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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Susan Rowlands v The Chief Constable of Merseyside Police [2006] EWCA Civ 1773 (20 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1773.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1773, [2007] 1 WLR 1065, [2007] WLR 1065 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE LIVERPOOL COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MACMILLAN
5LV12308
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
and
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
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SUSAN ROWLANDS |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE CHIEF CONSTABLE OF MERSEYSIDE POLICE |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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Mr. Graham Wells (instructed by Weightmans) for the respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
The trial
1. Have the police proved that it is more likely than not that P.C. Patterson thought that Mrs. Rowlands was likely to cause a breach of the peace? No
2. Have the police proved that it is more likely than not that the use of handcuffs by P.C. Patterson to restrain Mrs. Rowlands was reasonable? No.
3. Has Mrs Rowlands proved that it is more likely than not that she was dragged backwards by P.C. Patterson using the handcuffs? Yes.
4. Has Mrs. Rowlands proved that it is more likely than not that P.C. Patterson yanked the handcuffs in the back of the car to cause her pain? Yes.
5. Has Mrs. Rowlands proved that it is more likely than not that the account of the matter given to the Magistrates' Court by P.C. Patterson was deliberately false? Yes.
It followed from these findings that Mrs. Rowlands had made good her case in its entirety.
Mr. Wells: These [referring to the figures suggested in Thompson] go up with inflation. So, rather than go up like Heil v Rankin personal injuries, these just go up with the inflation. The inflation factor, I think and I am afraid I have not got it with me, but from 1997, from memory, is about 1.5 or thereabouts. So it would be increased by about £2,500/£2,700.
The Judge: Well, £2,500 was the figure I have written down.
Mr. Gow: I would not argue with that, Your Honour.
Mr. Wells: Yes and that is what I would say –
The Judge: Sorry?
Mr. Gow: I would not argue that; £2,500.
The Judge: Well, gentlemen, if we agree those figures - £2,000 psychiatric; £1,000 for the pain to the wrists; £850 false imprisonment and £2,500 for the malicious prosecution – there is nothing for the jury to decide, is there?
Mr. Gow: No. Well, I obviously do not agree with Your Honour's assessment of aggravated damages.
The Judge: No, obviously not, Mr. Gow.
Mr. Gow: I think that is a matter that we will have to go to a higher court on.
The Judge: Well, I am not granting you leave, but . . .
Mr. Gow: Certainly, obviously we will have to take that with another court, but as I say, there is nothing (inaudible) but I think the jury should be informed of what the damages –
The Judge: Yes, indeed.
The Thompson guidelines
". . . . . there can be a penal element in the award of aggravated damages. However they are primarily to be awarded to compensate the plaintiff for injury to his proper pride and dignity and the consequences of his being humiliated. This injury which is made worse for the plaintiff because it is more difficult to excuse when the malicious motives, spite or arrogance on the part of the police: see Rookes v Barnard [1964] AC 1129 , 1221 et seq., per Lord Devlin)."
"This element of profiting from your tort is almost invariably absent from this class of action. In addition, as the defendant is usually a chief officer of police, the personality of the defendant will not usually be significant in determining what the appropriate level of punitive damages should be. While the conduct calling for the award of exemplary damages may differ it is to be hoped that it will be rare indeed for the most senior officers in the force to be in any way implicated.
The fact that the defendant is a chief officer of police also means that here exemplary damages should have a lesser role to play. Even if the use of civil proceedings to punish a defendant can in some circumstances be justified it is more difficult to justify the award where the defendant and the person responsible for meeting any award is not the wrongdoer, but his "employer". While it is possible that a chief constable could bear a responsibility for what has happened, due to his failure to exercise proper control, the instances when this is alleged to have occurred should not be frequent. There is also a greater problem of awarding exemplary as well as aggravated damages in the class of action under consideration because the very circumstances which will justify the award of aggravated damages are probably the same as those which make it possible to award exemplary damages. This accentuates the risk of a double counting."
"(5) In a straightforward case of wrongful arrest and imprisonment the starting point is likely to be about £500 for the first hour during which the plaintiff has been deprived of his or her liberty. After the first hour an additional sum is to be awarded, but that sum should be on a reducing scale so as to keep the damages proportionate with those payable in personal injury cases and because the plaintiff is entitled to have a higher rate of compensation for the initial shock of being arrested. As a guideline we consider, for example, that a plaintiff who has been wrongly kept in custody for twenty four hours should for this alone normally be regarded as entitled to an award of about £3,000. For subsequent days the daily rate will be on a progressively reducing scale. . . . .
(6) In the case of malicious prosecution the figure should start at about £2,000 and for prosecution continuing for as long as two years, the case being taken to the Crown Court, an award of about £10,000 could be appropriate. If a malicious prosecution results in a conviction which is only set aside on an appeal this will justify a larger award to reflect the longer period during which the plaintiff has been in peril and has been caused distress.
. . . . . . . . . . . .
(8) If the case is one in which aggravated damages are claimed and could be appropriately awarded, the nature of aggravated damages should be explained to the jury. Such damages can be awarded where there are aggravating features about the case which would result in the plaintiff not receiving sufficient compensation for the injury suffered if the award were restricted to a basic award. Aggravating features can include humiliating circumstances at the time of arrest or any conduct of those responsible for the arrest or the prosecution which shows that they had behaved in a high handed, insulting, malicious or oppressive manner either in relation to the arrest or imprisonment or in conducting the prosecution.. Aggravating features can also include the way the litigation and trial are conducted. . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . .
(10) We consider that where it is appropriate to award aggravated damages the figure is unlikely to be less than a £1,000. We do not think it is possible to indicate a precise arithmetical relationship between basic damages and aggravated damages because the circumstances will vary from case to case. In the ordinary way, however, we would not expect the aggravated damages to be as much as twice the basic damages except perhaps where, on the particular facts, the basic damages are modest.
(11) It should be strongly emphasised to the jury that the total figure for basic and aggravated damages should not exceed what they consider is fair compensation for the injury which the plaintiff has suffered. It should also be explained that if aggravated damages are awarded such damages, though compensatory are not intended as a punishment, will in fact contain a penal element as far as the defendant is concerned.
(12) Finally the jury should be told in a case where exemplary damages are claimed and the Judge considers that there is evidence to support such a claim, that though it is not normally possible to award damages with the object of punishing the defendant, exceptionally this is possible where there has been conduct, including oppressive or arbitrary behaviour, by police officers which deserves the exceptional remedy of exemplary damages. It should be explained to the jury: (a) that if the jury are awarding aggravated damages these damages will have already provided compensation for the injury suffered by the plaintiff as a result of the oppressive and insulting behaviour of the police officer and, inevitably, a measure of punishment from the defendant's point of view; (b) that exemplary damages should be awarded if, but only if, they consider that the compensation awarded by way of basic and aggravated damages is in the circumstances an inadequate punishment for the defendants; . . . . . . (d) that the sum awarded by way of exemplary damages should be sufficient to mark the jury's disapproval of the oppressive or arbitrary behaviour but should be no more than is required for this purpose.
(13) Where exemplary damages are appropriate they are unlikely to be less than £5,000. Otherwise the case is probably not one which justifies an award of exemplary damages at all. In this class of action the conduct must be particularly deserving of condemnation for an award of as much as £25,000 to be justified and the figure of £50,000 should be regarded as the absolute maximum, involving directly officers of at least the rank of superintendent."
"In giving guidance for aggravated damages we have attached importance to the fact that they are intended to be compensatory and not punitive although the same circumstances may justify punishment.
In the case of exemplary damages we have taken into account the fact that the action is normally brought against the chief officer of police and the damages are paid out of police funds for what is usually a vicarious liability for the acts of his officers in relation to which he is a joint tortfeasor: see now section 88 of the Police Act 1996. In these circumstances it appears to us wholly inappropriate to take into account the means of the individual officers except where the action is brought against the individual tortfeasor. This would raise a complication in the event of the chief officer seeking an indemnity or contribution as to his liability from a member of his force. It is our view if this situation does arise it should be resolved by the court exercising its power under section 2(1) or (2) of the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 to order that the exemplary damages should not be reimbursed in full or at all if they are disproportionate to the officer's means."
The appeal
(a) Damages for malicious prosecution
(b) Aggravated damages
(c) Exemplary damages
(i) "Oppressive, arbitrary and unconstitutional action"
(ii) Vicarious liability
"88.—(1) The chief officer of police for a police area shall be liable in respect of torts committed by constables under his direction and control in the performance or purported performance of their functions in like manner as a master is liable in respect of torts committed by his servants in the course of their employment, and accordingly shall in respect of any such tort be treated for all purposes as a joint tortfeasor."
". . . . . the jury should be directed that, when they come to consider what if any addition is to be made to the compensatory damages by way of punitive damages, they must consider each defendant separately. If any one of the defendants does not deserve punishment or if the compensatory damages are in themselves sufficient punishment for any one of the defendants, then they must not make any addition to the compensatory damages. If each of the defendants deserves more punishment than is involved in payment of the compensatory damages then they must determine which deserves the least punishment and only add to the compensatory damages such additional sum as that defendant ought to pay by way of punishment."
". . . . . as the defendant is usually a chief officer of police, the personality of the defendant will not usually be significant in determining what the appropriate level of punitive damages should be. . . . .
The fact that the defendant is a chief officer of police also means that here exemplary damages should have a lesser role to play. Even if the use of civil proceedings to punish a defendant can in some circumstances be justified it is more difficult to justify the award where the defendant and the person responsible for meeting any award is not the wrongdoer, but his "employer." . . . . "
And later at page 517F:
"In the case of exemplary damages we have taken into account the fact that the action is normally brought against the chief officer of police and the damages are paid out of police funds for what is usually a vicarious liability for the acts of his officers in relation to which he is a joint tortfeasor: see now section 88 of the Police Act 1996. In these circumstances it appears to us wholly inappropriate to take into account the means of the individual officers except where the action is brought against the individual tortfeasor."
(iii) The award
Lord Justice Richards:
Lord Justice Ward: