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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Reaney v University Hospital of North Staffordshire NHS Trust & Anor [2014] EWHC 3016 (QB) (31 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/3016.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3016 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CHRISTINE REANEY |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL OF NORTH STAFFORDSHIRE NHS TRUST (1) and MID STAFFORDSHIRE NHS FOUNDATION TRUST (2) |
Defendants |
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Charles Feeny (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 16-18 and 22 July 2014
Further written submissions on damages: 22 September – 6 and 30 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
SUPPLEMENTAL JUDGMENT
Mr Justice Foskett:
Introduction
Multiplier
"In other cases, the medical evidence may state that the Claimant is likely to live for a stated number of years. This is often then treated as requiring payment to be made for a fixed period equal to the stated life expectancy and using Table 28 to ascertain the value of the multiplier. In general, this is likely to give a multiplier which is too high since this approach does not allow for the distribution of deaths around the expected length of life. For a group of similarly impaired lives of the same age, some will die before the average life expectancy and some after; allowing for the spread of death results in a lower multiplier than assuming payment for a term certain equal to the life expectancy."
"In cases where pecuniary loss is to be valued for a fixed period, the multipliers in Table 28 may be used. These make no allowance for mortality or any other contingency, but assumed that regular frequent payments (eg. weekly or monthly) will continue throughout the period."
"… Table 1 sets out reasonable estimates of the future mortality likely to be experienced by average members of the male population. It is a statistical expectation of life figure and as such cannot tell how long any particular person will live. Table 28 is a table to be used where pecuniary loss is to be valued for a fixed period. It makes no allowance for mortality or other contingency. Avoiding a double discount for mortality was the principle laid down by the Court of Appeal in Royal Victoria Infirmary v B [2002] Lloyds LR (Med) 282. In my judgment the learned judge in Crofts v Murton rightly said that the Royal Victoria principle applied only where, on the medical evidence, the court can determine exactly how long an individual in a particular case can be expected to live. In that case, as in the present claim, the medical evidence did not decide the overall expectation of life, how long the claimant would live. Rather it determined by how much his pre-morbid statistical life expectancy had been shortened. There is no double-counting of mortality by use of Table 1."
"100. The paediatric neurologists in this case have assessed the claimant's life expectancy by reference to his mortality risks as a whole, not just those risks associated with his cerebral palsy. This is not one of those cases (such as Tinsley, Crofts or Smith) where the medical evidence relates only to the reduction in life expectancy caused by a number of identified factors specifically relating to the claimant and the injury which is the subject of the claim. The predicted life expectancy which I have determined is a specific finding relating to the individual life expectancy of this claimant.
101. I accept that the decision in B did not involve an acceptance of Ogden Table 28 (or its forerunner, Table 38), in preference to the application of the Paragraph 20 methodology and the use of Ogden Table 1 or 2. Paragraph 20 had not been published at the time that B was decided and the defendant in B was not advocating the use of a different actuarial Table as a basis for calculating the appropriate multiplier. Instead, the defendant proposed a further deduction from the multiplier calculated by reference to Table 38 on the basis of medical statistical evidence to the effect that there was a greater chance that B would die earlier than her predicted life span than of her living longer than predicted. The Court of Appeal rejected that proposal.
102. The decision in B was based on the principle … that, where a claimant's life expectancy has been predicted (having been agreed between the parties or determined by the court), there is no room for any discount on the ground that the prediction might be wrong.
103. I have heard no statistical evidence explaining the Paragraph 20 methodology. Consequently, I do not understand the logic of assuming a spread of two years around the predicted life expectancy of 28 years, in preference to a spread of – say – four, six or eight years. But, whatever the logic may be, it is clear that the Paragraph 20 methodology is intended to make allowance for the fact that the predicted life expectancy of 28 years might be wrong. Moreover, it seems to me that underlying the methodology must be the assumption that the claimant has a greater chance of dying before the expiration of his predicted 28 years than of surviving for longer than 28 years. If that were not the case, the multiplier produced by using Table 1 would be greater than that derived from the application of Table 28. If I am right about that, the argument being mounted by the defendant in this case is, in reality, the same as that advanced unsuccessfully in B.
104. In any event, there can be no doubt that the effect of using Table 1 in the manner suggested by Paragraph 20 is to produce a discount (albeit a relatively modest discount) from the multiplier based on the full life expectancy as predicted. That being so, the application of Table 1 in accordance with the Paragraph 20 methodology in a case such as this would offend against the principle that there should be no discount from the multiplier calculated by reference to a claimant's predicted life expectancy.
105. In those circumstances I shall calculate the relevant multipliers in accordance with Ogden Table 28 …."
Future care claim
(i) first six months
(ii) longer term claim
Transport
Physiotherapy
Orthotics
Holidays
Other matters
Conclusion
Head of damage | Agreed figure | Comments/explanation |
General damages |
£115,000 |
Agreed |
Interest at 2% pa from date of service (16 October 2012) 4.00% to 18 October 2014 |
£4,600 |
Agreed |
General damages including interest |
£119,600 |
Agreed |
Past gratuitous care |
£25,222 |
Agreed |
Contributions to LA care |
£36,281.44 |
Agreed |
Past Chiropody costs |
£288 |
Agreed |
Past equipment and aids |
£1481 |
Agreed |
Past travel |
£2,215 |
Agreed |
Total past losses |
£65,487.44 |
Agreed |
Interest at 1.2% |
£785.85 |
Agreed |
Total past losses including interest |
£66,273.29 |
Agreed |
Future losses |
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Future care |
£2,194,883.29 |
Agreed- Allowing for £88,000 for first 6 months (as per Supplemental Judgment) Agreed - subject to a Peters' undertaking as offered in the Schedule of Loss - terms to be agreed between the parties |
Future case management |
£99,314.20 |
Agreed |
Accommodation |
£256,439.27 |
Agreed- The parties agreed a compromise on their accommodation figures to allow for some accommodation costs being incurred in advance of the 6 month period for purchase and move into new home – essentially allowing for a multiplier of 9.19 on the accommodation claim |
Transport costs |
£53,880 |
Agreed |
Equipment |
£32,500 |
Agreed – the parties took a broad brush approach on need for replacement of items of equipment and replacement costs of equipment and the fact that the cost of the Acquanova bath had been allowed for more than once in error by Claimant's counsel. |
OT |
£3540 |
Agreed |
Physiotherapy |
£22,934.40 |
Agreed |
Orthotics |
£24,072 |
Agreed |
Counselling |
£500 |
Agreed |
Manual handling |
£2,584.40 |
Agreed |
Incontinence and associated |
£5,172.24 |
Agreed |
Holidays |
£13,121.60 |
Agreed |
Total Future Losses |
£2,708,941.40 |
Agreed total |
Total Losses, General damages and interest |
£2,894,814.69 |
Agreed total |