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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> George v The Home Office [2008] EWCA Civ 1068 (08 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1068.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 1068, [2009] 1 WLR 1670 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Mr Justice Mackay
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
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Ryan St George (a Patient suing by his Father and Litigation Friend David St George) |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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The Home Office |
Defendant/Appellant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
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David Pittaway QC & Jane Tracy Forster (instructed by Messrs Hodge, Jones & Allen) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: Tuesday 29 July and Wednesday 30 July 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
Introduction
Summary of the judge's conclusions
The issues on appeal
The trigger theory
"MR JUSTICE MACKAY: Any re-examination?
MR PITTAWAY: Can I just ask about one matter? Your own clinical experience, which you said that you have, concussions causing seizures and status epilepticus, how commonly have you observed first concussions and minor head injury causing seizures, immediate seizures?
DR REYNOLDS: Oh, quite rarely, quite rarely. Maybe half a dozen times in my career.
MR PITTAWAY: And those have been seizures that have followed immediately on concussions or minor head injuries?
DR REYNOLDS: Yes. But usually in the context of something else, I mean for example in the context of anti-epileptic drug withdrawal.
MR PITTAWAY: Right. So where you've had - is that an underlying cause which is anti-epileptic drug withdrawal?
DR REYNOLDS: It would be a more important factor.
MR PITTAWAY: Right. And in that case then, has the concussion acted as a precipitating factor in your clinic experience?
DR REYNOLDS: Of the seizure, yes.
MR PITTAWAY: Yes. And what about status epilepticus?
DR REYNOLDS: I can only think of one example.
MR PITTAWAY: And again, has the concussion acted –
DR REYNOLDS: As a trigger?
MR PITTAWAY: - as a trigger?
DR REYNOLDS: Yes.
MR PITTAWAY: Yes, thank you, Dr Reynolds"
"We agree with Hunter that status should not be considered as a natural symptom of epilepsy, inherent to the underlying disease, such as for instance a petit mal or grand mal seizure, but that in each case its occurrence needs a special explanation. Based upon the most conspicuous fact, its prevalence in symptomatic and its relatively sporadic occurrence in idiopathic epilepsy, we may first of all conclude that an essential predisposing factor lies in a gross brain damage or in extensive cerebral dysfunction."
"Hunter (3) and Bamberger and Matthes (1) state that drug withdrawal and infection constitute the most essential causes for the precipitating of status. According to our experience, however, there are still other, apparently different factors, which should be taken into consideration and compared with each other if one wants to find their common denominator. We should first of all keep in mind that very often, even if we do not watch out for it systematically, we hear of some special circumstances immediately preceding the status. It is, therefore, probable that one or more specific causes are responsible for each status; these we intended to detect by a thoroughly planned investigation and questioning.
In a total of 110 case histories no specific circumstances prior to status were recorded in only 37 cases, whereas in 73, that is in almost 2/3 of all cases, particular events immediately preceding the status were registered. As in Hunter's material infections (23 times) and drug withdrawal (14 times) were the most frequent causes, followed by sleep deprivation (11 times), physical fatigue and concussions (11 times), alcohol (4 times) and fluid ingestion (4 times), cerebral emboly (4 times), over exposure to sun (4 times), procedures for diagnostical purposes such as ventriculography and arteriography (3 times), X-ray treatment of the brain (3 times), excitement (3 times) and high voltage current (once). However the case for case assessment adds two important conclusions to the statistical data: firstly that, as also mentioned by Hunter, usually a combination of several factors must be present in order to form the predisposing condition such as for instance the concurrence of underdose of medication in addition to an infection, or discontinuation of medication, deprivation of sleep and alcohol ingestion, of physical fatigue, overexposure to sun and increased fluid intake."
"Status after drug withdrawal is the only condition that now remains to be explained. Not all epileptic patients, however, react with status to a withdrawal or an underdose of medication. Only a small proportion of the patients are so affected, and in these cases contributing circumstances play an important role. It is observed only in those patients who have had seizures for many years, - i.e. where a substantial brain damage may be assumed to be present – and then only when additional stress on the brain metabolism occurs, such as general infections, deprivation of sleep, alcohol ingestion or physical fatigue."
"CEREBRAL TRAUMA: Open-head injuries are more likely than closed head injury to result in status, often in the acute phase (Oxbury & Whitty 1971), as is head injury complicated with intracerebral haemorrhage. In early seizures due to trauma, 10% present as status epilepticus."
