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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust & Anor v Williams (Including: Post Judgment Discussion) [2008] EWCA Civ 81 (15 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/81.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 81 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
His Honour Judge Hickinbottom
4CF20148
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
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WELSH AMBULANCE SERVICES NHS TRUST & ANR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JENNIFER MARY WILLIAMS |
Respondent |
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Christopher Purchas QC & Bryan Thomas (instructed by Russell Jones & Walker) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 30 & 31 January 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Smith:
Introduction
The Factual Background
The Claim for Damages
The Judgment
The Appeal - Submissions
The Judgment
"This, in the submission of the Defendants is the antithesis of dependency. It may be his greatest memorial is that Mr Williams, during his lifetime, achieved all of this and succeeded, without qualification, in providing security and independence for his wife and children."
"1(1) If death is caused by any wrongful act, neglect or default which is such as would (if death had not ensued) have entitled the person injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereof, the person who would have been liable if death had not ensued shall be liable to an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured.
1(2) …[E]very such action shall be for the benefit of the dependants of the person .. whose death has been so caused ….
3(1) In the action, such damages, other than damages for bereavement, may be awarded as are proportioned to the injury resulting from such death to the dependants respectively."
"In assessing damages in respect of a person's death in an action under this act, benefits which have accrued or will or may accrue to any person from his estate or otherwise as a result of his death shall be disregarded".
"This entirely swept away the common law rule of deduction. 'The immense range of this omnibus provision needs to be appreciated' (McGregor on Damages, 17th Edition (2003), Paragraph 36-103); and the Courts have generally resisted attempts to limit the meaning or effect of the section 4 (see, eg, Stanley v Siddique [1992] QB 1 and Roerig v Valiant Trawlers Ltd [2002] 1 WLR 2304). As Dr McGregor says (Paragraph 36-110):
Even before the Act of 1982 swept all benefits into oblivion, Lord Diplock in Cookson v Knowles [1979] AC 556, with reference to the provisions of the 1976 Act, was saying this:
'Today the assessment of damages in fatal accident cases has become an artificial and conjectural exercise. Its purpose is no longer to put dependants, particularly widows, into the same economic position as they would have been in had their late husband lived.'
It is therefore important to be cognisant of the limited extent to which, despite Section 4, benefits accruing to a claimant may be effective to impose checks upon the damages."
This is a stark warning against the superficial attraction of arguments such as that of Mr Stevenson in this claim that there is no dependency because the purported dependants are financially better off now than they were before Mr Williams' death. Because of the general statutory principle of non-deduction of benefits consequent upon the death, one cannot simply look at the financial position pre- and post-accident to determine whether there is a dependency and, if so, its value."
"In the present case, the judge came to the clear conclusion that the dependants had lost the flair and business acumen which would, by clear inference have resulted in a successful development of the property portfolio which represented the family assets, with the consequential increases in both the capital and the income value of the portfolio. In my view the judge was clearly correct in concluding that the dependants had thereby suffered a loss capable of being measured in money terms."
"The cost of such advice therefore represents the most secure basis from which to attempt to place a pecuniary value on the loss to the dependants arising from Mr O' Loughlin's death. Whether she chooses to have such an advisor or not is another matter. But the fact will always remain that she and the dependants will have lost the services of Mr O'Loughlin as the manager of the family assets and that loss is capable of being valued in money terms. I have no doubt, in these circumstances, the judge was entitled to take the course that he did." (Italicised emphasis added by Judge Hickinbottom).
"64. However, generally dependants cannot by their actions affect, either to their advantage or to their disadvantage, the existence or value of a dependency. For example, as Mr Stevenson accepted (Closing submissions, Paragraph 22(f)), had Mrs Williams and the other dependants in the case before me decided to sell the builders' merchant business and live off the income of the capital produced, that would not have affected any dependency claim they might have had. It would have been no answer to such a claim that they ought to have attempted to carry on the business and tested out their ability to do so. The same would have applied if they had sold that business and purchased a business of a different type – a hairdresser's was the example used in debate – which was as financially successful as the builders' merchants had been under Mr Williams. As Beldam LJ said in Wood (at page P342 and P346):
'It is immaterial that after the deceased's death the family put the whole or part of the assets to a different use producing additional income …
[W]here there is clearly established a loss from one source, the fact that it may be made good from another by using the benefit received from the estate of the deceased is beside the point …'
Neither, in my judgment, can the identification and valuation of a dependency depend upon the success or otherwise of dependants' efforts to run a business that they inherited. On policy grounds alone, this would be repugnant, as it would encourage failure and penalise success."
"65 The fatal flaw in these linked submissions is the same as that identified in the defendants' case in Wood and O'Loughlin respectively. The business insofar as it was owned by Mr Williams was a capital asset that was inherited by the dependants. As such, in respect of dependency it has to be left out of account altogether on the grounds elucidated in Wood, ie insofar as the dependants are concerned, that asset was wealth producing for them before Mr Williams' death and that remains the case after his death, so no loss to them has resulted from the death. (This is how I consider income effectively produced from assets should be dealt with. However, if I am wrong and such income is regarded as a loss which would otherwise be taken into account for the purposes of a dependency claim, it would in any event have to be disregarded by virtue of Section 4 of the 1976 Act. In either case, such assets and whatever might happen to them after the deceased's death cannot adversely affect a dependency claim.) What the dependants have lost is not income derived from a capital asset, but the contribution of Mr Williams as the manager of the business and family assets (including property and steam engines); his flair, skill, expertise and energy in the various wealth creating projects on which he engaged in his life and which, had he lived, he would have continued to engage upon. That is a real loss, which can be valued in moneys worth. Given that that is their loss in my judgment, just as it was irrelevant whether Mrs O'Loughlin hired expert assistance or not, it is irrelevant whether the Williams' dependants hired someone to replace Mr Williams' skills and services, or sold the business and reinvested the proceeds in capital assets or another business, or indeed (as they did) replaced those skills and services with their own. None of these can affect or diminish the true loss to the dependants as dependants. (Italics added by me)
67. By Mr Williams' death, his dependants have lost his very considerable skills and services in relation to the builders' merchant business, and wealth creating property and steam engine activities. They can be valued in moneys worth: and, in the circumstances of this case, I consider their dependency can most appropriately be measured by asking how much it would cost to replace those skills with another person capable of bringing those skills to bear upon the various activities engaged upon by Mr Williams. That is the approach I propose to adopt."
"In respect of dependency claims, the Court will look to the reality of the family situation (see, eg, Malyon v Plummer [1964] 1 QB 330). Although it may well be that much of the dependency value would be applicable to Mrs Williams' dependency in any event, the reality of this family is that, for the reasons I have given, Mrs Williams and the three children were each dependent upon Mr Williams at the time of his death, financially relying upon his skill and wealth creation. Their own respective contributions to that effort were small, and did not correlate to the rewards they obtained as partners in the business. To a large extent, they were dependent upon their father; and, on my findings, would have remained dependent. For the reasons I have given, the reality was that this was very much a family business and the property and steam engine activities were also family enterprises, and therefore, given the agreement between the parties, I am content to make a global award and not to deal with the dependency entitlement inter se. The loss of Mrs Williams and the three children as dependants is, in my judgment, properly valued in the manner I have proposed."
Discussion
Lord Justice Lloyd: I agree.
Lord Justice Thomas: I also agree.
Lady Justice Smith DBE:
1. For the reasons set out in the judgment which I now formally hand down, this appeal is dismissed. The parties have very helpfully agreed the terms of the order as follows, subject as provided as follows. The stay on the judgment of the court below is lifted. The appellants will pay interest on the judgment sum of £1,820,504.80, from date of judgment to today, being the sum of £103,343, and thereafter continuing to date of payment at the rate of 8 percent per annum. The sum of £50,000 in court to be paid out forthwith to the respondent's solicitor in part satisfaction of the judgment sum; interest that has accrued on the money in court to be paid out forthwith to the appellant's solicitor. The appellants are to have 28 days to satisfy the balance of the judgment sum together with interest. The appellants are to pay the respondent's costs of the appeal on the standard basis to be subject to detailed assessment if not agreed, and the appellants are to pay £100,000 on account of costs within 28 days.
Order: Appeal dismissed.