![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Shaw v Medtronic Corevalve LLC & Ors [2017] EWHC 54 (QB) (20 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/54.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 54 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
GABRIELE SHAW (suing as the personal representative of the estate of WILLIAM EWAN (deceased)) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
MEDTRONIC COREVALVE LLC (a company incorporated in the USA) JEAN CLAUDE LABORDE MEDTRONIC INC (a company incorporated in the USA) MEDTRONIC LIMITED MEDTRONIC PLC |
Defendants |
____________________
Toby Riley-Smith QC (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP) for the First, Third and Fourth Defendants
Hearing date: 12 January 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Lavender:
(1) Introduction
(1) The First Defendant applies for an order setting aside the service on it of the Claim Form out of the jurisdiction.(2) The Third Defendant, Medtronic Inc, (which has since April 2009 been the parent company of the First Defendant) makes a similar application.
(3) The Fourth Defendant, Medtronic Limited, (which is part of the same group of companies as the Third Defendant) applies for either an order striking out the Particulars of Claim (under CPR 3.4) or summary judgment against the Claimant (under CPR 24.2)).
(2) The Inquest
(3) The First Action
"Although the defendants have never made any admission of liability and, indeed, Mr Spilsbury expressly indicated during the trial that there was no such admission, there is no issue that the factual basis for the judgment to which both defendants have submitted, and which they have chosen not to challenge, was that set out in paragraphs 9 to 15 of the Re-amended Particulars of Claim. In short, the claimant's complaints are, first of all, that her father never gave proper or informed consent to the TAVI procedure. In particular it is alleged that he was never informed that the procedure was newly developed and still the subject of clinical trials; that the prosthetic valve used in the procedure was not approved for public use, nor fully or adequately evaluated in terms of its safety and performance; or of the alternatives of either open-heart surgery or conservative treatment. Secondly, there is an allegation that the defendants failed to care for him properly once it was realised that there was damage to the aorta."
(4) The Present Action
"The claim is for damages arising from the death of the Claimant's father, Mr William Ewan ("the Deceased") who died on 26 September 2007 upon implantation and use upon him of the Defendant(s)' medical devices and as a result of the conduct and/or omissions of the Defendant(s), their servants or agents including during the course of the advice to and treatment of the Deceased at Glenfield Hospital in 2007 until his death. The Claimant claims damages for:
- for personal injury and loss on behalf of the Estate of the Deceased pursuant to the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934 and/or pursuant to the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 as amended and/or pursuant to the Consumer Protection Act 1987 and/or the Product Liability Directive and/or
- negligence and/or in restitution (unjust enrichment and/or wrongful act)
- misrepresentation and/or deceit
- aggravated/exemplary damages
- and the Claimant seeks an account of profits
and interest thereon pursuant to Section 35A of the Senior Courts Act 1981."
(1) There is no claim under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976, because the late Mr. Ewan had no dependants.(2) The causes of action pursued by the Claimant pursuant to the 1934 Act arise:
(a) in negligence (as set out in paragraph 43 of the Particulars of Claim); and(b) under the Consumer Protection Act 1987 (as set out in paragraph 42 of the Particulars of Claim); and(c) (according to the Claimant) unjust enrichment; but(d) not in misrepresentation or deceit: although these are referred to in the Claim Form, Mr. Berkley acknowledged that the Particulars of Claim does not plead a case in misrepresentation or deceit.
(1) Damages, including aggravated and/or exemplary damages.(2) An account of profits.
(3) Damages in restitution.
(1) General Damages.(2) Restitutionary Damages.
(3) Aggravated and/or Exemplary Damages.
(1) Contrary to CPR 6.37(1)(a), the Claimant's application notice did not set out which ground in paragraph 3.1 of Practice Direction 6B was relied on.(2) The Claimant's counsel's skeleton argument mentioned ground (9), which concerns claims in tort, but made no mention of ground (16), which is the ground applicable to claims for restitution. Nor did it mention the Claimant's alleged cause of action in unjust enrichment.
(3) The skeleton argument asserted that the Third Defendant (and others) were the successors in title of CoreValve.
(4) The skeleton argument did mention (as does the Particulars of Claim) that the Claimant had successfully brought the First Action, but did not mention the potential defence to which this gave rise, and to which I will refer.
(5) The Fourth Defendant
"The First, Third, Fourth and Fifth Defendants are collectively referred to as "Medtronic"; the Fifth Defendant being the parent company located in Ireland. In 2009 Medtronic acquired CoreValve, including the intellectual property associated with the valve technology and development. Medtronic is sued as the successor of CoreValve and as the manufacturer producer and supplier of the Valve."
"The Fourth Defendant, the English company, was a subsidiary of the Third Defendant until the incorporation of the Fifth Defendant, Medtronic Plc, in Ireland in 2014. It was an interested party in the Inquest and were represented by the Defendants' current Solicitors and provided the non-party disclosure as well as the evidence of Dr Dunham regarding CE marking."
(6) The Third Defendant
(7) The First Defendant
(1) Exemplary damages.(2) Aggravated damages.
(3) Restitutionary damages.
"Additionally, the Claimant will seek to include other pecuniary losses including the costs of the judicial review proceedings and other costs which will become the subject of a schedule of loss."
(1) there might well be a question whether the Jameson principle permitted the Claimant to resurrect claims which were pursued in the First Action, but then abandoned when it came to the assessment of damages; and(2) in any event, I agree with what HHJ Platts said in paragraph 44 of his judgment about the abandoned claims:
"It seems to me that these claims were doomed to fail. The claimant's argument was that the disclosure in this action had led to disclosure of documents which had they been available in the judicial review proceedings, either at first instance or on appeal, would have led to a different result in those proceedings with the result that she would not have had an order for costs made against her in those proceedings. There are so many difficulties with such a claim, not least that it seeks to go behind cost orders made by courts of competent jurisdiction in different proceedings, but also the cause of action is not identified and I am not clear what it is at present. It is not easy to see how the claim is that of the estate, the orders having been made against Mrs Shaw personally; the claim does not appear to be properly or substantively pleaded and there is no evidence before me to support it. It seems clear to me that this claim could not have been made out at trial and in my judgment it was rightly abandoned by Mr Berkley QC."
(7)(a) Exemplary Damages
"Where a cause of action survives as aforesaid for the benefit of the estate of a deceased person, the damages recoverable for the benefit of the estate of that person—
(a) shall not include—
(i) any exemplary damages;"
(7)(b) Aggravated Damages
(7)(c) Restitutionary Damages
(7)(d) Cause of Action in Unjust Enrichment
"53. By putting into circulation the Valve and the larger and untested valve and causing or permitting the same to be implanted into the Deceased CoreValve and now Medtronic sought to gain substantial gains such as to unjustly enrich itself.
54. The Inquest was informed that the Deceased was to be the first person to receive the larger valve referenced CRS-P3-943.
55. CoreValve now is a subsidiary of Medtronic. The Claimant contends that Medtronic has unjustly been enriched from the use of the Deceased for the purposes of developing the valve and equipment for commercial exploitation."
(7)(e) Account of Profits
(7)(f) The First Defendant: Summary
(8) Conclusion
(1) I set aside both: (a) Master McCloud's order insofar as it relates to the First and Third Defendants; and (b) the service of the Claim Form on the First and Third Defendants out of the jurisdiction.(2) I order that the Particulars of Claim is struck out insofar as it relates to the Fourth Defendant.