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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Fleming v Keiller [2006] ScotCS CSOH_163 (17 October 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_163.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotCS CSOH_163, [2006] CSOH 163

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 163

 

PD1796/04

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF

LORD DRUMMOND YOUNG

 

in the cause

 

GRAHAM FLEMING

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

DEREK KEILLER

 

Defender:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

Pursuer: McCall; Lefevre Litigation

Defender: L. Milligan; Balfour & Manson

 

 

 

17 October 2006

 

[1] The pursuer has raised an action against the defender for damages for personal injuries. The circumstances giving rise to the claim are averred as follows. On 10 November 2001 the pursuer was taking part in a pheasant shoot at Tilliefourie, near Inverurie. There were seven guns in the shoot. The participants were walking forward in a straight line, in accordance with normal practice. They took their line from one Alex Alexander, who was in the middle position of the seven. Mr Alexander was working a dog. The pursuer was about 30 metres to the right of Mr Alexander, and was on slightly higher ground. The defender was the gun immediately to the left of Mr Alexander. Suddenly and without warning the defender shot low to his right hand side. His shot hit the pursuer. As a result it is said that the pursuer sustained loss, injury and damage. It is averred in particular that the defender shot outwith his arc of fire, too close to the line of shooters and too low. That is said to constitute fault at common law.

[2] The defender has averred that the action is time-barred. The accident complained of occurred on 10 November 2001, but the summons did not pass the Signet until 11 November 2004. Consequently, it is said, section 17 of the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973 is applicable. In response to the claim of time bar, the pursuer makes the following averments. It is admitted that the summons did not pass the Signet until 11 November 2004, under explanation that it was served on the defender by messengers-at-arms on 11 November 2004, one day after the expiry of the triennium. It is further admitted that the action is time-barred in terms of section 17 of the 1973 Act. The pursuer nevertheless relies on section 19A of the same Act, which permits the court, if it seems equitable to do so, to allow an action to be brought notwithstanding section 17.

[3] In support of his case under section 19A, the pursuer makes the following averments. The pursuer instructed solicitors, Messrs Hutcheon Rattray & Co, of Aberdeen, on 5 March 2002. On 20 June 2002 that firm intimated a claim to the defender. The defender instructed his own solicitors, Messrs Blackadders, of Dundee, who entered into correspondence with the pursuer's solicitors on the merits of the claim and denied liability. On 14 July 2004 the pursuer's solicitors instructed a note from counsel on the prospects of successfully pursuing an action against the defender. Counsel provided a note on 20 July 2004. On 21 September 2004 the pursuer's solicitors advised him that they did not feel qualified to continue to act and advised him to consult a firm known as Quantum Claims. The pursuer met with a representative of the latter firm on 22 October 2004. On 25 October 2004 that person wrote to the defender advising that Quantum Claims had been instructed and that they would be raising proceedings to protect the pursuer's right of action given that the action would time bar on 10 November 2004. On 25 October 2004 the same individual attended at the offices of Lefevre Litigation in Aberdeen with the papers in the case and instructed a solicitor there to act in the matter. She telephoned the counsel previously involved in the case and advised him that he would be instructed to draft a summons. A letter of instruction was written to counsel on the same day, 25 October 2004. Owing to an oversight the individual solicitor in Lefevre Litigation did not enter the case into the office diary and wall chart; the latter records the date of time bar of all cases being dealt with by that solicitor. Counsel's clerk acknowledged receipt of the letter of instruction by a letter dated 26 October 2004. The letter of instruction was placed in counsel's box. The counsel in question did not attend at Parliament House until 11 November 2004. He found the letter of instruction on that date and immediately drafted a summons, which was sent to Lefevre Litigation's office in Edinburgh. It was served by messengers-at-arms on the same day, 11 November 2004, one day after expiry of the triennium.

[4] The pursuer further avers that the defender has investigated the accident, and has not been prejudiced by the action's being raised one day after expiry of the triennium. The defender was not in ignorance of the fact that a claim was made and that an action was to be raised against him. The claim, it is said, is not stale, and the delay will not pose problems for the defender in defending the action. So far as the pursuer's position is concerned, it is said that he will be prejudiced if he loses his right of action against the defender. Any action against his solicitors would not be straightforward; they were instructed only 16 days prior to expiry of the triennium, their oversight or omission was excusable, and they relied upon counsel. As soon as a summons was received from counsel an action was raised. Raising an action against the solicitors would inevitably cause delay and inconvenience for the pursuer. He would require to instruct further solicitors, consider against whom proceedings should be directed and thereafter initiate proceedings. The case against his solicitors and counsel would require investigation. In addition, the pursuer's counsel pointed out in her submissions that, in any action based on professional negligence, the pursuer might not receive the support of Quantum Claims. That might mean that he had to fund proceedings out of his own resources.

[5] The defender now challenges the relevancy of the pursuer's averments in support of his case under section 19A, and their case called before me in the procedure roll in order that that matter might be discussed. For the defender, it was submitted that on the basis of the pursuer's averments summarized in the last paragraph the court should inevitably refuse to exercise its discretion under section 19A in favour of the pursuer; the result was that the action should be dismissed. Counsel accepted that under that section the court required to weigh various factors, in particular the conduct of the pursuer and his legal advisers and any likely prejudice to either party according to whether or not leave was granted. She submitted that the most important factor in the present case was that the defender would lose an absolute defence to the pursuer's claim. By contrast, the pursuer's averments indicated clear negligence on the part of his legal advisers, for which he would have a right of action. The fact that the delay was of only one day was not relevant; the action was still outwith the statutory time limit. In addition counsel placed reliance on the fact that the defender was uninsured and could suffer severe financial consequences as a result of the pursuer's claim. Counsel for the pursuer submitted that the court should exercise its discretion in the pursuer's failure on the basis of the averments that he had made. Even if that were not possible, she submitted that the pursuer's averments were not such that his case under section 19A must inevitably fail; consequently a preliminary proof should be allowed on the application of section 19A. Counsel relied particularly on the fact that the action was only one day late; consequently the pursuer's claim could not possibly be considered stale. She further emphasized that the conduct of the pursuer was personally blameless, and that there might be formidable difficulties in bringing an action for professional negligence against his legal advisers. Any professional negligence claim must inevitably be more complex than the personal injuries claim on which it is based; in the present case a range of defenders might be involved, including two sets of solicitors and counsel. In addition, an action based on professional negligence would not benefit from the new simplified personal injuries procedure. Moreover the pursuer had the financial backing of Quantum Claims, and that might be withdrawn if an action were raised against the pursuer's solicitors.

[6] Section 19A confers a discretion on the court. That discretion must be exercised according to equitable principles: nevertheless, it is clear that a number of specific issues are relevant to its exercise. Those that seem relevant to the present case are as follows. In the first place, the court must have regard to "the conduct of the pursuer since the accident and up to the time of his seeking the court's authority to bring the action out of time, including any explanations for his not having brought the action timeously": Carson v Howard Doris Ltd 1981 SLT 273, per Lord Ross at 275. In this connection, the pursuer is answerable for the acts of his agents, and any failure on the part of his legal advisers will normally be held against him: Donald v Rutherford 1984 SLT 70, per Lord Cameron at 77; Forsyth v A.F. Stoddard & Co Ltd 1985 SLT 51, per LJC Wheatley at 54. Consequently the negligence of the pursuer's legal advisers will not normally of itself be a sufficient reason for exercising the power of extension in section 19A: Morrice v Martin Retail Group Ltd 2003 SCLR 289.

[7] In the second place, it has been said that the court must consider the likely prejudice to the pursuer if authority to bring the action out of time is not granted, and likely prejudice to the defender if authority is granted: Carson, supra. I think that this proposition requires somewhat closer examination. The prejudice to the pursuer will normally be the loss of his right of action against the defender. The prejudice to the defender will normally be that he loses what is otherwise an unanswerable defence. In many cases the pursuer may appear to have a good right of action against his professional advisers based on their negligence; in that event the prejudice to the pursuer may be minimal, although an action against professional advisers will nearly always present greater complication than a straightforward action against the original defender. In cases where there is no apparent right of action against professional advisers, however, the prejudice to the pursuer and the prejudice to the defender are, in a sense, equal and opposite. In that event, it is necessary in my opinion to bear in mind the fundamental nature of a limitation statute. This is very clearly explained by McHugh J. in a decision of the High Court of Australia, Brisbane South Regional Health Authority v Taylor [1996] 186 CLR 541; McHugh J's opinion that case contains perhaps the most comprehensive and most helpful analysis of the law of limitation that is available. After considering the rationales of limitation statutes (a matter that I return to at paragraph [11] below), McHugh J states (at 553):

"In enacting limitation periods, legislatures have regard to all these rationales. A limitation period should not be seen therefore as an arbitrary cut-off point unrelated to the demands of justice or the general welfare of society. It represents the legislature's judgment that the welfare of society is best served by causes of action being litigated within the limitation period, notwithstanding that the enactment of that period may often result in a good cause of action being defeated. Against this background, I do not see any warrant for treating provisions that provide for an extension of time for commencing an action as having a standing equal to or greater than those provisions that enact limitation periods. A limitation provision is the general rule; an extension provision is the exception to it. The extension provision is a legislative recognition that general conceptions of what justice requires in particular categories of cases may sometimes be overridden by the facts of an individual case.... But whether injustice has occurred must be evaluated by reference to the rationales of the limitation period that has barred the action. The discretion to extend should therefore be seen as requiring the applicant to show that his or her case is a justifiable exception to the rule that the welfare of the State is best served by the limitation period in question. Accordingly, when an applicant seeks an extension of time to commence an action after a limitation period has expired, he or she has the positive burden of demonstrating that the justice of the case requires that extension".

Two important points emerge from the foregoing analysis of the law. First, the onus is on the pursuer of establishing that the limitation period should be extended. Secondly, following on from that first point, if the prejudice to the parties is equal and opposite, and the pursuer does not have a good excuse for his failure to raise proceedings timeously, the defender's rights under the limitation statute must normally prevail. This approach is in my opinion supported by the opinion of Lord Nimmo Smith in Cowan v Toffolo Jackson & Co Ltd 1998 SLT 1000, where he points out (at 1003) that the pursuer must aver more than the consequences alone, however serious for him, of the operation of section 17; the pursuer must, in his pleadings, provide the court with a basis upon which the court's discretion could properly be exercised in his favour. I respectfully agree with those views.

[8] In the third place, the fact that a pursuer who fails to raise an action within the triennium has an alternative ground of action against his legal advisers is regarded as relevant to the existence of prejudice. That appears from Donald v Rutherford, supra, and also from Anderson v Glasgow District Council 1987 SC 11. In the latter case, LJC Ross pointed out (at 25) that, in order to take into account the existence of a claim against legal advisers, it was not necessary to hold that the pursuer was almost certain to succeed in such an action.

[9] In the fourth place, even a very short delay beyond the triennium is sufficient to cut off the pursuer's right of action: Forsyth, supra, at 1985 SLT 54 (a delay of 48 days); Wilson v Telling (Northern) Ltd 1996 SLT 380 (a delay of three days, although exacerbated by further delay thereafter). Nevertheless the length of delay that has occurred may clearly be relevant to the exercise of the court's discretion. If the delay is long, the risk that evidence will be lost and that the general quality of justice will suffer is clearly much greater. If, by contrast, the delay is short, the defender is unlikely to be able to argue that he has suffered any prejudice through loss of evidence, and it is unlikely that there will be any serious deterioration in the quality of justice.

[10] In the fifth place, I am of opinion that the existence or otherwise of insurance is irrelevant to the exercise of the court's discretion. An insurer is entitled to assert all rights and defences that are open to the insured; that is a fundamental principle that underlies the law and practice of insurance. Consequently the insurer is entitled to invoke any relevant period of limitation. Conversely, the absence of insurance should not be regarded as a reason for stricter adherence to the basic limitation provision. I note that in Leith v Grampian University Hospital NHS Trust [2005] CSOH 20, Lord Brodie reached the same conclusion at paragraph [14]. Counsel for the defender suggested that the existence or otherwise of insurance was a material factor in the exercise of the discretion under section 19A; she relied on certain remarks by Lord Robertson in Forsyth v A.F. Stoddard & Co Ltd at 1985 SLT 58. In that passage Lord Robertson referred to the prejudice to "the defenders and their insurers" as a material consideration. I do not understand that passage to support counsel's submission; it rather seems to me that Lord Robertson was merely equiparating the insurers and the insured, and thus affirming that the insurer is entitled to all the rights and defences open to the insured.

[11] In the sixth place, the rationales that underlie the enactment of limitation periods may be relevant. The standard rationales are set out by McHugh J in Brisbane South Regional Health Authority v Taylor at 186 CLR 551-553. These are as follows. First, delay has an impact on the quality of justice. One manifestation of this is that, as time passes, relevant evidence is likely to be lost, and frequently it is not even realized that the evidence ever existed. Another manifestation is that, when evidence is led of events that occurred years previously, it becomes increasingly difficult for a court to assess those events properly. Secondly, it is oppressive to a defender to allow an action to be brought long after the circumstances that gave rise to it have passed. Thirdly, people should be able to arrange their affairs and utilize their resources on the basis that claims can no longer be made against them. Fourthly, the public interest requires that disputes should be settled as quickly as possible.

[12] In the present case the pursuer avers, in essence, that he instructed his original solicitors in March 2002, less than six months after the accident. More than two years later, in July 2004, the advice of counsel was taken. Two months after that, the original solicitors advised that they were not qualified to pursue an action and advised the pursuer to consult Quantum Claims. I must say that I find the delay in giving that advice quite extraordinary. Nevertheless, Quantum Claims were instructed on 22 October 2004, and they passed the instructions on to Lefevre Litigation on 25 October, 15 clear days before the expiry of the triennium. That ought to have been long enough to draft a summons, since the facts were simple and the identity of the defender was clear. The solicitor in Lefevre Litigation who dealt with the case, however, did not follow that firm's normal, and clearly sensible, practice of marking the firm's office diary and wall chart. Counsel was instructed, but he was absent from Parliament House until 11 November, the day after the triennium expired. There is no indication that any reminder was sent to counsel or his clerk.

[13] In these circumstances the principle that a pursuer is answerable for the acts of his legal advisers is plainly important. On his averments, it seems fairly clear that the pursuer is not personally liable for the failure to institute proceedings timeously. Nevertheless, he must be held responsible for the failure of his legal advisers to do so. In these circumstances I cannot see that there is any good reason advanced for the failure to raise proceedings within the triennium. That is a factor that must clearly be taken into account when the discretion under section 19A is considered, for the reasons discussed at paragraph [6] above. The next matter that must be considered is the prejudice suffered by each of the parties. At worst for the pursuer, he stands to lose his claim against the defender, but the defender stands to lose the defence that he would otherwise have under section 17. In these circumstances, in the absence of any good reason for the failure to raise proceedings timeously, the policy that underlies the enactment of a limitation period must be given effect, and the court must refuse leave under section 19A.

[14] Moreover, in the circumstances averred by the pursuer, it seems likely that there is a good case in negligence against the solicitors who ultimately acted for him. Counsel for the pursuer submitted that any such claim would be complicated by the intervention of earlier solicitors and the failure of counsel to discover the instructions; consequently the pursuer would suffer prejudice if the present action were not allowed to proceed. I agree that the necessity of bringing an action based on professional negligence, with the possibility that a number of different persons may have been negligent, introduces an inevitable degree of complication. Nevertheless, the primary responsibility for managing a claim rests with the solicitors who are instructed to do so, and the fact that they may choose to bring other persons in as third parties does not detract from their primary responsibility. Consequently, so far as the pursuer is concerned, the additional complication may not be all that great. In any event, as indicated in Anderson v Glasgow District Council, supra, there is no need to hold that the pursuer is almost certain to succeed in a claim against his professional advisers for the existence of such claim to be taken into account in the balancing exercise under section 19A. In the present case, the likelihood of success in an action against one or more of the pursuer's professional advisers appears sufficiently great for the matter to be taken into account. As such, it is a factor that tends strongly against the exercise of the court's discretion under section 19A. Counsel for the pursuer drew attention to the greater difficulty of an action against professional advisers, and also to the possible lack of the backing of Quantum Claims. I do not doubt that an action against professional advisers will be in some respects more complex than the present action would have been, and the loss of the backing of Quantum Claims may well make it more difficult for the pursuer to proceed. Nevertheless, I do not think that these factors outweigh the existence of what appears to be a reasonable claim for professional negligence, and they certainly do not, either alone or taken with other features of the case, tip the balance in favour of permitting the present action to continue.

[15] Perhaps the most striking feature of the present case is the fact that the action was raised one day after the expiry of the triennium. Such a short delay does mean that certain of the standard rationales for the enactment of limitation periods do not apply to the present case. It clearly cannot be said that there is any serious impact on the quality of justice; the pursuer's claim is not stale; it is unlikely that any relevant evidence will have been lost, at least to a material degree; and it cannot be said that it is oppressive to the defender to allow an action to be brought against him, especially as a letter intimating the claim was sent during the triennium. Nevertheless, the two other rationales of limitation statutes remain valid: the public interest requires that disputes should be settled as quickly as possible, and people should be able to arrange their affairs and to utilize their resources on the basis that after a certain time they are free of claims. The judgment of the legislature is that actions for personal injury should be begun within a period of three years. If the court is to grant an extension of that period, it is essential, as Lord Nimmo Smith pointed out in Cowan v Toffolo Jackson Ltd, supra, that affirmative grounds should be set forth for the granting of such an extension. The mere fact that the delay is very short is not enough, as the court has indicated in Forsyth v A.F. Stoddard & Co Ltd, supra. The delay in raising proceedings seems clearly to be the responsibility of the pursuer's legal advisers, and the pursuer may well have a claim against them. In all the circumstances, I am of opinion that no affirmative grounds have been set forth by the pursuer for the granting of an extension under section 19A. In those circumstances I must hold the pursuer's averments to be irrelevant. I will accordingly dismiss the action.

 


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