From: | Richard Lewis <LewisRK@cardiff.ac.uk> |
To: | Annette Morris <MorrisA7@cardiff.ac.uk> |
Hedley, Steve <S.Hedley@ucc.ie> | |
Date: | 20/10/2017 18:03:31 UTC |
Subject: | FW: Vicarious Liability and Non-Delegable Duties in the UK Supreme Court (Again) |
Dear both
I thoroughly enjoyed this contribution to the obligations exchange especially after Jason’s contributions to the last two conferences I attended.!
Yours
Richard
From: Paul Stanley QC [mailto:PStanley@essexcourt.net]
Sent: 19 October 2017 18:12
To: Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca>; obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: RE: Vicarious Liability and Non-Delegable Duties in the UK Supreme Court (Again)
I haven't though hard enough about the case itself to comment sensibly. But I'm interested in the question "What has happened to the UKSC?". My general sense has been that we have not (recently)
been in a very golden period, but I'm not sure there's anything to be read into that.
As to the points you make:
- Is it the effect of modern British legal education coming home to roost (see EJ Weinrib, Can Law Survive Legal Education)?
Not very likely, I think. The members of the panel in this case graduated, so far as I can ascertain, in around 1964 (Clarke, Cambridge), 1978 or 9 (Reed, Edinburgh -- also an Oxford D.Phil 1983),
1969 (Queen's Belfast, Lord Kerr), 1968 (Hale, Cambridge), and 1969 (Hughes, Durham). Apart from Lady Hale, all had extensive experience in practice. Given the era and the institutions, I'd expect a pretty black-letter training, reinforced by practice.
- Was it the change from the HL to becoming a separate organ of government?
Also improbable. The HL Judicial Committee /never/ functioned as "part" of the House of Lords in any real sense, and I don't think (as an advocate) that I detect any real difference as a
result of the change, except in things that don't matter (robes, badge-messengers, weird bowing ceremonies in corridors ...) The procedures are even pretty much the same.
- Is it merely the personnel turnover of the judges?
I'm not sure what you mean by "turnover". If you mean "judicial air miles", I doubt it.
Clarke: 24 years as judge, 19 years as appellate judge, 12 years on SC or equivalent.
Hale: 23 years as judge, 18 years as appellate judge, 13 years on SC.
Reed: 19 years as judge, 11 years as appellate judge, 6 years on SC.
Kerr: 24 years as judge, 13 as appellate judge, 8 years on SC.
Hughes: 20 years as judge, 11 as appellate judge, 4 years on SC.
So all of them have plenty of judicial experience, and some have a lot of SC experience. Certainly well in line with the past.
If you are delicately saying "Maybe some of the appointments are a bit poor", that's a pretty subjective question. Probably fair to say that none has an outstanding reputation as a black-letter
common lawyer (no Reids, Diplocks Mustills or Hoffmanns among them), but that's rare anyway. Admittedly the appointing authorities don't have a completely free hand because they have to reflect the range of specialisms on the bench, but that was true in the
past as well.
- Is it the influence of Canadian and American jurisprudence reinforced by international meetings between Final Court Appellate Judges (as one of my colleagues has suggested)?
I'd be surprised. That might be a factor conceivably in Reed's case. Clarke I'd think largely immune to such influence: I'd be inclined to say that he is quite "merits minded", but not really an international
academic. Lady Hale would, I should expect, see the problem with her family law background. Of those on the court at the moment, I'd think Lord Mance the most deeply involved in that sort of discussion in a law of obligations type context, and he's certainly
not an innovator, but is a notably clear thinker.
- Other possible reasons
Can I canvass three other possibilities?
(1) You may be looking at the HL of the past with rather over-generous eyes. Remember Anns (and that Lord Wilberforce's work). Remember Junior Books. Remember, for that matter, Caparo,
which gets a sensible result but on nearly incoherent reasoning. Don't forget the flip-flopping over the meaning of dishonesty in Twinsectra et al. The past had it giants, but it also had its not-so-giants: Dilhorne? Keith? Morris? Brightman? Slynn? Shouldn't
we /expect/ some duff decisions, in the longer run?
(2) One definite change in recent years has been the huge increase in human rights cases. Are the techniques of those cases (all about balancing, and proportionality, and an endless wander
through the grey margins of discretion) infecting other areas? For the worse? I'd think that, rather than legal education in the late 1960s or recent cocktails with American judges is more likely to have influenced thinking about basic approach, perhaps especially
in a case which had governmental and policy overtones by virtue of its very subject-matter.
(3) Judicial assistants? An innovation, really, of the last 10 years or so, and perhaps more of an influence on the way cases get thought about and talked about and written about than one
might at first expect. If you're looking for influence from modern legal education, it's more likely to come via the judicial assistants than directly.
Paul
From: Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca>
Sent: 18 October 2017 15:53
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: RE: Vicarious Liability and Non-Delegable Duties in the UK Supreme Court (Again)
Dear Colleagues:
I have to admit that I have not been following the UK developments in relation to vicarious liability very closely, but I had a look at the
Ames case. What has happened to the UKSC?* I was shocked that what used to be considered the world's leading common law court could think the mere existence of the ability to pay is a reason to pay. It is as if the fact that most assaults happen at
night, means that it being dark is part of the legal test of assault! Moreover, how could they seriously think that the
Christian Brothers/Cox factors could possible justify when someone is in a type of relationship for which it is permissible to impose vicarious liability (or conversely not in such a relationship). Lord Hughes is bang on when he says at [77]:
Lord Phillips’s five policy factors or incidents (Christian Brothers paras 35 and 47) were derived by him from the primary model of vicarious liability,
namely employment. … In the present case, the third factor (business activity) does not apply. The first (deep pockets or insurance) … cannot by itself be a principled ground for vicarious liability and tends to be circular. The fourth (creation
of risk) will in practice apply to virtually all situations in which A asks or authorises B to deal in some manner with C. The principally relevant factors here would seem to be factors 2 (integration), and 5 (control).
The task therefore is obvious: the courts need to come up with a theory that explains why integration and control lead to vicarious liability but does not simultaneously
commit the common law to a regime of strict liability for everything. Once that is done, the theory then has to accommodate the modern course of employment/relationship jurisprudence: ie the fact that serious deviations from the tasks assigned (such as sexual
assault) are in the course of employment/relationship without leading to responsibility on the basis of merely but for causation. If that cannot be done then the courts should abandon vicarious liability as unprincipled, unjust and unexplainable (or rewind
the clock). It seems clear that on the basis of 20 years development, the indemnity model is no longer able to provide that explanation. Perhaps with a few tweaks, the attribution model might, but that remains to be determined.
*Why has the UKSC has seemingly changed from the most legalistic and doctrinal Commonwealth court to one that trades in balancing platitudes. Is it the effect of modern
British legal education coming home to roost (see EJ Weinrib, Can Law Survive Legal Education)? Was it the change from the HL to becoming a separate organ of government? Is it merely the personnel turnover of the judges? Is it the influence of Canadian and
American jurisprudence reinforced by international meetings between Final Court Appellate Judges (as one of my colleagues has suggested)? Or perhaps some combination of them all?
Sincerely,
Jason Neyers
Professor of Law
Faculty of Law
Western University
Law Building Rm 26
e. jneyers@uwo.ca
t. 519.661.2111 (x88435)
From: Lee, James [mailto:james.lee@kcl.ac.uk]
Sent: October 18, 2017 5:23 AM
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: Vicarious Liability and Non-Delegable Duties in the UK Supreme Court (Again)
Dear Colleagues,
In the major decision of
Armes v Nottinghamshire County Council [2017] UKSC, the Supreme Court has considered the law on non-delegable duties and vicarious liability in cases of historic abuse. It is the first time that the Supreme Court has revisited the vicarious liability
since Cox v Ministry of Justice and Mohamud v Morrisons last year, which were decided after the Court of Appeal decision in the instant case.
The claimant was in the local authority’s care from early childhood until she was 18. The local authority placed her with two sets of foster
parents, Mr and Mrs A and Mr and Mrs B. She was physically abused by Mrs B and sexually abused by Mr B and. She sought to claim against the local authority in respect of the abuse which she had suffered.
The Court unanimously holds that the local authority did not owe any non-delegable duty to the claimant, given the legislative framework
(the Court considers Woodland v Essex on the point).
However, the Court, by a majority (Lord Hughes dissenting), allows appeal and hold that the claim succeeds on the basis of vicarious liability.
The Court concludes that the Council’s extensive involvement with the foster parents meant that the foster parents were undertaking an activity on behalf of the Council, with the attendant risk of abuse, and that the Council should be vicariously liable. There
is also express mention of the Council being better placed to satisfy any claim than the foster parents.
A couple of paragraphs from Lord Reed’s judgment indicate the approach to the Cox factors:
60. “Although the picture presented is not without complexity, nevertheless when considered as a whole it points towards the conclusion
that the foster parents provided care to the child as an integral part of the local authority’s organisation of its child care services. If one stands back from the minutiae of daily life and considers the local authority’s statutory responsibilities and the
manner in which they were discharged, it is impossible to draw a sharp line between the activity of the local authority, who were responsible for the care of the child and the promotion of her welfare, and that of the foster parents, whom they recruited and
trained, and with whom they placed the child, in order for her to receive care in the setting which they considered would best promote her welfare. In these circumstances, it can properly be said that the torts committed against the claimant were committed
by the foster parents in the course of an activity carried on for the benefit of the local authority.”
63 “In relation to the remaining issue, that of the ability to satisfy an award of damages, vicarious liability is only of practical relevance
in situations where (1) the principal tortfeasor cannot be found or is not worth suing, and (2) the person sought to be made vicariously liable is able to compensate the victim of the tort. Those conditions are satisfied in the present context. Most foster
parents have insufficient means to be able to meet a substantial award of damages, and are unlikely to have (or to be able to obtain) insurance against their own propensity to criminal behaviour. The local authorities which engage them can more easily compensate
the victims of injuries which are often serious and long-lasting.”
Lord Hughes dissents on this point, concluding:
91. “Vicarious liability is strict liability, imposed on a party which has been in no sense at fault. It is necessary, and fair and just,
when it applies to fix liability on someone who undertakes an activity, especially a commercial activity, by getting someone else integrated into his organisation to do it for him. Employment is the classic example, but other situations may be analogous. But
the extension of strict liability needs careful justification. Once one examines the nature of fostering, its extension to that activity does not seem to me to be either called for or justified, but, rather, fraught with difficulty and contra-indicated. Accordingly,
I would uphold the decision of the Court of Appeal and dismiss this appeal.”
Armes is thus another significant step in the
seemingly relentless expansion of the scope of vicarious liability in English Law.
The full judgment is available here:
https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uksc-2016-0004-judgment.pdf.
Best wishes,
James
--
James Lee
Reader in English Law and PC Woo Research Fellow 2016-17
Director of Undergraduate Admissions and Scholarships
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