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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> ED's Parent Guardian v. Argyll Clyde Acute Hospitals NHS Trust [2003] ScotCS 67 (12 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/67.html Cite as: [2003] ScotCS 67, 2003 SCLR 485 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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A3160/02
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OPINION OF LORD CARLOWAY in the cause ED's PARENT AND GUARDIAN (A.P.) Pursuer against ARGYLL AND CLYDE ACUTE HOSPITALS NHS TRUST Defenders ________________ |
Act : Maguire QC, Maclean; Brechin Tindal Oatts
Alt : Stacey QC, Khurana; Ranald F Macdonald
12 March 2003
1. Facts
"The effect of the spinal cord injury is to have caused profound weakness of all muscles from his neck downwards. Reflex control of movement, independent of volition, is entirely normal and many reflex activities are greatly exaggerated because of lack of normal regulation by the brain as are autonomic reflexes (reflexes which regulate blood pressure, heart rate, sweating, bowel and bladder function etc.). As a result he has severe limitation of upper limb function and no useful lower limb function. Neck and trunk control are also severely limited so that [he] is unable to support his spine adequately, sit or support his head unaided. He has greatly impaired sensation below this level.
[The child] has some disturbance of lower brainstem function (inability to suck and swallow) and occipital cortical function (reduced visual acuity).
There is no reason to suspect any general disorder of brain function and, so far as can be ascertained, [his] cognitive function is normal."
The child has a tracheotomy and is permanently on a mechanical ventilator, requiring supervision at all times, four hourly chest physiotherapy and suction. One of the major unknowns is the child's life expectancy. This is undoubtedly greatly reduced, not so much because of the risk of respiratory infection but because of the likely development of severe skeletal, particularly spinal, deformity. Dr McWilliam concludes :
"Considering all this I believe that [the child] will, on balance of probabilities, survive well into adult life (say 25 years). There is, of course, a small risk of death at a much younger age but, depending on the extent of future deformities, it is at least as likely that he will survive very much longer than 25 years."
A report from Professor Michael J DeVivo at the National [United States of America] Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center at the University of Alabama dated 23rd December 2002 [Pro 6/3] suggests a statistical life expectancy of a further 35.4 years but the report acknowledges the difficulty of assessment because of the lack of comparable cases. For present purposes, having regard to Dr McWilliam's knowledge of the precise circumstances of the child, I will proceed upon his figure, although no doubt he might, in due course, wish to revise it in light of Professor DeVivo's statistics. The defenders were also content with that figure, again for present purposes.
2. The Rule of Court
"...the court may...ordain [the] defender to make an interim payment to the pursuer of such amount as it thinks fit, not exceeding a reasonable proportion of the damages which, in the opinion of the court, are likely to be recovered by the pursuer."
The terms of the rule afford the court a wide discretion restricted only by the ceiling of "reasonable proportion". Its predecessor, the old rule 89A(1), stated that court "may, if it thinks fit, order the defender...to make an interim payment...of such amount as it thinks just...". Under that rule it was said that a "conservative and moderate approach" was necessary (Nisbet v Marley Roof Tile Co 1988 SC 29, Lord Clyde at page 31). One factor which was regarded as significant in deciding whether to grant an award was the existence of hardship which might be alleviated by an early payment (see the passage in Littlejohn v Clancy 1974 SLT (notes) 68 quoted in McNicol v Buko 1986 SLT 12) but this was not an essential element (Nisbet v Marley Roof Tile Co (supra), Lord Clyde at page 32). Indeed the expenditure needed to alleviate any difficulty might not, of itself, form a head of claim (Thompson's Curator Bonis v Burnett 1989 SLT 264). The amount of the interim award was also not restricted to loss already actually suffered to date in the sense of expenditure incurred or pain experienced by the time of the award (Nisbet v Marley Roof Tile Co (supra)).
3. The Likely Award of Damages
4. Award