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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Campbell & Anor v. Imray & Ors [2003] ScotCS 122 (25 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/122.html Cite as: [2003] ScotCS 122 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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A2452/99
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OPINION OF LORD EMSLIE in the cause KARIN O'DONNELL CAMPBELL or PEARSON (AP) Pursuer; against JAMES PATRICK IMRAY and OTHERS Defenders:
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Pursuer: G M Henderson; Lindsays, W.S.
Defenders: Shand; Bishops
25 April 2003
Introduction
(1) Were the defenders professionally negligent in not raising proceedings on the pursuer's behalf, either timeously within the triennium, or later by virtue of section 19A of the 1973 Act?
(2) Did any such negligence on the defenders' part cause the pursuer to lose a worthwhile right of action against the Health Board? and
The alleged negligence of the defenders
"As we only have until 26 December next to decide whether or not to proceed with your claim before it becomes time barred, we would be grateful to hear from you as quickly as possible.
In order that there is no doubt in this matter what we would advise is that if we have not heard from you within the next 10 days, either by telephone or by appointment, then we shall assume that you do not intend taking the matter further and we shall then close our file.
We look forward to hearing from you."
"We thank you for your letter of 12 December 1994 which was not received in our office until 27 January 1995. We note what you write in your letter but we would refer you to our recent correspondence. Despite our letter you unfortunately did not return to us your request a seek a review (sic) of the Legal Aid Board's decision to refuse legal aid. You will also note that we wrote to you confirming that unless we heard from you in good time prior to 26 December 1994 your claim would be time barred and that if you wished to proceed with any action we would have to hear from you before then. We did not do so and we therefore assumed that you did not wish to take matters further. On that basis we closed our file.
The position therefore is that your claim remains time barred and we feel that you would have great difficulty in taking matters further. What we mean by time barred is that even if you were in a position to proceed with Court action now, as you have not done so within three years of the date of the accident then those who you sue can put this forward as a valid defence. Moreover, you still do not have the benefit of legal aid.
If you would wish to discuss matters further, then please do not hesitate to arrange an appointment with writer, but we trust that you will appreciate the difficulties that are now upon you with regard to pursuing this claim."
According to the pursuer, she took this letter as final confirmation that there was "no route out" and that the claim could no longer proceed. At the time, she said, she could control her back condition with painkillers, and so thought no more about it. She made no attempt to contact the defenders pursuant to the invitation in the concluding paragraph of their letter, and I believe that the next communication to be received by the defenders from the pursuer or her agents was the letter enclosing a mandate for the transfer of the file in August 1997.
Contributory negligence
Legal aid
Extent of the defenders' liability: general principles
"The negligent act consists of the agent's neglect to take the peremptory step timeously. The loss consists of the inability to pursue the claim thereafter. The causal link between the act and the loss presents little problem in such a case. However, when it comes to a closer consideration of the loss itself, it must be clearly recognised that the solicitor's negligence has not caused the would-be litigant to lose his claim against the third party; it has caused him to lose only the right to advance that claim in a court of law. Accordingly, in assessing the monetary value of what has been lost, the Court has to ask two questions: (1) Did the right to advance the claim have any tangible value at all at the time when it was lost? (2) If it did, how can that value be assessed? Obviously, if the right to advance the claim had no value at all at the time of the negligent act, then the would-be litigant would not be entitled to an award against the negligent solicitor: having lost nothing he would not be entitled to compensation for any loss. If, however, the right to advance the claim did have a tangible value, then the Court would have to assess that value on the basis of the material placed in evidence before the Court. Factors that may be taken into account in arriving at the monetary value of the loss may well include any factor that would have been directly relevant to the assessment of the value of the original claim - now lost - against the third party, the hypothetical prospects of success in the litigation in which that claim was to be pursued, and the lost possibilities of a compromise settlement with the third party in the now lost litigation. ....
.... If it can be shown that at the time when it was lost the claim had a value, then there is both injuria and damnum and the only remaining issue is the potentially difficult one of assessing what is the true measure of the loss. .... There may be cases in which the litigant, suing his negligent solicitor, can demonstrate that the claim against the original defender would have been bound to succeed; in that event the measure of his claim against the solicitor may be close to or identical to the measure of his lost claim against the original wrongdoer. Equally, there may be cases in which the prospects of success in the original claim were so remote that the Court could confidently conclude that the claim in the litigation was worthless and that the loss of the right to pursue it was a nugatory loss. In between there may be a whole spectrum of possibilities. It may be that in a case such as the present the Court could be readily persuaded to have regard to the everyday fact that legal disputes are compromised at some stage (often at the last minute) between their initiation and their determination by the Court. There are elaborate and frequently used procedures for compromising claims in whole or in part. It follows, therefore, that the pursuer in the present case is right to claim damages for what he offers to prove he has lost, namely the value of the lost right to proceed with his appeal in the original litigation. The pursuer will fail unless it is established that the lost right had an ascertainable, measurable, non-negligible value; but he is under no obligation, as a precondition of obtaining an award against the present defenders, to show that he would probably have succeeded in the original litigation."
These principles have been followed and applied in subsequent cases including Smith v Lindsay & Kirk (No.2) 2002 SLT 335.
`The issue of time-bar
Merits of the pursuer's claim against the Health Board
"Obviously, if the right to advance the claim had no value at all at the time of the negligent act, then the would-be litigant would not be entitled to an award against the negligent solicitor: having lost nothing, he would not be entitled to compensation for any loss".
On the evidence before me, I am satisfied that that is the very situation which pertains here.
Conclusion on liability
Quantification of the pursuer's claim: general
Pearson and, second, the pursuer's mother Mrs Sadie Pearson were led as witnesses. While I could accept some of what they said about the pursuer's condition at different times, and about the basic domestic assistance which they and others provided, I formed an adverse view of their credibility and reliability in two main areas. These were (i) their apparent unwillingness to acknowledge the pursuer's freedom from significant back pain during her first two pregnancies and her subsequent extended return to work; and (ii) the unqualified terms in which they purported to recollect that from 1991 onwards the pursuer's back had never got better, and had indeed gradually deteriorated to the point where a fusion operation was undertaken in 1998. The trouble with such testimony was that it was at variance with much of the independent evidence bearing on this aspect of the case, notably the GP records, the pursuer's employment records and the expert orthopaedic evidence of Mr Klas Buring and Mr Michael McMaster. Even the pursuer's own evidence was in important respects contradictory of what her husband and mother said.
Solatium
Loss of earnings
Services and outlays
Conclusion on quantum
Decision