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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 >> Dunhill v Burgin [2012] EWCA Civ 397 (03 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/397.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 397 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
MR JUSTICE SILBER
BY020529
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
SIR MARK POTTER
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Joanne Dunhill (a Protected Party by her Litigation Friend Paul Tasker) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Shaun Burgin |
Respondent |
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James Rowley QC (instructed by Keoghs LLP) for the respondent
Hearing date: 30th November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WARD:
The issue in this case
"whether in considering the issue of capacity historically rather than prospectively, should the court:
(a) confine itself to examining the decisions in fact required of the claimant in this action; or
(b) expand its consideration to include decisions which might have been required if the litigation had been conducted differently."
On 7th March 2011 Silber J. held that:
"The court should confine itself fundamentally to examining the decisions in fact required of the claimant in this action. It should not expand its considerations to include decisions which might have been required if the litigation had been conducted differently."
This is Mrs Dunhill's appeal against that ruling.
A little more of the background
The legal background
"Rule 21.1 Scope of this Part
(1) This Part
(a) contains special provisions which apply in proceedings involving patients;
(2) In this Part
(a)
(b) 'patient' means a person who by reason of mental disorder within the meaning of the Mental Health Act 1983 is incapable of managing and administering his property and affairs.
Rule 21.2 Requirement for litigation friend in proceedings by or against children and patients
21.2-(1) a patient must have a litigation friend to conduct proceedings on his behalf.
Rule 21.3 Stage of proceedings at which a litigation friend becomes necessary
(1)
(2)
(3) If a party becomes a patient during proceedings, no party may take any step in the proceedings without the permission of the court until the patient has a litigation friend.
(4) Any step taken before a patient has a litigation friend shall be of no effect, unless the court otherwise orders.
Rule 21.10 Compromise etc by or on behalf of a child or patient
(a) where a claim is made
(a) by or on behalf of a patient; or
(b) against a patient,
no settlement, compromise or payment and no acceptance of money paid into court shall be valid, so far as it relates to the claim by, on behalf or against the patient, without the approval of the court."
(1) From the judgment of Kennedy L.J.:
"27. What, however, does seem to me to be of some importance is the issue-specific nature of the test; that is to say the requirement to consider the question of capacity in relation to the particular transaction (its nature and complexity) in respect of which the decisions as to capacity fall to be made. It is not difficult to envisage claimants in personal injury actions with capacity to deal with all matters and take all "lay client" decisions related to their actions up to and including a decision whether or not to settle, but lacking capacity to decide (even with advice) how to administer a large award. In such a case I see no justification for the assertion that the claimant is to be regarded as a patient from the commencement of proceedings. Of course, as Boreham J said in White's case [White v Fell (unreported) 12th November 1987), capacity must be approached in a common sense way, not by reference to each step in the process of litigation, but bearing in mind the basic right of any person to manage his property and affairs for himself, a right with which no lawyer and no court should rush to interfere."
(2) From the judgment of Chadwick L.J.:
"57. English law requires that a person must have the necessary mental capacity if he is to do a legally effective act or make a legally effective decision for himself.
58. The authorities are unanimous in support of two broad propositions. First, that the mental capacity required by the law is capacity in relation to the transaction which is to be effected. Second, that what is required is the capacity to understand the nature of that transaction when it is explained.
62. The authorities to which I have referred provide ample support for the proposition that, at common law at least, the test of mental capacity is issue-specific: that, as Kennedy LJ has pointed out, the test has to be applied in relation to the particular transaction (its nature and complexity) in respect of which the question whether a party has capacity falls to be decided. It is difficult to see why, in the absence of some statutory or regulatory provision which compels a contrary conclusion, the same approach should not be adopted in relation to the pursuit or defence of litigation.
75. For the purposes of Order 80 and, now, CPR Pt 21 - the test to be applied, as it seems to me, is whether the party to legal proceedings is capable of understanding, with the assistance of such proper explanation from legal advisers and experts in other disciplines as the case may require, the issues on which his consent or decision is likely to be necessary in the course of those proceedings. If he has capacity to understand that which he needs to understand in order to pursue or defend a claim, I can see no reason why the law whether substantive or procedural should require the interposition of a next friend or guardian ad litem (or, as such a person is now described in the Civil Procedure Rules, a litigation friend)."
(3) My Lord, Potter L.J., agreed with both judgments.
"74. the issue was the issue of liability and the piece of business done was the compromise of the issue of liability not the conduct of the whole of the litigation."
"123. It seems to me that the right approach must be to ask as a matter of common sense whether the individual steps formed part of a larger sequence of events which should be seen as one, or whether they were in fact self-contained steps which were not connected with each other.
124. the relevant transaction for the purposes of a compromise made at a time when legal proceedings are in contemplation should be treated in the same way as a compromise made in the course of those proceedings. The logical time for solicitors to consider the capacity of their client to litigate must surely be before the letter before action is sent not after it is sent and immediately before the proceedings are issued. In that event they could find that the client had no capacity to bring the proceedings that he had threatened without the intervention of a litigation friend. an individual can only properly evaluate an offer to settle a claim if he has some idea of what would follow from his rejection. So the individual must therefore have some capacity to understand what might happen in the course of the contemplated litigation. So some at least of the issues involved in the decision to litigate are also involved in the decision to compromise a claim which would otherwise have to be litigated. there is no doubt that where a compromise is made in the course of litigation the test is whether the individual has capacity to conduct those proceedings ...
125. I prefer the conclusion that the appropriate test in this case is whether the client had capacity to start proceedings. That would include the question whether he would have capacity for the purposes of an offer of compromise. I would add that, in my judgment, where a client seeks damages for personal injury because he has suffered a brain injury, capacity is a question that ought in general routinely to be considered by those representing him.
126. The assessment of capacity to conduct proceedings depends to some extent on the nature of the proceedings in contemplation. I can only indicate some of the matters to be considered in accessing a client's capacity. The client would need to understand how the proceedings were to be funded. He would need to know about the chances of not succeeding and about the risk of an adverse order as to costs. He would need to have capacity to make the sort of decisions that are likely to arise in litigation. Capacity to conduct such proceedings would include the capacity to give proper instructions for and to approve the particulars of claim, and to approve a compromise. For a client to have capacity to approve a compromise, he would need insight into the compromise, an ability to instruct his solicitors to advise him on it, and an understanding of their advice and an ability to weigh their advice. So far as Mr Bailey was concerned, the receipt of damages could have a substantial impact upon him. He would need to know what he was giving up and what would happen if he refused to accept the offer of compromise."
My view was:
"177. I consider that the answer is provided by the terms of Part 21 itself and the several references in the rules to the purpose to be served by having a litigation friend, namely having someone able properly to conduct the proceedings on behalf of the patient. That is the capacity which the patient lacks. Thus the enquiry should be focused on the capacity to conduct the proceedings as Arden L.J. describes in paragraph 126. This it seems to me is totally consistent with Masterman-Lister.
178. If, as it seems to me, the relevant capacity is capacity to conduct proceedings, then the client must be able to understand all aspects of those proceedings and take an informed decision, with the help of such explanation as he is given, which bears upon them. It cannot be judged piecemeal. If he has the ability to understand what is meant by a 50/50 split of liability but lacks the capacity to understand the concept of damages which results from that division of liability, then he lacks true capacity to conduct the proceedings. all of this makes much more sense where one is considering the capacity to conduct the proceedings at the moment when they are instituted and thereafter during their continuance and it makes less sense to consider the matter in the run up to the litigation even if litigation is a possible outcome in default of a fully successful settlement of the claim."
The preliminary issue
"Without fettering the trial judge's ability to rephrase the preliminary issue, the following wording is proposed:-
"Did the compromise and consent judgment made/entered on 7th January 2003 require court approval?""
That was framed in very wide terms.
"1.9. The claimant asserts that the test to determine the issue of capacity is a broad test of whether the claimant has capacity to conduct the proceedings whereas the defendant adopts a narrow test of whether the claimant is able to understand the transaction in point which was the settlement of her case for £12,500 in the light of the litigation risks at the time."
"28. The defendant has from the outset asked his expert witnesses to focus on the actual decision and the actual explanation given. While the test for capacity relates to the actual litigation as whole rather than any one specific decision, again the court will not speculate in respect of past matters when it can know if the evidence is placed before it. The claimant was legally aided and had no funding worries or decision to take on that score. There is no other decision or difficulty which confronted the claimant during the course of the litigation in respect of which it is pleaded that she had difficulty or lacked capacity. The decision whether or not to compromise was clearly the most difficult decision she had to take in the course of her claim in 2002-3. If the claimant cannot prove lack of capacity in respect of that most difficult decision to compromise, there is no other identifiable decision to form grounds for finding any lack of general litigation capacity."
"1. The parties agree that the legal test in respect of capacity to litigate is issue-specific and relates to the capacity to conduct the proceedings.
2. In order to decide if the consent order made on 7th January 2003 might be set aside on the grounds of lack of capacity, the fundamental question is whether, in considering the issue of capacity historically rather than prospectively, should the court:
(a) confine itself to examining the decisions in fact required of the claimant in this action; or
(b) expand its considerations to include decisions which might have been required if the litigation had been conducted differently?
3. If 2(a) is correct:
(a) the practical issue in this case is agreed to be confined to whether the claimant had capacity to enter the compromise agreement on 7th January 2003. Is the presumption that the claimant had capacity rebutted on the evidence?
(b) If the answer to question 3(a) is in the negative, the compromise is unimpeachable (but go to question 5).
(c) If the answer to question 3(a) is yes, go to question 5.
4. If 2(b) is correct, the defendant concedes lack of capacity; and go to question 5.
5. The issue of the application of CPR 21.10(1) to the facts of this case is to be adjourned."
"18. In the light of the way the pleadings and early part of the hearing developed, the Court can now appreciate more easily why the preliminary issues 2 and 3 were formulated as they were. It was becoming clear that there was to be an Aristotelian battle of potentiality versus actuality. The Claimant was going to pray in aid of lack of capacity a list of potential problems on the hoof without [1] evidence that they had ever troubled the litigation or [2] ever having identified a detailed list of relevant aspects."
"Mr Justice Silber: Your point, as far as I see it, when you are looking at capacity, particularly if you are doing it historically, you are looking at all acts that have been done and saying, "Did they have capacity to do each of those acts?"
Mr Rowley: My Lord, yes, it is as simple as that. "
So it seems to me the judge had well in mind what the defendant's case was.
The judgment
"19. The case for the claimant is first that she needed to have capacity to conduct proceedings on her own behalf and second that according to Mr Willems, this entailed a capacity to deal with all matters, and to take all actual and potential decisions relating to the action, up to and including a decision whether or not to settle. So the claimant's case is that capacity is required of her not merely to make the decisions actually required of the claimant but also in respect of any decision which might have been required of her but which was not required of her.
20. Mr Rowley for the defendant stresses that in this case, capacity is considered retrospectively. He submits that means the court will not speculate where the real position can be discovered and that this should be the focus of the court's enquiry. In other words, the court must look at the actual way in which the litigation progressed and the matters which actually required the claimant's decision, which by agreement in this case on this application was the decision to settle on 7th January 2003."
"50. I therefore conclude in relation to issue 2, that when the court is considering if the consent order might be set aside on grounds of lack of capacity, the fundamental question for the court when considering this issue of capacity historically, is confined to examining the decisions in fact required of the claimant in the action as drafted."
"41. I should stress that in Bailey, the majority's comments were looking at matters prospectively as Arden LJ referred to "the proceedings in contemplation" and Ward LJ was dealing with "the capacity to conduct proceedings" at the moment when they are instituted. Another reason why Bailey is not of relevance is [that] the reason why the Court of Appeal disagreed with the judge is that he did not consider capacity as at November 2000 which was when the compromise was made "
"Otherwise it would mean that if a party had full capacity to agree all steps which were taken in a particular piece of litigation, those steps could be set aside just because there is another step which could conceivably have been taken but which was not taken and was beyond the capacity of the litigant. This would mean that the court would set aside for lack of capacity steps in the litigation which a person was capable of entering into. I do not consider that to be the law. "
"To my mind, those citations show that capacity is determined retrospectively by looking at the actual proceedings which, in the present case, were for general damages with the limited special damages set out in the schedule of loss accompanying the particulars of claim "
Discussion
"courts should always, as a matter of practice, at the first convenient opportunity, investigate the question of capacity whenever there is any reason to suspect that it may be absent (e.g. significant head injury) "
The judgments are instructive for their clarification of how that question of capacity should be decided. Of importance was the "issue-specific nature of the test" and "the requirement to consider the question of capacity in relation to a particular transaction (its nature and complexity) in respect of which decisions as to capacity fall to be made" Kennedy L.J. at [27]. To like effect is the judgment of Chadwick L.J. at, for example [58], where he agrees that "the mental capacity required by the law is capacity in relation to the transaction which is to be effected." That is the essential principle established by that case. One should not, however, overlook how the facts were decided. The particular issue was whether the plaintiff had been a patient at any time between the time of his accident on 8th September 1980 and the date of the hearing before Wright J. in 2002. The criticism that the judge failed to apply the proper principles to the facts was rejected. Wright J.'s conclusions after examining the medical evidence and the evidence of the claimant's day to day behaviour was this:
"The evidence of the last 20 years enables me to arrive with confidence at certain conclusions. "
It is, therefore, quite obvious that the court did not focus on any particular point in time but looked at the whole picture in order to decide whether or not the claimant's disabilities rendered him incapable of managing his property and affairs.
