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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Flaviis v Pauley [2002] EWHC 2886 (QB) (29 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2002/2886.html Cite as: [2002] EWHC 2886 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FLABIO GUIANNI FLAVIIS Claimant | ||
- and – | ||
MALCOLM CHARLES PAULEY Defendant | ||
LESLIE WILLIAM MORRISS | ||
(Trading as Banjax Bike Hire) |
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David Melville QC and Rohan Pershad (instructed by Taylor Wessing, Solicitors) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Nelson:
THE FACTS
TITLE CLAIM
THE BASIS OF THE DEFENDANT'S APPLICATION
"There is in my view but one principle that is applicable to an action based upon contract, tort or recovery of property. It is, that public policy requires that the courts will not lend their aid to a man who founds his action upon an immoral or illegal act. The action will not be founded on an immoral or illegal act, if it can be pleaded and proved without the reliance upon such an act."
1 7. The Defendants also relied upon Ashmore, Benson Pease & Co. Ltd v. A v Dawson Ltd (1973) 1 WLR 828.
"It is a well established maxim in contract that a claimant cannot found his claim on an illegal act or agreement. The rule applies where the claimant has to rely on the illegality in order to assert his claim. Where a claimants success in tort depends on establishing a contract, and that contract is tainted by illegality, the claim in tort fails too. As a matter of public policy the claimant is not permitted to ground the claim on illegality. No cause of action arises from illegal or flagrantly immoral acts; ex turpi causa non oritur actio."
"The court may allow a party to amend or withdraw an admission".
It is necessary for the court to consider all the circumstances before exercising its discretion under the CPR and to ensure that the case is dealt with justly in accordance with the overriding objective.
THE CLAIMANT'S RESPONSE TO THE APPLICATION
"Where issues of illegality are raised, the courts have (as it seems to me) to steer a middle course between two unacceptable positions. On the one hand it is unacceptable that any court of law should aid or lend its authority to a party seeking to pursue or enforce an object or agreement which the law prohibits. On the other hand, it is unacceptable that the court should, on the first indication of unlawfulness affecting any aspect of the transaction, draw up its skirts and refuse all assistance to the plaintiff, no matter how serious his loss or how disproportionate his loss to the unlawfulness of his conduct."
Here, where the Claimant's criminality was not a cause of the injury for which he suffers and where the Defendants conduct in providing him with a motor cycle in a dangerous condition was the cause of his injuries, it could not be said that his conduct was so grave that, as a matter of public policy, the Claimant should not be entitled to recover under a contract, or not be owed a duty of care in tort. It was only in the very clear cases, such as Pitts v Hunt (1990) 3 AER 344, where the unlawful conduct is of a particularly grave nature and brings about the loss which is the subject matter of the claim, that public policy will preclude a duty of care From being owed. Pitts v Hunt also demonstrates that where there is an illegal joint enterprise, it may be impossible to judge what standard of care is owed by the potential tortfeasor.
"The conduct of SCB was not so egregious, though potentially unlawful, and its share of responsibility for its own loss was not so weighty that the court had to refuse to entertain the claim." (Paragraph 57).
When the facts here are analysed in a similar manner, it can be seen that the conduct of the Claimant was not so serious, nor its share of responsibility for the accident, so weighty, that it could be found that his claim was barred by public policy. The facts of the case are such that the defences of illegality and or ex turpi causa were not properly arguable.
DECISION