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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tutas v East London Bus & Coach Company [2013] EWCA Civ 1380 (16 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1380.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1380 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CLERKENWELL & SHOREDITCH COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CRYAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SIR STEPHEN SEDLEY
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MR HASAN TUTAS | Appellant/Claimant | |
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EAST LONDON BUS & COACH COMPANY | Respondent/Defendant |
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Mr F Treasure (instructed by David Hurley Associates) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE:
"The Defendant is unable to agree or dispute this item, having no knowledge of the same. The request for disclosure of the notes of the treating physiotherapist is repeated."
"The Defendant is unable to agree or dispute this head of claim, having no knowledge of the same. The Claimant has failed to provide disclosure of documentary evidence to support this head of claim in full, despite being requested to do so."
"This appears to be a claim for a GP consultation, an initial physiotherapist's assessment, and 8 treatment sessions.
Firstly, there is no evidence that the Claimant has paid these sums, nor that he is legally obliged to pay them."
"I was referred to the Cavell Hospital for physiotherapy but who sent me there, I believe it's the third party, East London Buses sent me to physiotherapy. I said that from the beginning as well."
He is then asked various other questions about the detail of that. He was then asked again, "You don't know who that was?", that being the person who referred him, and the answer is, "I am presuming it is East London Bus Company that have set up and paid for the physiotherapy. They are the ones that sent me. Because of the suffering and the pain I was going through, they obviously set up the appointments and the arrangements for me to go". He is then taken to some documentation where the bill is shown from the Physio-Link organisation going to the solicitors that were then acting for the claimant and not to the bus company, and he is asked about that and he says, "It could have been Scott Rees [the solicitors] that sent me there". Question: "But this is not a bill that you expect to be paying yourself, is it?" Answer: "No, no. I am baffled as well who arranged it, who paid for it. I don't know". A short time later he is taken back to the documentation and asked to remember whether there was a particular date in January 2008 when he did or did not attend for a consultation, and he is taken to the particular dates, and his answer is, "I can't remember". Moving on from there, counsel, Mr Treasure, says this: "Your Honour, these are perhaps points that I can make on the papers. I do not want to be accused of being unfair". Then Judge Cryan says this: "Yes. If the witness does not expect to be paying for it I can't see how he can regard it as a loss".
"This will assist both the claim for compensation and aid you in the recovery of your injuries. We provide a private, fast track physiotherapy treatment service to Scott Rees & Co Solicitors clients at specialist clinics local and convenient to you. The cost of treatment is included at part of your claim and pursued against the guilty party's insurance company."
"In evidence however the claimant said that he was not aware that he was liable to pay for any physiotherapy. He thought it had been provided, as he put it, by a third party. All he did was turn up to it."
"69. It is, it seems to me, clearly the case that where there is a challenge as to the liability of a claimant to pay for treatment of this sort and how it arose, there is a duty when the absence of documentation is highlighted to produce all relevant documents upon which the claimant intends to rely. It is quite clear that the letter from Physio-Link Services of 30 November 2007 has existed for a very long time and could have been, and indeed ought to have been, produced at a very much earlier stage. It might be tempting to say that the physiotherapy was provided and invoices submitted and therefore the physiotherapy ought to be paid because it resulted out of the accident, but on the other hand the court must have considerable sympathy for the defendant who says that it wanted to know the basis upon which this liability was incurred so that they could consider it and decide to challenge it one way or another.
70. The clear evidence from the claimant himself was that he did not believe he was liable. Whether that is a question of him being misinformed or whether it was a question of him having forgotten would be really a matter of speculation. The evidence itself was plain. In those circumstances I do not consider that it would be appropriate for me at this stage, on the basis of the evidence which the claimant gave to me at the start of this week and on the basis of the hopelessly late production of what is said to be supporting documentation, to give judgment against the defendant, who has not had an adequate opportunity of considering what might be described as the new case presented this morning and who would prefer instead really to rely upon the claimant's own evidence that he is not liable for his charges. In those circumstances I do not give judgment for that sum."
"The clear evidence from the claimant himself was that he did not believe he was liable."
That, with respect, is not a conclusion that could be drawn from the oral evidence, to which I have already made reference. The claimant simply did not know. If there is a conclusion to be drawn, it is that he assumed that the defendant was going to be responsible for this payment, and that, I think it is accepted, would be the ordinary outcome given that liability is agreed and the various sums involved are unremarkable but for this opportunistic point as to the transmission of money arising.