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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Giambrone & Ors v Sunworld Holidays Ltd. [2004] EWCA Civ 158 (18 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/158.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 158, [2004] 2 All ER 891 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
HH Judge MacDuff
QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal
(Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
and
MR JUSTICE
PARK
____________________
ANITA GIAMBRONE &
OTHERS |
Respondents/ Claimants | |
- and - |
||
SUNWORLD HOLIDAYS
LIMITED |
Appellants/ Respondents |
____________________
Andrew Spink QC & Samantha Presland
(instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 16th
January 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke :
Claimant | Group | Duration of Illness | Age | Care Claim |
A | 2 | 22-28 days | 3 years 10 months | 2 weeks |
B | 3 | 29-42 days | 7 years | 2 weeks |
C | 5 | 3-4 months | 8 years 9 months | 111 days |
D | 8 | 6-8 months | 18 months | 77 days |
E | 9 | 8-10 months | 7 years | 2 weeks |
F | 11 | Over 12 months | 29 years | 3 weeks |
"In all these claims, the care (be it 'nursing' care and attendance, or child minding) was provided by a parent, and not by some third party for payment. In all these claims, the claim is for the value of that which the parent provided. I do not think there is any distinction to be drawn between these different categories (nursing care and childminding). They are part and parcel of the same need – to look after the child during his/her illness. The 'care' may attract different labels. It may be childminding; attending the child when, but for the illness, it would not be necessary. It may be nursing care in the narrow sense: helping to the lavatory, administering medicine, changing the bedding, or cleaning up after an accident. It may be care (or attendance) in the wider sense; being at the bedside, to provide comfort and support to an ill child. These different roles all fall within the generic term 'care and attendance' or (where the provision is by a parent and not a professionally engaged carer) 'gratuitous care'."
Claimant | Days | Hours per Day | Claim | Total Award |
A | 7 | 4 | £139.44 | |
7 | 2 | £ 69.72 | £150 | |
B | 4 | 5.5 | £103.88 | £209.16 |
5 | 6 | £145.20 | ||
£249.08 | £175 | |||
C | 14 | 4 | £278.88 | £175 |
D | 5 | 4 | £ 99.60 | |
2 | 14 | £139.44 | ||
2 | 10 | £ 99.60 | ||
27 weeks | 4 per 3 weeks | £179.28 | ||
£517.92 | £275 | |||
E | 1 | 6 | £ 29.88 | |
14 | 2 | £139.44 | ||
£169.32 | £150 |
"… I do draw assistance from the case. The Court of Appeal took the opportunity to emphasise that a judge of first instance should not be put into a strait-jacket, when assessing this head of damage. In many cases, it might be inappropriate to adopt the traditional approach (assessing a number of hours input per day or week, applying a commercial hourly rate, and then discounting, in the way described earlier in this judgment). It is open to a judge to assess the value of the care, very much as he might assess general damages for pain and suffering, by having regard to what the carer has done, and fixing appropriate compensation. In this case it seems to me that such an approach is the correct one. It is artificial to adopt what I have called the conventional approach, where a parent of young children is providing a mixture of love, support, and care. It is just not possible to separate out the 'extra' hours or minutes superimposed on the normal daily round by the illness. It is possible to understand the general nature of the extra burden placed upon the parent, and to make a proportionate and proper award. That is how I propose to assess the damages in these cases."
"That is of small significance, in view of the fact that I intend, as I have said, to adopt a more broad brush approach. I have read the evidence of the parents carefully. I have read the medical evidence, because it seems to me that the nature and severity of the child's illness is a relevant factor. I have noted the number of days or weeks over which care was said to be necessary. I have taken account of the fact that, for part of the time, the claimant was getting better and that the need for care would, at that time, reduce. I have taken account of whether or not the claim incorporates a claim for 'child minding' (where the claimant was unable to go to nursery or school and needed to be attended) and I have taken account, in each case, of the nature of the additional burden, as described by the parent."
