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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Devon County Council v Clarke [2005] EWCA Civ 266 (17 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/266.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 266 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM TORQUAY & NEWTON ABBOTT COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE OVEREND
No. EX103818
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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DEVON COUNTY COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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STUART CLARKE |
Respondent |
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MR DAVID FLETCHER (instructed by Stephens & Scown) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 17th February 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
This is the judgment of the court to which we have all contributed.
Educational Negligence: General
Phelps
" Questions as to causation and as to the quantum of damage, particularly if actions are brought long after the event, may be very difficult, but there is no reason in principle to rule out such claims." (p654F-G).
"There may also be severe difficulty in establishing a causal connection between the alleged negligence and the alleged loss and in the assessment of any damages. But these possible difficulties should not be allowed to stand in the way of the presentation of a proper claim, nor should justice be altogether denied on the ground that a claim is of a complex nature. That any claims which are made may require a large number of witnesses, a consideration which weighed with the Court of Appeal, and involve considerable time and cost, are again practical considerations which should not be allowed to justify a total exclusion of an otherwise legitimate claim…" (p673A-B)
"Causation could also raise formidable problems for future plaintiffs, especially since the absence of records and delay in bringing such claims might make it very difficult for plaintiffs to substantiate them. But even leaving problems of evidence aside, the hurdles of Phelps on causation for plaintiffs are formidable. They would have to satisfy the court first, that if their difficulties had been discovered in time, the school ought to have taught them in a different way and then, if that had happened, their ultimate educational attainment would have improved. These are not insubstantial hurdles; and overcoming them still leaves open the question of the extent, in financial terms, of the plaintiff's future loss. The quantum problems are thus also likely to be formidable."(p 258).
The Appeal
The Facts
The Proceedings
Causation
"5. …it is necessary for the claimant to establish, once breach of duty has been established, (a) that he would have been taught differently, and (b) that the teaching, which I have indicated has to be specifically identified, needs to have made a measurable difference."
"96. I turn to the issue of causation and ask the questions, firstly, would Stuart Clark have been taught differently but for the breaches of duty, and, secondly, would it have made any difference. The aspects that need to be considered are following Dr Canning's breach of duty in which she failed to suggest specialist teachers coming into Alphington either some time after her report in May or possibly after her supplementary consideration in November 1989; and secondly after Mrs Holt's breach of duty when the transfer to the specialist school from September 1991 did not take place.
97. There was no direct evidence that visits of specialist teachers at Alphington between sometime in 1990 and 1991 would have made a measurable difference to the progress of Stuart Clark. The court is invited to infer it from Mr Woodhouse's evidence that it should have been tried as the remedial teaching and attention of the Learning Support Team in the form of Yvett Corner, the advisory teacher, were not producing the required progress.
98. The evidence of causation, however, is stronger in the case of the proposed transfer to Queen Elizabeth, Crediton. Mrs Martin's evidence was that the vast majority of pupils did benefit. However, she was very frank in her approach to the court, She said there are always problems, and she pointed out the attitude of Stuart when she went out of her way to help him in September 1994 as an example.
99. On balance I find that causation is established for the three year period between September 1991 and September 1994; in other words, the period when Stuart Clark should have been at Queen Elizabeth, Crediton before any question of a failure to mitigate arose. I am not, however, persuaded that the evidence supports a causative link flowing from Dr Canning's breach of duty."
Quantum and Loss of earnings
"116. I finally turn to the claim for loss of earnings, and this is the most difficult of all three to assess. I appreciate that Stuart Clark has attempted a number of jobs since leaving school. They were almost all of short duration and in nearly all cases resulted in abrupt dismissal due to his difficulties with reading, writing, or possibly his organisational disability of dyspraxia, the latter of course for which the defendants are not liable.
117. It was the view, I think, of Dr Conway that in five years time he should be able to hold down a job. He needs to be weaned away from his home into sheltered accommodation. He needs to have advice from an adult other than his mother to give him advice and support. He has been set back, but part of his difficulties have been of his own making because of the decision not to go to Queen Elizabeth, Crediton. He will find it more difficult now to recover where he would have got to had he gone initially in September 1991.
118. It is almost impossible in those circumstances to produce a figure. The approach has to be on a lump sum basis. Mr Fletcher has suggested that one should consider a past loss of earnings of £23,000 and a future loss of earnings of £50,000, making in excess of £70,000 in all, and he stresses that in coming to those figures he relies upon Mrs Greenaway's report using very modest earnings for manual work from the New Earning Survey.
119. Miss Mortimer on behalf of the defendant equally has difficulty in putting forward a figure but she put forward a figure of £10,000. I had in fact selected a figure before asking either counsel what their figures were and I am sticking by mine, £25,000, which I think should cover both past and future earnings."
Costs
"I have taken into account what has been urged on behalf of the defendants as to a percentage order. I do, however, take two factors into account. One, this is a case which is concerned with education over a long period of time and the fact that you have to identify which teachers, which educational psychologists, which schools, is part and parcel of the technique of getting home and it shouldn't be, in my judgment, for a claimant such as this to give up his award because of a technical fact that some parties have escaped the claim. I reach that conclusion with, as I say, acceptance of the difficulty of the question, but I think that in the exercise of my discretion a 100% order is the correct order and I so order."
"It is a single claim for a failed education over a period of time where allegations are commonly pursued in the alternative against psychological advisers and teachers."
Result