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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Smith v Hughes & Anor [2007] ScotCS CSOH_199 (14 December 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_199.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSOH_199, [2007] CSOH 199

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 199

 

PD1462/07

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD BRODIE

 

in the cause

 

FIONA SMITH

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

(FIRST) MADELINE HUGHES and (SECOND) HOME CONCERN (SCOTLAND) LIMITED

 

Defenders:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Pursuer: Euan Mackenzie; Balfour + Manson, LLP

Defenders: Neil Mackenzie; Simpson & Marwick

 

14 December 2007

 

[1] In this action the pursuer sues for damages as reparation for personal injury she sustained on 30 July 2004 in a road traffic accident. Liability is admitted. What is in issue is quantification of damages. The provisions of Chapter 43 of the Rules of Court apply.

[2] The pursuer has enrolled a motion in terms of Rule of Court 43.6(5) to allow issues for jury trial. The defenders have opposed the motion. Their reason for opposition is stated as follows:

"Issues should not be allowed. The pursuer's very brief pleadings give no specification of basis for claims for (1) prospects of further promotion; (2) necessary services being provided to the pursuer's family; (3) additional expenditure; (4) past and future necessary services.

Any inquiry should be by proof before answer since these claims are of doubtful relevance and entirely lack any specification."

[3] Counsel for the defenders intimated that he only intended to argue points (1) and (4): the doubtful relevancy of the averments relating to the calculation of future wage loss by reference to prospects of future promotion and the claim in terms of section 8 of the Administration of Justice (Scotland) Act 1982 for such necessary services as have been and will be rendered to the pursuer by relatives in consequence of the injuries she sustained in the accident. Counsel drew my attention to the pursuer's averments in support of these heads of damages. They were to be found in paragraph 5 of the Statement of Claim. They were as follows:

"She was unable to return to her employment with the second defenders. Her employment was terminated. She is unemployed. She is permanently unable to return to her former employment as a carer. At the time of the accident she had recently been promoted to supervisor. But for the accident she had prospects of further promotion. She intended working to at least 65. She has received and continues to receive services from her husband and daughters. ... The pursuer seeks damages for ... (3) future wage loss. (4) past and future necessary services she has received....."

[4] In developing his submission that the averments to which he had drawn my attention were of doubtful relevancy, counsel for the defenders reminded me of the authorities to the effect that a distinction was to be drawn between, on the one hand, the specification required of the averments where inquiry was to be by way of proof before answer and, on the other where inquiry was to be made by way of jury trial: Boyle v Glasgow Corporation 1949 SC 254 at 261 to 262, Higgins v DHL International (UK) Ltd 2003 SLT 1301 at 1304E to H and 1305E, and O'Malley v Multiplex (UK) Inc 1997 SLT 362 at 363F to K. This line of authority was, counsel submitted, clear. However, he anticipated that a question may arise as to whether the pursuer's Statement of Valuation of Claim made in terms of Rule of Court 43.9(1) can be had regard to in determining whether the pursuer has given sufficient specification of her claim. The point had been reserved by Lady Paton in L's Guardian v Fife Council 2006 SLT 811 at 814K, Lady Paton having been referred in that case to Lord Kingarth's unreported decision in Easdon v A Clarke & Co (Smithwick) Ltd, 25 January 2006. Counsel accepted that the Statement of Valuation of Claim might be looked at to fill in gaps but it was not a substitute for pleadings. In the present case, looking at the Statement of Valuation of Claim might provide some sort of basis for fleshing out the services claim but how past experience related to the future was anyone's guess. Reference to the Statement of Valuation of Claim provided absolutely no assistance in relation to the claim for future wage loss under reference to prospects of promotion. In the Statement of Valuation of Claim there was included a calculation of future wage loss by reference to the pursuer's wage at the date of termination of her employment. Following that calculation there was the sentence: "NB this calculation takes no account of wage increases the pursuer would have received or her prospects of promotion." Rather than providing further specification of a claim based on prospects of further promotion, if anything, this sentence suggested that no such claim was being made.

[5] Counsel for the pursuer confirmed that his motion was the allowance of issues. He began by advancing a number of general propositions. A party has a statutory right to a jury trial unless "special cause" exists in not allowing issues: Court of Session Act 1988, sections 9(b) and 11(a). In choosing proof or jury trial the question is essentially one of discretion, the object being to select between the alternative methods of inquiry which type of tribunal would best secure justice between the parties: Graham v Associated Electrical Industries Ltd 1968 SLT 81 at 82. The cause must be special to the particular cause and not a general cause: Taylor v Dumbarton Tramways Co Ltd 1918 SC (HL) 96 at 108. Special cause means some real ground of substance making the cause unsuitable for jury trial. It must not be a mere hypothetical difficulty conjured up by the ingenuity of counsel. That a legal question may arise is not generally a sufficient ground for refusing issues: Gardner v Hastie 1928 SLT 497 at 499. Turning to the present case counsel noted that liability was admitted. There was therefore no difficulty in relation to the merits. The objection advanced on behalf of the defenders related to a failure to give fair notice in relation to quantification of damages. The response by counsel for the pursuer was to submit that the pleadings in the present case complied with the relevant rules. In considering questions of specification the court was entitled to take into consideration the Statement of Valuation of Claim. Moreover, in relation to compliance with the rules, Chapter 43 envisages simplified pleadings. As far as quantification of damages was concerned, the relevant rules and form of summons envisaged no more than heads of damages being averred in the pleadings and the specification of these heads being given in the Statement of Valuation of Claim and supporting documents: Rule of Court 43.2(1), Form 43.2-A, Rule of Court 43.9, and Form 43.9. Practice Note No 2 of 2003 referred to the Report of the Working Party chaired by Lord Coulsfield which was issued in 1998 and to the Supplementary Report issued in 2002. The Practice Note included the following quotation from the Supplementary Report:

"Essentially, therefore, we agree that what is necessary is a method of pleading which encouraged brevity and simplicity and discourages technicality and artificiality."

If a question arose as to whether a pursuer had provided sufficient specification of the heads of damages claimed the court was entitled to have regard to the Statement of Valuation of Claim: Easdon v Clarke & Co (Smithwick) Ltd, 25 January 2006, Lord Kingarth, paragraphs [10] to [17], Strang v Churchill Insurance Co Ltd, 15 November 2006, Lord Kinclaven, paragraphs [123] to [142], and Baird v Cowie, 27 October 2006, Lord Carloway, paragraphs [24] to [26]/

[6] I am not prepared to allow issues on the present pleadings but for the moment at least I do not intend to refuse the pursuer's motion for the allowance of issues or to grant the defender's motion for proof before answer. It appears to me that what I see as a deficiency in the pursuer's pleadings can readily be cured by amendment and, as requested by counsel for the pursuer and consented to by counsel for the defender, I propose to have the case brought by order after parties have had the opportunity of seeing this Opinion.

[7] Having regard to the Outer House decisions to which I was referred, I am persuaded that it is appropriate to have regard to the Statement of Valuation of Claim in determining whether the pursuer has given sufficient specification in relation to the heads of damages that he seeks. Counsel for the defender did not suggest otherwise.

[8] As far as the averment "but for the accident she had prospects of further promotion", I have no difficulty. I do not consider this to be an averment of doubtful relevancy. I consider it to be an irrelevant averment. As counsel for the pursuer frankly accepted, the averment says nothing about what sort of prospects the pursuer may have had. There may have been poor or indifferent for all that appears in the pleadings. No assistance is to be got from the Statement of Valuation of Claim which states that the quite precise calculation of future wage loss does not take into account the "wage increases the pursuer would have received" or her "prospects of promotion". Counsel for the pursuer was again entirely frank in explaining that he was not in a position to improve on the averment. He did not suggest that he was in a position to lead evidence to the effect that it was likely that the pursuer would be promoted. Accordingly, I would not be prepared to allow the averment to go forward to probation. Counsel for the pursuer indicated that if that was my view, he would simply delete it.

[9] I found the question as to whether the pursuer has relevantly pled her claim in respect of future services to be rendered by relatives to be more difficult. Looking to the pleadings it is not so much a question as to whether the pursuer's averments are sufficiently specific as to whether she has any averments whatsoever in support of a claim which she states in terms that she is making. Counsel for the pursuer made clear that the absence of further averment in statement 5 was entirely intentional. It was his submission that the form of summons to be used in a Chapter 43 procedure required nothing more in the Statement of Claim than a list of heads of damages. That was what he had provided. That interpretation of the Rules was fully supported by what had been said by Lord Carloway in Baird v Cowie.

