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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Beechwood Birmingham Ltd v Hoyer Group UK Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 647 (10 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/647.html Cite as: [2010] RTR 33, [2010] EWCA Civ 647, [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 460, [2011] QB 357, [2011] 1 QB 357, [2010] 3 WLR 1677, [2010] Bus LR 1562 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Telford County Court
His Honour Judge Mitchell
7RAO3506
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
____________________
BEECHWOOD BIRMINGHAM LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HOYER GROUP UK LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
William Edis QC, Ken Delaney and Miss Summer (instructed by Anthony Hodari & Co) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 11 February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Mark Potter :
Introduction
Brief facts
"By reason of the aforesaid the Claimant has suffered loss, damage, expense and inconvenience.
(1) Vehicle Repairs | £ 3,071.40 |
(2) Vehicle Hire Charges | £30,239.00 |
The Claimant hired an Audi A6 3.0 Quattro from Accident Exchange Ltd from 9 February 2006 until 8 June 2006 (120 days) at a rate of £250.95 per day Plus a credit repair fee of £50.00 plus a delivery and Collection fee of £75.00 | . |
(3) Miscellaneous Expenses associated with the claim. | £35.00 |
TOTAL CLAIMED: | £33,345.40" |
Thus the claim was for special damage, based on the actual costs of hire under the credit hire agreement and no separate or alternative claim for general damages for loss of use was pleaded.
The judgment below
"Mr Lagden's claim was, in essence, a claim for the loss of use of his car while it was in the garage undergoing the repairs which needed to be done as a result of the accident. There was no evidence that he would have suffered financial loss as a result of being unable to use his car during this period. But inconvenience is another form of loss for which, in principle, damages are recoverable. So it was open to him, as it is to any other motorist, to avoid or mitigate that loss by hiring another vehicle while his own car was unavailable to him. The expense of doing so will then become the measure of the loss which he has sustained under this head of his claim. It will be substituted for his claim for loss of use by way of general damages. But the principle is that he must take all reasonable steps to mitigate his loss. The injured party cannot claim reimbursement for expenditure by way of mitigation which is unreasonable. So the motorist cannot claim for the cost of hiring another vehicle if he had no reason to use a car while his own car was being repaired if, for example, he was in hospital during the relevant period or out of the country on a package holiday. If it is reasonable for him to hire a substitute, he must minimise his loss by spending no more on the hire than he needs to do in order to obtain a substitute vehicle. If the defendant can show that the cost incurred was more than was reasonable if, for example, a larger or more powerful car was hired or although vehicles equivalent to the damaged car were reasonably available at less cost the amount expended on the hire care must be reduced to the amount that would have been needed to hire the equivalent. "
"It has to be shown that the claimant had a choice, and that he would have been able to mitigate his loss at less cost. The wrong doer is not entitled to demand of the injured party that he incur a loss, bear a burden or make unreasonable sacrifices in the mitigation of his damages. He is entitled to demand that, where there are choices to be made, the least expensive route which will achieve mitigation must be selected. So if the evidence shows that the claimant had a choice, and that the route to mitigation which he chose is more costly than an alternative that was open to him, then a case will have been made out for a deduction ."
"The evidence makes it plain that this claimant neither had a need of outside hire, nor was it reasonable for them to resort to it. They did so for reasons which were remote from the defendant's wrongdoing. Does that then mean, as the defendant submits, that the claimant is entitled to no compensation at all for the loss of use of their motor vehicle?"
"
Mr Lagden had been deprived of the use of his car for the 17-day period between the date of the accident and the completion of the repairs. He was entitled to damages as compensation for that deprivation. If he had not hired a substitute vehicle he would still have been entitled to general damages. His entitlement to general damages would not have depended on the degree of use to which he would, if his car had not been damaged, had been likely to put it. He had been deprived of the benefit of having his car available for whatever use he might from time to time decide upon. The measure of damages for this deprivation would, prima facie, have been the spot rate charged for a comparable vehicle over the repair period. In Owners of No 7 Steam Sand Pump Dredger v Owners of SS Greta Holme (The Greta Holme) [1897] AC 596, 604 Lord Herschell said:
'I take it to be clear law that in general a person who has been deprived of the use of a chattel through the wrongful act of another is entitled to recover damages in respect therefore, even though he cannot prove what has been called "tangible pecuniary loss", by which I understand is meant that he is a definite sum of money out of pocket owing to the wrong he has sustained. This was not disputed.'
And in Owners of the Steamship Mediana v Owners, Master and Crew of the Lightship Comet (The Mediana) [1900] AC 113, 117, Lord Halsbury LC said:
'What right has a wrongdoer to consider what use you are going to make of your vessel? Here, as I say, the broad principle seems to me to be quite independent of the particular use the plaintiffs were going to make of the thing that was taken' "
In both these cases the issue was as to the damages to be paid to the plaintiff for loss of use for a ship while the damage caused by the defendant's negligence was being repaired. In Admiralty Comrs v Owners of SS Susquehanna (The Susquehanna) [1926] AC 655, 661, another ship collision case, Viscount Dunedin made clear that: 'There is no difference in this matter between the position in Admiralty law and that of the Common law ' so, in car accident cases as in ship accident cases, the negligent driver must compensate the owner of the other car for his loss of use of the car while it is undergoing repair. If there is no more to the loss of use claim than that, the claim will be for general damages and a fair approach to quantum would be to award a sum based upon the spot rate hire charge for a comparable vehicle." (emphasis added).
"14. The A6 was an asset employed by the claimant in their business. I adopt the fair approach adumbrated in the speech of Lord Scott the approach should be to award the claimant general damages based upon the spot hire rate for the comparable vehicle. That is conceded in this case by the defendant, on the particular facts, to be equivalent to the Accident Exchange rate of £250.95 per day."
The grounds of appeal
The respondent's submissions
Discussion
Mitigation
"The first and most important rule is that the claimant must take all reasonable steps to mitigate the loss to him consequent upon the defendant's wrong and cannot recover damages for any such loss which he could thus have avoided but has failed, through unreasonable action or inaction to avoid."
So far as the hiring of a vehicle following an accident is concerned, it is plain that the necessity to do so is not regarded as self-proving. The position in law is that stated by Lord Mustill in Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142 at 167:
" It has been questioned whether there is sufficient proof that the motorist acted reasonably in hiring a replacement vehicle to justify an award in full of the company's hire chargesor, indeed, it would seem any award at all. The question is before the House because the County Court Judge held:
'As a matter of principle if you deprive me of an article of use to me, you have no complaint whatever if I hire another to replace it If I have a car simply for my own pleasure, I regard it, in principle, [as] wrong that I should be required, before being able to hire a car and charge it to the wrongdoer, to prove that I needed as opposed to merely desire the use of it.'
Whilst I have sympathy with this point of view I think it too broad. The need for a replacement car is not self-proving. The motorist may have been in hospital through the accident for longer than his vehicle was off the road; or he may have been planning to go abroad for a holiday leaving his car behind; and so on. Thus, although I agree with the judgments in the Court of Appeal that it is not hard to infer that a motorist who incurs the considerable expense of running a private car does so because he has a need for it, and consequently has a need to replace it if, as a result of a wrongful act, it is put out of commission, there remains ample scope for the defendant in an individual case to displace the inference which might other wise arise.
Further than this I am not prepared to go."
"147. The fundamental principle is that a person whose car has been damaged is entitled to compensation for the loss caused. In a case where such loss includes loss of use and he establishes a need for a replacement, he is entitled to the cost of hiring a replacement car However the basic principle is qualified by the duty to take reasonable steps to mitigate the loss. What is reasonable will depend on the particular circumstances." (emphasis added)
"148. We do not anticipate the application of the correct principles will lead to disproportionate costs in small cases. The claim will be based on evidence as to the rate charged by a car hire company in the relevant area. Perhaps the rate will be at the top end of the range of company rates. Thereafter the evidential burden passes to the insurers to show that it would not have been reasonable to use that particular car hire company and that the reasonable course would be to use another company which charged a lower rate. What is reasonable and whether a loss is avoidable are questions of fact, not law, which District and County Court Judges regularly decide." (emphasis added)
"It will not be difficult for an ordinary motorist who loses the use of his only car to prove his need. It will generally not be too difficult for a commercial organisation which, for example, lost the use of a van which was daily employed for delivery. It might have been possible for Park Lane to have called evidence to establish that it had or would have had the need to use the limousine showing what his diplomatic commitments were or were expected to be and explaining what the substitute car was in fact used for. But it did not bother to do so. Consequential loss, special damage of the type here, does not prove itself."
"In the present cases there was an undoubted loss to the claimants because their cars had to be repaired and they needed replacement cars during the period of repair. That loss cannot be wiped out by an offer from the defendants to provide a "free" replacement " (emphasis added)
" unless and to the extent that a defendant can show that on the facts of a particular case, a car could have been provided even more cheaply than the "spot" or market rate."
