From: Eoin.Quill <Eoin.Quill@ul.ie>
To: Neil Foster <neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au>
CC: obligations@uwo.ca
Date: 15/10/2014 12:21:17 UTC
Subject: [Spam?] RE: Fund management costs as part of a damages award in the HCA

Neil (& all ODGers), the Irish decision in Ward v Walsh Unrep. SC, 31 July 1991 allowed a small amount for investment advice also. It hasn’t come up in any judgments here since then, as far as I am aware.

Personally I think it is reasonable to allow such a head of damages, as plaintiffs with long term injuries are forced into dealing with a method of long term financial planning that they are not really prepared for. As most victims (and the bulk of society in general) are accustomed to managing on a periodic income (of varying degrees of stability and predictability), the shift to a large single lump sum with no prospect of revisiting its suitability (which is the case in jurisdictions with lump sum once and for all awards) is a dramatic change and it is not unreasonable to seek expert help in adjusting. As long as the cost involved is reasonable, it’s ok; clearly if the injury impairs the victim’s ability to adapt and cope, the level of assistance will be greater and may run for a lengthy period of time, but that is the same for any head of damages – remoteness principles determine recoverable types of loss and quantum is a matter of luck.

 

Eoin Quill

School of Law

University of Limerick

 

 

From: Neil Foster [mailto:neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au]
Sent: 15 October 2014 01:15
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: ODG: Fund management costs as part of a damages award in the HCA

 

Dear Colleagues;

The decision of the High Court of Australia today in Gray v Richards [2014] HCA 40 (15 October 2014) http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2014/40.html deals with complex issues to do with calculation of a damages award in a personal injury claim where the plaintiff will need money administered by a fund due to an inability to manage the money herself created by the tortious act. I hesitate to go into detail because some aspects of the decision make my brain hurt, especially comments about the need to provide the costs of managing the fund, and then the need to provide the costs of managing that amount of costs, etc etc in an infinite regression.. See [22] quoting the trial judge. (I gather there is some fancy accounting technique for valuing this amount!)

But the bottom line seems to be:

  1. The costs of managing a fund in these circumstances are damages that should be recoverable, as they relate to a need created by the tort. In this case there was some debate occasioned by the fact that the management would be done by a private trustee company as opposed to the government Trustee, but the court said that so long as the decision to choose the trustee company was not totally unreasonable the amounts were recoverable; see [47]:

47.              The real question is whether the management arrangement with the Trust Company was so unreasonable in its terms that it could not be regarded, as a matter of common sense, as a consequence of the appellant's injury. If the fund management expense component of an award reflects actual market conditions, and is not contrary to any statutory control, then it may be seen, as a matter of common sense, as an expense consequent upon the tortfeasor's wrong and, therefore, compensable.

2. However, the court should not award damages representing the cost of managing the future income to be derived from the fund. The "cost of managing the income predicted to be earned on, and reinvested as part of, the funds under management” (defined in [16]) was not a legitimate part of a damages award.

 

Regards

Neil

 

 

NEIL FOSTER
Associate Professor

Newcastle Law School
Faculty of Business and Law

MC177 McMullin Building

T: +61 2 49217430
E: neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au

 

Further details: http://www.newcastle.edu.au/profile/neil-foster

My publications: http://works.bepress.com/neil_foster/ , http://ssrn.com/author=504828 



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