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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dow v. West Of Scotland Shipbreaking Company Ltd & Anor [2007] ScotCS CSOH_71 (05 April 2007) URL: https://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_71.html Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSOH_71, [2007] CSOH 71 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION [2007] CSOH 71 |
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PD1666/06 |
OPINION OF LADY PATON in the cause THOMAS DOW Pursuer; against (FIRST) WEST OF Defenders: |
Pursuer:
Maguire, Solicitor-Advocate;
Thompsons
Defenders: McGregor, Advocate; Simpson & Marwick, Solicitors
5 April 2007
[1] The
Rights of Relatives to Damages (Mesothelioma) (
[2] The
Bill amends section 1 of the 1976 Act, and in effect permits the victim to
accept damages in settlement prior to death, without jeopardising the
relatives' potential claims on death in terms of section 1(4).
[3] The
Bill is restricted to mesothelioma-sufferers because of the particular
characteristics of that asbestos-related disease. As was explained by a representative of the
Scottish Executive Justice Department to the Justice 1 Committee of the
Scottish Parliament on
"Under current medical
science, there is no treatment that will cure anyone with [mesothelioma]. The average life expectancy of someone who
has the disease is 14 months.
For people diagnosed with
mesothelioma, the issue of how to handle a compensation claim arises
immediately. They know their likely life
expectancy and that their disease was caused by exposure to asbestos, and -
this is important - under the Fairchild exception they do not need to meet the
normal test of causation in civil actions.
The causal requirement is satisfied if an employer's wrongful conduct
materially increased the risk of the person contracting mesothelioma.
The Executive believes that
no other class of personal injury shares those characteristics and, typically,
puts the sufferer in a dilemma in relation to relatives' compensation
claims. Most mesothelioma-sufferers are
not pursuing their own claims, in order not to disadvantage their relatives. No one involved in making personal injury
claims has told us that any other groups of claimants face that dilemma and are
forgoing their own claims in favour of their relatives' claims. We have introduced the bill to address that
specific problem ...
... [The bill] is intended to
remove a problem that the law causes for a particular group of people; it is not intended to encroach into the law
itself any more than is necessary to address the identified problem. In other words, the purpose of the bill is
not to right any perceived wrong in the long-held principle that relatives'
rights are extinguished if the deceased settles [his] claim in full prior to
death ...
... The Executive has
introduced this short bill to address urgently and specifically a problem
encountered by mesothelioma-sufferers who are choosing not to pursue their own
claims so that their family can benefit from larger awards."
[4] Section
1 of the Damages (
"No liability shall arise
under this section if the liability to the deceased or his executor in respect
of the act or omission [giving rise to liability to pay damages] has been
excluded or discharged (whether by antecedent agreement or otherwise) by the
deceased before his death, or is excluded by virtue of any enactment."
Thus acceptance of damages by a mesothelioma-sufferer
in settlement of his or her claim has the result that relatives cannot make
claims on the death.
[6] The
Rights of Relatives to Damages (Mesothelioma) (
"(2A) Where subsection (2B) below applies -
(a) liability arises under this
section even though the liability to the deceased or the deceased's executor
mentioned in subsection (2) above has been discharged as mentioned in that
subsection; but
(b) that liability is limited to
the payment of such sum of damages as is awarded under subsection (4) below
[i.e. damages for distress, grief, and loss of society].
(2B) This subsection applies where -
(a) the personal injury in
consequence of which the deceased died is mesothelioma; and
(b) the discharge of liability
occurred on or after the date on which section 1 of the Rights of Relatives to
Damages (Mesothelioma) (
[7] Thus
the Bill amends section 1 of the 1976 Act so that relatives may still claim
damages on the death of the mesothelioma-sufferer despite prior settlement of
the sufferer's personal claim for damages.
In such circumstances the relatives' claims are limited to the
deceased's immediate family, and to damages for distress, grief and loss of
society.
[8] The
new provisions are given retrospective effect, and are to apply to any case
where the victim recovers damages or obtains a full settlement on or after
[9] One of
the first mesothelioma-sufferers in
[10] Shortly
after
[11] On
[12] Mr.
Maguire stated that lawyers representing both pursuers and defenders agreed
that it would be advantageous to all concerned if one court action could accommodate not only the
pursuer's claim, but also the relatives' claims arising on the pursuer's
ultimate death. An outline of a possible
procedural approach was discussed, involving settling the pursuer's claim and
thereafter sisting the action pending the death, whereupon the sist would be
recalled, and relatives would be sisted as pursuers and the pleadings amended accordingly. There was also discussion concerning the
appropriate form of any Joint Minute settling the pursuer's claim. In particular, if the action was to continue
to be used as a vehicle for the relatives' subsequent claims, it was agreed
that it would be inappropriate that the Joint Minute should invite the court to
grant decree for damages or absolvitor, with the expenses of the action. The granting of such an interlocutor would
bring the action to an end, leaving no proceedings in court to act as a vehicle
for the relatives' claims.
[13] In the
light of the discussion on
[14] On
[15] Following
the hearing on
"88. The Committee considers that there may be
benefit in the initiation of only one court action. The Committee appreciates that the extent of
the savings may be limited, but in order to provide a simplified process for
all parties, the Committee considers that there may be merit in the initiation
of a single action.
89. The Committee recommends that the Scottish
Executive liaise with the Court of Session, insurance industry and solicitors
in order to establish, firstly whether the raising of a single action in
mesothelioma cases would be feasible, and secondly, whether it would indeed be
beneficial to all parties."
The Note further referred to Rule 31.1 of the Rules of
the Court of Session (a pursuer dying during his case, and the sisting of an
executor in his place), and also to superseded Rules of Court 43.1 and 43.6
concerning the sisting of connected persons as additional pursuers (the current
equivalent rules being Rules 43.6(10) and 43.14 et seq.)
[16] A
further Note by Mr. Maguire dated
[17] Some
weeks later, I was advised that the pursuer had died on
[18] The
third reading of the Bill took place on
[19] In my
view, it is appropriate in cases affected by the Rights of Relatives to Damages
(Mesothelioma) (Scotland) Act 2007 that one court action should, wherever
possible, act as the vehicle for not only the mesothelioma-sufferer's claim,
but also for the relatives' subsequent claims for distress, grief, and loss of
society.
[20] Current
practice permits an executor to be sisted in place of a pursuer who dies in the
course of an action. Thus for example
Rule of Court 31.1 provides:
"(1) Where a party dies or
comes under legal incapacity while a cause is in dependence, any person
claiming to represent that party or his estate may apply to the court by minute
to be sisted as a party to the cause.
(2) Intimation of such an
application shall be made to each party."
[21] Further,
as was pointed out by Mr. Maguire in his written submissions, the combined
effect of several rules in Chapter 43 (currently Rules 43.6(10) and 43.14
to 43.19) can result in an action where the pursuers are ultimately (i) the
executor in place of the deceased pursuer;
and (ii) the relatives for their own rights, all encompassed in one
court action.
[22] There
are practical advantages arising from the use of one court action. For example, there are savings in
administration and in costs. There is no
need for a repetition of averments relating to the mesothelioma-sufferer's
employment, the exposure to asbestos, the effect of the disease on the victim,
and the various breaches of duty on the part of the defenders. There is no need for a duplication of the
Specification of Documents attached to the Chapter 43 summons.
[23] The
standard procedural stages which might take place in an action affected by the
Rights of Relatives to Damages (Mesothelioma) (
[24] In
certain circumstances, it may prove impossible to use the pursuer's original
action as a vehicle for the relatives' subsequent claims. For example:
1. If the pursuer's case did not settle, but proceeded to
proof resulting in the court granting decree with expenses, the pursuer's
action would be exhausted by that decree.
It would be necessary for relatives to raise another action after the
pursuer's death.
2. Similarly, the wording of a Joint Minute might bring the
pursuer's action to an end. For example,
the standard wording that "[counsel] stated to the court that this action has
settled extra-judicially; they therefore
craved and hereby crave the court to find the defenders liable to the pursuer
in the expenses of the action; and quoad ultra to assoilzie the defenders
from the conclusions of the summons" would result in decree being granted in
those terms, and the pursuer's action coming to an end. It would be necessary for relatives to raise
another action after the pursuer's death.
3. If a mesothelioma-sufferer's claim was settled, and the
defenders wished to have a decree from the court (because, for example, they
had to exercise rights of relief against another party: see, for example, section 3 of the
Compensation Act 2006; or because they
were obliged to comply with a requirement imposed by the Financial Services
Compensation Authority) the inevitable procedural consequence would be a termination
of the pursuer's action once the court has granted decree. It would be necessary for relatives to raise
another action after the pursuer's death.
4. If the defenders lodged a tender in the pursuer's action,
and if the pursuer formally accepted that tender and enrolled the usual motion
for decree in terms of the tender and acceptance, the court would grant decree
as requested, and the pursuer's action would come to an end. It would be necessary for relatives to raise
another action after the pursuer's death.
(In one recent mesothelioma case, a formal tender was lodged, but agents
for the pursuer and defenders agreed to resolve matters by way of an
appropriately-worded Joint Minute rather than by a formal acceptance of the
tender, thus preserving the action as a vehicle for the relatives' subsequent
claims.)
[25] There
may be other circumstances, not outlined above, which would make it necessary
for relatives to raise their own action after the pursuer's death.
[26] In the
present case, the action was sisted in terms of Rule of Court 43.8(3) for a
period of four months commencing on