Damages for loss of use
"That case laid down that damages were due for the period in which a ship was rendered useless, even though the ship was not a ship of the kind which could secure commercial employment and earn consequent reward. That, and that alone was the true point of the case. It is true that a sum was then fixed, but it was fixed by Your Lordships much as a jury would fix it. The Greta Holme was a dredger. Her services were lost during the period which was occupied in her repair. She could not be, and was not, replaced by any other dredger. There was evidence that if anyone had had a dredger of the same sort he could have let it out at the rate of £100 a day. The dredger was disabled for fifteen weeks. Their Lordships, really acting as a jury, assessed the damages at £500."
Thus, the rate of hire appropriate to a vessel of the type damaged was rejected as the mode of calculation or the loss of use claim.
" there was no discussion in either the Court of Appeal or in this House upon the precise principles upon which the sum afforded was fixed. It was taken as if it had been found by a jury. Nevertheless, Lord Halsbury LC gave a long opinion on the general question of the ascertainment of damages. I analyse his opinion as follows: Small damages are not synonymous with nominal damages; damages which are not nominal may be either small or large; no exact rules for the valuation of damages can be given; special damage must be specially proved; but general damages only admit of such evidence as is in the circumstances available, and the amount becomes a jury question; depriving a person of the use of his chattel is a ground for real and not for nominal damages." (emphasis added)
" The Admiralty were able to supply the gap made by the accident out of their resources. That does not mean that they are not entitled to any damages. If their fleet was sufficient to provide a stand-by then the expenses of keeping that stand-by may fairly be taken into consideration. Such expenses mean no only the daily upkeep but something representing the amount of capital should have been parted with in order to have another ship "
" no stand-by oiler was substituted for the Prestol and therefore calculations based upon the value of a non-existent stand-by The fact is that the Admiralty by prompt effort and economy in consumption, acting in accordance with their obligation to minimise the damages, managed to get through their work without the Prestol and they cannot get damages based upon the use of a stand-by when in fact they did very well without one All the same, the Prestol's services during the time of repair were lost, and accordingly the principle of the Greta Holme may be applied, with such rates of interest and depreciation as the evidence may justify. In other words, the loss of user for time of repair, in effect, made the Prestol's then capital value infructuous for the time being even though by special effort more benefit was got out of other ships in which other capital was invested than would otherwise have been the case."
"The appellants then argued that, in any event, they are entitled to general damages, that the method of assessing such damages is a jury question, and that, taking the whole matter into consideration as a jury would, the fair method is to take into account what, as a matter of regular practice, the authority was paying for chartered tonnage. I must confess that I do not understand that. I do not proceed on any supposed distinction in principle between a profit-earning ship and a non-profit earning ship. The task for assessing damages is easier with a profit-earning ship and depends on the probability that she would have earned so much money if her owner could have used her. With a non-profit earning ship there is no direct financial loss and one must ask what harm was done to the owner by his being deprived of the use of his ship. Then comes what may be a very difficult task, to put a value in money on the harm which the owner has suffered. But you must first prove the harm. If no harm is proved beyond the mere fact that the owner is deprived of the services of his ship during the period of repairs, the opinion of Lord Herschell in Steam Sand Pump Dredger No. 7 (Owners) The Greta Holme (Owners) appears to have given rise to the practice of awarding damages based on interest on the value of the ship."
"The cost to us of maintaining and working on this dredger, while it is working, amounts to so much per day, and its depreciation daily amounts to so much more. We take the total daily sum which it costs to us as a fair measure of the value of its daily service to us. Those services are at least worth what we are habitually paying for them year after year, including what we sacrifice in depreciation."
The measure of damage
"Such authority as exists upon the subject is confined to shipping cases. It indicates that there are two possible methods of arriving at the figure which will fairly compensate the plaintiffs for the loss they have sustained. The first method is to take the cost of maintaining and operating the vehicle as the basis of causation, on the assumption that this figure must represent approximately the value [to] the operators where the concern is non-profit making. An example of this method is to be found in The Marpessa [1907] AC 241. The second method is based on interest on capital and depreciation. This method is exemplified by Admiralty Commissioners v Chekiang (Owners) [1926] AC637 where five percent of the estimated capital value of the ship at the time of the collision was used as the basis, and by The Hebridean Coast [1961] AC545 where an award was based on seven percent of the depreciated value of the vessel for the appropriate period."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Dyson:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: