(In this YAWS version a few editorial alterations have been made to the description of the CPR and Practice Directions, eg references to Part 3.8 have been changed to Rule 3.8, to ensure consistency with the remainder of the site.)
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HOLMAN
5MC01022
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2 A 2LL
05/10/2006
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
Debbie Casey
Appellant
- and -
David Cartwright
Respondent
|
Lord Justice Dyson: this is the judgment of the court. | |||||||||||||||
| 1. | The defendant appeals with
the permission of His Honour Judge
Holman against his case management decision of 6 April 2006 whereby he revoked
the permission granted by District Judge Beattie on 12 October 2005 to the
parties to rely on the evidence of a joint expert on the orthopaedic issues
arising in this case. Pursuant to the permission of the district judge, the
parties had instructed Mr RJ Williams, who had produced a report dated 20
February 2006. It is unusual for a judge to give permission to appeal to this
court against a case management decision that he or she has made. Such appeals
are not encouraged. But Judge Holman gave permission in this case because he
considered that his decision raised important policy issues, particularly in the
light of the decision of this court in | ||||||||||||||
| 2. | This is a low-velocity road traffic claim. On 6 September 2004, a collision occurred between two cars, one driven by the claimant and the other by the defendant. The defendant collided with the rear of the claimant's car. The defendant has admitted liability. Proceedings were issued in March 2005 with damages limited to £10,000. The particulars of claim were supported by medical reports from Dr Mark Middleman dated 26 January and 22 February 2005 following his examination of the claimant on 12 January. He concluded that the claimant had sustained a typical soft tissue whiplash injury. He recommended physiotherapy and his prognosis was that there would be full recovery within 9 months of the accident. | ||||||||||||||
| 3. | As early as September, the defendant's insurers stated that they considered this to be a low-velocity impact case and that on that account causation would be in issue. This position was amplified in the defence which pleaded that this was a very gentle incident; the speed of the defendant's vehicle was around 2 mph; and that the force transmitted from the defendant's vehicle to the claimant's vehicle was insufficient to cause personal injury to the claimant. | ||||||||||||||
| 4. | The district judge gave permission to the claimant to rely on the evidence of Dr Middleman and, as we have said, to both parties to instruct a joint expert to deal with orthopaedic issues. The case was allocated to the multi-track and transferred to Manchester. | ||||||||||||||
| 5. | The district judge ordered the joint expert's report to be served by 16 December 2005. In fact, it was not served until 22 February 2006. Mr Williams said that there was a wealth of published evidence to the effect that at impact velocities of between 5 and 10 mph, injury to the occupant(s) of the struck vehicle is unlikely to occur, and if it does occur, it is likely to result in symptoms lasting no more than a few days. This is because the forces directly attributable to the impact velocity are modified by the absorption of energy by the two vehicle upon impact with resultant velocity change in the struck vehicle. This is known as "delta V". The velocity change is approximately half the impact velocity. Mr Williams concluded that from the information available and on a balance of probabilities, the collision in the instant case occurred at low velocity with a delta V of less than 5 mph. | ||||||||||||||
| 6. | Since the trial had been fixed for 27 February, Judge Holman decided to vacate the trial date. He fixed a case management conference for 23 March and indicated that one of the matters that he would wish to consider was what evidence should be adduced in relation to the causation issue. | ||||||||||||||
| 7. | The argument before the
judge on 23 March ranged far and wide. In a careful reserved judgment given on
6 April, he explained why he was revoking the permission given to the parties to
rely on the evidence of Mr Williams. Before we examine his reasoning, we need
to refer to the decision in | ||||||||||||||
| 8. | The judgment of the court was given by Brooke LJ. The claim in that case was a low-velocity claim. The defendant wished to adduce expert evidence from Mr Newman, who is a consultant surgeon and traumatologist, to show that the nature of the impact was such that it was very unlikely that the claimant had sustained an injury as a result of the collision. On the strength of that and other evidence, the defendant pleaded that the claimant was fabricating his symptoms and that he had in fact sustained no injuries. Initially, the case was allocated to the fast-track. But both parties wished to have it allocated to the multi-track and permission for the experts to give oral evidence. The district judge refused. She considered that the directions being sought were disproportionate: this was a relatively low-value claim and she had to think of the proportionality of the costs and expense. On appeal, Judge Tetlow took a different view. He said that fairness dictated in a fraud case that it be investigated properly. The experts should be called to give their evidence orally. He allocated the case to the multi-track with a trial estimate of 2 days. | ||||||||||||||
| 9. | The claimant appealed to this court. His appeal was dismissed. The dilemma facing the court was described at para 28 of the judgment in these terms: | ||||||||||||||
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| 10. | At para 33, the court said that Judge Tetlow was right to overrule the district judge for the reasons that he gave. The district judge did not adequately address the question whether the case could be dealt with justly on the fast-track, or consider whether because fraud was alleged it was necessary in the interests of justice for the experts to attend so that the trial judge could properly unravel the complexities that were inherent in their contested evidence. | ||||||||||||||
| 11. | At para 34, the court said that this was not a case which could be justly disposed of by "paper exercises and questioning" as the district judge supposed. "By the very nature of the issues raised by the defence, the expert witnesses had to be called to give oral evidence if justice was to be done". Judge Tetlow was right to express the views that he did. | ||||||||||||||
| 12. | Paras 35 and 36 are important and need to be set out in full: | ||||||||||||||
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| 13. | No series of trials such as were envisaged by para 36 of the judgment has yet taken place, and, so far as we are aware, none is yet in prospect. With a view to implementing the suggestion made in that paragraph, the four designated civil judges on the Northern Circuit consulted McCombe J. They had the benefit of a paper prepared by Mark Turner QC and Berrymans Lace Mawer on behalf of a number of insurers. Their consensus was that it was not yet possible to identify suitable cases for the trial of generic issues: further investigation was required and the paper suggested that six months should be allowed for such investigation. | ||||||||||||||
| 14. | On 14 March 2006, McCombe J issued a Practice Note with the approval of Dyson LJ. He directed that, in order to achieve some consistency of approach pending an authoritative decision, all applications to adduce expert evidence on issues of causation in low-velocity road traffic claims on the Northern Circuit should be issued or transferred to the relevant designated civil judge. | ||||||||||||||
| 15. | We now turn to the judgment of Judge Holman. | ||||||||||||||
| 16. | The judge started with the question of the correct general approach to these cases. At paras 8 and 9, he said : | ||||||||||||||
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| 17. | He then said that these
features could be readily demonstrated by looking at other cases. He referred
to 9 cases for this purpose. At para 11, he said that he had been told in open
court by Mr McCann (the defendant's solicitor in the present case) and Mr
Higgins (counsel who appeared regularly for the defendant in these cases) that
they were not aware of any trial where the claim had failed because the judge
accepted the defence expert evidence: they failed because the judge had rejected
the claimant's evidence as unreliable. The judge said that he had no reason to
doubt this information. Mr Turner submitted to the judge that | ||||||||||||||
| 18. | Judge Holman decided what he referred to as the "generic issues" as follows: | ||||||||||||||
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| 19. | Accordingly, in such cases the starting point is that expert evidence on causation should not be permitted in these cases. At para 19 of his judgment Judge Holman said that it did not follow that defendants and their insurers would be put to a significant disadvantage. They could and should put appropriate questions to the claimant's medical expert. | ||||||||||||||
| 20. | In the second part of the judgment, he did not discuss the question whether there were any reasons for departing from his starting point. Rather, he identified a number of what he referred to as "problems" which had arisen with Mr Williams' report and concluded that Mr Williams was not suitable to act as an expert witness. The judge's concern as to the suitability of Mr Williams was heightened by the answers he gave to the claimant's solicitors' questions. His answer "Whiplash injuries are uncommon in Singapore, New Zealand, Quebec, Greece, Russia and Lithuania. These countries either have no or restricted mechanisms of compensation". The judge said that this answer clearly demonstrated a lack of objectivity. | ||||||||||||||
| 21. | The judge then considered what he should do. He said that there was no ideal solution: it was a matter of identifying the least imperfect solution. He had little hesitation in concluding that the permission for Mr Williams should be revoked. Viewed in totality, the defaults were not capable of rectification. He decided that the defendant should be given permission to put questions to Dr Middleman and that Dr Middleman should have permission to give oral evidence at trial if so required by the defendant. He did not interfere with the district judge's decision to allocate the case to the multi-track. He gave the defendant permission to appeal against his decision. He said that he recognised that the issues were finely balanced and that his decision represented a significant change of approach. | ||||||||||||||
| The narrow issue | |||||||||||||||
| 22. | In his skeleton argument, Mr Turner submits that the judge was wrong to revoke the permission to rely on the evidence of an orthopaedic expert. The defaults in the presentation of Mr Williams' evidence could have been cured. They did not disqualify him from giving evidence. But in oral argument, Mr Turner realistically acknowledged the difficulty he faced in seeking to persuade this court that the judge erred in principle or reached a decision that was not reasonably open to him. Mr Turner did not pursue the narrow issue. The judge did not give permission to appeal for the purpose of enabling the defendant to challenge his decision on the narrow question of whether he was right to hold that permission to rely on the evidence of Mr Williams should be revoked because he was not a suitable witness. He gave permission to enable the defendant to raise the wider issue as to the correct approach to the giving of permission to adduce expert evidence on questions of causation in low-velocity impact cases. It is to this wider issue that we now turn. | ||||||||||||||
| The wider issue | |||||||||||||||
| 23. | There can be no doubt that
the decision of this court in | ||||||||||||||
| 24. | Mr Turner told us that, so
far as he was aware, during the period between | ||||||||||||||
| 25. | In his skeleton argument,
Mr Turner subjects the judgment in | ||||||||||||||
| 26. | Mr Turner also criticises the judge for relying on the nine first instance county court judgments to which I have earlier referred in order to show that expert evidence on causation was not tending to influence the outcome of low-velocity impact cases. Many of these cases had been compromised by the parties and none had been reported. Mr Turner submits that the body of cases relied on by the judge was selective and misrepresented the usefulness of expert evidence in these types of case. He has referred us to other cases where defendants have been permitted to adduce expert evidence on the causation issue and such evidence has been decisive or at any rate found to be helpful by the court. We agree that an analysis of these cases by the judge was unhelpful. Without a detailed examination of the facts of each case, it is difficult to see what conclusions could be safely drawn from them. Moreover, the judge was ill-advised to include in his judgment an analysis of the cases without giving the defendant an opportunity to consider each case and make relevant submissions. | ||||||||||||||
| 27. | Mr Turner advances four
main criticisms of Judge Holman's approach. First, the judge was bound by
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| 28. | We do not consider that it
is profitable to analyse the judgment in | ||||||||||||||
| 29. | It is not controversial that in ordinary run-of-the-mill road traffic whiplash injury cases, there will be no need for expert medical evidence on the causation issue. The question of whether such evidence should be permitted only arises where the defendant contends that the nature of the impact was such that it was impossible or very unlikely that the claimant suffered any injury or any more than trivial injury as a result of the collision and that accordingly the claimant has fabricated the claim. It is only in such a case that the causation issue arises. | ||||||||||||||
| 30. | We think that it is desirable that, if a defendant wishes to raise the causation issue, he should satisfy certain formalities. In this way, the risk of confusion and delay to the proceedings should be minimised. Accordingly, where in a particular case a defendant wishes to raise the causation issue, he should notify all other parties in writing that he considers this to be a low impact case and that he intends to raise the causation issue. For the reasons set out at para 33 below, he should do so within three months of receipt of the letter of claim. The issue should be expressly identified in the defence, supported in the usual way by a statement of truth. Within 21 days of serving a defence raising the causation issue, the defendant should serve on the court and the other parties a witness statement which clearly identifies the grounds on which the issue is raised. Such a witness statement would be expected to deal with the defendant's evidence relating to the issue, including the circumstances of the impact and any resultant damage. | ||||||||||||||
| 31. | Upon receipt of the witness statement, the court will, if satisfied that the issue has been properly identified and raised, generally give permission for the claimant to be examined by a medical expert nominated by the defendant. | ||||||||||||||
| 32. | If upon receipt of any medical evidence served by the defendant following such examination, the court is satisfied on the entirety of the evidence submitted by the defendant that he has properly identified a case on the causation issue which has a real prospect of success, then the court will generally give the defendant permission to rely on such evidence at trial. | ||||||||||||||
| 33. | We believe that what we
have just said reflects the tenor of the judgment in | ||||||||||||||
| 34. | Secondly, if there is a factual dispute the resolution of which one way or the other is likely to resolve the causation issue, that is a factor which militates against the granting of permission to rely on expert evidence on the causation issue. In such a case, expert evidence is likely to serve little or no purpose. | ||||||||||||||
| 35. | Thirdly, there may be cases where the injury alleged and the damages claimed are so small and the nature of the expert evidence that the defendant wishes to adduce so extensive and complex that considerations of proportionality demand that permission to rely on the evidence should be refused. This must be left to the good sense of the judge. It does not detract from the general guidance given at para 32 above. | ||||||||||||||
| 36. | We should say something about single joint experts. They have an invaluable role to play in litigation generally, especially in low value litigation. But we accept the submission of Mr Turner that, at any rate until some test cases have been decided at high court level, judges should be slow to direct that expert evidence on the causation issue be given by a single joint expert. This is because the causation issue is controversial. | ||||||||||||||
| 37. | We repeat what we said at
para 36 of | ||||||||||||||
| Conclusion | |||||||||||||||
| 38. | In this judgment, we have
attempted to amplify the guidance given in |