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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> JM v Fife Council [2008] ScotCS CSIH_63 (05 December 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_63.html
Cite as: [2008] CSIH 63, [2008] ScotCS CSIH_63

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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord President

Lord Kingarth

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] CSIH 63

A688/02

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by the LORD PRESIDENT

 

in

 

RECLAIMING MOTION

 

by

 

JM

Pursuer and Reclaimer;

 

against

 

FIFE COUNCIL

Defenders and Respondents:

 

_______

 

Act: A Smith, Q.C., Stirling; Drummond Miller, LLP

Alt: Maguire, Q.C., Duncan; Simpson & Marwick

 

5 December 2008

Introduction

[1] The pursuer and reclaimer was for some years resident in St. Margaret's Children's Home ("the home"), situated in Elie, Fife. The home was run by the statutory predecessors of the defenders and respondents. He seeks damages for loss, injury and damage sustained as a result of sexual and non-sexual abuse inflicted on him by David Murphy, an employee of the respondents' statutory predecessors who was responsible for the day to day running of the home and the care of the children who resided there. In 2001 Murphy pled guilty to offences involving the abuse of a number of children formerly in his care. He was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment, and died while serving that sentence. The respondents do not dispute liability for the actions of Murphy. The reclaiming motion concerns the Lord Ordinary's assessment of solatium at £75,000 and his decision to award interest on that sum only from the time of citation, rather than from the date of the wrong.

 

The reclaimer's personal history

[2] The reclaimer was born on 18 September 1952 and immediately taken into care by the respondents' statutory predecessors. He was placed with a foster mother, Miss S, for around the first six years of his life, which were generally happy. He formed a bond with his foster mother, whom he considered to be his natural mother. In July 1959 he was admitted to the home, initially on a temporary basis due to his foster mother's ill health. In February 1960, due to his behaviour and to Miss S's continuing ill-health, the reclaimer was admitted to the home on a permanent basis, but retained some contact with his foster mother until her sudden death in October 1961. He remained at the home until September 1966, when he was placed with another foster family with whom he remained for about a year. In due course he spent about 18 months training in the catering industry. Thereafter he moved to London, where he spent about 18 months to 2 years homeless and working as a male prostitute. He thereafter gained employment, and eventually spent 15 years working with the National Health Service at Westminster Hospital. He became active in politics, serving as a councillor in Tower Hamlets, and emerged as a leading figure in a trade union. While working at the hospital he met the woman who was to become his wife; he married in 1979 and had two sons, born in 1981 and 1985. The family moved together to the Liverpool area in 1990, despite the reclaimer and his wife going through a process of separation at that time. They subsequently divorced, but remain on very good terms; indeed, they continue to share a house. The appellant no longer works, but has acted as a lay magistrate, having done so at the time of the proof for around five years. He has also acted as a director of a charity which aims to support victims of abuse and their families.

 

Evidence of abuse and its effect

[3] Murphy arrived at the home when the reclaimer was about eight years old. From the time of his arrival he was both verbally abusive and physically violent towards the reclaimer. This lasted until the reclaimer left the home. The Lord Ordinary heard evidence about a number of examples of such abuse: the reclaimer was made to stand naked on a cold stone floor in an attempt to make him admit to having done something which he had not done, pulled by the hair, kicked, punched and struck on the head and body with a belt; he was made to stand naked in front of other children; he was struck on the face when he made simple spelling errors; and he was told to eat the same plate of macaroni, which made him gag, for three consecutive days. He was frequently kept off school due to the visible injuries which he had sustained. He suffered from faecal and urinary incontinence as a result of the distress occasioned by this and the aftermentioned sexual abuse.


[4] When the reclaimer was around eight and a half or nine years old, Murphy began to abuse him sexually. On the first occasion, when the reclaimer was upset, Murphy put his arms around him, before placing his hands inside the reclaimer's trousers, penetrating his anus with his finger, telling him to remove his trousers, removing his own trousers and engaging him in lewd conversation. Thereafter the reclaimer was subjected to a protracted course of almost daily sexual abuse, often accompanied by Murphy spitting in his face or mouth. The abuse included Murphy forcing the reclaimer to perform oral sex, masturbating over him, sodomising him and tying him to a bed. He appeared deliberately to try to hurt the reclaimer when penetrating him during the frequent acts of sodomy. The reclaimer usually accepted the abuse without a struggle. On one occasion he bit Murphy's penis and was subjected to a very violent assault which left him unconscious, with a chipped tooth and a broken nose. On another occasion Murphy held the reclaimer over the side of a boat on the River Forth, sodomised him and then threw him overboard to swim back to the shore. The reclaimer lived in constant fear of Murphy and believed that the latter could have killed him without anyone noticing or caring.