"Where the injured plaintiff is cared for, not by professional, paid carers, but by volunteers, whether members of his family or otherwise, the award of damages will reflect the value of the services provided. The value of such gratuitous services may be determined either by applying the cost of buying such care on the open market, or by assessing the loss of income suffered by a carer who has given up paid employment to care for the plaintiff, or a combination of the two. A plaintiff who receives damages for services rendered by another holds the relevant amount on trust for that other."
"Thus in both England and Scotland, the law now ensures that an injured plaintiff may recover the reasonable value of gratuitous services rendered to him by way of voluntary care by a member of his family … [T]he underlying rationale of the English law … is to enable the voluntary carer to receive proper recompense for his or her services."
May LJ then went on to say (at para 25):
"In my judgment, this court should avoid putting first instance judges into too restrictive a strait-jacket such as might happen if it was said that the means of assessing a proper recompense for services provided gratuitously by a family carer had to be assessed in a particular way or ways. Circumstances vary enormously and what is appropriate and just in one case may not be so in another."
"What this case … illustrates is that it is appropriate to make an assessment on the basis of the caring services provided by the gratuitous carer as a result of the claimant's injury, and it will depend on the circumstances of the case what the extent of those services are. In many cases, it will be appropriate to assess them at a relatively small number of hours per day or week."
"To my mind there can be no justification in principle for differentiating between full-time care needing really a trained nurse and full-time care needing a carer giving love and affection to the patient, the dying person, to a degree far more than would be expected in any ordinary way of life. In principle it must be, in my judgment, a matter for an award only in recompense for care by the relative well beyond the ordinary call of duty for the special needs of the sufferer. The basis, as explained by O'Connor LJ in his judgment in Housecroft v Burnett, is that the court will make an award to enable the sufferer or his estate to make reasonable recompense to the relative who has cared so devotedly. So it must indeed only be in a very serious case that an award is justified – where, as here, there is no question of the carer having lost wages of her or his own to look after the patient. (Emphasis added)
To my mind, however, if one looks at Miss Sergeant's schedule for a wife's care beyond what she would anyhow have been doing for her husband in her part of the household tasks and cooking, it comes out too high. She had a lot of extra duties put upon her. Because of his illness she rightly thought that it would be wrong to leave her husband on his own. She took him out from the house either in a wheelchair that was obtained or for a drive in the car, but not otherwise; he did not walk outside the house; he could walk a little, but without ease, in the house or occasionally out to the back of the garden. He had been keen on do-it-yourself and on gardening and was an active man. Those are matters taken into account in other heads of special damage which were not in dispute. She was understandably afraid of what might happen if he pottered out in the garden on his own. The quality of his life had been reduced and that meant more care from her was needed. But I take the view that the figure that the judge awarded, having regard to the way Miss Sergeant's schedule is made up and the extent to which it goes back, was too high. I would accordingly reduce this award from £8,000 to £5,000. It is not possible to make a really precise calculation."
"It seems to me that a plaintiff would naturally wish to pay some reward or compensation, if he had the money to do so, for care and attendance by a relative which goes distinctly beyond that which is part of the ordinary regime of family life; and, where his disability has been caused by the fault of the defendant, it is right that he should be provided with the money to do so. It will often be difficult, or even impossible, to measure with complete accuracy what reward or compensation a reasonable plaintiff would pay to the relative in those circumstances, even though this is said to be a head of special damages. The sum should be modest and not extravagant. (Emphasis added)
Here the care continued in all for a period of no more than a year, becoming increasingly demanding as time went by. I agree with Dillon LJ that an appropriate figure is £5,000."
The third member of the court, Neill LJ, simply said that he agreed that the appeal should be allowed to the extent that Dillon LJ indicated.
(1) There should be no award of this kind except in a very serious case;
(2) In order to qualify for an award the relative must provide care well beyond the ordinary call of duty for the special needs of the sufferer, alternatively care which went distinctly beyond that which was part of the ordinary regime of family life.
Lord Justice Mance:
Mr Justice Park: