Legal Watch: Personal Injury 23rd July 2015 Issue: 071
Part 36 In the commercial claim of Dutton and others v Minards and
others [Lawtel 20/07/2015] we have yet another case dealing with Part 36.
Former CPR 35.10(1), now CPR 36.13(1) states: (1) Subject to paragraphs (2) and (4) and to rule 36.20, where a Part 36 offer is accepted within the relevant period the claimant
In this issue: • Part 36 • Limitation • Some relief at last for motor insurers
will be entitled to the costs of the proceedings (including their
recoverable pre-action costs) up to the date on which notice of acceptance was served on the offeror.
The claimants alleged that the defendants owed them
commission following the dissolution of a joint venture and issued a claim. The defendants offered the claimants £25,000
plus their reasonable costs; the claimants did not accept the
offer. The claimants then made a series of offers, including a Part 36 offer to settle for £18,000. The defendants deliberately
accepted it one minute after the expiry of the 21-day period prescribed by CPR 36.3. Consequently, the claim was settled but the automatic costs consequences under CPR 36.10(1),
Events
The parties could not agree on costs. The defendants
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£25,000, made 15 months earlier, instead of perpetuating the
The Major Bodily Injury Group (MBIG) | Spring
the costs. The judge found that the defendants had chosen
Wellcome Collection, London
as it then was, were avoided.
argued that the claimants should have accepted their offer of proceedings, and that it was unfair that they should bear all to accept the claimants’ offer, even though they could have reminded the claimants of their earlier offer, which he found
was a Part 36 offer that had not been withdrawn; and that a decisive factor was that the value of the claim net of the
counterclaim was uncertain because the defendants had
been unwilling to disclose the strengths and weaknesses of their case. He decided that it would not be unjust to apply
the presumption in CPR 36.10(5) that the defendants pay the claimants’ costs.
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‘…the task for the judge had been to make a value judgment as to whether it would be unjust to apply the presumption as to costs in CPR 36.10(5)...’ Dismissing the defendants’ appeal, the Court of Appeal held
that the task for the judge had been to make a value judgment as to whether it would be unjust to apply the presumption as to costs in CPR 36.10(5); that was a discretionary matter. He had been right to find that the defendants’ earlier offer
had been a Part 36 offer. A reasonable reader would have understood it to be such.
The judge had been entitled to find that the claimants had not been able to value the defendants’ counterclaim
properly at the time of the defendants’ offer. If the claimants could be criticised for not accepting the defendants’ offer,
the defendants could have made a new offer outside Part 36. Other judges might have given more weight to the
defendants’ offer, but matters of weight were discretionary, and the judge had acted within the ambit of his discretion.
02
Limitation The case of South West Strategic Health Authority v Bay Island Voyages (2015) EWCA Civ 708 sees the court
distinguishing between a convention time limit for bringing a claim for personal injury and the time limit for pursuing a claim for contribution.
The appellant’s employee had been injured during a work
team-building outing on a rigid inflatable boat owned and operated by the respondent. The employee sued the
appellant employer for damages for personal injury and the
employer issued a Part 20 claim against the respondent seeking a contribution to any liability.
The respondent filed a defence that the contribution claim
was barred because it had not been issued within the twoyear time limit in Article 16 of the Athens Convention 1974.
A district judge granted the respondent summary judgment
on the ground that the employee’s right to pursue the employer had been extinguished by the time limit expiring,
and that therefore under S1(3) Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 there was nothing on which the contribution claim could rely.
On appeal, the judge did not distinguish between the
personal injury claim and the contribution claim and held that the contribution claim had been extinguished. The issues
were (i) whether the Convention was directly applicable to
the contribution claim; (ii) the nature of the time bar under Article 16.
‘The claim to contribution was autonomous and derived from the English domestic statutory entitlement to contribution’
Allowing the appeal, the Court of Appeal held that the Convention dealt with claims by passengers against carriers
and with nothing else. It did not purport to be a complete code governing all liability of sea carriers in respect of carriage of passengers and their luggage. Rights of recourse
between carriers and other parties were not mentioned in the Convention. An action in which a claim for contribution
from the carrier was sought in respect of the employer’s liability for personal injury to its employee was not “an action
for damages for...personal injury to a passenger... brought against a carrier”. The claim to contribution was autonomous
and derived from the English domestic statutory entitlement to contribution. It was unsurprising that the claim in itself was unaffected by the provisions of the Convention. On the other hand, the carrier’s liability to contribute was critically
dependent on its own liability to the passenger, which in turn was governed by the provisions of the Convention, including those as to limitation.
The language of Article 16 did not extinguish the right on which the claim was based: it was remedy-barring as
opposed to right-extinguishing. However, it was appropriate
to approach the effect of Article 16 having regard to the fact that it was the language of an international convention
rather than a domestic statute. There was no corpus of
international understanding pursuant to which the language of Article 16 should be regarded as extinguishing the right of action. The ultimate question was what the words meant,
which was prompted by an exclusively domestic enquiry of whether the statutory right to contribution was excluded by
reason of S1 (3) of the 1978 Act. Whilst the words used in Article 16 had an international or convention provenance,
they did not have an autonomous and internationally
understood meaning that was different in effect from that which they naturally bore in the English language and as understood in English law.
03
Some relief at last for motor insurers Over the years it has become easier for motor insurers to deliver certificates of insurance under S147 Road
Traffic Act 1988 but it remained a complex and relatively costly exercise to recover a certificate if it was cancelled during the currency of the policy but not surrendered by
the policyholder. However, that problem has now been addressed in S9 Deregulation Act 2015.
Subsections 147(4) and (5) have been removed from S147
and the only requirement now is for the insurer which cancels a certificate of insurance to update MID. Provided that is done before an accident has occurred, the insurer will
retain no liability to deal with resulting claims, which will fall to be dealt with by MIB.
These provisions came into force on 30 June 2015 and relate to policies cancelled on or after that date. Failure to notify MID of the cancellation before an accident has occurred will
result in the insurer retaining Article 75 status. Article 75(2)
(iii) has been amended accordingly. If a policy was cancelled
before 30 June, the procedure remains the same and the
insurer must take steps to recover the certificate or risk retaining RTA or Article 75 status.
It is important to note that these amendments do not affect
the situation where an accident occurs and it is subsequently
discovered that the policyholder was guilty of a material
non-disclosure or misrepresentation when proposing for the policy. It will still be necessary to apply for a declaration
to reduce the insurer’s status from RTA to Article 75 (if it
is worth doing so), addressing the requirements of the Consumer Insurance (Disclosure and Representations) Act 2012 where the driver was a private individual.
Insurers using this new procedure to cancel policies and come off risk will need to remember their duty to treat
customers fairly and ensure that the grounds for cancelling the policy are valid.
04
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The information and opinions contained in this document are not intended to be a comprehensive study, nor to provide legal advice, and should not be relied on or treated as a substitute for specific advice concerning individual situations. This document speaks as of its date and does not reflect any changes in law or practice after that date. Plexus Law and Greenwoods Solicitors are trading names of Parabis Law LLP, a Limited Liability Partnership incorporated in England & Wales. Reg No: OC315763. Registered office: 12 Dingwall Road, Croydon, CR0 2NA. Parabis Law LLP is authorised and regulated by the SRA.