[5]
The abuse has had a profound effect on the reclaimer's ability to relate to other people, both physically and emotionally. The first emotional attachment he had was with his future wife but it took three years for him to allow her to touch him, as he found it physically painful. He has had similar difficulties showing affection to his children and has never been as close to them as he would have liked: the first time he hugged one of his sons was on the opening day of the proof in this case. He was at one time part of an organisation where people shook hands and put their arms around each other, but he had to leave as such practices made him uncomfortable. He received some psychiatric treatment, but stopped attending after around three sessions. He has also received some counselling. He testified that he had suffered from depression consistently and had been advised that he would have to take daily medication for this for the rest of his life.

 

Disclosure of abuse
[6] At the time of the abuse the reclaimer was too afraid to disclose what was taking place. Murphy was a former policeman and a respected member of the community. The reclaimer did not think that any report he made would be believed.


[7]
In December 1970 the reclaimer wrote a letter from London to the respondents' predecessors in which, inter alia, he disclosed some details of the abuse. He received a reply from a Miss W, his former social worker, then the Assistant Director of Social Work, in which she intimated that the allegations "would have been investigated very thoroughly" had they been reported at the time. A number of telephone conversations ensued between the reclaimer and Miss W during which the allegations were discussed. The records completed by Miss W (who did not give evidence) suggested that she discussed the allegations with her colleagues in December 1970, that the Fife Police were notified and that police officers from Chelsea had visited the reclaimer who had not made a statement at that time. The reclaimer's recollection was that he had visited the police in Chelsea in January 1971. He had spoken to Miss W, who had suggested that he had better be able to prove his allegations, given Murphy's good reputation and his position in the community. This discouraged him from progressing matters. He was never made aware of the police in Scotland being informed of the allegations.


[8]
In the years prior to this action being raised the reclaimer discussed the abuse with a limited number of people. He told his general practitioner in 1972 or 1973, without going into any detail. He was referred for counselling as a result. He told his future wife some of the details shortly after they met, in 1976 or 1977, but had never told her all that had taken place. In 1994 and 1995 he gave general information about the abuse to doctors who were treating his son, as he had concerns that it might be relevant to his son's care and treatment. In 1999 he again contacted his general practitioner, who referred him for counselling. He spoke to a social worker who contacted the police about the abuse with his consent. He then gave a number of statements to police officers prior to the arrest and conviction of Murphy. The reclaimer intimated no civil claim against the respondents until December 1999. The summons in the present action was served on 13 March 2002.

 

Decision of the Lord Ordinary

[9] In awarding solatium of £75,000 the Lord Ordinary identified the following non-exhaustive list of relevant factors in a case of this kind: the nature and severity of the abuse; its frequency; its duration; the victim's age at the time; its immediate effects; possible other causes of the victim's problems; the emotional and social consequences; and any psychiatric illness or psychological condition suffered as a result of the abuse. He considered that it was difficult to imagine a worse case of child abuse than the present, that it was akin to torture, as commonly understood, and that it involved the "grossest breach of trust imaginable". He considered that the starting date for the abuse was about 18 June 1961, this being the mid-way point between the reclaimer being eight and a half and nine years old. By reference to documentation which disclosed when the reclaimer was placed with his second foster family, he decided on an end date of about 14 September 1966. He accepted the evidence about the physical pain and emotional distress suffered at the time of the abuse, as well as the evidence concerning the reclaimer's inability to form a "tactile" relationship with members of his family. However, he also considered that the reclaimer had achieved success in life, despite the abuse. Given the lack of expert evidence, he was unwilling to accept the reclaimer's own evidence about psychiatric illness or psychological condition. In reaching a figure for solatium he relied to some extent on English authority, but did not think that the Irish authorities, relied on by the reclaimer, were relevant. He decided that the whole award of solatium should be referable to the past only. In exercising his discretion in terms of Section 1 of the Interest on Damages (Scotland) Act 1958 (as amended) and limiting interest to the period from the date of citation until payment, he took into account that there had been a delay of more than 35 years from the end of the abuse until the raising of the present action. Despite the reclaimer's evidence about the impression conveyed by Miss W during his telephone conversations with her, the Lord Ordinary noted that the reclaimer had discussed the abuse with various individuals thereafter - his wife and various medical advisers and counsellors. There was no satisfactory explanation for the delay in raising the action.

 

Submissions for the parties

[10]
Mr Smith on behalf of the reclaimer acknowledged that an appeal court should be slow to interfere with a Lord Ordinary's assessment of solatium. The test was whether the award was "wholly unreasonable" or was "out of all proportion" (McEwan and Paton on Damages for Personal Injuries in Scotland (2nd ed.) para.15-01 (as at May 2007); Macphail, Sheriff Court Practice (3rd ed.) para.18.110-2; Barker v Murdoch and Others 1979 S.L.T. 145). It had been observed judicially that it might be that the levels fixed by judges in respect of personal injury claims were lower than they should be (Baigent v British Broadcasting Corporation 2001 SC 281, at para.[24]). The relevant test was met here. In the circumstances an award of £75,000 as a principal sum could be regarded as derisory. There were no Scottish awards in point. Those in England were difficult to analyse; reference was made to KR and Others v Bryn Alyn [2003] QB 1441; [2003] EWCA Civ 85. It was important to bear in mind that the present case involved repeated sexual and physical assault which was to be distinguished from accidental injury (Griffiths v Williams, Court of Appeal, 21 November 1995, per Rose L.J. at pages 21-3; Lawson v Glaves-Smith [2006] EWHC 2865 (QB), per Eady J. at paras.3, 26 and 138-40; Walker on Delict (2nd ed.) pages 488-9). Awards in the Republic of Ireland provided a potential source of guidance. Reference was made to Nolan v Murphy [2005] IESC 17 (where an award of €350,000 for repeated sexual abuse had been made). The psychosocial aspects of the damage to the reclaimer had not been given appropriate weight by the Lord Ordinary. In McLeod v British Railways Board 2001 S.C. 534 a jury award of £250,000 for burning injuries had been sustained. It was appropriate for the court to have regard to jury awards (Shaher v British Aerospace Flying College Limited 2003 S.C. 540, at para.[6]). Reference was made to the solatium awards noted in Hajducki - Civil Jury Trials at page 261. The award of £75,000 was in the circumstances wholly unreasonable. An award of £175,000 was sought. The largest part of the damages should be attributed to the period of the abuse.


[11] As to interest on damages, it was accepted that that was a matter for the exercise of a judicial discretion. The Lord Ordinary had failed to explain why he had not accepted the reclaimer's explanation as to why he had not pressed his claim earlier. The Lord Ordinary had exercised a discretion (by awarding interest on the whole damages from citation) but had exercised it unduly restrictively. Interest should have been awarded on the bulk of the damages at the full rate of interest from the time the reclaimer left the home and on the award in respect of the consequences experienced since that date from then at half the judicial rate. The development of the law on interest could be seen from Macrae v Reed and Mallik Limited 1961 S.C. 68, especially per Lord Patrick at pages 76-8. The norm was now to award interest from the date when the wrong was committed. A successful claimant was entitled to interest to compensate him for being kept out of money which he was due. As to the position in
England, see McGregor on Damages (17th ed.) para.15-108-9; Kemp and Kemp - Quantum of Damages, Chapter 26. The test for interference with a judicial discretion was that expressed by Lord Reid in Thomson v Glasgow Corporation 1962 S.C. (H.L.) 36, at page 66. Delay, even inordinate delay, did not justify the withholding of interest (Boots The Chemist Limited v G.A. Estates 1992 S.C. 485, especially per Lord Justice Clerk Ross at pages 497-8). The true issue was who had meantime had the benefit of the money. The reclaimer's lack of action in pursuing a civil claim until he did was perfectly comprehensible. Reference was also made to Pickett v British Rail Engineering Limited [1980] AC 136, especially per Lord Edmund-Davies at page 164 and per Lord Scarman at pages 172-3.


[12] Miss Maguire on behalf of the respondents submitted that the reclaiming motion should be refused on both aspects; each involved a discretionary exercise by the Lord Ordinary and there were no grounds for interfering with the discretions exercised. The reclaimer accepted the high test to be met before a discretionary decision could be interfered with by an appellate court. Reference was made additionally to Britton v Central Regional Council 1986 S.L.T 207 and to G v G [1985] 1 WLR 647, especially per Lord Fraser of Tullybelton at pages 650-2.


[13] As to solatium, the Lord Ordinary had discharged his task in a reasoned and considered manner. He had appropriately used such English authorities as there were on child abuse as a benchmark for the present case. He had made an award higher than those made in the Bryn Alyn cases and beyond the upper bracket for severe psychiatric damage suggested in the Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injury Cases (8th ed.) issued by the (English) Judicial Studies Board. The use of jury awards, particularly where the circumstances were not comparable, was unhelpful; they provided no reasoning. Whereas the use of English awards of general damages for the purposes of comparison had been approved (Allan v Scott 1972 S.C. 59), no such approval had been given to the use of awards in the
Republic of Ireland. Damages there were amongst the highest in Europe (Quill - Torts in Ireland (2nd ed.) at page 542; see also MacIntosh and Holmes - Personal Injury Awards in EU and EFTA Countries, pages 367-8). The principles to be applied in a Scottish court where there was psychological affection were well expressed in Bowers v Strathclyde Regional Council 1981 S.L.T 122, per Lord Cameron at pages 125-6.


[14]
As to interest on damages, the rate to be applied was a matter for the Lord Ordinary's discretion (MacIntosh v National Coal Board 1988 S.L.T. 348). It could not be said that a "silencing effect" was within judicial knowledge (AS v Poor Sisters of Nazareth 2007 SC 688, at para.[35]). An inordinate delay in making a claim had (in a commercial case) led to a modification in the interest awarded (Nacap Limited v Moffat Plant Limited 1986 S.L.T. 326). Reference was also made to Buchanan v Cameron 1973 S.C. 285. The exercise of the discretion in respect of interest required a selective and discriminating approach (Macrae v Reed and Mallik Limited). That approach had been followed after the amendment made to the 1958 Act by the 1971 Act (Smith v Middleton 1972 S.C. 30). Reference was also made to Ross v British Railways Board 1972 S.C. 154. To award interest as sought by the reclaimer would be manifestly unfair to the respondents. The Lord Ordinary had done his best to do justice between the parties. Boots The Chemist Limited v G.A. Estates Limited could be distinguished. A delay of the order which had occurred in this case had not been envisaged by the legislature. Reference was also made to Wilson v Dunbar Bank plc 2008 S.L.T. 301, L v Chief Constable of Staffordshire [2000] P.I.Q.R.Q. 349 and Eagle v Chambers (No.2) [2004] 1 WLR 3081. No explanation had been put forward by the reclaimer as to why from 1970 there had been no intimation of a claim and no action taken by him. It could not be said that action taken by the respondents' predecessors had been responsible for the reclaimer not taking matters forward. The fact that the respondents, who had made their own decision not to dispute liability, had also decided not to take any time bar point, should not be held against them. It was necessary to do justice between the parties and not to penalise the respondents. In the absence of any claim made against them until 1999, the respondents (and their predecessors) could not have acted earlier.

 

Discussion - the principal sum

[15] In Inglis v London, Midland and Scottish Railways 1941 SC 551 Lord President Normand observed (at page 560) that:

"It would be most unwise for the Court to interfere with an award of solatium made by a Sheriff or Judge unless it was satisfied that the amount was wholly unreasonable."

The other judges agreed. An alternative test of "being out of all proportion to the sum which [the appellate court] think[s] should have been awarded" (Barker v Murdoch, at page 147) has on occasion been adopted.


[16] The circumstances of this case are unusual, as well as being atrocious. There was no guidance in Scottish authority, whether at first instance or on appeal, and whether by judge or jury, to assist the Lord Ordinary. He did, however, have some assistance from the range of awards made by way of general damages in England and Wales in KR and Others v Bryn Alyn Community Limited, where discussion of the individual awards is to be found (only in the neutral citation) at paras.137 and following. The use of English authority is competent and appropriate (Allan v Scott). Although the awards in Bryn Alyn were "primarily for long-term psychiatric or psychological injury" (para.1) and were particularised and supported by relative professional reports (para.112), while the reclaimer's evidence of long-term effects was not so supported, the background circumstances were the nearest available in cases arising in the United Kingdom. They included subjection of children to buggery at the hands of wrongdoers. The highest award, in 2003, in the Bryn Alyn cases (made to DJ who had been grossly abused, physically and sexually, between about the ages of ten and sixteen) was £50,000 by way of general damages (para.224). The Lord Ordinary, having made a careful analysis of all the relevant factors, concluded that, had there been (professional) evidence of psychiatric and/or psychological injury and, if the reclaimer had not coped so remarkably well with his life despite Murphy's abuse, he would have considered making an award of solatium in excess of £100,000. He continued (para.[55]):

"Despite the absence of these elements, I am persuaded that, in the absence of any need for apportionment in this case, the horrific nature, character and severity of the abuse taken together with its frequency and duration, the age of the pursuer at the time and the immediate effects on the pursuer, justify an award greater than those made by the Court of Appeal in Bryn Alyn. I consider that solatium is properly assessed at £75,000."


[17]
That approach and the resulting conclusion are not, in our view, open to successful challenge. The Lord Ordinary was, in the absence of professional support for the assertions of psychiatric and psychological damage, entitled to hold that the existence of such damage and its causal relationship to the abuse had not been proved. Nonetheless, he felt entitled to have regard to and to accept the evidence of the reclaimer and his former wife as to the emotional and social experiences (falling short of psychiatric illness or psychological condition) of the reclaimer and to attribute these to the abuse (para.[49]).


[18]
In the event, the Lord Ordinary (who awarded interest on the whole damages from the date of citation, attributing the damage wholly to the past), did not require to allocate damages between the immediate consequences of the abuse when in the home and the emotional and social experiences subsequently. However, counsel for the reclaimer, both before the Lord Ordinary and before us, attributed twice the level of damages to the period in the home over that from his leaving it until the date of decree (£100,000 and £50,000 respectively). That apportionment seems reasonable and we adopt it. The Lord Ordinary was entitled to take the view that there was no compensatable future damage. In these circumstances his award of £75,000 can reasonably be said to comprise £50,000 in respect of the period in the home and £25,000 in respect of the emotional and social consequences thereafter.


[19]
Such an award cannot, in our view, be said to be so low as to be wholly unreasonable or out of all proportion to the sum which should have been awarded.


[20]
Awards in the Republic of Ireland in this field are not helpful. There appears to have been a long tradition in that jurisdiction of making awards in personal injuries cases significantly higher than elsewhere in the British Isles and amongst the highest in Europe (Quill - Torts in Ireland (2nd ed.) at page 542; Personal Injury Awards in EU and EFTA Countries (editors Macintosh and Holmes) at pages 367-9).


[21]
In these circumstances the reclaimer's challenge to the amount of the principal award, in our view, must fail.

 

Discussion - interest

[22]
At common law interest on damages was commonly awarded only from the date of decree. The Interest on Damages (Scotland) Act 1958, section 1(1) empowered the court in an action of damages to award interest from a date not earlier than the date of citation "if the circumstances warrant such a course". In Macrae v Reed and Mallik Limited (decided in 1961) the Second Division held that the discretion conferred by section 1(1) must be exercised on a selective and discriminating basis. The majority of the court (Lord Justice Clerk Thomson dissenting) held that interest from a date earlier than the date of decree could be allowed on damages awarded for loss suffered before that date only where such loss could be definitely ascertained. In particular, interest on solatium (being ascertainable not earlier than the award having been made in the court of first instance) was not payable from any date earlier than that court's decree.


[23]
Section 1(1) of the Interest on Damages (Scotland) Act 1971 substituted for section 1(1) of the Interest on Damages (Scotland) Act 1958 the following:

"(1) Where a court pronounces an interlocutor decerning for payment by any person of a sum of money as damages, the interlocutor may include decree for payment by that person of interest, at such rate or rates as may be specified in the interlocutor, on the whole or any part of that sum for the whole or any part of the period between the date when the right of action arose and the date of the interlocutor.

(1A) Where a court pronounces an interlocutor decerning for payment of a sum which consists of or includes damages or solatium in respect of personal injuries sustained by the pursuer or any other person, then (without prejudice to the exercise of the power conferred by subsection (1) of this section in relation to any part of that sum which does not represent such damages or solatium) the court shall exercise that power so as to include in that sum interest on those damages and on that solatium or on such part of each as the court considers appropriate, unless the court is satisfied that there are reasons special to the case why no interest should be given in respect thereof.

...".


[24]
Lord Emslie, sitting in the Outer House, in a leading judgment always thought to be authoritative (Smith v Middleton), adopted in the context of the amended statute the selective and discriminating approach advocated in Macrae v Reed and Mallik Limited. In applying that approach in that context he held that interest was payable at a restricted rate on past solatium from the date of death, the action in question having arisen out of the death of a husband and father. The restricted rate (half the rate payable as from the date of death) was applied because the loss in question could be regarded as being sustained not wholly at the death but over the period of time from the death to the date of decree. Although Lord Emslie emphasised that he was making that determination in the context of a claim in respect of death, it has been the regular practice of this court, in the absence of special reasons not to do so, to award interest on the same basis on past solatium for pain and suffering where that pain and suffering has extended over the whole period between the date when the right of action arose and the date of the interlocutor (see, for example, Orr v Metcalfe 1973 S.C. 57, per Lord President Emslie at page 60). Where the pain and suffering has ended at some date prior to the date of the interlocutor, it is the usual practice to award interest at the full rate from that terminus until payment.


[25]
Usually the nature of the pain and suffering to be compensated will be of a sufficiently homogenous nature that it will not be necessary, for the purposes of making an award of interest, to divide past solatium into constituent elements. Unusually, in the present case, there are, it seems to us, two discrete elements, namely (1) the pain, affront and humiliation experienced by the reclaimer while resident at the home and (2) the emotional and social consequences which he experienced after leaving the home. Although the Lord Ordinary in his discussion distinguishes between these elements, he did not distinguish between them for the purposes of an award of interest. It was unnecessary for him to do so once he had decided to award interest on the whole award of past solatium from the date of citation.


[26]
Section 1(1A) of the 1958 Act (as amended) is mandatory - the court is obliged in the defined circumstances to exercise the power conferred by section 1(1) (Orr v Metcalfe). But that power involves a wide discretion - in particular, while it would be open to a court to award interest from the date when the right of action arose, it would also be an exercise of that power to award interest only from a later date, say, the date of citation. Accordingly, the Lord Ordinary's restriction of the award of interest to run from the date of citation cannot be said to infringe the mandatory requirements of section 1(1A). It remains, however, to consider whether the manner of the exercise of that power is open to successful challenge. It has not at any stage been suggested by the respondents that no interest should be awarded.


[27]
The Lord Ordinary at para.[58] stated:

"...; in the circumstances of the present case, I do not consider it is necessary for me to express a view as to whether delay must be 'inordinate', 'inexcusable' or 'unreasonable' to justify a restriction on interest".

That was said against a submission made by the respondents that, in circumstances where some such adjective had been appropriately applied to delay on the part of a pursuer, a restriction on the interest to be awarded was appropriate. Two Outer House cases (Buchan v J. Marr (Aberdeen) Limited 1987 S.L.T. (N) 521 and M & I Instrument Engineers Limited v Varsada 1991 S.L.T. 106) had been relied on before the Lord Ordinary in respect of that submission. Reference was also made to Nacap Limited v Moffat Plant Limited. But all these decisions require to be looked at against the decision of the Second Division in Boots The Chemist Limited v G.A. Estates Limited where, at page 497, Lord Justice Clerk Ross, having referred to these three Outer House cases, observed:

"I am not persuaded that inordinate delay on the part of the pursuer in prosecuting his action should justify any modification of interest. If there has been such inordinate delay, the result must be that the defenders have had use of money for a longer period than they should have had it."

Although there was no express disapproval of the Outer House decisions, disapproval seems implicit. Lord Murray and Lord Grieve agreed. Accordingly, in the absence of special circumstances, inordinate delay in prosecuting an action should not, it would appear, of itself result in a pursuer being deprived of interest to which he was otherwise entitled. The same principle has been found to apply in relation to delay in raising proceedings (Bhatia v Tribax Limited 1994 S.L.T. 1201, per Lord Cullen at page 1204 and Purryag v Greater Glasgow Health Board 1996 S.L.T. 794 where Lord Abernethy, when considering quantum of damages following a proof in a medical negligence case which had taken place 18 years after the alleged omission, felt obliged to hold, in accordance with the normal practice, that interest would have been payable at half the court rate for the whole period from the date of that omission until the date of decree).