"…Interesting though that [Australian] paper is, in my judgment, it is the case that there is an absence of any medical learning or literature supporting Professor Chadwick to the extent of saying that status will not be found to occur after a minor head injury, and in Dr Reynolds' view, Janz and the work by Shorvon, "Status Epilepticus", indicate the contrary."
"Well, says Mr Kent, why is it necessary to look beyond withdrawal of alcohol or benzodiazepine as the cause of the status epilepticus? For the reasons Dr Reynolds gave, I think it right to do so. For a quiet witness, he was remarkably confident in his conclusion. Professor Chadwick acknowledged that trauma as a cause of status was a possibility, although he said the strong balance of probability was against it. On this issue, and I bear in mind the neuroradiologists' views as well, I prefer the views of Dr Reynolds and I find his reasons for them compelling. The distinction between immediate and early onset I do not regard as important, as he did not. There is good support in the literature for a connection with trauma, even non-severe trauma, and the onset of status. In my judgment, that explains why on this occasion, the claimant developed a condition which he had never developed on other similar occasions."
"…[Dr Reynolds'] belief is that the claimant was experiencing what I would call an "ordinary" withdrawal seizure as he fell from bunk to ground, hit his head and the injury that he sustained caused him to go into status. He said, as the neuro radiologists had agreed, that status can be triggered by head injury, and one which is relatively minor and leaves no radiological sign or trace behind it. He based this on his own clinical experience;..."
Contributory negligence
"58. Viewed objectively as it must be, in my judgment the claimant has to be described as being at fault in relation to the choices he had made in his life prior to the events of this night. That fault has caused or contributed to the dreadful injuries in this way, not because they have put him in prison, but because he was knowingly risking injury to his health by doing what he was doing, even if he did not know how it would happen. This is so as much as if he had wandered abroad in a drug-induced state of intoxication and walked into the path of a negligently driven car. The analogy is very far from being a perfect one. It would be simply wrong, reluctant as I am to find this, to say that there was no causative fault of his in operation as part of the events of 3rd November.
59. As to how responsibility should be apportioned on a just and equitable basis as the statute requires me to do, it is my judgment that the prison service failed in its duty to him by some clear margin and the prison service should have been better prepared to deal with epileptic emergencies than it was at least on that occasion. They must clearly shoulder the majority of responsibility for this event."
"Where any person suffers damage as the result partly of his own fault and partly of the fault of any other person or persons….the damages recoverable in respect thereof shall be reduced to such extent as the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant's share in the responsibility for the damage…"
"The result partly of his own fault"
"One may find that as a matter of history several people have been at fault and that if any one of them had acted properly the accident would not have happened, but that does not mean that the accident must be regarded as having been caused by the faults of all of them. One must discriminate between those faults which must be regarded as too remote and those which must not. Sometimes it is proper to discard all but one and to regard that one as the sole cause, but in other cases it is proper to regard two or more as having jointly caused the accident. It may often be dangerous to apply to this kind of case tests which have been used in traffic accidents by land or sea, but in this case I think it useful to adopt phrases from Lord Birkenhead' speech in Admiralty Commissioners v Volute (Owners), and to ask was Dale's fault "so much mixed up with the state of things "brought about" by Stapley that "in the ordinary plain common sense of this business" it must be regarded as having contributed to the accident. I can only say that I think it was and that there was no "sufficient separation of time, place or circumstance" between them to justify its being excluded."
"There is no clear guidance to be found in the books about causation. All that can be said is that causes are different from the circumstances in which, or on which, they operate. The line between the two depends on the facts of each case. It is a matter of common sense more than anything else…..
In order to illustrate this question of causation, I may say that if the plaintiff, whilst riding on the towbar, had been hit in the eye by a shot from a negligent sportsman, I should have thought that the plaintiff's negligence would in no way be a cause of his injury. It would only be the circumstance in which the cause operated. It would only be part of the history. But I cannot say that in the present case. The man's negligence here was so much mixed up with his injury that it cannot be dismissed as mere history. His dangerous position on the vehicle was one of the causes of his damage just as it was in Davies v Swan Motor Co (Swansea) Ltd [1949] 2 KB 291."
Just and equitable
Overall conclusion
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Lord Justice Ward: