[2022] UKSC 29
On appeal from: [2020] EWCA Civ 926
JUDGMENT
The Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Families Association – Forces Help and another (Respondents) v Allgemeines Krankenhaus Viersen GmbH (Appellant)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Hodge, Deputy President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Kitchin
Lord Hughes
2 November 2022
Heard on 29 and 30 March 2022
Appellant
Charles Dougherty KC
Benjamin Phelps
(Instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP (Bristol))
Respondents
(The Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Families Association – Forces Help and Ministry of Defence)
Charles Hollander KC
(Instructed by The Government Legal Department)
LORD LLOYD-JONES (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Hodge, Lord Kitchin and Lord Hughes agree):
Introduction
This appeal raises an important question as to the effect of the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 (“the 1978 Act”), namely whether it has mandatory or overriding effect (“overriding effect”) so that it applies to all contribution claims brought in England and Wales, or whether it applies only when domestic choice of law rules indicate that the contribution claim in question is governed by the law of England and Wales (hereinafter “English law”).
On 14 June 2000 the claimant, Mr Harry Roberts, was born at a hospital in Viersen, North-Rhine Westphalia, Germany (“the hospital”) operated by the third party, Allgemeines Krankenhaus Viersen GmbH. The claimant alleges that in the course of his birth he suffered an acute hypoxic brain injury as a result of negligence on the part of the attending midwife.
The claimant’s father was stationed with UK armed forces in Germany. The hospital provided medical services to UK armed forces and their families. The attending midwife was employed by the first defendant, the Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen and Families Association – Forces Help (“SSAFA”). The claimant alleges that SSAFA and/or the second defendant, the Ministry of Defence (which has agreed to indemnify SSAFA for the purposes of the claim), are liable for the acts or omissions of the midwife. The defendants deny that they are liable to the claimant.
The defendants in turn brought a claim for contribution against the third party. The basis of the claim is that pursuant to the 1978 Act the third party is liable in respect of the same damage as the defendants. Whilst the first defendant admits that it employed the midwife, it denies it is liable for any failings on her part, alleging that she was working under the control and instruction of the third party. Furthermore, the defendants allege negligence on the part of the obstetricians employed by or working at the hospital for which the third party is said to be liable.
It is common ground on this appeal that the claimant’s claim against the defendants is governed by German law and that any liability of the third party to the claimant is also governed by German law. The parties agree that, applying domestic choice of law rules, German law would apply to the contribution claim unless the 1978 Act has overriding effect. The parties further agree that, if the contribution claim is governed by German law, this would extend to the question of limitation by virtue of section 1(1) of the Foreign Limitation Periods Act 1984 and that under German law the limitation period has expired. However, the defendants maintain that the 1978 Act has overriding effect with the result that limitation is governed by section 10 of the Limitation Act 1980 and the contribution claim is not time-barred.
Soole J and the Court of Appeal held that the 1978 Act does have overriding effect and applies irrespective of domestic choice of law rules.
Procedural background
The claimant’s claim form against the defendants was issued on 31 December 2004. The defendants filed a defence to that claim and issued third party proceedings on 17 February 2016.
The third party challenged the jurisdiction. Dingemans J dismissed the third party’s jurisdiction challenge by a judgment dated 3 November 2016 ([2016] EWHC 2744 (QB), [2017] PNLR 10).
The third party thereafter filed a defence dated 12 September 2017 denying negligence but also averring that the defendants’ contribution claim was time barred under German law.
On 15 May 2018 Master Yoxall directed that the following preliminary issue be heard in the third party proceedings (as varied by a consent order dated 10 October 2018):
“[T]he relevant question for the purposes of the trial of the preliminary issue is whether or not the 1978 Act has mandatory or overriding effect and applies automatically to all proceedings for contribution brought in England and Wales, without reference to any choice of law rules. If not, German law will apply to the Defendants’ claims for contribution against the Part 20 Defendant and they will be time-barred”.
Soole J heard the trial of the preliminary issue in March 2019. In a judgment dated 3 May 2019 ([2019] EWHC 1104 (QB), [2020] QB 310) he held that the 1978 Act does have overriding effect and applies to all claims for contribution in courts in England and Wales regardless of the law applicable to the contribution claim under any anterior choice of law analysis.
The third party appealed, with the permission of the judge. The Court of Appeal heard the appeal in April 2020 and dismissed the third party’s appeal by a judgment dated 17 July 2020 ([2020] EWCA Civ 926, [2021] QB 859).
In the main proceedings between the claimant and defendants, on 31 July 2018 Master Yoxall directed that a preliminary issue be heard as to the law applicable to the claimant’s claim against the defendants, and whether that claim was time-barred. Foster J heard the preliminary issue in November 2019 and by a judgment dated 24 April 2020 ([2020] EWHC 994 (QB)) held that German law applied to the claimant’s claim against the defendants, and that the claim was not time barred under German law.
On 15 December 2020 the claimant applied in the main proceedings to join the third party as a defendant. That application was dismissed by Master Yoxall by a judgment dated 8 October 2021.
The contribution proceedings against the third party are stayed by an order of Master Yoxall dated 8 October 2021. The main proceedings are to proceed to a trial on liability as a preliminary issue.
Legislation
The 1978 Act provides in relevant part:
Entitlement to contribution.
Subject to the following provisions of this section, any person liable in respect of any damage suffered by another person may recover contribution from any other person liable in respect of the same damage (whether jointly with him or otherwise).
A person shall be entitled to recover contribution by virtue of subsection (1) above notwithstanding that he has ceased to be liable in respect of the damage in question since the time when the damage occurred, provided that he was so liable immediately before he made or was ordered or agreed to make the payment in respect of which the contribution is sought.
A person shall be liable to make contribution by virtue of subsection (1) above notwithstanding that he has ceased to be liable in respect of the damage in question since the time when the damage occurred, unless he ceased to be liable by virtue of the expiry of a period of limitation or prescription which extinguished the right on which the claim against him in respect of the damage was based.
A person who has made or agreed to make any payment in bona fide settlement or compromise of any claim made against him in respect of any damage (including a payment into court which has been accepted) shall be entitled to recover contribution in accordance with this section without regard to whether or not he himself is or ever was liable in respect of the damage, provided, however, that he would have been liable assuming that the factual basis of the claim against him could be established.
A judgment given in any action brought in any part of the United Kingdom by or on behalf of the person who suffered the damage in question against any person from whom contribution is sought under this section shall be conclusive in the proceedings for contribution as to any issue determined by that judgment in favour of the person from whom the contribution is sought.
References in this section to a person’s liability in respect of any damage are references to any such liability which has been or could be established in an action brought against him in England and Wales by or on behalf of the person who suffered the damage; but it is immaterial whether any issue arising in any such action was or would be determined (in accordance with the rules of private international law) by reference to the law of a country outside England and Wales.
Assessment of contribution.
Subject to subsection (3) below, in any proceedings for contribution under section 1 above the amount of the contribution recoverable from any person shall be such as may be found by the court to be just and equitable having regard to the extent of that person’s responsibility for the damage in question.
Subject to subsection (3) below, the court shall have power in any such proceedings to exempt any person from liability to make contribution, or to direct that the contribution to be recovered from any person shall amount to a complete indemnity.
Where the amount of the damages which have or might have been awarded in respect of the damage in question in any action brought in England and Wales by or on behalf of the person who suffered it against the person from whom the contribution is sought was or would have been subject to—
(a) any limit imposed by or under any enactment or by any agreement made before the damage occurred;
(b) any reduction by virtue of section 1 of the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945 or section 5 of the Fatal Accidents Act 1976; or
(c) any corresponding limit or reduction under the law of a country outside England and Wales;
the person from whom the contribution is sought shall not by virtue of any contribution awarded under section 1 above be required to pay in respect of the damage a greater amount than the amount of those damages as so limited or reduced.
…
Interpretation
A person is liable in respect of any damage for the purposes of this Act if the person who suffered it (or anyone representing his estate or dependants) is entitled to recover compensation from him in respect of that damage (whatever the legal basis of his liability, whether tort, breach of contract, breach of trust or otherwise). …
Savings
…
The right to recover contribution in accordance with section 1 above supersedes any right, other than an express contractual right, to recover contribution (as distinct from indemnity) otherwise than under this Act in corresponding circumstances; but nothing in this Act shall affect—
(a) any express or implied contractual or other right to indemnity; or
(b) any express contractual provision regulating or excluding contribution;
which would be enforceable apart from this Act (or render enforceable any agreement for indemnity or contribution which would not be enforceable apart from this Act).
The Foreign Limitation Periods Act 1984 provides in relevant part:
Application of foreign limitation law.
Subject to the following provisions of this Act, where in any action or proceedings in a court in England and Wales the law of any other country falls (in accordance with rules of private international law applicable by any such court) to be taken into account in the determination of any matter—
(a) the law of that other country relating to limitation shall apply in respect of that matter for the purposes of the action or proceedings…; and
(b) except where that matter falls within subsection (2) below, the law of England and Wales relating to limitation shall not so apply.
A matter falls within this subsection if it is a matter in the determination of which both the law of England and Wales and the law of some other country fall to be taken into account.
…
In this section “law”, in relation to any country, shall not include rules of private international law applicable by the courts of that country or, in the case of England and Wales, this Act.
The Limitation Act 1980 provides in relevant part:
Special time limit for claiming contribution
Where under section 1 of the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 any person becomes entitled to a right to recover contribution in respect of any damage from any other person, no action to recover contribution by virtue of that right shall be brought after the expiration of two years from the date on which that right accrued. …
The judgment of Soole J at first instance
Soole J approached the issue on the basis of what he described as “the authoritative exposition of the relevant law” in Cox v Ergo Versicherung AG [2014] UKSC 22; [2014] AC 1379 (para 86). He rejected the submission that the 1978 Act expressly provided that it had overriding effect. However, a statutory intention of overriding effect could be implied and the presumption to the contrary rebutted. In his view, the express reference to private international law in sections 1(6) and 2(3)(c) supported this implication (paras 91-92). Parliament having chosen to identify specific circumstances in which choice of law rules are to apply and the extent of that application in a claim under the statute, the natural implication was that the availability of this statutory cause of action was not itself to be subject to choice of law rules (para 93). Furthermore, on its proper construction section 7(3) was consistent with this conclusion. In the context of the express references in section 1(6) and section 2(3)(c) to private international law, the natural meaning of the words “supersedes any right” was that “any right” included any right of contribution which would otherwise arise under foreign law (para 96). He considered that the implication of overriding effect could be justified on each of the two bases identified by Lord Sumption in Cox (at para 29): the purpose of the 1978 Act cannot effectually be achieved unless it has extraterritorial effect and the legislation gives effect to a policy so significant in the law of the forum that Parliament must be assumed to have intended that policy to apply to anyone resorting to an English court regardless of the law that would otherwise apply. In each case this was most obvious where the foreign law provided no right of contribution, but it applied equally where a foreign limitation provision would otherwise have defeated the claim (at para 102). He agreed with the observation of Chadwick J in Arab Monetary Fund v Hashim (No 9), The Times, 11 October 1994, that it would be a serious defect in the law if contribution could not be obtained between tortfeasors who have been or could be found liable in the courts of England and Wales.
The judgments in the Court of Appeal
The Court of Appeal (David Richards, Irwin and Phillips LJJ) unanimously dismissed the appeal by the third party.
The lead judgment was given by Irwin LJ. First, with regard to the provisions of the 1978 Act he noted that the effect of section 1(6) was that provided the underlying liabilities of defendant and third party to the claimant could be established, so as to gain judgment in an English court whether or not any issue or issues were decided by foreign law, the threshold condition for a contribution claim was fulfilled. He asked rhetorically: if by its own terms the Act applies in relation to the principal liability of the tortfeasors, even where the proper law of the tort is foreign law, then why should a consequential contribution claim where the proper law of the claim is foreign law fall outside the ambit of the 1978 Act? He gained no assistance from sections 1(3) or 2(3) but considered section 7(3), which provides for other rights of contribution to be superseded by the right to contribution under the 1978 Act, a powerful argument in the defendants’ favour (paras 54-60). Secondly, with regard to the purpose of the 1978 Act, he considered that the principal purpose was the simplifying and standardising of contribution claims, whatever form of liability gave rise to the common liabilities to the person suffering damage. The 1978 Act was wholly directed to contribution claims and it would have been simplicity itself to provide that where the proper law of the contribution claim was a foreign law, then the statutory right did not arise. There was no such provision. While he accepted that there was no inherent defect in the German law on contribution, it was nevertheless logical, in a standardising and simplifying statute, that such considerations should be set aside once it is shown that primary liability can be established, if necessary, by reference to the relevant foreign law (paras 63-64). Thirdly, referring to the judgment in Lord Sumption in Cox, a matter considered further below, Irwin LJ considered that the policy to be construed from the 1978 Act, and in particular from section 7(3), would not be achieved “otherwise than through extraterritorial effect” (para 68).
Phillips LJ agreed with Irwin LJ. He considered it plainly implicit that the statutory right of contribution under section 1(1) arose regardless of the law which might otherwise have governed such rights between the parties. In his judgment, such implication arose not only because of the interplay between section 1(1) and 1(6), but also because the rights of contribution superseded by virtue of section 7(3) must be taken, in the context of provisions which fully recognise the likely relevance of private international, to include rights of contribution under the otherwise applicable foreign law. The creation of a statutory right of contribution as between persons notwithstanding that the liability of one or more of them arises under foreign law and the exclusion of other rights of contribution (save for express contractual rights) could and should be read together as giving rise to the plain implication that the 1978 Act has “extraterritorial effect” (para 74).
David Richards LJ concurred in the result, but for different reasons. Referring to the judgment of Lord Sumption in Cox, he did not consider that this was a case where the terms of the legislation could not effectually be applied, or its purpose effectually achieved, unless it had extraterritorial effect. Furthermore, this was not a case where the legislation gave effect to a policy so significant in English law that Parliament must have intended it to apply to anyone having resort to the English courts. As a result, it could not be said that the 1978 Act embodied any policy of such significance that it could by implication have “extraterritorial effect” (para 84). David Richards LJ rejected the judge’s suggestion that there would be a defect in English law if, where the underlying liability of defendant and third party to the claimant were governed by a foreign law, the contribution claims were also governed by that foreign law (at para 86). He considered that sections 2(3) and 7(3) were equivocal (paras 93-95). However, he considered that section 1(6) expressly contemplated the application of the 1978 Act to contribution proceedings even if both underlying liabilities to the claimant were subject to a foreign law. In this regard he rejected the submission that this would be so only if the contribution claim would, under private international law principles, be governed by English law, because the chances of a contribution claim in such circumstances being governed by English law “appear to be small to the point of invisibility” (at para 91). In his judgment, the conclusion was inescapable that the 1978 Act was intended to have “extraterritorial effect”, in the sense that claims lie under it even though, applying the principles of private international law, they would be governed by foreign law (para 92).
Submissions of the parties
On behalf of the appellant third party, the hospital, Mr Charles Dougherty KC and Mr Benjamin Phelps submit as follows:
There is nothing in the 1978 Act that expressly provides that it applies regardless of the law applicable to the contribution claim.
There is nothing in the language of the 1978 Act from which overriding effect might be implied. Properly understood the provisions variously relied upon by Soole J and the Court of Appeal, sections 1(3), 1(6), 2(3)(c) and 7(3), do not provide support for the 1978 Act having any overriding effect. The provisions relied on are equally consistent with the 1978 Act only applying where the applicable law of the contribution claim is English law.
The case against implying overriding effect into the 1978 Act is all the stronger when the presumption against “overriding/extraterritorial effect” is taken into account, as it should be.
The terms of the 1978 Act can be effectively applied absent overriding effect. They simply apply to those contribution claims governed by English law.
The purpose of the 1978 Act can be achieved without any overriding effect. The clear aim was to expand the statutory right of contribution in English law beyond joint tortfeasors. There is nothing in the 1978 Act to suggest that it was targeted at correcting perceived inadequacies in foreign laws of contribution.
Insofar as any ambiguity remains, the relevant legislative history of the 1978 Act plainly indicates that there was no intention by the Law Commission, on whose report the 1978 Act was based, or the promoters of the Bill in Parliament, for the 1978 Act to have “overriding/extraterritorial effect”.