise recoverable.
“"…works by making temporary changes to the performance data:
110.1 It temporarily changes the coding of the specified incident to ""Planned"", so that it will be excluded from the performance regime.
110.2 It temporarily reduces lateness values pro rata by the level of delay caused by the specified incident (this amount of reduction is the Lateness Reduction Factor).
110.3 It temporarily removes any reliability event caused by the specified incident.
110.4 RICCS then performs the calculations normally performed by PEARS [Paladin Extraction and Reporting System] to show what the Schedule 8 liability would have been had the incident in question not occurred.
110.5 The amount calculated by RICCS is compared against the figures calculated by PEARS (i.e. those including the effects of the specified incident). The comparison demonstrates the financial effect of the specified incident on Network Rail’'s contractual liabilities/entitlements under Schedule 8.""
Unidentified minutes
The Higher Delay Principle
“"…the principal incident (i.e. the one that has the largest number of Minutes Delay allocated to it that contribute to the lateness at that point). Where two or more incidents have had the same effect then the Reactionary Delay must be split equally between them.”"
Delays which did not occur but which would have occurred if the incident had not happened
(a) Even where the approximate or immediate cause of train cancellations or train disruption was the road on rail incident in question, there may have been elsewhere on the railway line or route (usually in logic down-line from the incident) some other potential cause of delay which would or could have delayed the cancelled or disrupted trains if that road on rail incident had not occurred. A hypothetical example might be in the Handy case if there was in fact a signal failure 20 miles down the track which would have held up, say, 5 of the cancelled trains by 30 minutes; as a matter of fact, the signal failure did not delay any trains because they were all delayed up the line by the Handy incident. The argument therefore seems to be that, if the 5 trains, in that example, would have been delayed each by 30 minutes, credit must be given off the damages for the delay which would have occurred in any event.
(b) The second argument is that, even if in fact on the day in question there were no actual delays caused by any other such factor, one can look at historical information over a period of time (possibly in the four week period preceding and following the incident) to form a view that in any event the performance would have been less than perfect on the day in question such that some delay at least would have occurred even if the particular incident complained of had not occurred.
Conclusion and Decision
(a) The payment adjustments required under Schedule 8 reasonably estimate revenues likely to be lost by the TOCs as a result of an individual incident of disruption to the rail network as occurred in the present cases. They are certainly not unreasonable.
(b) The legal consequences, given the facts of the case, are that they are recoverable from the Defendants.
(c) The Defendants’' contentions that the payment adjustments required under Schedule 8 do not accurately, reasonably or genuinely estimate or reflect the actual lost revenue suffered by the TOCs caused by an individual incident of disruption to the rail network as occurred in the present cases are wrong.
(d) As those contentions are wrong and in the light of the findings in this judgment, those payment adjustments are recoverable from the Defendants.