[2024] UKSC 11
On appeal from: [2023] EWCA Civ 19
JUDGMENT
Hassam and another (Appellants) vRabot and another (Respondents)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Hamblen
Lord Burrows
Lady Rose
26 March 2024
Heard on 20 February 2024
Appellants
Isabel Hitching KC
(Instructed by DAC Beachcroft Claims Limited (London))
Respondents
Benjamin Williams KC
Shannon Eastwood
(Instructed by Robert James Solicitors (Woolton))
Interveners – Association of Personal Injury Lawyers and Motor Accident Solicitors Society
Robert Weir KC
Sam Way
(Instructed by Hugh James (London))
LORD BURROWS (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lord Hamblen and Lady Rose agree):
Introduction
In general terms, Part 1 of the Civil Liability Act 2018 (“the 2018 Act”) and the Whiplash Injury Regulations 2021 (SI 2021/642) (“the 2021 Regulations”) have significantly reduced the amount of damages payable for pain, suffering and loss of amenity (“PSLA”) in respect of whiplash injuries caused by negligent driving. The 2021 Regulations lay down the amount of damages that is payable for PSLA according to a tariff that varies only by reason of the duration of the whiplash injury. I shall refer to that amount of damages as the “tariff amount”.
The highest percentage reduction, in comparison with the damages that would have been recoverable for PSLA at common law, is where the duration of the whiplash injury is for not more than 3 months. The tariff amount for a whiplash injury of that duration is £240 (or £260 if there was additional minor psychological injury) compared to common law damages (as set out in the Judicial College Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injury Cases (“the Guidelines”),16th ed (2021)) of £2,450. The lowest percentage reduction is where the duration of the whiplash injury is for 18 to 24 months. The tariff amount for a whiplash injury of that duration is £4,215 (or £4,345 if there was additional minor psychological injury) compared to a damages bracket, at common law, of £4,350 to £7,890.
The question raised by the two test cases before us is, what is the impact of the whiplash reform on damages for PSLA in respect of non-whiplash injuries suffered by the claimant in the same accident in which he or she suffers a whiplash injury? More specifically, what is the position on concurrent PSLA caused by both a whiplash injury and a non-whiplash injury?
Although the sums at stake in these two cases are small, it is clear that many thousands of cases are potentially affected by the decision on these appeals. The Official Injury Claim Service, on behalf of the Ministry of Justice, collects and analyses the data from the use of the Official Injury Claim online portal for road traffic accident small claims (“the OIC portal”) that was set up as part of the same package of reforms as the reduction of damages for whiplash injuries. The Official Injury Claim Service’s statistics (Official Injury Claim, “Claims Data: for the period 1 October to 31 December 2023”) show that, in those three months, there were 62,557 whiplash claims (including claims for both whiplash and non-whiplash injuries) made using the OIC portal. 19,398 (30% of all the claims made using the OIC portal) were for whiplash injuries (plus minor psychological injuries) alone and 43,159 (66.7%) were for both whiplash and non-whiplash injuries.
I should make clear at the outset that, because the relevant legislation covers whiplash injuries and minor psychological injuries suffered by the claimant on the same occasion, I shall, for ease of exposition, include those minor psychological injuries as whiplash injuries rather than non-whiplash injuries.
Three possible approaches
The parties’ submissions have focused on three possible approaches to dealing with concurrent PSLA caused by whiplash and non-whiplash injuries.
The first approach, advocated by the defendants (the appellants in these appeals), is that one should first take the tariff amount laid down in the 2021 Regulations. One should then add the amount of common law damages for PSLA for the non-whiplash injury but only if the claimant establishes that the non-whiplash injury has caused non-concurrent (ie different) PSLA. This approach therefore envisages a build up from the tariff amount and requires the claimant to identify with some precision any different PSLA caused by the non-whiplash injury. This was the approach accepted by Sir Geoffrey Vos MR in his dissenting judgment in these two test cases in the Court of Appeal: [2023] EWCA Civ 19, [2023] KB 171, paras 50-70.
The second approach is advocated as their primary case by the claimants and, as their sole case, by the interveners (who are the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers and the Motor Accident Solicitors Society). According to this approach, one should add together the tariff amount for the whiplash injury and the amount of common law damages for PSLA for the non-whiplash injury without any consideration of whether there should be a deduction to avoid double recovery for the same loss.
The third approach, advocated by the claimants as their secondary case, is that one should first add together the tariff amount for the whiplash injury and the common law damages for PSLA for the non-whiplash injury. Then one should stand back to consider whether to make a deduction to reflect any overlap between the two amounts (ie where both amounts cover the same PSLA). As is explained below, such an adding together, standing back and deduction is in line with what has been the standard approach at common law to assessing damages for PSLA for multiple injuries (whether involving whiplash or not) as articulated by the Court of Appeal in Sadler v Filipiak [2011] EWCA Civ 1728 (“Sadler”). But any deduction must be made from the damages for the non-whiplash injury because the tariff amount is a statutory fixed sum; and the deduction should not reduce the overall amount of damages to be awarded below the amount that would be awarded for the non-whiplash injury alone (this has been labelled “the caveat”). This was the approach laid down by the majority of the Court of Appeal in these two test cases. Nicola Davies LJ gave the leading judgment, which was agreed with, in a concurring judgment, by Stuart-Smith LJ: [2023] KB 171, paras 1-49. It was also the approach basically adopted, but without the caveat, by District Judge Hennessy at first instance.
The assessment of damages at common law for PSLA including in cases of multiple injuries
Before turning to the relevant legislation, it is important to understand how damages for PSLA are assessed at common law. The general aim of damages for a tort is to compensate the claimant’s loss. Compensation means the award of a sum of money which, so far as money can be so, is equivalent to the claimant’s loss. The loss may be pecuniary (such as a loss of earnings or medical expenses) where the equivalence to the claimant’s loss can be precise; or the loss may be non-pecuniary, such as PSLA, where the sum to be awarded as compensation cannot be precisely equivalent to the loss and where consistency of awards is instead achieved through the application of the scale of values established by decisions in past cases. It is also trite law, as made clear in the classic formulation by Lord Blackburn in Livingstone v Rawyards Coal Co (1880) 5 App Cas 25, 39, that the aim of compensatory damages is to put the claimant into as good a position as he or she would have been in if no tort had been committed. This has often in the past been described as seeking to achieve “restitution” (and was so described in the written submissions of the claimants and interveners) but, in the modern law, restitution is a term that is primarily understood to be concerned with reversing benefits obtained by a defendant and is, therefore, best avoided as a supposed synonym for compensation.
In respect of PSLA in personal injury cases, it was explained by the Court of Appeal in Heil v Rankin [2001] QB 272 that the scale of values represents what the judges consider to be the fair, just and reasonable sums to award for PSLA. The determination of what is fair, just and reasonable takes into account the interests of claimants, defendants and society as a whole. The Court of Appeal also made clear that, although compensation for PSLA can never be precise, the aim is to provide full compensation.
The need for consistency through past awards in respect of PSLA has traditionally depended on the publication (in, for example, Kemp & Kemp on the Quantum of Damages) of judicial awards listed under the different types of personal injury with brief details of the claimant’s circumstances. The bracket of damages for that injury which the previous cases have laid down (adjusted upwards for inflation) has provided the range of award for the particular case before the court. In deciding where within the range the instant case falls (or if, exceptionally, it falls outside the range) the courts have taken account of the claimant’s particular circumstances: for example, the claimant may have suffered a great deal of pain over a long period of time or the claimant may have been unable to continue with a particular activity that he or she had previously enjoyed.
In 1992, the Judicial Studies Board (now the Judicial College) produced the Guidelines as an attempt to produce greater consistency of awards and to make the judicial scale of values more easily accessible. The Guidelines set out, in easily understood form, a distillation, from past cases, of the range of awards for various injuries. In the most recent 16th edition, published in 2021, the range runs from a few hundred pounds for minor cuts and bruises through to £403,990 for the most serious injuries.
A question that has concerned the courts for several decades is, how should one assess damages for PSLA in respect of multiple injuries? The most important statement on this question was made by Pitchford LJ in Sadler. He said at para 34:
“It is in my judgment always necessary to stand back from the compilation of individual figures, whether assistance has been derived from comparable cases or from the JSB guideline advice, to consider whether the award for pain, suffering and loss of amenity should be greater than the sum of the parts in order properly to reflect the combined effect of all the injuries upon the injured person’s recovering quality of life or, on the contrary, should be smaller than the sum of the parts in order to remove an element of double counting. In some cases, no doubt a minority, no adjustment will be necessary because the total will properly reflect the overall pain, suffering and loss of amenity endured. In others, and probably the majority, an adjustment and occasionally a significant adjustment may be necessary.”
Pitchford LJ’s statement has attained prominence. This appears to be not only because of its rational clarity but also because it was cited at the start of the Guidelines in the 11th edition in 2012 under the heading “Note on Multiple Injuries” and has been repeated in the same form in all subsequent editions. Prior to then, the Guidelines hadoffered no clear approach to assessing PSLA in multiple injury cases.
Etherton LJ in Sadler made similar remarks to those of Pitchford LJ. Citing an earlier judgment of the Court of Appeal, he said the following at paras 1-2 of his judgment:
… The correct methodology was that set out by the Court of Appeal in Brown v Woodall [[1995] PIQR Q36]. In that case Sir John May, with whom the other members of the court agreed, said:
‘As far as the first ground of appeal is concerned, I respectfully agree that the learned judge’s approach adding up the various figures for the awards that she thought appropriate for the various different injuries could well lead one to an award, which, compared with other awards, is in the aggregate larger than is reasonable.
In this type of case, in which there are a number of separate injuries, all adding up to one composite effect upon the plaintiff, it is necessary for a learned judge, no doubt having considered the various injuries and fixed a particular figure as reasonable compensation for each, to stand back and have a look at what would be the global aggregate figure and ask if it is reasonable compensation for the totality of the injury to the plaintiff or whether it would in aggregate be larger than was reasonable?’
In other words the judge should have, firstly, considered the various injuries and fixed a particular figure as reasonable for each and then, secondly, stood back and had a look at what would be the global aggregate figure and ask whether it was reasonable compensation for the totality of the injury.”
For other judgments taking a similar approach to multiple injuries, see, eg, Santos v Eaton Square Garage Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 225, paras 22-23; Noble v Owens [2008] EWHC 359 (QB), paras 46-49 (overturned on a separate evidential issue at [2010] EWCA Civ 224, [2010] 1 WLR 2491);and see, generally, Kemp and Kemp on the Quantum of Damages,para 3-024.
It was not in dispute between the parties that what was said by Pitchford LJ in Sadler is now the standard approach at common law for dealing with damages for PSLA in respect of multiple injuries.
The legislation
I shall now describe or set out the most relevant provisions of the primary and secondary legislation with which we are concerned in these cases.
Part 1 of the 2018 Act is concerned with damages for whiplash injuries. Section 1 explains what is meant by a “whiplash injury” for the purposes of the 2018 Act. It is confined to whiplash injuries caused by negligent driving on a road or other public place in England or Wales. Under section 1(4), the person injured must be the driver or a passenger in a motor vehicle but the driver or passenger on a motor cycle is excluded.
Section 3 is the most important provision for our purposes. In so far as relevant it reads:
“3 Damages for whiplash injuries
This section applies in relation to the determination by a court of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity in a case where—
a person (‘the claimant’) suffers a whiplash injury because of driver negligence, and
the duration of the whiplash injury or any of the whiplash injuries suffered on that occasion—
does not exceed, or is not likely to exceed, two years, or
would not have exceeded, or would not be likely to exceed, two years but for the claimant’s failure to take reasonable steps to mitigate its effect.
The amount of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity payable in respect of the whiplash injury or injuries, taken together, is to be an amount specified in regulations made by the Lord Chancellor.
If the claimant suffers one or more minor psychological injuries on the same occasion as the whiplash injury or injuries, the amount of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity payable in respect of the minor psychological injury or the minor psychological injuries, taken together, is to be an amount specified in regulations made by the Lord Chancellor.
…
Nothing in this section prevents a court, in a case where a person suffers an injury or injuries in addition to an injury or injuries to which regulations under this section apply, awarding an amount of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity that reflects the combined effect of the person’s injuries (subject to the limits imposed by regulations under this section).
…”
Section 5, headed “Uplift in exceptional circumstances”, empowers the Lord Chancellor by regulations to allow a percentage uplift (with the maximum to be specified) of the tariff amount where the whiplash injuries are “exceptionally severe” or where the person’s exceptional circumstances increase the PSLA.
Through the 2021 Regulations, which came into force on 31 May 2021, the Lord Chancellor exercised the power conferred on him by the 2018 Act to fix the amounts payable in respect of a whiplash injury and a whiplash injury with minor psychological injury. The amounts are contained in Regulation 2:
Damages for whiplash injuries
Subject to regulation 3—
the total amount of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity payable in relation to one or more whiplash injuries, taken together (‘the tariff amount’ …), is the figure specified in the second column of the following table; and
the total amount of damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity payable in relation to both one or more whiplash injuries and one or more minor psychological injuries suffered on the same occasion as the whiplash injury or injuries, taken together (‘the tariff amount’…), is the figure specified in the third column of the following table—
Duration of injury
Amount –Regulation 2(1)(a)
Amount –Regulation 2(1)(b)
Not more than 3 months
£240
£260
More than 3 months, but not more than 6 months
£495
£520
More than 6 months, but not more than 9 months
£840
£895
More than 9 months, but not more than 12 months
£1,320
£1,390
More than 12 months, but not more than 15 months
£2,040
£2,125
More than 15 months, but not more than 18 months
£3,005
£3,100
More than 18 months, but not more than 24 months
£4,215
£4,345
Through Regulation 3, the Lord Chancellor exercised the power to fix the percentage uplift where the exceptionality requirement, set out in section 5 of the 2018 Act, is satisfied. Under that Regulation, the maximum uplift cannot exceed the tariff amount by more than 20%.
The facts of these two cases and the decisions at first instance
In Rabot v Hassam (J10YJ826) the claimant was a passenger in a car that was negligently hit from behind while stationary. That accident occurred on 16 July 2021. The claimant suffered whiplash injuries to his neck and back (ie soft tissue injuries to the cervical spine and lumbo-sacral area). He also suffered non-whiplash injuries to his knees (ie soft tissue injuries to both knees). On 22 July 2021 Mr Rabot commenced a claim by means of a small claims notification form on the OIC portal.
The parties were unable to agree the quantum of damages. Where this occurs, the Civil Procedure Rules PD 27B (headed “Claims under the Pre-Action Protocol for Personal Injury Claims below the Small Claims Limit in Road Traffic Accidents – Court Procedure”) sets out the procedure to be followed. The relevant evidence will be contained in a “Court Pack”. A medical report prepared on behalf of the claimant was included in the Court Pack. It identified the nature and duration of the injuries as being: injury to the cervical spine, resolution 8 to 10 months; injuries to the lumbo-sacral area, resolution 8 to 10 months; injuries to both knees, resolution 4 to 5 months; travel anxiety, resolution within 3 months. The claimant also experienced difficulty in a number of activities (eg carrying heavy items, exercising, and driving for long periods).
At the quantum only hearing before District Judge Hennessy, the tariff amount for the whiplash injuries was assessed at £1,390 and the common law damages for PSLA for the knee injuries at £2,500. Adding those together produced an overall figure of £3,890. Essentially applying the third approach set out in para 9 above, the District Judge, following Sadler,stepped back, in order to reach a final figure, by making an appropriate deduction. At para 41, she identified the “clear overlap” between the PSLA from the injuries, as indicated by the medical evidence, and added that “[t]here is nothing highlighted in terms of particular loss of amenity that can be attributed to the knee injuries alone.” The overall award was therefore assessed to be £3,100 (ie the Sadler deduction was £790).
In Briggs v Laditan (J10YJ855) the claimant was the driver of a car that was hit from behind while he was slowing down at a roundabout. The accident occurred on 8 June 2021. He suffered whiplash injuries (ie soft tissue injuries) to his neck, upper and lower back; and non-whiplash injuries (ie soft tissue injuries) to his left elbow, chest, left knee and hips. His claim proceeded through the OIC portal. The medical report was to the effect that the injuries to the hips, chest and elbow resolved after, respectively, 1, 2 and 3 months. The prognosis for the other injuries was that there would be resolution of the injuries to the neck, and upper and lower back, within 9months of the accident; and there would be resolution of the injury to the knee within 6 months of the accident. The claimant, who was a taxi driver, lost 4 days of work.