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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Grady v HM Prison Service [2003] EWCA Civ 527 (11 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/527.html Cite as: [2003] ICR 753, [2003] EWCA Civ 527, [2003] BPIR 823, [2003] IRLR 474, [2003] 3 All ER 745 |
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A1/2003/0264A EATRF |
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC)
A1/2003/0264A EATRF Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
MR JUSTICE RICHARDS
____________________
SHARON MARIE GRADY | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
HM PRISON SERVICE | Respondent |
____________________
JEREMY JOHNSON (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor of London SW1H 9JS) appeared for the respondent.
Hearing date: Tuesday 1 April 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
SEDLEY LJ:
The issue
The statutory framework
The effect of bankruptcy
"Cases in which 'the damages are to be estimated by immediate reference to pain felt by the bankrupt in respect of his body, mind or character, and without immediate reference to his rights of property': see Beckham v Drake (1849) 2 HL Cas. 579, 604, per Erle J and Wilson v United Counties Bank Ltd [1920] AC 102. Actions for defamation and assault are obvious examples. The bankruptcy does not affect his ability to litigate such claims."
If, however, the damages from such a claim are invested, the investment can be claimed by the trustee: Re Wilson, ex parte Vine (1878) 8 ChD 364, CA.
The arguments
How many claims?
Did the unfair dismissal claim vest in the trustee?
"The law … is shewn to be this, that even where there is no actual damage proved, or even where the damage is merely nominal for a breach of contract, still if that is in respect either of property or of a proprietary right, such as service or work and labour, as in the present case, even in that case it passes."
While Beckham v Drake is undoubtedly regarded as a continuing source of law, care needs to be taken with it. It was in form a decision of the House of Lords in the years before the Judicature Acts, and the speech of Lord Brougham was concurred in by Lord Campbell alone. The report does not indicate which if any other members of the house sat and voted. The report is for this reason more valued for the extensive opinions of the judges which their Lordships had called for upon the appeal from the Court of Exchequer Chamber, among them the opinion of Erle J cited by Hoffmann LJ in Heath v Tang (paragraph 11 ante). The action was for payment of a fixed contractual sum for the premature termination of the plaintiff's seven-year contract of service, and the plea in bar was that the cause of action had passed on his bankruptcy to the assignees. Erle J said (at 606):
"As to that part of [the promise] respecting the continuance of this relation, it has no reference to the feelings of the bankrupt, so as to be analogous to the promises and causes of action which are decided to be excepted, and it is not the substance of the promise which is considered in the award of damage; but as to the other part, namely, the paying of the wages, it is the consideration for the promise of service….[T]he first ground abovementioned, namely, that the contract relates to the person, is true only in respect of the consideration for the promise, which is personal skill and labour, and not in respect of the promise itself…"
The reasoning of Williams J (at 598-9) picks up this point:
"…it cannot be doubted that where a contract remains to be executed, and cannot be executed without the co-operation of the bankrupt, his assignees cannot enforce the contract, at all events unless they can procure him to co-operate."
Williams J goes on to point out that, a breach having now occurred, the plaintiff "is not bound by the contract to bestow any of his skill and labour in order to sustain the right of action".
"that his reasoning appeared satisfactory to me; but a more obvious illustration of the principle on which it rested would have been afforded by reversing the case, and supposing that Sir Walter Scott had been the bankrupt and his booksellers solvent, would they have been content to pay their £4,000 and take the risk of publishing a novel written by the assignees of the novelist?"
Conclusions
Postscript