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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wall v Mutuelle De Poitiers Assurances [2013] EWHC 53 (QB) (25 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/53.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 53 (QB), [2013] 1 WLR 3890, [2013] 2 All ER 709, [2013] PIQR P9, [2013] ILPr 20, [2013] RTR 18 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Steven John Kilfoy Wall |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Mutuelle De Poitiers Assurances |
Defendant |
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Benjamin Browne QC & Marie Louise Kinsler (instructed by Greenwoods London) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 & 15 January 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"Does the issue of which expert evidence the court should order fall to be determined:
(a) By reference to the law of the forum (English Law) on the basis that this is an issue of 'evidence and procedure' within Article 1.3 of Rome II; or
(b) By reference to the applicable law (French law) on the basis that this is an issue falling within Article 15 of Rome II?"
THE FORM OF THE CLAIMANT'S MEDICAL EXPERTS' REPORTS
THE BACKGROUND TO ROME II
"8. The traditional English way of deciding contentious expert issues is for a judge to decide between two contrary views. This is not necessarily the best way of achieving a just result. …
9. In continental jurisdictions where neutral, court-appointed experts are the norm, there is an underlying assumption that parties' experts will tell the court only what the parties want the court to know. For the judge in an inquisitorial system, the main problem is that it may be difficult for him to know whether or not to accept a single expert's view. There is no suggestion, however, that he is inevitably less likely to reach the right answer than his English counterpart".
THE RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF ROME II
"Article 1 Scope
1 This Regulation shall apply, in situations involving a conflict of laws, to non contractual obligations in civil… matters…
3. This Regulation shall not apply to evidence and procedure …
Article 4 General rule
1. Unless otherwise provided for in this Regulation, the law applicable to a non-contractual obligation arising out of a tort/delict shall be the law of the country in which the damage occurs… irrespective of the country or countries in which the indirect consequences of that event occur…
Article 15 Scope of the law applicable
The law applicable to non-contractual obligations under this Regulation shall govern in particular:
(a) the basis and extent of liability…
(c) the existence, the nature and the assessment of damage or the remedy claimed;
(d) within the limits of powers conferred on the court by its procedural law, the measures which a court may take to prevent or terminate injury or damage or to ensure the provision of compensation; …"
TEXT BOOK COMMENTARIES
"7-022 … The lex causae [the applicable law] generally determines what are the facts in issue; and it may do so by providing that no evidence need, or may, be given as to certain matters… Such provisions are substantive. On the other hand as a general rule, the lex fori determines how the facts in issue must be proved. In the context of English proceedings, whether or not a document is privileged is to be determined by English law; the fact that under a foreign law the document is not privileged … is irrelevant".
"7-050 … Hence, the availability of particular heads of damage is to be treated as a substantive matter. The same is true of rules of remoteness… Rules imposing a statutory ceiling on the level of damages affect the assessment of those damages and are to be treated as substantive, so that such rules of the lex causae would be applied in England. The application of the lex causae is not limited to compensatory damages. More generally, it appears that the English courts should endeavour to consider the rules of the lex causae together with relevant judicial practices and guidelines as to their application, so as to endeavour to apply the law of damages to reflect, as accurately as possible, the level of damages that would actually be awarded in the courts of the country whose law is applicable. (Emphasis of Mr Browne)
34-036 … In order to secure the objectives of the Regulation in enhancing the predictability of litigation and the reasonable foreseeability of court decisions, it is suggested that the Art 1(3) exclusion should be interpreted narrowly as covering only matters, such as the constitution and powers of courts and the mode of trial, that are an integral and indispensable feature of the forum's legal framework for resolving disputes, such that they cannot satisfactorily be replaced by corresponding rules of the lex causae…
34-056 … [Art 15(c)] will include: the nature of the available remedy; questions of remoteness of damage; the duty to mitigate, the available heads of damage; and matters of assessment (quantification) of damages". This provision departs from the pre-existing English law position … that the assessment of damages is a procedural questions governed by the law of the forum".
"3.39 … the direction to 'apply' the 'law' of a particular country must not be understood as requiring the Member State court to put itself in the position of the court of that country and to decide the case as that court would have decided it…
14.19 [after a passage very similar to the words of Dicey Morris and Collins para 7-050] … Thus, for example, the court seised should look to particular tariffs, guidelines, or formulae which are used in practice by foreign judges in the calculation of damages, as well as the approach in calculating awards in individual cases. The applicable law will also determine the extent to which specific facts (for example, social and economic conditions in a particular place) are relevant to the assessment of damages. Proof of the underlying facts will, however, remain a matter for the law of the forum, in accordance with Art 1(3)…
14.34 … Art 15(d) does not require Member States to create new … procedures in order to accommodate those recognised by the law applicable under the Regulation. Instead it is submitted, the court seised of the dispute must adopt a 'best fit' approach, using the procedural … powers that are available to it to reflect the remedial framework of the applicable law as closely as possible…
14.61 Without judicial guidance, the precise scope and effect of Art 1(3) remains unclear … Rules falling within the category of 'evidence and procedure' … would include, for example, those concerning … (c) case management, … (f) mode of proof of facts, and (g) costs"
MATTERS NOT IN DISPUTE
"35.1 Expert evidence shall be restricted to that which is reasonably required to resolve the proceedings…
35.3(1) It is the duty of experts to help the court on matters within their expertise".
"6. The Need for Experts
6.1 Those intending to instruct experts to give or prepare evidence for the purpose of civil proceedings should consider whether expert evidence is appropriate, taking account of the principles set out in CPR Parts 1 and 35, and in particular whether:
(a) it is relevant to a matter which is in dispute between the parties.
(b) it is reasonably required to resolve the proceedings (CPR 35.1);
(c) the expert has expertise relevant to the issue on which an opinion is sought;
(d) the expert has the experience, expertise and training appropriate to the value, complexity and importance of the case; and whether
(e) these objects can be achieved by the appointment of a single joint expert (see section 17 below)."
THE CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
"(1) Elements: Amputation scars persist on his right upper and lower limbs.
(2) Evaluation: the definitive impairment must be considered as equivalent to 5 on a scale of 0 to 7".
"The consequences of the accident necessitate:
(1) Psychological counselling, essential provision, twice a week for one year, ie 100 sessions a year altogether, then for two further years, one session a week, ie 50 sessions a year…"
Discussion
CONCLUSION