[28]
The Lord Ordinary found it unnecessary to express a view on that line of authority. He continued, however:

"No satisfactory explanation has been provided as to the elapse of more than 35 years. Although the pursuer stated in evidence that his telephone conversation with Miss [W] of the Social Work Department in early 1971 caused him to be too scared to proceed with any complaint at that time, I did not understand him to suggest that this conversation remained the cause of his delay in intimating any claim for the next 28 years or thereabouts. There is no suggestion in the evidence of any other steps taken by the defenders or their predecessors which might have caused the pursuer to refrain from intimating a claim. If interest were to run on the whole award of solatium, even at half the judicial rate from time to time in force, from the date when the abuse ended (or indeed earlier than that, if the pursuer's approach is to be preferred) this would add very significantly to the amount payable by the defenders to the pursuer. In the absence of satisfactory explanation for the delay, I do not consider that this would be fair to the defenders. In enacting the amendments to the 1958 Act which are comprised in the Interest on Damages (Scotland) Act 1971, I do not consider that Parliament had in mind interest on awards of solatium for personal injuries caused more than 40 years before the date of decree. No doubt it is for that reason that Parliament saw fit to confer the discretion on the courts which was in fact conferred."


[29]
In early 1971 the reclaimer was a few months over the age of 18. The Lord Ordinary at para.[14] records his evidence of what happened at that time as follows:

"In January 1971, the pursuer went to the police in London and reported what Murphy had done to him in the home. The police told him that he would have to return to Scotland to make a report there. He had nowhere to stay in Scotland and was scared to report this matter to the procurator fiscal. He spoke to Miss [W] on the telephone and told her that he had been to the police; she told him that Murphy was a lovely man, who was very caring and was a respected member of the community, and if the pursuer made these allegations, he would have to be able to prove them. If he could not do so, he should 'shut up'. The pursuer said that he was too scared to proceed with any complaint at that time."


[30]
The Lord Ordinary does not make any adverse criticism on the reclaimer's credibility or reliability as to his account of these events. Indeed his treatment at para.[58] suggests that he found the reclaimer's evidence as to his reaction to Miss W's observations on the telephone to be true and accurate. For our part, it does not surprise us that a very young man, having experienced what the reclaimer had experienced in the home and being faced in 1971 with Miss W's attitude as expressed on the telephone, would have been apprehensive about returning to Scotland and there pursuing matters with the authorities. What he was faced with was not the making of a civil claim - with or without professional advice - but the mounting of an allegation of gross criminal conduct against an individual who was at that time regarded highly in the local community. The mounting of such an allegation was, so far as the reclaimer was concerned, discouraged by the authority who were that individual's employers and who had had ultimate responsibility for the reclaimer's care while a child in their home. The reclaimer, so far as he was aware, had no support for his allegations. He did not think that he would be believed.


[31]
It is against that background that the reclaimer's inaction over the succeeding 35 years must, in our view, be addressed. The Lord Ordinary's concern appears to have been that there was in evidence no satisfactory explanation for the delay between the conversation with Miss W and the making of a civil claim in 1999. Neither counsel at the proof asked the reclaimer why he had not acted earlier. But such an explanation is, in our view, not hard to find from the whole background circumstances. The allegations which the pursuer would have had to make were, as we have said, of gross criminal conduct. It was and remained essentially a police matter. Any civil claim was necessarily a secondary aspect. It was only when in 1999 a social worker, to whom he had related his experiences, obtained the reclaimer's permission to ask the local police to contact him that a change occurred. He gave a statement to the police on Merseyside where he was then living. That statement, as it happened, matched with an account given at about the same time to Fife Police by another former resident of the home who, having been detained for some offence, in the course of a police interview broke down and told of his experiences. It was only then that Fife Police came to interview the reclaimer. Thereafter a substantial criminal investigation was mounted against Murphy. In the same year the reclaimer made his civil claim.


[32]
The Lord Ordinary in discussing interest and, in particular when concluding that there was no satisfactory explanation for the lapse of time, does not discuss that history, which in our view is material. His omission to do so involved, in our judgment, a misdirection. Further, in considering the matter of fairness he addresses only what would be fair or unfair to the respondents, without having regard, at least expressly, to fairness to the reclaimer. Nor does he take into account the established practice, in personal injuries cases of awarding damages on past solatium from the date when injury was first sustained. In these circumstances the Lord Ordinary's decision on interest, while involving an exercise of a discretion, is open, in our view, to review by this court.


[33]
In deciding what disposal in respect of interest is in the circumstances fair to both parties, it is important to bear in mind two things - first, that the quantum of the principal sum of past solatium is assessed in money's-worth as at the time of the interlocutor, not as at the time or times when the injury was sustained and, second, that two elements may be said to be included in the giving of interest on damages. In Wright v British Railways Board [1983] 2 A.C. 773 (referred to in McGregor on Damages (17th ed.) at para.15-109) Lord Diplock at page 781F identified these elements as "one, a reward for taking a risk of loss or reduction of capital; the other, a reward for foregoing the use of the capital sum for the time being". The former element in effect protects against inflationary effects on the value of money; the latter is concerned with the obligant having had, over the intervening period, the benefit of the use of the capital sum. These elements, it may reasonably be supposed, are both intended to be reflected in the rates of interest on decrees which have been fixed from time to time - and which historically have been set at the same rates in Scotland as in England.


[34]
Where the period between the sustaining of the damage and the making of an award is relatively short, there may not be a serious injustice in interest on past solatium being awarded which includes both elements; but the position is more problematic where a long period is involved. As the effects of past inflation are taken into account in making the award of the capital sum in terms of current money's-worth, interest should not also be allowed to the extent of that element of the rate which may be said to represent protection against inflation. No doubt, some assessment could be attempted as to what proportion of the judicial interest rates over the last four decades could be said to have been attributable to the inflationary as against the other element. No such assessment was attempted in this case. (Nor was any specific argument advanced about the incidence of tax.) In its absence, a fair apportionment might be to treat each element as of equal weight. The result would be that interest would be payable from the requisite date at half the rate which would otherwise be awarded.


[35]
The reclaimer seeks interest on the larger part of the principal sum (that is, on the compensation for the damage done during his stay in the home) from 14 September 1966, when he left the home, until payment. Although strictly some interest may be due from an earlier date, that is not pressed for. All the damage for which that part of the principal sum is due had been sustained by 14 September 1966. The reclaimer seeks interest on that principal sum from that date until decree at the full judicial date from time to time in force. We shall return shortly to which judicial rate is appropriate; but for the reasons given above the full judicial rate should not, in our view, be allowed on that sum but rather half that rate. On the lesser part of the principal sum (that is, on the compensation for the emotional and social consequences experienced by the reclaimer after he left the home) the reclaimer claims interest at half the full judicial rate from 14 September 1966 until decree - to reflect the circumstance that the damage was suffered over that period. For the reasons given that rate should be restricted further to one-quarter of that rate.


[36]
As to which judicial rate to adopt, practice has varied. Sometimes the current judicial rate has been used as the starting point, sometimes that prevailing from time to time over the period or periods in question, sometimes (as in Smith v Middleton at page 40) an average of the rates over that period. Between 1966 and the present time the judicial rate on decrees of the Court of Session has varied from 5% to 7% to 11% to 12% to 15% and then back down to 8%, the last having been the prevailing rate since April 1993. Those rates which are in double figures no doubt contain a significant element of protection against inflation. The simple average of these rates is about 9.67% but, having regard to the assumed significant inflationary elements in the higher rates, that average appears to us to be in the circumstances too high. Although the exercise must necessarily be a broad one and expert testimony might have produced a lower figure, taking as the starting point the current rate of 8% per annum appears to us to be reasonable.


[37]
In all the circumstances, accordingly, we shall refuse the reclaiming motion in so far as directed to the principal sum of damages but to allow it in so far as directed to interest, to the extent of varying the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor by substituting for "interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum from the date of citation until payment" the words "interest on the sum of £50,000 from 14 September 1966 until decree at the rate of 4% per annum, interest on the sum of £25,000 from 14 September 1966 until decree at the rate of 2% per annum and interest on the sum of £75,000 and on the capitalised amounts of the foregoing interest at the rate of 8% per annum from the date of decree until payment".


[38]
We would add only two things. First, it was suggested by Mr Smith that the respondents might have protected themselves from a substantial award of interest by taking a plea of limitation (or even of prescription). But the fact that they chose not to do so (perhaps for policy reasons) does not, in our view, affect the proper approach to the awarding of interest. Second, the basis on which the reclaimer sued the respondents was that they were vicariously liable for the conduct of their employee Murphy - albeit that conduct was criminal as well as giving rise to a civil wrong. Such vicarious liability may not have been clear until the decision of the House of Lords in Lister v Hesley Hall Limited [2002] 1 AC 215 - though there was a suggestion by Mr Smith that the respondents and their predecessors might in any event have been exposed to liability because as education authority they should have been aware, from the reclaimer's appearance at school, that he was being subjected to ill-treatment at the home. The latter suggestion is speculative, but it does not matter. The theory of the law is that the respondents and their predecessors were always vicariously liable for the conduct of Murphy and that the reclaimer was entitled to compensation from them from the time or times when that conduct caused injury to him.


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