" Obviously, where the transaction is self-contained and clearly separate from other matters, it is easy to determine the issue to which capacity should be related. Examples would include the making of a gift or the making of a will. It may not be so easy, however, to determine the issue to which capacity should be related where the transaction is multi-faceted, and a choice exists as to whether to break the transaction down into its component parts, to which capacity is related seriatim, or to treat the transaction as a single indivisible whole. A will may consist of a series of gifts but on the authorities the question of capacity is assessed in relation to the will as a whole. A person making a will is not making a series of separate decisions as to gifts but is making a decision as to the nature and effect of the claims of all the persons who might have claims upon him. Thus the gifts are interdependent and connected. Likewise this court in the Masterman-Lister case considered that litigation down to the administration of any award of damages was to be treated as a single transaction and not as a series of individual steps. Kennedy LJ regarded this conclusion as one of common sense (para. 27).
123. It seems to me that the right approach must be to ask as a matter of common sense whether the individual steps formed part of a larger sequence of events which should be seen as one, or whether they were in fact self-contained steps which were not connected with each other.
124. There are a number of reasons why, in my judgment, the relevant transaction for the purposes of a compromise made at a time when legal proceedings are in contemplation should be treated in the same way as a compromise made in the course of those proceedings."
Since the compromise is not a self-contained transaction but inseparably part and parcel of the proceedings as a whole, the question is not the narrow one of whether she had capacity to enter into that compromise but the broad one whether she had the capacity to conduct those proceedings.
"75. For the purposes of RSC 80 and, now, CPR Pt 21 - the test to be applied, as it seems to me, is whether the party to legal proceedings is capable of understanding, with the assistance of such proper explanation from legal advisers and experts in other disciplines as the case may require, the issues on which his consent or decision is likely to be necessary in the course of those proceedings.
76. That approach seems to me consistent with the approach adopted by this Court in Kirby v Leather [1965] 2 QB 367 , In upholding the trial judge's decision that the plaintiff was of unsound mind so as to prevent the relevant period of limitation from running against him Lord Denning MR said at p. 384:
"After a time he was to some extent able to appreciate (from being told by others) something of what had happened to him, and indeed to his scooter. But he could not concentrate on it for any length of time: not long enough to be able to appreciate the nature and extent of any claim that he might have. ..."
"
In Bailey Arden L.J. said, again with emphasis added by me:
"112. The Masterman-Lister case establishes a number of important propositions. In particular it establishes that for the purposes of the definition of "patient" in the CPR, the "property and affairs" against which the person's capacity has to be assessed is the specific transaction of commencing the litigation in question. Moreover, when that litigation is a claim for personal injuries of a substantial amount, the capacity in question is limited to capacity to make decisions likely to be necessary in the course of the litigation (per Chadwick LJ at para. 75).
126. The assessment of capacity to conduct proceedings depends to some extent on the nature of the proceedings in contemplation. I can only indicate some of the matters to be considered in accessing a client's capacity. The client would need to understand how the proceedings were to be funded. He would need to know about the chances of not succeeding and about the risk of an adverse order as to costs. He would need to have capacity to make the sort of decisions that are likely to arise in litigation. Capacity to conduct such proceedings would include the capacity to give proper instructions for and to approve the particulars of claim, and to approve a compromise. For a client to have capacity to approve a compromise, he would need insight into the compromise, an ability to instruct his solicitors to advise him on it, and an understanding of their advice and an ability to weigh their advice. So far as Mr Bailey was concerned, the receipt of damages could have a substantial impact upon him. He would need to know what he was giving up and what would happen if he refused to accept the offer of compromise."
Lord Justice Lewison:
Sir Mark Potter: