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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Law Commission >> Scottish Law Commission (Reports) >> Report on Damages for Psychiatric Injury [2004] SLC 196 (Report) (01 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/other/SLC/Report/2004/196.html Cite as: [2004] SLC 196 (Report) |
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Report on a reference under section 3(1)(e) of the Law Commissions Act 1965Laid before the Scottish Parliament by the Scottish Ministers
August 2004
SE/2004/129
EDINBURGH: The Stationery Office
£xx.xx
The Scottish Law Commission was set up by section 2 of the Law Commissions Act 1965[1] for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law of Scotland. The Commissioners are:
The Honourable Lord Eassie, Chairman
Professor Gerard Maher, QC
Professor Kenneth G C Reid
Professor Joseph M Thomson
Mr Colin J Tyre, QC.
The Chief Executive of the Commission is Miss Jane L McLeod. Its offices are at 140 Causewayside, Edinburgh EH9 1PR.
Tel: 0131 668 2131
Fax: 0131 662 4900
E-mail: [email protected]
Or via our website at www.scotlawcom.gov.uk - select "Contact"
NOTES
SCOTTISH LAW COMMISSION
Report on a reference under section 3(1)(e) of the Law Commissions Act 1965
Report on Damages for Psychiatric Injury
To: Ms Cathy Jamieson MSP, Minister for Justice
We have the honour to submit to the Scottish Ministers our Report on Damages for Psychiatric Injury
(Signed) RONALD D MACKAY, Chairman
GERARD MAHER
KENNETH G C REID
JOSEPH M THOMSON
COLIN TYRE
Miss Jane L McLeod, Chief Executive
8 July 2004
Contents
Paragraph | |
Part 1 Introduction |
|
Remit |
1.1 |
Scope of the Report | 1.2 |
Terminology | 1.7 |
Our recommendations in outline | 1.9 |
Plan of the Report | 1.13 |
Advisory Group | 1.14 |
Legislative competence | 1.15 |
Part 2 The Existing Law and its Defects |
|
Introduction |
2.1 |
Need for psychiatric injury or disorder | 2.2 |
Need for a shock | 2.4 |
Primary and secondary victims | 2.6 |
Need for foreseeability | 2.14 |
Rescuers | 2.17 |
Ordinary fortitude | 2.19 |
Conditions for damages to be due to secondary victims | 2.21 |
Primary victim responsible for own injuries | 2.25 |
Part 3 Recommendations for Reform |
|
Introduction |
3.1 |
A new statutory scheme | 3.3 |
Remoteness of damages | 3.5 |
Mental harm: intentional and unintentional | 3.7 |
Relationship of new scheme to rules of delict | |
(a) Common law rules | 3.11 |
(b) Statutory rules | 3.13 |
General restrictions on the new statutory obligation to | |
make reparation | 3.18 |
(a) Vicissitudes of life | 3.22 |
(b) Bereavements and other losses | 3.27 |
Further restrictions where mental harm is caused unintentionally | |
(a) Harm amounts to a mental disorder | 3.31 |
(b) Foreseeability | 3.32 |
Victim not directly involved in the incident | |
(a) General | 3.45 |
(b) Rescuers | 3.52 |
(c) Persons in a close relationship | 3.54 |
(d) Illustrative examples | 3.56 |
Liability where immediate victim is responsible for own injuries | 3.61 |
Part 4 List of Recommendations |
Part 4 |
APPENDIX A | |
Draft Reparation for Mental Harm (Scotland) Bill with Explanatory Notes |
Appendix A |
APPENDIX B | |
List of those submitting written comments on Discussion Paper No 120 |
Appendix B |
APPENDIX C | |
Membership of the Advisory Group | Appendix C |
Remit
"To examine the law of Scotland relating to psychiatric injury caused by another person and to make recommendations as to possible changes in the law."
We published Discussion Paper No 120 Damages for Psychiatric Injury ("the Discussion Paper") in August 2002 which contained a detailed examination of the law in the United Kingdom, a summary of the position in many other jurisdictions and our proposals for reform. The Discussion Paper was widely distributed and we are grateful to those who submitted comments on our proposals.[3]
Scope of the Report
• Victims are divided into two categories, primary victims and secondary victims. Roughly speaking, primary victims are those directly involved in the accident or incident, while secondary victims are those who see or learn of others being killed or injured. The two categories have different rules for compensation, yet the boundary between them is unclear.[12]
• While, in general, liability arises only if the injury to the victim is reasonably foreseeable by the wrongdoer, a primary victim may recover for an unforeseeable psychiatric injury if some physical injury was foreseeable but did not occur.[13]
• For secondary victims at least, compensation is awarded only if they have suffered a shock – the sudden appreciation by sight or sound of a horrifying event.[14]
• Secondary victims can recover only if they meet the so-called Alcock criteria:[15]
- There must be a close tie of love and affection between the secondary victim and the injured person;
- The secondary victim must have been present at the accident or at its immediate aftermath; and
- The secondary victim's psychiatric injury must have been caused by direct perception (ie through his or her own unaided senses) of the accident or its immediate aftermath.
• Secondary victims can recover only if their psychiatric injuries were foreseeable in a person of "ordinary fortitude"[16] – a legal construct that is difficult to evaluate.
• Rescuers are treated as primary rather than secondary victims in that they do not have to meet the Alcock criteria. However, they may well have to have feared for their own safety.[17]
Terminology
Our recommendations in outline
(i) There would be no liability for mental harm, whether caused intentionally or unintentionally, if a person could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking damages. People would be expected to put up with mental harm resulting from bereavements and the normal stresses or vicissitudes of life or the particular life that they lead.
(ii) The wrongdoer would be liable for unintentionally caused mental harm only if it constituted a medically recognised mental disorder and was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the wrongdoer's act or omission.
(iii) A person who suffers unintended mental harm as a consequence of witnessing or learning of an incident (in which he or she was not directly involved) would not be entitled to damages unless he or she had a close relationship with another person killed, injured or imperilled in the incident or was acting as a rescuer in relation to the incident. These requirements would be in addition to those in (ii) above.
(i) Abolition of the requirement that in certain types of action the mental harm has to be induced by shock,[23] a sudden assault on the senses.
(ii) Replacement of the current classification of pursuers as such into either primary victims or secondary victims (which gives rise to difficulties at present) with new rules. People who suffer mental harm as a consequence of witnessing or learning of an incident in which others are killed, injured or imperilled (but in which they themselves were not directly involved) will have to meet certain additional criteria (see (iv) below) before being entitled to damages.
(iii) Replacement of the current rule that secondary but not primary victims are expected to be of ordinary fortitude, by a rule that all victims are expected to endure (without claiming damages) mental harm resulting from bereavements and the normal stresses or vicissitudes of life or the particular life that they lead.
(iv) Replacement of the so-called Alcock criteria (whereby a person who suffers mental harm as a consequence of witnessing or learning of an incident can recover damages for that harm only if he or she: had a close tie of love and affection with the person injured or killed in the incident, was sufficiently close in time and space to the incident or its immediate aftermath, and perceived the incident or its immediate aftermath directly with unaided senses) by a rule that such a person has to have had a close relationship with the dead or injured person. This new requirement would not apply to rescuers.
(v) Abolition of the rule in the case of Page v Smith.[24] There will then be no liability for unintentionally inflicted mental harm which was not a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the wrongdoer's actions, unless (as under the existing law) the mental harm resulted from another type of harm for which there is delictual liability (eg a physical injury) and the mental harm was not too remote.
Plan of the Report
Advisory Group
Legislative competence
Introduction
Need for psychiatric injury or disorder
"It is not enough for a person to say that he received a shock or a fright from an explosion which caused normal emotional reaction with no lasting effect, and to claim on account of this 'shock' alone. He can only claim damages if he proves that he suffered some physical, mental or nervous injury."
In the same case Lord Grieve quoted[32] Lord Bridge's dictum in McLoughlin v O'Brian:[33]
"The common law gives no damages for the emotional distress which any normal person experiences when someone he loves is killed or injured…So, the first hurdle which a plaintiff claiming damages of the kind in question must surmount is to establish that he is suffering, not merely grief, distress or any other normal emotion, but a positive psychiatric illness."
and Lord Grieve then went on to say that: [34]
"While it is well established that damages can be recovered on the ground of nervous shock, as well as the ground of actual physical injury, there must be some evidence that the 'nervous shock' complained of is a condition which can reasonably be described as an illness."
"Many, if not all, employees are liable to suffer those emotions [frustration and embarrassment], and others mentioned in the present case such as stress, anxiety, loss of confidence and low mood. To suffer such emotions from time to time, not least because of problems at work, is a normal part of human existence. It is only if they are liable to be suffered to such a pathological degree as to constitute a psychiatric disorder that a duty of care to protect against them can arise…"
The law on this point appears to us satisfactory, although there will be cases in which drawing the line between a recognised psychiatric injury or disorder and mere stress or anxiety may not be easy.
Need for a shock
Primary and secondary victims
Need for foreseeability
Rescuers
Ordinary fortitude
"The driver of a car or vehicle, even though careless, is entitled to assume that the ordinary frequenter of the streets has sufficient fortitude to endure such incidents as may from time to time be expected to occur in them, including the noise of a collision and the sight of injury to others, and is not to be considered negligent to one who does not possess the customary phlegm."
In Page v Smith[82] it was decided that the requirement of ordinary fortitude did not apply to primary victims: however, it was held that it continued to apply to secondary victims.
Conditions for damages to be due to secondary victims
(a) there must be a close tie of love and affection between the secondary victim and the injured person;
(b) the secondary victim must have been present at the accident or at its immediate aftermath; and
(c) the secondary victim's psychiatric injury must have been caused by direct perception (ie through his or her own unaided senses) of the accident or its immediate aftermath.
Primary victim responsible for own injuries
Introduction
A new statutory scheme
(i) the need for a "nervous shock" before there can be liability;
(ii) the classification as such of persons into primary and secondary victims. As we have seen,[101] one of the major difficulties of the current law is that the criteria to establish whether a person is a primary victim are not certain;
(iii) the rule in Page v Smith[102] that a defender is liable for the unforeseeable mental harm caused to a primary victim even though the primary victim has not sustained any foreseeable physical harm;
(iv) the Alcock criteria[103] which must be satisfied before a duty of care arises to prevent a secondary victim sustaining mental harm; and
(v) that for the purpose of determining whether or not there has been a breach of duty a secondary victim is assumed to be a person of ordinary fortitude unless the defender has knowledge of the pursuer's unusual susceptibility to psychiatric harm.[104]
1. The common law rules which apply only to reparation for mental harm including the rules on liability for "nervous shock" should be replaced by a statutory obligation to make reparation for wrongfully caused mental harm.
(Draft Bill, sections 1 (1) and 1 (2))
Remoteness of damages
2. The legislation abolishing the common law rules relating to delictual liability for mental harm should make clear that the abolition does not affect:
(a) the right to obtain damages for mental harm resulting from any other type of harm to the claimant for which there is delictual liability; or
(b) the right to obtain damages for distress, anxiety, grief or sorrow where the claim is made by a relative of a deceased person under section 1(4)(a) or (b) of the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976.
(Draft Bill, section 6)
Mental harm: intentional and unintentional
3. (a) For the purpose of the statutory liability to make reparation for mental harm, mental harm should mean any harm to a person's mental state, mental functioning or well-being whether or not it amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder.
(Draft Bill, section 7(c))
(b) Where the mental harm is caused unintentionally there should be no statutory liability to make reparation unless the mental harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder.
(Draft Bill, section 4(1)(a))
Relationship of the new scheme to rules of delict
(a) A subjects B to harassment with the intention of causing her distress ie mental harm. A is liable to make reparation for B's mental harm because he intended to cause her mental harm as a consequence of the harassment.
(b) A subjects B to harassment with the intention of causing C, B's mother, distress ie mental harm. A is liable to make reparation for C's mental harm because he intended to cause her mental harm as a consequence of the harassment of B.
Where the defender does not intend to harm the victim, he may be liable if he causes her mental harm by unintentional but wrongful conduct. The most common example of such conduct is, of course, where A causes mental harm to B as a consequence of A's carelessness. As the harm was caused unintentionally, there will be no liability unless the mental harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder. If so, then under our proposals, A will be liable to make reparation to B for mental harm provided his careless conduct amounted to negligence under the rules which determine negligent conduct for the purpose of reparation for physical harm. Accordingly, the pursuer will have to establish the existence of a duty of care to prevent mental harm, a breach of that duty as a consequence of the defender's failure to take reasonable care, and a sufficient causative link between the breach and the mental disorder sustained by the pursuer. The law on remoteness of damages would apply in the same way: so, for example, if the pursuer sustained mental harm which was more serious than was reasonably foreseeable, damages would be based on the more serious mental harm as a result of the application of the thin skull rule. The pursuer may also be met by any common law defence which would be open to the defender in a claim for damages for physical harm. This would include the defence of volenti non fit injuria (ie where the pursuer consented to run the risk of mental harm), contributory negligence or the defence that the pursuer was participating in a criminal activity at the time he sustained the harm. Similarly, the doctrine of vicarious liability would apply in cases of mental harm in exactly the same way as a case of physical harm.
(a) P sustains a mental disorder when his car goes off the road because the brakes fail as a result of a design defect. P's action will fail unless he can show that it was reasonably foreseeable that he would sustain such mental harm as a consequence of the defective product. It is submitted that P's mental disorder is reasonably foreseeable. Therefore D is liable without proof of fault as liability is strict under Part 1 of the Consumer Protection Act 1987.
(b) P sustains a mental disorder because his television breaks down and he misses his favourite programme. P's action will fail unless he can show that it was reasonably foreseeable that he would sustain such mental harm as a consequence of the defective product. It is submitted that P's mental disorder is not reasonably foreseeable. Therefore D is not liable even though liability is strict under Part 1 of the Consumer Protection Act 1987.
Similarly, there would be a defence to any claim under Part 1 of the Consumer Protection Act 1987 if the mental harm sustained by the pursuer as a consequence of a defective product was of such a type that a person in the position of the victim could reasonably be expected to endure it without reparation - a general restriction on liability which we discuss later.[116]
(a) From the safety of his house, a man sees his next door neighbour's child being savaged by the neighbour's dog. As a consequence, he sustains mental harm. Even though liability is strict under the Animals (Scotland) Act 1987, he is unable to sue as he was not directly involved in the incident.
(b) From the safety of her house, a mother sees her own child being savaged by her neighbour's dog. As a consequence, she sustains a mental disorder. Although she was not directly involved in the incident, there is a gateway as she is related to the child who was injured in the incident. There can be liability for mental harm if it was reasonably foreseeable that a mother would suffer mental harm by witnessing her child being savaged by her neighbour's dog. It is submitted that it is. Consequently, she can obtain compensation under the Animals (Scotland) Act 1987 without establishing fault as a keeper's statutory liability for harm caused by an animal is strict.
Where a statute was not intended to apply to reparation for mental harm,[118] then the exclusion will not be affected by our proposals. Nor would our proposals apply where a statute was clearly intended to apply to physical harm in a different way from mental harm.
4. (a) In determining whether a person is under a statutory obligation to make reparation for mental harm, the common law rules of delict which apply to reparation for physical harm should also apply to reparation for mental harm.
(Draft Bill, section 2(a))
(b) In determining whether a person is under such an obligation, any enactment which applies to reparation for harm caused to a person should apply to reparation for mental harm in the same way as to reparation for physical harm, unless the contrary is provided in that enactment.
(Draft Bill, section 2(b))
General restrictions on the new statutory obligation to make reparation
(a) An employer is irritated with an employee and shouts abuse at her. As a result the employee is emotionally upset for a few days. While upset, the employee is suffering harm to her mental well-being and under the proposed definition the emotional upset would constitute mental harm. Prima facie she is entitled to reparation as the employer's wrongful conduct was intentionally to upset her. However, it is thought that the restriction would apply. Society expects that its members should be sufficiently thick skinned to put up with one isolated instance of verbal abuse as opposed to a sustained campaign of abuse. Accordingly, her claim would fail as the mental harm she sustained resulted from the normal stresses or vicissitudes of life.
(b) An employer is irritated by an employee and shouts abuse at her. As a result the employee sustains a nervous breakdown as a consequence of an unusual susceptibility to psychiatric injury. She cannot work for three months because of the breakdown. During her breakdown, the employee is suffering from mental harm. Prima facie she is entitled to reparation as the employer's wrongful conduct was intentionally to upset her. It does not matter that the mental harm sustained by the employee was greater than that intended by the employer, as applying the thin skull remoteness test, the defender must take his victim as he finds her and, as the wrongful act was intentional, he is liable for all the mental harm arising from the wrong even if its extent was unforeseeable.[122] Nevertheless it could be argued that the claim would fail because one incident of verbal abuse from an employer is a normal stress or vicissitude of life and that any mental harm arising therefrom should be endured without compensation.
(a) A is killed in a car accident as a consequence of a driver's negligence. A's mother is informed of his death. She suffers a nervous breakdown because of her grief at her son's death. She is restricted to her claim for non-patrimonial loss under the 1976 Act even if her nervous breakdown is a medically recognised mental disorder. The restriction applies as the mental harm is caused solely by the death of her son, a loss of a kind which a mother could reasonably expect to suffer during her life.
(b) A is killed in a car accident as a consequence of a driver's negligence. A's mother is present at the accident and directly sees her son being killed. She suffers a nervous breakdown because of her grief at her son's death. While she may claim for non-patrimonial loss under the 1976 Act, she may have an additional claim for reparation if the nervous breakdown is a recognised mental disorder. This is because the mental harm does not arise merely from the bereavement but the fact that she saw her son being killed: it is not a type of loss which a mother can reasonably expect to suffer during her life. Accordingly, the restriction does not apply.
(c) A is injured in a car accident as a consequence of a driver's negligence. A's injuries trigger a pre-cancerous growth. His mother nurses him through a long and painful illness. A dies. His mother suffers a nervous breakdown. While she may claim for non-patrimonial loss under the 1976 Act, she may have an additional claim if the nervous breakdown is a recognised mental disorder. This is because the mental harm does not arise merely from the bereavement but from the fact that she saw her son's injuries and nursed him through a long and painful illness: it is not a type of loss which a person can reasonably expect to suffer during her life. Accordingly, the restriction does not apply.
(d) A is kidnapped, tortured and killed. His mother suffers a nervous breakdown particularly when she contemplates the nature of her child's death. While she may claim for non-patrimonial loss under the 1976 Act, she may have an additional claim if the nervous breakdown is a recognised mental disorder. This is because the mental harm does not arise merely from the bereavement but also from the horrific circumstances of her child's death: it is not a type of loss which a person can reasonably expect to suffer during her life. Accordingly, the restriction does not apply.
5. (a) There should be a general restriction on the statutory obligation to make reparation for wrongfully caused mental harm if the mental harm is of such a nature that a person in the position of the victim could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking reparation.
(Draft Bill, section 3(1))
(b) A person should reasonably be expected to endure mental harm without seeking reparation if, for example, it results from:
(i) the normal stresses or vicissitudes of life or of the type of life which that person leads; or
(ii) bereavements or losses of a type which persons can reasonably expect to suffer in the course of their lives.
(Draft Bill, section 3(2))
Further restrictions where mental harm is caused unintentionally
(a) A attempts to assault B. B escapes without any physical harm. B then suffers mental harm as a consequence of the attempted assault. Although A did not intend to cause B mental harm, A should nevertheless be liable to B if at the time of the attempted assault it was reasonably foreseeable that B might suffer mental harm which amounts to a mental disorder. This would depend on the nature of the attempted assault, for example a punch swung in a pub would probably not be sufficient to render such mental harm reasonably foreseeable, but when the attempt involves a significant degree of violence reasonable foreseeability would be readily inferred.[130]
(b) A murders B. B's parents suffer mental harm as a consequence of B's death. A did not kill B with the intention of causing mental harm to B's parents. A will only be liable to B's parents if at the time he killed B it was reasonably foreseeable that the victim's parents might suffer mental harm which amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder as a consequence of their child's death. Again it is thought that it is reasonably foreseeable that the parents of a murder victim might suffer such mental harm as a consequence of their child's death.
6. A person should be liable for causing mental harm unintentionally only if the harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder and the person foresaw, or could reasonably have foreseen, at the time of the act causing the harm, that the act was likely to cause a person in the position of the victim to suffer such harm.
(Draft Bill, section 4(1)(b))
Victim not directly involved in the incident
(a) As a consequence of C's negligence, B ingests dangerous substances while employed by C. An illness presents five years later. B dies after a long and painful illness having been nursed by A. A sustains a mental disorder as a result of seeing B's illness and death. Since A was not at risk of physical harm, prima facie there is no liability for the mental harm A sustained by witnessing the physical harm caused to B as a consequence of C's negligence.
(b) Similarly, there would be no liability to A if A sustains a mental disorder from witnessing mental harm suffered by B as a result of C's negligence.
(c) For the same reason, there would be no liability if A suffered a mental disorder from learning that B had been financially ruined as a consequence of C's fraudulent misrepresentations.
Accordingly, for the purpose of the doctrine of non-liability, we are concerned both with witnessing or learning of an act or event that is distressing in itself, for example a road accident, and the distress caused by witnessing or learning of the harm - whether physical or mental or economic - caused to others as a result of wrongful conduct.
(a) A doctor examines a patient. As a consequence of his negligence, the doctor tells the patient that he has terminal cancer. The patient suffers mental harm as a result of contemplating an early death. It is discovered that the diagnosis is wrong and in giving such a diagnosis the doctor was professionally negligent. The restriction does not apply as the patient was directly involved in the incident. Accordingly, the doctor will be liable if the mental harm was a medically recognised mental disorder and the reasonable foreseeability criterion was satisfied.
(b) A doctor examines a patient. He negligently makes the diagnosis, conveyed to the patient, that the patient has terminal cancer. The patient tells a third party of his terminal illness. The latter suffers mental harm as he contemplates the patient's early death. It is discovered that the diagnosis is wrong and that the patient will live. The restriction applies as the cause of the third party's mental harm was learning of the diagnosis, "an incident" in which he was not directly involved. Accordingly, the third party's claim against the doctor will fail even if the mental harm was a medically recognised mental disorder and mental harm to the third party was reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances.
7. (a) Where a victim suffers a mental disorder by witnessing or learning of an incident in which he or she was not directly involved, as a general rule there should be no liability on the wrongdoer to make reparation.
(Draft Bill, section 4(1)(c))
(b) An incident for these purposes includes:
(i) any act or event which can cause distress to a person witnessing or learning of it; and
(ii) the harm caused to persons, other than the person suffering the mental disorder, as a result of the wrongful conduct.
(Draft Bill, sections 4 (1) (c) and (3))
(c) For these purposes the act or event may be caused intentionally or otherwise and may or may not have caused physical or mental harm.
(Draft Bill, section 4(3))
8. The restriction on suing for reparation where the victim has sustained a mental disorder by witnessing or learning of an incident should not apply if the victim was acting as a rescuer in relation to the incident.
(Draft Bill, section 4(2)(a))
9. (a) The restriction on suing for reparation where the victim has sustained mental harm by witnessing or learning of an incident should not apply if, at the time of the incident, the victim had a close relationship with a person injured or killed, or at risk of being killed or injured, in the incident.
(Draft Bill, section 4(2)(b))
(b) For this purpose, a close relationship means the type of relationship which exists between persons bound to each other by strong ties of affection, loyalty or personal responsibility.
(Draft Bill, section 5(1))
(a) spouses;
(b) cohabitants whether of the same or different sexes;
(c) parents and children;
(d) persons who have been accepted by other persons as a children of their family, for example step-parents and step-children;
(e) grandparents and grandchildren;
(f) brothers and sisters;
(g) persons who have the characteristics of siblings as they have been brought up together in the same household.
Accordingly we recommend that:
10. (a) The following persons should be presumed to have a close relationship for this purpose: spouses, cohabitants of the same or different sexes, parents and children, persons who have been accepted by other persons as children of their family, grandparents and grandchildren, siblings and persons who have the characteristics of siblings as they have been brought up together in the same household.
(Draft Bill, section 5 (2))
(b) This presumption may be rebutted by evidence that the persons in question did not in fact have a close relationship with each other at the relevant time.
(Draft Bill, section 5 (3))
(a) A is informed that his wife has been killed in a car crash caused by the driver's negligence. As a result A suffers a mental disorder. Although A has sustained mental harm as a consequence of learning of an incident in which he was not directly involved, since he had a close relationship with the person killed in the incident, A can pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. However, A's claim will fail as it is not reasonably foreseeable that by merely being informed of his wife's death that A would suffer a medically recognised mental disorder. Even if the mental harm was reasonably foreseeable, A would be met by the general restriction that the mental harm resulted from a bereavement of a type that a person can reasonably expect to suffer in the course of his life: consequently the mental harm was of such a nature that a person in the position of A could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking reparation.
(b) A is informed that his wife has been killed. She had been kidnapped by B who had tortured and raped her before strangling her. As a result A suffers a mental disorder. Although A has sustained a mental disorder by having been informed of an incident in which he was not directly involved, since he had a close relationship with a person killed in the incident, A can pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. However, given the horrendous nature of his wife's death it is thought that it is reasonably foreseeable that her husband would suffer a medically recognised mental disorder when informed how his wife died. Moreover, the general restriction would seem to be inapplicable as it could not be said that A's bereavement and loss was of a type that a person should reasonably expect to experience in the course of his life.
(c) A mother is informed that her son has been killed in a car crash caused by the negligence of the driver. As a result she suffers a mental disorder. Although she has sustained mental harm as a consequence of learning of an incident in which she was not directly involved, since she had a close relationship with the person killed in the incident, she can pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. However, it is submitted that the mother's claim will fail as it is not reasonably foreseeable that by merely being informed of her child's death a woman would suffer a medically recognised mental disorder. Even if the mental harm was reasonably foreseeable, she would be met by the general restriction that the mental harm resulted from a bereavement of a type that a person can reasonably be expected to suffer in the course of her life: consequently, the mental harm was of such a nature that a person in the position of the pursuer could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking reparation.
(d) A mother is informed that her son has been injured in a car crash caused by the negligence of the driver. She rushes to the hospital where she sees her son's injuries. She attends the hospital regularly until her son recovers. She suffers a mental disorder as a consequence of witnessing her son's ordeal. Although the mother has sustained mental harm as a consequence of witnessing an incident in which she was not directly involved, since she has a close relationship with the person injured in the incident, she can pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. Before her claim can succeed she must establish that it was reasonably foreseeable that she would suffer a medically recognised mental disorder as a consequence of witnessing her child's injuries in the hospital. This might depend on how serious the child's injuries were, how soon she saw her child after the accident and how long it took before the child recovered. Even if the mental harm was reasonably foreseeable, it would remain open to argue that her claim should fail as a consequence of the general restriction that the mental harm was of such a nature that a person in the position of the pursuer could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeing reparation.
(e) A is a schoolteacher. She is a devoted teacher and her pupils are devoted to her. She is killed in a car crash as a consequence of the driver's negligence. One of her pupils suffers a mental disorder when she learns of A's death. Although the pupil has sustained such mental harm as a consequence of learning of an incident in which she was not directly involved, she may be able to argue that she had a close relationship with A who had been killed in the incident and thereby pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. However, it is submitted that the pupil's claim will fail as it is not reasonably foreseeable that merely by being informed of her teacher's death a pupil will suffer a medically recognised mental disorder. Even if that mental harm was reasonably foreseeable, she would be met by the general restriction that it resulted from a bereavement of a type that a person can reasonably expect to suffer in the course of her life: consequently, the mental harm was of such a nature that a person in the position of the pursuer could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking reparation.
(f) A is a schoolteacher. She is a devoted teacher and her pupils are devoted to her. One of her pupils is killed in a car crash caused by the driver's negligence. She suffers a mental disorder when she learns of the pupil's death. It is thought that her claim would fail for the same reasons as the pursuer's claim failed in the preceding example.
(g) A is a schoolteacher. She is devoted to her pupils and her pupils are devoted to her. She organises a trip for her pupils and hires a bus so that they can visit a castle. She does not travel in the bus but follows the bus in her car. The roof of the bus is removed when the bus attempts to go under a low bridge. Some of the pupils are decapitated; others die in agony before they can be rescued. As a result, she suffers a mental disorder. Although A has sustained mental harm as a consequence of witnessing an incident in which she was not directly involved, since she had a close relationship with persons killed in the incident, she can pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. Because she saw the terrible fate of her pupils and had been responsible for organising the trip, it is submitted that it is reasonably foreseeable that someone in A's position would suffer a medically recognised mental disorder. Moreover, it is thought that the general restriction would not be applicable as it cannot be said that A's bereavement and loss was of a type that a person could reasonably expect to suffer in the course of her life.
(h) A, a doctor, examines a patient. As a consequence of his negligence, A tells the patient that he has terminal cancer. The patient tells his wife that he is terminally ill. She suffers a mental disorder as she contemplates her husband's early death. It is discovered that the diagnosis is wrong and that the patient will live. Although she has sustained mental harm as a consequence of witnessing an incident in which she was not directly involved, since she was the wife of the person who was wrongly diagnosed, she can pass through the second gateway and avoid that restriction. However it is submitted that her claim will fail as it is not reasonably foreseeable that by being informed of her husband's mistaken diagnosis, a wife would suffer a medically recognised mental disorder.
These examples illustrate how a person who has not been directly involved in an incident will only succeed in a claim for mental harm if:
- he can pass through the second gateway;
- the mental harm was a medically recognised mental disorder;
- such mental harm was reasonably foreseeable; and
- the general restriction does not apply.
Liability where immediate victims are responsible for their own injuries
1. The common law rules which apply only to reparation for mental harm including the rules on liability for "nervous shock" should be replaced by a statutory obligation to make reparation for wrongfully caused mental harm.
(Paragraph 3.4)
2. The legislation abolishing the common law rules relating to delictual liability for mental harm should make clear that the abolition does not affect:
(a) the right to obtain damages for mental harm resulting from any other type of harm to the claimant for which there is delictual liability; or
(b) the right to obtain damages for distress, anxiety, grief or sorrow where the claim is made by a relative of a deceased person under section 1(4)(a) or (b) of the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976.
(Paragraph 3.6)
3. (a) For the purpose of the statutory liability to make reparation for mental harm, mental harm should mean any harm to a person's mental state, mental functioning or well-being whether or not it amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder.
(b) Where the mental harm is caused unintentionally there should be no statutory liability to make reparation unless the mental harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder.
(Paragraph 3.10)
4. (a) In determining whether a person is under a statutory obligation to make reparation for mental harm, the common law rules of delict which apply to reparation for physical harm should also apply to reparation for mental harm;
(b) In determining whether a person is under such an obligation, any enactment which applies to reparation for harm caused to a person should apply to reparation for mental harm in the same way as to reparation for physical harm, unless the contrary is provided in that enactment.
(Paragraph 3.17)
5. (a) There should be a general restriction on the statutory obligation to make reparation for wrongfully caused mental harm if the mental harm is of such a nature that a person in the position of the victim could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking reparation.
(b) A person should reasonably be expected to endure mental harm without seeking reparation if, for example, it results from:
(i) the normal stresses or vicissitudes of life or of the type of life which that person leads; or
(ii) bereavements or losses of a type which persons can reasonably expect to suffer in the course of their lives.
(Paragraph 3.30)
6. A person should be liable for causing mental harm unintentionally only if the harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder and the person foresaw, or could reasonably have foreseen, at the time of the act causing the harm, that the act was likely to cause a person in the position of the victim to suffer such harm.
(Paragraph 3.44)
7. (a) Where a victim suffers a mental disorder by witnessing or learning of an incident in which he or she was not directly involved, as a general rule there should be no liability on the wrongdoer to make reparation.
(b) An incident for these purposes includes:
(i) any act or event which can cause distress to a person witnessing or learning of it; and
(ii) the harm caused to persons, other than the person suffering the mental disorder, as a result of the wrongful conduct
(c) For these purposes the act or event may be caused intentionally or otherwise and may or may not have caused physical or mental harm.
(Paragraph 3.50)
8. The restriction on suing for reparation where the victim has sustained a mental disorder by witnessing or learning of an incident should not apply if the victim was acting as a rescuer in relation to the incident.
(Paragraph 3.53)
9. (a) The restriction on suing for reparation where the victim has sustained mental harm by witnessing or learning of an incident should not apply if, at the time of the incident, the victim had a close relationship with a person injured or killed, or at risk of being killed or injured, in the incident.
(b) For this purpose, a close relationship means the type of relationship which exists between persons bound to each other by strong ties of affection, loyalty or personal responsibility.
(Paragraph 3.54)
10. (a) The following persons should be presumed to have a close relationship for this purpose: spouses, cohabitants of the same or different sexes, parents and children, persons who have been accepted by other persons as children of their family, grandparents and grandchildren, siblings and persons who have the characteristics of siblings as they have been brought up together in the same household.
(b) This presumption may be rebutted by evidence that the persons in question did not in fact have a close relationship with each other at the relevant time.
(Paragraph 3.55)
Draft Reparation for Mental Harm (Scotland) Bill with Explanatory Notes
Contents
PART 1 MAIN RULES
1 General rule on liability
2 Application of ordinary rules on delict
3 General restriction on liability
4 Other restrictions on liability where harm caused unintentionally
PART 2 SUPPLEMENTARY RULES AND SAVINGS
5 Close relationship
6 Claims linked to other types of harm
PART 3 INTERPRETATION AND FINAL PROVISIONS
7 Interpretation
8 Short title, temporal application and commencement
Reparation for Mental Harm (Scotland) Bill
[DRAFT]
An Act of the Scottish Parliament to make provision on delictual liability to make reparation for mental harm.[longtitle.doc]
Part 1
Main rules
1 General rule on liability
(1) A person who causes mental harm to another person is liable to make reparation in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
(2) The common law rules on delict which apply only to reparation for mental harm to a person (including the rules on liability for nervous shock) are abolished.
NOTE
Subsection (1) sets out the basic rule that a wrongdoer is delictually liable for mental harm that he or she causes to another person.
Subsection (2) abolishes all the common law rules of the law on delict that relate only to mental harm, wiping the slate clean for the new rules set out in this Bill. General rules of the law on delict, ie rules which also apply to delictual claims that do not concern mental harm, are not abolished but are retained. Section 6 makes it clear that this subsection does not abolish the common law rules relating to recovery of damages for: (a) mental harm which results from some other type of harm, or (b) non-patrimonial loss under section 1(4) of the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976. See comments on section 6.
The phrase "(including the rules on liability for nervous shock)" is added because claims for mental harm have in the past been referred to as claims for nervous shock. In more modern cases they have been framed in terms of a recognised psychiatric injury or disorder, but these terms fall within the scope of mental harm as defined in section 7(c).
2 Application of ordinary rules on delict
Subject to the following provisions of this Act—
(a) the common law rules on delict (including the rule that a person can consent to run the risk of harm in such a way as to lose the right to reparation) which apply to reparation for physical harm to a person apply also to reparation for mental harm; and
(b) any enactment which applies to reparation for harm caused to a person applies to reparation for mental harm in the same way as to reparation for physical harm, unless the terms of the enactment indicate that it was intended to apply only to physical harm or was intended to apply to physical harm and mental harm in different ways.
NOTE
Section 2 provides that, subject to the other provisions of the Bill, the rules that apply to delictual liability for physical harm also apply to liability for mental harm. This is intended to make rules relating to causation, remoteness of damages, vicarious liability, establishing a breach of duty, defences, etc, applicable to claims for reparation for mental harm.
Paragraph (a) relates to common law rules while paragraph (b) relates to rules set out in legislation, such as the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945. The common law defence of volenti non fit injuria, ie the rule that "a person can consent to run the risk of harm in such a way as to lose the right to reparation", is expressly mentioned because it is not possible to contract out of statutory liability in such a way unless the statute so provides. The phrase "physical harm to a person" excludes physical harm done to property.
Paragraph (b) provides that any enactment (primary or secondary legislation) which applies to reparation for harm caused to a person applies to mental harm in the same way as it applies to physical harm to a person unless the contrary is provided in that enactment, either expressly or by implication. Examples of legislation that contain provisions to the contrary are the Carriage by Air Act 1961 and the Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme 2001. The Carriage by Air Act 1961 has been held by the House of Lords in King v Bristow Helicopters Ltd 2002 SC(HL) 59 to exclude claims for pure mental injury, and the Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme 2001 limits claims for compensation for mental injury by those who witness the death or injury of others using the "Alcock criteria", see paragraph 2.21 above.
The phrase "subject to the following provisions of this Act" is intended to make clear that the common law rules of liability for physical harm and any relevant statutory provisions are subject to the restrictions in sections 3 and 4 when applied in claims for reparation for mental harm.
3 General restriction on liability
(1) A person is not liable for causing mental harm, whether intentionally or otherwise, if the harm is of such a type that a person in the position of the victim could reasonably be expected to endure it without seeking reparation.
(2) A person can reasonably be expected to endure mental harm without seeking reparation if, for example, it results from—
(a) the normal stresses or vicissitudes of life or of the type of life which that person leads; or
(b) bereavements or losses of a type which a person can reasonably expect to suffer in the course of his or her life.
NOTE
This section applies whether the harm was caused intentionally or otherwise, though if harm was inflicted intentionally then it would be less likely that a person would be expected to endure it without seeking reparation. It sets out the general principle that people are expected to put up with certain types of mental harm without seeking reparation.
Subsection (2) illustrates what kinds of mental harm a person can reasonably be expected to endure without seeking reparation. It is not an exhaustive list as can be seen from the words "if, for example".
Paragraph (a)
It is a normal part of human experience to encounter events that will cause distress, fear or loss of confidence from time to time. People are expected to deal with various difficult circumstances and situations that may occur in life without seeking reparation unless there is some particular aggravating factor that makes it unreasonable for them to do so.
The phrase "or of the type of life which that person leads" is intended to limit claims for mental harm suffered as a result of incidents which that person is expected to deal with as part of his or her job. This will tend to limit claims by, for example, members of the police or fire service, soldiers, or people who have chosen high-pressure jobs. Another example would be those who engage in combative sports or other "dangerous" recreational activities.
Paragraph (b)
Only in special circumstances will a person be able to recover damages for mental harm induced by the death of a relative or close friend. Bereavement in itself is not enough because people are bound to suffer bereavements in the course of their lives. To claim damages for mental harm caused by bereavement there must be some additional aggravating factor, such as the death being of a particularly horrific nature. This does not prevent a claim under the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976 for non-patrimonial loss by a member of the deceased's immediate family, as is made clear by section 6. Other losses which a person may reasonably expect to suffer include destruction of property, death of a pet, injury to, or disablement of, a loved one or loss of money.
4 Other restrictions on liability where harm caused unintentionally
(1) A person is liable for causing mental harm unintentionally only if...
(a) the harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder;
(b) the person foresaw, or could reasonably be expected to have foreseen, at the time of the act causing the harm that the act was likely to cause a person in the position of the victim to suffer harm of that kind; and
(c) in any case where the harm was caused to the victim by witnessing, or learning of –
(i) an incident in which the victim was not directly involved; or (ii) the consequence of such an incident,
subsection (2) is satisfied.
(2) This subsection is satisfied only if the victim...
(a) was acting as a rescuer in relation to the incident; or (b) had, at the time of witnessing or learning of the incident or its consequences, a close relationship with a person injured or killed, or at risk of being injured or killed, in the incident.
(3) In this section, "incident" includes any act or event, whether caused intentionally or otherwise and whether or not it causes physical harm.
NOTE
This section applies in all cases where mental harm is inflicted unintentionally (ie negligently or recklessly) on the victim. It sets out further criteria that a pursuer seeking damages for unintentionally caused mental harm must satisfy. Where A intends to cause harm only to B, but ends up causing harm to C instead or in addition, the liability of A to C would be restricted by this section. Suppose, for example, that A tortures a child. The child's parent who happens to be watching suffers mental harm, but A did not intend any harm to the parent. Although A's actions themselves might have been intentional, A did not in fact intend to cause harm to the parent. A's liability to the parent would be restricted by the provisions of this section. By contrast, A's liability to the child would only be restricted by section 3.
Subsection (1), paragraph (a)
First, the harm must amount to a medically recognised mental disorder. This does not change the substance of the current law.
Subsection (1), paragraph (b)
Secondly, the mental harm which constitutes the medically recognised mental disorder must have been a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the wrongdoer's acts. This changes the current law as set out in Page v Smith [1996] AC 155 whereby a victim can recover for unforeseeable mental harm provided physical harm was foreseeable, even if no physical harm was actually suffered. However, this provision does not affect the remoteness of damages rules preserved by section 6. Wrongdoers may therefore be liable under the thin skull rule for unforeseeable mental harm arising from other wrongfully caused physical harm.
Whether the wrongdoer could have been reasonably expected to foresee that his or her act was likely to cause the victim mental harm amounting to a medically recognised disorder is to be a question of fact. The court would need to look back to the wrongdoer's knowledge at the time of the act. It would take into account any prior knowledge the wrongdoer had that the victim was particularly vulnerable to mental disorder. For example, an employer might be liable for knowingly keeping in a highly stressful post an employee who had recently been off work with mental illness arising from the stress.
The phrase "harm of that kind" refers back to a medically recognised mental disorder in section 4(1)(a). Wrongdoers are not expected to be able to diagnose medically recognised mental disorders, but they are expected to be able to foresee when their conduct will cause mental harm of a kind amounting to a medically recognised mental disorder.
The phrase "person in the position of the victim" has been used rather than "victim" to make clear that it would not be necessary that the wrongdoer foresaw or was aware of the existence of the victim, or of the victim's proximity to the incident. Claims by unknown rescuers or unknown close relatives would be allowed. If, for example, a mother happened to be nearby the scene of her child's death and thus witnessed her child's body being taken away from the scene of an accident, the wrongdoer could not argue that he could not reasonably have foreseen that the mother would witness the incident. The issue is not what in fact the wrongdoer did foresee but what the wrongdoer would have foreseen if he or she had been aware of the existence of the victim.
Subsection (1) paragraph (c)
Thirdly, where a person suffers mental harm as a consequence of witnessing or learning of an incident in which he or she was not directly involved, or of the consequences of such an incident, further restrictions on liability are imposed. Unless the pursuer was acting as a rescuer, or had a close relationship with a person injured or killed or at risk of being injured or killed in the incident, he or she will not be able to recover.
The consequences of an incident may occur days or even years after the initial act or event. Mental harm suffered following identification of a relative's body days after the person's death would be a consequence of the wrongdoer's negligent driving resulting in the road accident and the relative's death. Mental harm suffered by a wife after nursing her husband through a long and painful death from mesothelioma would be a consequence of the husband's exposure to asbestos fibres, however many years earlier the exposure occurred.
The Bill thus draws a distinction between those who sustain mental harm because of what directly happened to them and those whose harm flows from seeing or learning about an incident in which they were not directly involved or its consequences. Any person at risk of significant physical harm would be considered to be "directly involved" in the incident, as might persons who were involved in such a way as to feel personally responsible for it, even though they were not at fault, see paragraph 2.11 above.
Subsection (2), paragraph (a)
"Rescuer" is left undefined in the Bill, so that the courts can determine who is a "rescuer" in any particular case. There is no requirement in the Bill that a rescuer must have been at risk of some degree of physical harm in the incident.
Subsection (2), paragraph (b)
In order to avoid the general principle of non-liability when the pursuer was not directly involved in an incident the pursuer must have had a close relationship with the person injured or killed or at risk of being injured or killed in the incident at the time of witnessing or learning of the incident or its consequences. But, unlike the current law, in the close relationship situation, there is no need for there to have been temporal or physical proximity to the incident. Thus the second and third Alcock criteria (see paragraph 2.21 above) are abolished. "Close relationship" is defined in section 5, see the notes on that section.
Effect of section 4 subsection (2)
Even if the pursuer satisfies section 4(2)(a) or (b), that would not of itself entitle the pursuer to damages. It would merely open the gateway to section 4(1). The pursuer would still have to prove (i) that the mental harm amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder, and (ii) that harm of that kind could reasonably have been foreseen by the defender as a consequence of the act or omission. Furthermore, the general restriction in section 3 must not be applicable.
Conversely, unless section 4(2) (a) or (b) is satisfied, there is no delictual liability to pursuers who sustain a mental disorder from witnessing or learning of incidents in which they were neither directly involved nor in a close relationship with those who were killed or injured or at risk of being killed or injured, even if such mental harm to them was reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances. Thus mere bystanders to an accident, however horrific, would not be able to claim.
Subsection (3)
Section 4 as a whole applies only to unintentionally inflicted mental harm, but "incident" has been used instead of "accident" in order to cover intentional as well as non-intentional acts. Thus this section applies where a man sustains mental harm as a result of seeing his son deliberately injured. However it would not apply if by injuring the child the wrongdoer had deliberately intended to inflict mental harm on the father: in this case the father can sue the wrongdoer for intentionally causing mental harm.
It is not necessary that someone must have suffered physical harm in the incident in order to entitle another person not directly involved in the incident to claim for the mental harm caused by witnessing or learning of it. Those directly involved in the incident may sustain only mental harm as the words "whether or not it causes physical harm" make clear. Moreover, it is sufficient that they were at risk of death or injury: they do not have in fact to be killed or suffer injury before the provision applies.
Part 2
Supplementary rules and savings
5 Close relationship
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a close relationship means the type of relationship which exists between persons bound to each other by strong ties of affection, loyalty or personal responsibility.
(2) The following persons are presumed to have a close relationship with each other for the purposes of this Act...
(a) spouses;
(b) persons (whether of different sexes or of the same sex) who are not married to each other but who are living with each other in a relationship which has the characteristics of the relationship between husband and wife;
(c) parents and children;
(d) persons who are in a relationship which has the characteristics of the relationship between parent and child as a result of one of them having been accepted by the other as a member of his or her family;
(e) grandparents and grandchildren;
(f) siblings;
(g) persons who are in a relationship which has the characteristics of the relationship between siblings as a result of having been brought up together in the same household.
(3) The presumption in subsection (2) may be rebutted by evidence that the persons in question did not have a close relationship with each other at the relevant time.
NOTE
Subsection (1) explains what "a close relationship" means. It is intended to be slightly wider than the "close tie of love and affection" as required by Alcock in claims by persons not directly involved in the incident under the present law. "Strong ties of affection" would cover close relatives and friends. A teacher or a nanny might have feelings of "personal responsibility" for a child in his or her care or class. A tie of "loyalty" might for example apply to employers and employees or members of the armed forces. However a tie of "loyalty" would probably not, by itself, be enough to constitute a close relationship, but would have to be mixed with some element of affection or personal responsibility. In determining who had a close relationship the court would look at the totality of the picture with these three elements in mind. It would be open to persons such as work colleagues, neighbours, friends and teachers and pupils to establish that they had a close relationship.
A close relationship is presumed between those family members (including cohabiting partners) listed in subsection (2) but this presumption may be rebutted. The substance of the list is the same as that recommended in our Report on Title to Sue for Non- Patrimonial Loss (Scot Law Com No. 187, 2002) to replace the class of immediate relatives currently set out in paragraphs (a) to (c) in Schedule 1 to the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976.
In subsection (3), "the relevant time" refers, in accordance with section 4(2)(b), to the time of witnessing or learning of the incident or its consequences.
The existence of a close relationship only opens the gateway to section 4(1). The pursuer still has to establish that he or she had a medically recognised mental disorder which was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the defender's conduct.
6 Claims linked to other types of harm
Nothing in this Act prevents damages from being recovered for...
(a) mental harm resulting from any other type of harm to the claimant for which there is delictual liability; or
(b) distress, anxiety, grief or sorrow where the claim for damages is made by a relative of a deceased person under section 1(4)(a) or (b) of the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976 (c.13).
NOTE
Paragraph (a) makes it clear that damages currently available for mental harm as a head of damages in other claims, such as claims for damages for physical harm, property damage, defamation, patrimonial loss or breach of contract, will continue to be available under the rules of remoteness of damages. Such claims are not affected by section 3 of the Bill.
Paragraph (b) preserves claims for non-patrimonial losses (ie distress, anxiety, grief or sorrow) on the death of an immediate family member under section 1(4) of the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976. Where the non-patrimonial loss amounts to a mental disorder, however, the provisions of the Bill are intended to apply.
Part 3
Interpretation and final provisions
7 Interpretation
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires...
(a) "act" includes omission;
(b) "harm" includes any kind of loss, injury, damage or deleterious effect; and
(c) "mental harm" means any harm to a person's mental state, mental functioningor mental well-being whether or not it amounts to a medically recognised mental disorder.
NOTE
Paragraph (b)
"Harm" is widely defined covering, for example, personal injury, damage to property and insult and any patrimonial loss caused by defamation. Its meaning in the Bill depends on the context. For example, "harm" in section 3(1) means mental harm, while "harm" in section 2(b) means personal injury, ie mental or physical harm.
Paragraph (c)
"Mental harm" includes medically recognised mental disorders and less severe harm. Mental harm includes psychiatric and psychological harm.
8 Short title, temporal application and commencement
(1) This Act may be cited as the Reparation for Mental Harm (Scotland) Act 2004.
(2) This Act applies only to mental harm occurring (or, in the case of continuing mental harm, first occurring) after the Act comes into force.
(3) This Act comes into force at the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of Royal Assent.
NOTE
Subsection (2)
It may be that mental harm is the delayed effect of an incident which occurred before the legislation came into force. For example, a wife may suffer a medically recognised mental disorder after nursing her husband through a long and painful terminal illness such as mesothelioma. In such a case it would be irrelevant that the exposure to asbestos fibres had occurred before commencement. The crucial date is the date at which the mental harm occurred. In the case of a long period of nursing the mental harm may be continuing and so the relevant date would be the first occurrence of mental harm of a nature that would warrant a claim under this legislation. In the case of harm caused unintentionally this would be the onset of harm amounting to a medically recognised mental disorder.
The current law on reparation for mental harm will continue to apply to any claims where the mental harm occurred before commencement.
Subsection (3)
Little or no subordinate legislation seems necessary. There is therefore no need to delay the date of commencement to one appointed in regulations made by the Scottish Ministers. Three months is the standard "non-appointed day" commencement period.
List of those submitting comments on
Discussion Paper No 120
Aberdeen University School of Law
Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland
Association of Personal Injury Lawyers
Centre for Research into Law Reform, University of Glasgow
Dr John Crichton, The Orchard Hospital
Faculty of Advocates
Fire Brigades Union-Scotland
The Law Society of Scotland
Ms Lesley Lomax, School of Social Science and Law, Sheffield Hallam University
Professor Norrie, University of Strathclyde
Professor Rodger, University of Strathclyde
The Royal College of Psychiatrists, Scottish Division
Scottish Police Federation
The Society of Writers to H M Signet (view of a member)
Dr Helen Stirling, Department of Child and Family Clinical Psychology, Stirling
Thompsons, Solicitors
Dr Ian Tierney, The Keil Centre
Victim Support Scotland
Membership of the Advisory Group
Dr Pamela Abernethy, Solicitor, Edinburgh
Dr Douglas Brodie, University of Edinburgh
Dr Chris Freeman, Consultant Psychiatrist, Royal Edinburgh Hospital
Mr D Ian Mackay QC, Advocate, Edinburgh
Miss Ishbel McLaren, Solicitor, Edinburgh
Mr Peter Milligan, Advocate, Edinburgh
Professor Barry Rodger, University of Strathclyde
Note 1 Amended by the Scotland Act 1998 (Consequential Modifications) (No 2) Order 1999 (S.I. 1999/1820). [Back] Note 2 Under the Law Commissions Act 1965, s 3(1)(e). [Back] Note 3 A list of those who submitted written comments forms Appendix B. [Back] Note 4 Two of the leading cases in this area arose out of the Hillsborough disaster: Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 1 AC 310 and Frost v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1999] 2 AC 455 (sometimes cited as White v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police). [Back] Note 5 Our Report on Title to Sue for Non-Patrimonial Loss (Scot Law Com No 187, 2002) recommended changes in the definition of immediate family member. [Back] Note 6 Such as the Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme 2001 (made under the Criminal Injuries Compensation Act 1995), the Offshore Installations (Operational Safety, Health and Welfare) Regulations 1976 and the Workplace Regulations 1992. [Back] Note 7 The Consumer Protection Act 1987, s 45(1) defines personal injury to include impairment of a person's mental condition, for example, but it is thought secondary victims are not covered. [Back] Note 8 Eg King v Bristow Helicopters Ltd 2002 SC(HL) 59 - a pure psychiatric illness is not "bodily injury" for the purposes of a claim under the Carriage by Air Act 1961; Glen v Korean Airlines Co Ltd [2003] QB 1386 - loss or damage in terms of s 76(2) of the Civil Aviation Act 1982 did include psychiatric injury, but compensation to observers of an accident was awardable under the Act only if their claim would have been competent at common law; and Magnohard Ltd v United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority 2003 SLT 1083 - damages under the Nuclear Installations Act 1965 were refused to estate owners who averred that they had suffered stress and anxiety (but no physical or recognised psychiatric injury) due to the presence of radioactive particles on their beach. However, the Lord Ordinary (Lady Paton) said that such claims might be relevant to an action grounded on a breach of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. [Back] Note 9 [1992] 1 AC 310, at 418 [Back] Note 10 In "Liability for Negligently Inflicted Psychiatric Harm: Justifications and Boundaries”, (1998) 57 CLJ 91 at 94. [Back] Note 11 "In Restriction of Tort" in P Birks (ed), The Frontiers of Liability, vol 2 at 95. [Back] Note 12 See paras 2.6-2.13 below. [Back] Note 13 See paras 2.15-2.16 below. [Back] Note 14 See paras 2.4-2.5 below. [Back] Note 15 See paras 2.21-2.24 below. [Back] Note 16 See paras 2.19-2.20 below. [Back] Note 17 See paras 2.17-2.18 below. [Back] Note 18 [1999] 2 AC 455, at 500. [Back] Note 19 Law Com No 249 (1998). [Back] Note 20 See para 2.4-2.5 below. [Back] Note 21 The Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000 has been amended by the Mental Health (Care and Treatment)(Scotland) Act 2003, para 9(5), Sch 4 so that it now uses the 2003 Act definition of mental disorder. [Back] Note 22 See para 3.7 below. [Back] Note 23 See para 2.4-2.5 below. [Back] Note 25 Scotland Act 1998, s 29(2)(c) and Sch 4. [Back] Note 26 In Reid v Ski Independence 1999 SLT(Sh Ct) 62, damages for distress and annoyance were awarded in addition to patrimonial losses when the pursuer’s flight was delayed and luggage mislaid at the start of a short skiing holiday. [Back] Note 27 Anderson v Secretary of State for Scotland 1999 SLT 515. Where the death of young children is concerned distress, pain and suffering may be the only claim, see for example Jarvie v Sharp 1992 SLT 350. [Back] Note 29 In Attia v British Gas Plc [1988] QB 304 a woman was awarded damages for the psychiatric injury she sustained as a result of witnessing her house being burned down. [Back] Note 31 Ibid at 605. See also Harvey v Cairns 1989 SLT 107, Lord Ordinary (Murray) at 109; Page v Smith [1996] AC 155, Lord Keith at 167, Lord Jauncey at 171 and Lord Lloyd at 189 and 197. [Back] Note 32 1983 SLT 601 at 609. [Back] Note 33 [1983] 1 AC 410, at 431. In a later case, Hicks v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 2 All ER 65 at 69, Lord Bridge said "…fear by itself, of whatever degree, is a normal human emotion for which no damages can be awarded". [Back] Note 34 1983 SLT 601 at 609. [Back] Note 35 2000 SCLR 245 at 250. [Back] Note 37 Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 1 AC 310, Lord Ackner at 401. [Back] Note 38 Ibid, Lord Keith at 398, Lord Oliver at 411. [Back] Note 39 1958 SLT (Notes) 49. [Back] Note 40 [1994] 5 Med LR 170 (CA). [Back] Note 41 See also Taylorson v Shieldness Produce Ltd [1994] PIQR P329. [Back] Note 42 [2002] EWHC 321. [Back] Note 43 Cross v Highland and Islands Enterprise 2001 SLT 1060, Lord Ordinary (Macfadyen) at 1075-76 (express denial of requirement). In Fraser v State Hospitals Board for Scotland 2001 SLT 1051 a claim by an employee arising out of a series of disciplinary measures was dismissed not because of the absence of shock but because his psychiatric injury was not foreseeable. [Back] Note 44 [1992] 1 AC 310. [Back] Note 46 Involuntary participants and rescuers are discussed further at paras 2.11 and 2.17-2.18 below respectively. [Back] Note 47 [1996] AC 155 at 184. [Back] Note 48 [1999] 2 AC 455. [Back] Note 50 Ibid at 496-497. [Back] Note 52 Ibid at 479-480. [Back] Note 54 See, for example, para 2.21 below. [Back] Note 55 As such, it is already an exception to the general rule that reparation is only available for psychiatric injury caused by shock. See para 2.4 above. Stress at work cases are sometimes brought under the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 or as a breach of the implied contractual term of mutual trust and confidence between employer and employee; Eastwood v Magnox Electric Plc [2002] EWCA Civ 463. [Back] Note 56 [2002] 2 All ER 1, followed in Stevenson v East Dunbartonshire Council 2003 SLT 97 and Taplin v Fife Council 2003 SLT 653. See also A Bowen, "Earmuffs and Non-slip Flooring for the Soul: Negligence and Occupational Stress" 2002 SLT(News) 81, and N J Mullany, "Containing Claims for Workplace Mental Illness" (2002) 118 LQR 373. [Back] Note 57 [2004] 1 WLR 1089. A conjoined appeal involving, among others, Hatton v Sutherland. [Back] Note 59 [1951] 1 Lloyds Rep 271. [Back] Note 60 [2001] 2 AC 592. [Back] Note 61 [2002] QB 1312, also known as McLoughlin v Grovers. [Back] Note 62 However, Hale LJ considered (ibid at 1329, para 57) that, "Loss of liberty is just as much an interference in bodily integrity as is loss of a limb": she was therefore prepared to consider the case as analogous with Page v Smith. [Back] Note 63 [2003] EWCA Civ 1848. [Back] Note 64 AB v Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust [2004] EWHC 644 (QB). [Back] Note 65 [1996] 7 Med LR 167, see also Farrell v Avon Health Authority [2001] Lloyd's Rep Med 458 where a father was falsely informed of the death of his child and had been given a corpse of another baby to hold when he came to the hospital. [Back] Note 66 [1997] 8 Med LR 91. See also N J Mullany, "Liability for Careless Communication of Traumatic Information'' (1998) 114 LQR 380. [Back] Note 68 The wrongdoer must take his victim as he finds him, see Bourhill v Young 1942 SC(HL) 78, Lord Wright at 92 and McKillen v Barclay Curle & Co Ltd 1967 SLT 41, the Lord President (Clyde) at 42. Thus if the victim sustains a minor injury but because of his physical condition this has major consequences for him, then the wrongdoer is liable for these major consequences, even though they were unforeseen by the wrongdoer. [Back] Note 71 Ibid at 197. See also Lord Browne-Wilkinson at 180-181. [Back] Note 73 See, for example, T K Feng, "Nervous Shock to Primary Victims" (1995) SJLS 649; C A Hopkins, "A New Twist to Nervous Shock" (1995) 54 CLJ 491; N J Mullany, "Psychiatric damage in the House of Lords - Fourth time unlucky: Page v Smith" (1995) 3 Journal of Law and Medicine 112; A Sprince, "Page v Smith - being 'primary' colours House of Lords' judgment" (1995) 11 PN 124; P R Handford, "A New Chapter in the Foresight Saga: Psychiatric Damage in the House of Lords" (1996) 4 Tort L Rev 5; F McManus, "Nervous Shock - Back to Square One?" (1996) Jur Rev 159; F A Trindade, "Nervous Shock and Negligent Conduct" (1996) 112 LQR 22. F A Trindade and P Cane, The Law of Torts in Australia (3rd edn, 1999) 362. But see B McDonald and J Swanton, "Foreseeability in relation to negligent infliction of nervous shock" (1995) 69 ALJ 945. [Back] Note 74 [1967] 1 WLR 912. [Back] Note 75 [1999] 2 AC 455. [Back] Note 78 Ibid at 464-465. [Back] Note 80 1942 SC(HL) 78. [Back] Note 82 [1996] AC 155, Lord Lloyd at 197. [Back] Note 83 Unless the harm was inflicted intentionally. [Back] Note 84 [1992] 1 AC 310 at 411. [Back] Note 85 Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 1 AC 310, Lord Keith at 397; see also Currie v Wardrop 1927 SC 538. [Back] Note 86 McCarthy v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police (unreported) 11 Dec 1996, half-brother. [Back] Note 87 1995 SC 364, the Lord President (Hope) at 368 and 370. [Back] Note 88 Keen v Tayside Contracts 2003 SLT 500. [Back] Note 89 [1992] 2 All ER 470 (note). [Back] Note 90 Court of Appeal, 28 April 1998 (unreported). [Back] Note 91 [1994] PIQR P329. [Back] Note 92 [1993] 4 Med LR 34. [Back] Note 93 [2003] EWCA Civ 697. [Back] Note 94 [2000] 4 All ER 769. [Back] Note 95 Ibid at 783. The decision has been criticised by P Handford “Psychiatric Damage where the Defendant is the Immediate Victim” (2001) 117 LQR 397. [Back] Note 96 [1999] 2 AC 455 at 511. [Back] Note 97 As in Page v Smith [1996] AC 155 discussed at paras 2.15-2.16 above. [Back] Note 98 In particular the Alcock criteria discussed at paras 2.21-2.24 above. [Back] Note 99 J Stapleton, “In Restriction of Tort" in P Birks (ed) The Frontiers of Liability, vol 2 at 95. [Back] Note 100 See, for example, Lord Steyn and Lord Hoffmann in Frost v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1999] 2 AC 455 at 500 and 511 respectively. [Back] Note 101 Paras 2.6-2.13 above. [Back] Note 102 [1996] AC 155. [Back] Note 103 Paras 2.21-2.24 above. [Back] Note 104 See, for example, paras 2.19-2.20 above. [Back] Note 107 [1988] QB 304. [Back] Note 108 Under the Damages (Scotland) Act 1976, s1(4)(a) or (b). [Back] Note 109 Proposal 1(2), para 2.9. [Back] Note 110 Proposal 1(1), para 2.9. [Back] Note 111 Smith New Court Securities Ltd v Scrimgeour Vickers (Asset Management) Ltd [1997] AC 254; Barry v Sutherland 2002 SLT 413. [Back] Note 112 Para 3.7 above. [Back] Note 113 Under the Animals (Scotland) Act 1987 and Part 1 of the Consumer Protection Act 1987 respectively. [Back] Note 114 Draft Bill, s 2 “Subject to the following provisions of this Act”. This reflects the position under the current law where liability for mental harm under s 76 of the Civil Aviation Act 1982 has been held to be subject to the common law restrictions on liability to secondary victims; Glen v Korean Airlines [2003] 3 All ER 621. [Back] Note 115 Recommendation 6 at para 3.44. [Back] Note 116 See paras 3.18-3.30 below. [Back] Note 117 See paras 3.45-3.53 below. [Back] Note 118 See, for example, the Carriage by Air Act 1961, King v Bristow Helicopters Ltd 2002 SC (HL) 59. [Back] Note 119 T Weir, Tort Law (Oxford 2002) 49. [Back] Note 120 See paras 2.19-2.20 above. [Back] Note 121 Proposal 3(6), para 3.36. [Back] Note 122 As under the current law, Essa v Laing Ltd [2004] EWCA Civ 2. [Back] Note 123 S 1(4) (a) and (b). [Back] Note 124 Cf Gifford v Strang Patrick Stevedoring Pty Ltd (2003) 198 ALR 100 where the High Court of Australia held that an employer owed a duty of care to the parents of an employee to prevent them suffering mental harm as a consequence of the employee’s death. [Back] Note 125 See para 3.6 above. [Back] Note 126 Of course, it will only be in exceptional circumstances that such mental harm would be reasonably foreseeable: therefore, in practice, the outcome will be the same as if the restriction did apply. [Back] Note 127 Recommendation 3(a) at para 3.10. [Back] Note 128 Recommendation 3(b) at para 3.10. [Back] Note 129 Recommendation 4(a) and paras 3.11-3.12 above. [Back] Note 130 Of course, if B was physically assaulted and suffers mental harm as a consequence of the physical harm he has sustained, under the thin skull rule he could obtain damages for the mental harm whether or not it was foreseeable. But if it was held that an attempted assault was a complete assault for the purposes of the law of delict then this result would follow even in the absence of physical contact. [Back] Note 131 Para 3.36 above. [Back] Note 132 Page v Smith [1996] AC 155; Donachie v Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police [2004] EWCA Civ 405; Simmons v British Steel Plc 2004 SLT 595. [Back] Note 133 See Recommendation 2(a) and paras 3.5-3.6 above. [Back] Note 134 Cf Salter v UB Frozen & Chilled Foods Ltd 2003 SLT 1011. [Back] Note 135 Cf Dooley v Cammell Laird & Co Ltd [1951] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 271. [Back] Note 136 Cf Barber v Somerset County Council [2004] 1 WLR 1089. [Back] Note 137 W v Essex County Council [2001] 2 AC 592. [Back] Note 138 McLoughlin v Jones [2002] QB 1312, also known as McLoughlin v Grovers. [Back] Note 139 Cf AB v Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust [2004] EWHC 644 (QB). [Back] Note 140 Tame v New South Wales (2002) 76 ALJR 1348. [Back] Note 141 See Recommendation 5(b) and paras 3.22-3.29 above. [Back] Note 142 See Recommendation 2(a) and paras 3.5-3.6 above. [Back] Note 143 See paras 3.54-3.55 below for where there is such a relationship. [Back] Note 144 Bourhill v Young 1942 SC (HL) 78. [Back] Note 146 See Recommendation 5 and paras 3.22-3.29 above. [Back] Note 147 See Recommendation 6, para 3.44. [Back] Note 148 Proposals 5 and 8 at paras 4.13 and 4.34. [Back] Note 149 [1999] 2 AC 455. [Back] Note 150 Under our recommendations the Hillsborough relatives might have been able to sue. [Back] Note 151 Recommendation 5(b), para 3.30 above. [Back] Note 152 Malcolm v Dickson 1951 SC 542. [Back] Note 153 See for example, Haynes v Harwood [1935] 1 KB 146; Ward v T E Hopkins & Son Ltd [1959] 3 All ER 225; Videan v British Transport Commission [1963] 2 QB 650; Flannigan v British Dyewood Co Ltd 1969 SLT 223 approved in Ogwo v Taylor [1988] AC 431. [Back] Note 154 See paras 3.45-3.50 above. [Back] Note 155 Proposal 4 at para 4.8. [Back] Note 156 Proposal 6 at para 4.21. [Back] Note 157 Scot Law Com No 187 (2002). [Back] Note 158 Bourhill v Young 1942 SC (HL) 78. [Back] Note 159 In this we are differing from the approach taken by the High Court of Australia in Gifford v Strang Patrick Stevedoring (2003) 198 ALR 100. [Back] Note 160 See paras 3.18-3.30 above. [Back] Note 161 Recommendation 5(b) and paras 3.27-3.30 above. [Back] Note 162 S 1(4)(a) and (b). [Back] Note 163 Discussion Paper, Proposal 9, para 4.37. [Back] Note 164 Discussion Paper, Proposal 10(1), para 5.20. [Back] Note 165 Discussion Paper, Proposal 10(2), para 5.20. [Back] Note 166 Greatorex v Greatorex 2000 1 WLR 1970 and see para 2.25 above. [Back]