Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ...

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Courts and BHR

Transcript of Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ...

Page 1: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Courts and BHR

Page 2: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Today’s Session

Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93

Cheung v Parry

Lawson v Mullen

McBride v UK Insurance

Page 3: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Court structure

Page 4: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Stevens reminder

Page 5: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Stevens reminder

Recorder took an average of the rates quoted by four mainstream vehicle hire companies for vehicles in the relevant group and in this way arrived at a basic hire rate of £63.02 (excluding VAT)

Page 6: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Stevens reminder

Cases considered:Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142, Dimond v Lovell [2002] 1 AC 384, Burdis v Livsey [2002] EWCA Civ 510, [2003] QB 36, Lagden v O’Connor [2001] UKHL 64, [2004] 1 AC

1067Pattni v First Leicester Buses Ltd; Bent v Highways

and Utilities Construction Ltd and anor [2011] EWCA Civ 1384, [2012] Lloyd’s Rep IR 577

Page 7: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

Pattni“the loss of the use of a vehicle as result of the

negligence of another driver is a loss for which, in appropriate circumstances, the innocent party can recover damages”

Page 8: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

Don’t forget that this is the

Page 9: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

“It is the duty of the innocent party to mitigate his loss”

Page 10: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

“if the loss of the use of the vehicle can be mitigated by the hire of a replacement vehicle, the cost of that replacement vehicle will be the measure of damages recoverable”

Page 11: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

“If he could have afforded to hire a replacement vehicle in the normal way, that is to say without credit hire terms and by paying in advance, then the damages recoverable will be that sum which is attributable to the basic hire rate (or BHR) of the replacement vehicle”

Page 12: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

In other words, if the client is skint then he’s no option but to use a credit hire company in which case they can pretty much charge what they like?????

Page 13: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

BUT………If the claimant has funds available then“it is necessary, in assessing his loss, to look at

any additional benefits he has obtained and so to “balance the loss and gain””

Page 14: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

Right back to Dimond v Lovell.

1) break down the charge made by credit hire companies so as to enable the additional unrecoverable elements to be stripped out

Page 15: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

2)

Page 16: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Principles

3) Look at the locally available rate

BHR!

Page 17: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Tests

73. …To summarise, the questions are: (i) did the claimant need to hire a replacement car at all; if so, (ii) was it reasonable, in all the circumstances, to hire the particular type of car actually hired at the rate agreed; if it was, (iii) was the claimant “impecunious”; if not (iv) has the defendant proved a difference between the credit hire rate actually paid for the car hired and what, in the same broad geographical area, would have been the BHR for the model of car actually hired and if so what is it; if so, (v) what is the difference between the credit hire rate and the BHR?

Page 18: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Tests

“35……But it seems to me reasonable to suppose that the lowest reasonable rate quoted by a mainstream supplier for the hire of such a vehicle to a person such as the claimant is a reasonable approximation to the BHR.”

Page 19: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Tests

“36….. try to identify the rate or rates for the hire, in the claimant’s geographical area, of the type of car actually hired by the claimant on credit hire terms.”

Page 20: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Tests

“39……The search must rather be for the lowest reasonable rate quoted by a mainstream supplier for the basic hire of a vehicle of the kind in issue to a reasonable person in the position of the claimant.”

Page 21: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Tests

Main stream supplier?

“27……he had properly concentrated on four major suppliers, National, Europcar, Thrifty and Alamo.”

Page 22: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Tests

Terms?

“27…….in looking at the nil excess the Recorder was endeavouring to find the closest like for like comparator”

Page 23: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant bits

“The judge disallowed the first nine days on the basis that a reasonable driver would not have delivered his driveable car to the garage for repair before they were ready to start.“

Page 24: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant bits

“The log of activity to which I have referred notes that it was ‘stripped’ on the following day and that the parts necessary to make the repairs did not come until 4 March.”

Page 25: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

Page 26: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

DJ relied upon the basic hire rate evidence produced by Rob Stone of TCF Corporate Limited on behalf of the respondent.

Page 27: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

He adopted the rates quoted by Enterprise for the hire of a Nissan X-Trail or Honda CRV, the total cost of hire being £2,500.12 for a 28-day period.

Page 28: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

In addition, the District Judge allowed the cost of excess reduction whereby the excess was reduced to £500 which amounted to £11.99 per day and the cost of an additional driver which amounted to £10 per day.

Page 29: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

“It is up to this court to decide as to whether the sum of £500 excess is out of the ordinary in relation to this particular type of hire for this particular type of vehicle, and this court is satisfied it is not unduly unjust in the circumstances and that the defendants have provided sufficient information to enable this court to find that a car, which I find a Nissan X-Trail and/or a Honda CRV or similar, could have been provided at around that time for this family at a cost of £2,500 and coppers for the exact 28-day period as per the quotation and that for an additional sum of £615.72 that would then cover the excess and reduce it down to £500 and allow the additional driver to drive.”

Page 30: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Dhami v Amlin

“I have come to the conclusion that the two cannot be put alongside one another as equivalent deals. They may be equivalent vehicles but the terms upon which each vehicle was hired are different, and potentially the terms upon which City Inter-Rent hire are very onerous compared with the position in the Accident Exchange hire because the Claimant could potentially, if he damaged the BMW M3, had he hired it, have been liable for a figure of up to £3,000.”

Page 31: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Dhami v Amlin

“That being so, where, as here, City Inter-Rent are unwilling to offer the same deal by waiving, for a sum forming part of the hire charges, a requirement to potentially pay £3,000, it seems to me that I cannot conclude that that is an equivalent ‘basic hire rate’.”

Page 32: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Dhami v Amlin

“a copy of an annual insurance quote which enables the hirer to reduce the amount of the policy excess on a hire vehicle.”

Page 33: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Dhami v Amlin

“I cannot and could not expect the Claimant in this case to have availed himself of it.”

Page 34: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Marcic v Davis

“There the court held that the Claimant who hired a replacement vehicle and paid the waiver fee to achieve a nil excess when his own excess had been £150 was entitled to recover that fee, since, if there had been no collision, the Claimant would, “never have come under any contractual liability to the car hire company.” It was entirely reasonable that he should pay the waiver fee to cover himself against a contractual liability which he would otherwise never have been under.”

Page 35: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

“To put it another way, is it reasonable for the insurer to be required to pay an additional £4,300 in order to avoid the appellant facing the potential risk of having to pay a £500 excess in the event of the hire car being damaged?”

Page 36: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Lawson v Mullen

“It seems to me that Mr Turner is entirely right in submitting that the ultimate test is one of reasonableness and that if the defendant can show that the claimant has failed reasonably to mitigate his loss, then the hire charges claimed ought not to be recoverable."

Page 37: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Cheung v Parry

D’s rates had excesses of £5k, £2.k and £2.5k

No evidence they could be reduced to nil.

Deposits of between £2.5k and £3k.

Page 38: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Cheung v Parry

Points on mileage limitations and geography in were not pressed. “He was right not to do so in light of the Claimant’s evidence of his use and the fact that cars such as these would probably be delivered.”

Page 39: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Cheung v Parry

“In reply, Ms Kennedy submitted that where an excess (or deposit) equates to a week of hire, it would be reasonable for a claimant to accept that liability if the daily rate were that much less. Mr Nicol submits that if the Defendant had come to court with but one rate which qualified then it could win the argument. But it had not and so it lost. I agree with Mr Nicol’s submission. The differences he identifies are significant. There is insufficient evidence for me to be satisfied that there is a lower basic hire rate.”

Page 40: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Ash v AXA

“that the ‘basic hire rate’ includes any charges that are paid for collision damage waiver.”

Page 41: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Ash v AXA

“This arises from two factors. First, neither expert has produced a comparable with a zero excess and the rates taken by each would, in order to make a fair comparison, have to be raised to reflect this.”

Page 42: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Kerr v Toal

“If he or she has a credit card it would be available for a range of purposes…….What if the limit has been reached? What if the plaintiff is not in a position to meet the monthly bill in full? That would affect his credit rating.”

Page 43: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Kerr v Toal“The concept of a form of borrowing from a different source in place of one under a credit agreement does not bear examination….no reason why access to borrowing powers should be regarded as relevant to the question of a plaintiff’s ability or in ability to pay.”

Page 44: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Other relevant cases

Kerr v Toal

“be in a financial position to meet a bill from his available cash assets”

Page 45: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

The future

1) Within 28 days of the date of this order the claimant provide evidence in support of impecuniosity. Failure to comply with this date means the claimant be debarred from raising impecuniosity at the final hearing.

Page 46: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

The future

2. Within 42 days of the date of this order, the defendant do file and serve evidence of hire rates available within the claimant’s geographical location, from a mainstream supplier, for the vehicle actually hired, on the terms hired to the claimant and for the dates covering the claimed hire period.

Page 47: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

The future

3. Within 56 days of the date of this order, the claimant, if so advised, do file and serve rebuttal evidence.

Page 48: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

The future

In accordance with the authorities, the claimant must first (if he so claims) produce the evidence to prove that he could not have afforded to hire up front (i.e. that he was impecunious); if the Defendant does not accept that the claimant was impecunious on the evidence produced he should then have time to show that there was a comparable alternative available to the claimant at a lower rate than the contractual credit hire rate. Such evidence not necessarily being factually irrebuttable on issues such as true comparability and availability, the claimant should have further time to rebut the defendant’s rates evidence with his own factual evidence directed specifically at the rate or rates the defendant seeks to rely upon. Clearly, it is only equitable that the claimant should have the opportunity to rebut such rates evidence.

Page 49: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

One to watch

McBride v Southern

Lives in Salisbury.Owns a Jag, hired a Jag.3 points on his licence.

Page 50: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

One to watch

McBride v Southern

Page 51: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Above all else

Page 52: Courts and BHR. Today’s Session Karl Stevens v Equity Syndicate Management Limited [2015] EWCA Civ 93 Cheung v Parry Lawson v Mullen McBride v UK Insurance.

Above all else

Get your barrister right!

Guy VickersGlennWillettsStuart Nicol