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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Nield & Anor v Loveday & Anor [2011] EWHC 2324 (Admin) (13 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/2324.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2324 (Admin), [2012] ACD 2, (2012) 123 BMLR 132, [2011] 4 Costs LO 470 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KEITH
____________________
(1) EDWARD NIELD | ||
(2) ACROMAS INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED | Claimants | |
v | ||
(1) GRAHAM JEFFREY LOVEDAY | ||
(2) SUSAN LOVEDAY | Defendants |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R CRAVEN (instructed by T Llewellyn Jones) appeared on behalf of the First Defendant
MR D HARRIS (instructed by Cameron, Jones, Hussell & Howe) appeared on behalf of the Second Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"The following documents must be verified by a statement of truth -
(a) a statement of case;…
(c) a witness statement…"
"… a statement of truth is a statement that –
(a) the party putting forward the document;
(b) in the case of a witness statement, the maker of the witness statement
believes the facts stated in the document are true."
"Proceedings for contempt of court may be brought against a person if he makes, or causes to be made, a false statement in a document verified by a statement of truth without an honest belief in its truth."
"I believe that the facts stated in this [sic] Particulars of Claim are true."
The injuries which he claimed to have sustained included "a [soft] tissue injury to his neck and lower back". As a result, he was said to be "often reliant on a wheelchair for travel outside the home as he is unable to walk more than a very short distance". The particulars of claim said that his damages were likely to exceed £50,000.
A schedule of financial loss was attached to the particulars of claim. It was verified by a statement of truth signed by Mr Loveday on 14 January 2009 in these terms:
"I believe that the facts stated in this Schedule of Loss and Damage are true."
"I believe that the facts stated in this Witness Statement are true."
"If I never have to leave and go anywhere, then that would be much better. It is when I have to move or leave to go places that things become much, much worse. I would just like to stay in my house, and never have to go outside."
"I believe that the facts stated in this Statement are true."
"When she verified her witness statement dated the 7th August 2009, she knew that her description of the extent of [Mr Loveday's] disability was false. In particular –
(i) it was not true that [Mr Loveday] required a wheelchair to mobilise;
(ii) the description of the level of care provided by [Mrs Loveday] and her son to [Mr Loveday] was no longer true;
(iii) the description of [Mr Loveday] as virtually housebound and reclusive was no longer true;
(iv) the description of [Mr Loveday's] phobic reaction to travel by car was no longer true; (v) the description of [Mr Loveday's] inability to perform day-to-day activities was no longer true."
"Lumbago. Bent over and back pain. Not lifting anything at the time."
Dr Goodwin gave a little more detail of that in his letter to the orthopaedic specialist of 21 August 2006:
"Last 3 weeks he simply bent over to pick something up from the floor and had intense low back pain such that [he] can barely walk."
"The airline were very good, and immediately we arrived at the airport I was put in a wheelchair and taken straight through. I was the first on the plane and the last off so I did not have to get involved in being in the middle of crowds."
"I advised [Mrs Loveday] that I have explained to [the insurers] that it is very different. From my understanding, she was able to escort her husband a short distance to the local airport under her own care and that of two other responsible adults. That is something quite different than trying to manoeuvre a wheelchair and her husband on her own all the way to London and through London to the appointment. [Mrs Loveday] confirmed that this was precisely the case."
"… I agreed that provided he had disabled and priority boarding at Cardiff Airport, and appropriate wheelchair taxis/coach transport of the hotel at the other end, that a month's holiday in the sun at Lake Garda would be a good idea, both mentally, physically for him, and his long-suffering wife."
"Once you are happy with the statement, please can you initial at the bottom of each page and sign the statement of truth at the end to confirm that you have an honest belief in the contents of your statement. I am obliged to advise that if this proves to be a false declaration, your credibility as a witness could be affected. Your claim could be reduced or dismissed altogether, and you may also be found to be in contempt of court which is punishable by a fine or imprisonment."
"So that leaves the question about the statement on the 7th August. Was he not concentrating sufficiently to make it clear during the interview with the solicitor that some of the physical symptoms he described related to the time after the time of the accident and no longer by the summer of 2009 obtained? Was it true that when the draft statement arrived in the post he did not bother to read it? I have to say that having listened carefully to his story for two hours it seemed to me that that was just the sort of thing this man would have done - he just did not want to know. Each solicitors' communication seemed to remind him of his predicament. He told me he was not interested in the money. All he wanted to do was to get back to work. Any letter arriving from his solicitors was, yet again, another reminder of how he felt this accident had destroyed him and his future."
The insurers' solicitors subsequently pointed out to Dr Reeves that two things had happened since his report. First, Mr Loveday had admitted that the annotations on his statement were his. Secondly, since Mr Loveday had been blaming his solicitors for misunderstanding his instructions, the insurers applied for additional disclosure on the basis that legal professional privilege had been waived by him. On 13 June 2011 Collins J ordered Mr and Mrs Loveday to cause Shoosmiths to disclose to the insurers their file on Mr Loveday's claim. That had revealed the first draft of the witness statement with 43 of the 151 paragraphs apparently annotated by Mr Loveday.
(i) that when he went out, he had to use a wheelchair if he was going any distance;
(ii) that he relied fully on his wife to help him to get both indoors and outside;
(iii) that the pain was such that he could walk virtually no distance at all, and that he struggled with any stairs or steps;
(iv) that his wife had to help him with the stairs at home, which meant that she had to take him up to bed every night;
(v) that his wife had to help him up and down the steps leading to his front door;
(vi) that he had developed a fear of travelling which was "absolutely crippling", that the prospect of him having to go in a car filled him with such dread that he had become violently ill, that he would do anything to avoid going out, particularly in the car, and that he just wanted "to be locked up safe at home";
(vii) that he had been unable to go caravanning or to work on cars and rebuild engines since his accident;
(viii) that his wife had become his full-time carer, and she would not leave him at home, not even to go to the supermarket;
(ix) that he would not accompany his wife to the shops, even though Motability scooters were available at the local shopping centre; and
(x) that he and his wife had travelled to Lake Garda by air, that as soon as they had arrived at the airport he had been put in a wheelchair and taken straight through, and that he had been first on the plane and the last off it.
(3.40 pm)
(3.48 pm)
(3.52 pm)
(3.56 pm)
"Without reservation, I can vouch for her good character. She is genuine, thoughtful and considerate, and I consider it appropriate to testify on behalf ... "
"Those who make false claims, if caught, such false claims, if caught, should expect to go to prison. There is no other way to underline the gravity of the conduct, there is no other way to deter those who may be tempted to make such claims, and there is no other way to improve the administration of justice."