[10] In Baird Lord Carloway provides a careful exposition of what chapter 43 requires of a pursuer by way of notice of the injury and damage in respect of which he makes a claim. The effect of Rule 43.2(1), taken with Form 43.2-A, Lord Carloway explains at paragraphs [19] and [20] of his opinion is that in relation to injury and damage a pursuer's pleadings will meet the requirements for formal relevancy if the pursuer's personal injuries are adequately described and the heads of damage (described as "heads of claim") are listed in the penultimate paragraph of the statement of claim. At paragraph [24] Lord Carloway continues:

"Whereas the conventional rules of pleading require a pursuer to make appropriate averments in his summons giving [detail of the averred heads of claim], the new rules do not. Instead, the route which the Court has chosen to follow is to oblige a pursuer to states heads of claim but to value them in the manner provided for in [Form 43.9, ie the Form of Statement of Valuation of Claim provided for in Rule 43.9]. The general need to provide fair notice still remains, but the rules after the procedure to be followed to provide that notice."

[11] Lord Carloway provides a summary of the requirements imposed by the Rules of Court which is clear and accurate. I immediately accept that to require more from a pursuer in a personal injury claim can be seen as a move back towards the over-elaboration of pleadings which was criticised by the Coulsfield Working Group and which gets no encouragement from Practice Note 2 of 2003. However, as Lord Carloway points out, there remains a need to give fair notice and in my view there is a place for concise averment to supply that notice, in relation to damages as well as in relation to the merits of the claim. That might be said to be particularly so in a case which the pursuer wishes to be determined by way of jury trial. As Lady Paton observed in Higgins v DHL International (UK) Ltd supra at 1304F, the views of Lord Justice Clerk Thomson in Boyle v Glasgow Corporation still have considerable force, notwithstanding the charges effected by chapter 43. The pleadings should be in such a form as clearly to convey what the case is about to their two direct audiences, the other party and the judge: Higgins supra at 1305E. When it comes to questions purely of quantification then the pleadings may be supplemented by what appears in the Statement of Valuation of Claim but it would seem appropriate and, in a jury trial, convenient to be able to ascertain from a party's pleadings what it is that party seeks and the factual basis upon which he seeks it. Entitlement to particular heads of damages may be among the important issues in a case and where that is so I would expect something by way of averment in support of such entitlement. If weight is to be attached to the precise wording of Form 43.2-A, I would draw attention to what appears at paragraph 5 of the Statement of Claim: "State briefly the personal injuries suffered". I would take "personal injuries" to comprehend not only physical injuries but their consequences insofar as disabling or otherwise injurious and what directly flows from that which bears on quantification of damage.

[12] However, even if I am wrong in my general observations in this particular case I consider that the material relied on by the pursuer, her averments taken with the Statement of Valuation of Claim, is inadequate if she wishes issues to be allowed in respect of a claim that includes a requirement for future services in terms of section 8 of the Administration of Justice (Scotland) Act 1982. The valuation of future services in this case is put at the sum of ฃ94,900. The matter is not therefore inconsequential. It appears from the Statement of Valuation of Claim that this head is based on a requirement for two hours of services per day for the rest of the pursuer's life. It is not said what the future services will be or why they will be necessary. It may be that they will be the same services that the pursuer's husband and daughters have provided in the past: changing dressings, applying creams, bathing, toileting, dressing. However, that is not said and the number of hours of necessary services claimed for the future is two per day rather than the three claimed in respect of the past. That suggests that there is some distinction to be drawn as between past and future but what the distinction may be is nowhere disclosed.

[13] I do not suggest for a moment that the matter of future services is one of great difficulty. I would anticipate that counsel for the pursuer will be able to set out precisely why it is that this head is claimed in a sentence or two of averment. I propose to give him the opportunity to do so but until he does so as well as deleting the reference to prospects of promotion I am not prepared to allow issues.

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_199.html