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High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Queen's Bench Division Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Queen's Bench Division Decisions >> X v. Y [2000] NIQB 5 (14th April, 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NIHC/QB/2000/5.html Cite as: [2000] NIQB 5 |
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1. The
claim arises out of an incident which occurred on 4 August 1997 when the
defendant, who was a 59 year old Chief Inspector in the Royal Ulster
Constabulary and a stranger to the minor plaintiff, carried out an indecent
assault on the minor plaintiff, then aged 12, on a beach at Newtownabbey by
kissing her, inserting his tongue into her mouth and by attempting to put her
hand inside his swimming trunks; he asked the minor plaintiff to return the
next day for a picnic, but she did not go, having informed her parents who in
turn reported the matter to the police.
2. On
16 April 1999 the defendant was convicted at Newtownabbey
Magistrates' Court, after a three day hearing, of indecent assault on the
plaintiff and was fined £750; he did not appeal against his conviction or
sentence. He has since resigned from the police force.
3. The
defendant delivered a defence denying liability in this action. On
27 September 1999 Master Kennedy, on an application made on behalf of
the minor plaintiff, entered judgment against the defendant pursuant to Order
14(1) of the Rules of the Supreme Court (Northern Ireland) 1980, leaving
the issue of damages to be assessed by this court. The defendant did not
appeal against the order made by Master Kennedy.
4. The
minor plaintiff claims damages for the indecent assaults on her and aggravated
damages by reason of the trauma to which she was subjected by reason of the
fact that the defendant pleaded not guilty to the charge. As a result, she
herself had to give evidence at the Magistrates' Court; there was a long delay
between the date of the incident and the actual hearing before that court,
which did not help matters.
5. The
court had the benefit of two reports from Dr Alice Swann dated
15 December 1997 and 5 November 1999, which were received in evidence
by the court. The court also had the benefit of oral evidence from Dr Swann.
The minor plaintiff's mother also gave evidence. The minor plaintiff, although
present in the court building, did not give evidence before this court.
6. It
is clear that the minor plaintiff found the incident very distressing but this
was as nothing compared to the ordeal which she had to undergo by reason of the
fact that the defendant pleaded not guilty. When the matter eventually came on
for hearing it was put to the minor plaintiff by the defendant's counsel, on
his instructions, that she was lying and that it was she who had initiated the
sexual contact with him and that this was due to "the way she had been brought
up". The criminal trial lasted for three days. The minor plaintiff gave
evidence on the first day of the hearing for a period of four hours, during
which she broke down and wept; she did not have to attend court on the second
or third day. After the case was over she made a rapid recovery due to her own
resilience and the help given to her by her parents and one of the school
teachers who had counselled her from the outset. Although her name had not
been published in the local newspapers, this was a high profile case as it
involved a police officer and unfortunately her identity became well known in
the neighbourhood, which resulted on occasions in inappropriate comments being
made to her by other children. Fortunately Dr Swann does not anticipate
any long term sequelae of significance.
7. I
award the minor plaintiff the sum of £5,500 for general damages in respect
of the incident itself.
8. While
there is little authority on the point, I consider that this is an appropriate
case in which to award a sum by way of aggravated damages by reason of the
ordeal to which the defendant subjected the minor plaintiff by her having to
give evidence and to be cross-examined during the course of the criminal trial.
In
Re
S
,
Central London County Court, 12 October 1994, reported in Kemp & Kemp
on the Quantum of Damages volume 2 as paragraph C4-101/1 which was a case of
sexual abuse of a young boy by the headmaster of his school, Judge Cotran
referred to a number of factors which had been raised by counsel for the
plaintiff in support of his claim for aggravated damages, including "the not
guilty pleas entered by the defendant at his trial on indictment, the causing
of the plaintiff to give evidence at the trial, the nature of the
cross-examination of the plaintiff when he gave evidence at the trial of the
first defendant with the publicity attendant on the trial"; he went on to
state that without enumerating those factors and other factors in relation to
aggravated damages, he had no doubt that the case was one which required an
award of aggravated damages which he took into account in the overall figure
for general damages which he awarded.
9. In
the present case, having regard to the order made by Master Kennedy pursuant to
Order 14, the minor plaintiff was not subjected to a further ordeal in the
course of this civil trial by having again to give evidence. She was however,
as already mentioned, subjected to a considerable ordeal by having to give
evidence and be cross-examined at the criminal trial.
10.
What
is the correct figure to award for aggravated damages? The award of aggravated
damages is not intended to punish the defendant but to reflect the real ordeal
to which the plaintiff was subjected by reason of the defendant's plea of "not
guilty". Lord Woolf in
Thompson
v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis
stated at page 775H,
11. I
consider on the facts of the present case that the award of aggravated damages
should exceed the award for general damages, which in the present case is the
fairly modest figure of £5,500. By way of aggravated damages I award the
minor plaintiff an additional sum of £10,000, giving a total award of
£15,500. I award interest at the rate of 2% per annum on the sum of
£15,500 from the date of the service of the writ of summons until the date
of trial.