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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Chase International Express Ltd. & Anor v McCrae [2003] EWCA Civ 505 (14 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/505.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 505 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SLOUGH COUNTY COURT
(DEPUTY DISTRICT JUDGE DUNCAN)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NEWMAN
____________________
CHASE INTERNATIONAL EXPRESS LTD | ||
JUSTIN SMITH | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
McCRAE | Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R MENZIES (instructed by Silverbeck Rymer of Liverpool) appeared on behalf of the Respondents
____________________
(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
Crown Copyright ©
Future Earnings
"Please list the jobs you had had in the 5 years before starting with Kuehne & Nagel, indicating for each job the date on which it started; the date on which it ended; the nature of the job; and the rate of pay" -
the answer filed on behalf of the claimant was:
"Before working for Kuehne & Nagel my employment was, to the best of my knowledge, as follows:
From May 1999 to August 1999 I worked at the Fun Factory. I operated a sewing machine and was paid approximately £13,500 per annum.
From 1996 to 1999 I worked for a company called Eurolines. The work was mainly administrative but I was required to load vehicles in the evenings. Here I earned approximately £13,000 per annum.
Finally as far as I can recall from 1994 to 1996 I worked for A J R International. Here I was employed as a courier driver. My earnings were approximately £12,000 per annum."
The answer, it will be noted, does not indicate whether the sums earned were gross or net or whether the periods of employment were consecutive or whether there were intervals between them. Certainly, as Mr Roussak for the defendants points out, there was a gap between August 1999, the end of the employment at the Fun Factory, and the beginning of the employment with Kuehne & Nagel on 18 October 1999.
" ..... had he been able to go out post-accident and acquire a better paid job he would have done so."
Mr Roussak rightly points out there was simply no evidence before the judge to substantiate that finding. There was no assertion in the pleadings; there was nothing in the statement filed on behalf of the claimant. When the claimant came to give oral evidence he was not asked about that matter at all.
"A Yes, I did it all myself before the accident."
He was asked what he had said to Mr Weston, and he said:
"A I just asked him to give me a quote.
Q Do you say you were able or unable to do those three DIY tasks following the accident?
A I am unable to do them.
Q Are you able to do all your other DIY tasks apart from those three or not?
A Small simple things I can still do. If there is anything like plumbing work or putting a kitchen cabinet in or something like that I would not be able to do it."
Loss of Congenial Employment
"The claimant very much enjoyed riding his motor cycle (it was a hobby of his) and therefore found his work as a motor cycle courier extremely satisfying."
Nothing more was said about the matter either in his statement or when he was in the witness box. However it is right to say that he did personally sign the statement of truth at the end of the particulars of claim. Therefore there was some evidence before the judge to indicate that he enjoyed riding his motor cycle and found his work as a motor cycle courier extremely satisfying. It does inevitably beg the question as to why, if it was the sort of work he found extremely satisfying, it had taken him about 20 years of working life to reach that employment, never having previously worked from a motor cycle before. When the judge came to deal with the matter he dealt with it in a way that I, for my part, find unsatisfactory. The judge said this:
"The next head to which I turn is that relating to loss of congenial employment. It was common ground between the parties that I must disregard the loss of ability to ride a motor cycle per se because this has already been taken into account in the general damages award, but that I can otherwise take it into account."
Thus far, I have no problem. The judge continued:
"It is quite clear from the evidence, and I accept, that motor cycling was a very important part of the claimant's life. The way he put it is 'motor cycling has always been my life', and I accept that he went on motor cycling holidays with his friends annually over the past twenty years. He can no longer do that. I accept that he can no longer ski as he liked to do before and that generally there has had to be a change in his social life by virtue of his not being able to use his motor cycle. Taking all these factors into account I consider that an award of £2,000 would be appropriate under this head."
" ..... the reasons you have given for your award of £2,000 for loss of congenial employment bear no relation to the claimant's employment."
The deputy district judge then said:
" ..... it seems to me that the restriction in his wrist movement must have the effect of limiting or handicapping him in employment. It interferes and prevents him from going on his motor cycling holidays. It prevents him from going skiing and it generally interferes with his way of conducting his social life."
In effect, all the judge did was to repeat the irrelevant reasons he had given earlier for making an award under this head.