From: Leow,R <R.Leow@lse.ac.uk>
To: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>
Christine Beuermann <Christine.Beuermann@newcastle.ac.uk>
james_lee_kcl_ac_uk <james.lee@kcl.ac.uk>
obligations@uwo.ca
Date: 27/04/2023 12:33:02 UTC
Subject: RE: UK Supreme Court on Vicarious Liability

On Mary M, is what you’re saying basically what Lord Toulson was saying in Mohamud? Are we back to the ‘unbroken sequence of events’ from an initial authorised act?

 

I agree about the limited use of apparent authority (at least, as that term is understood in the law of agency). In my view it is only relevant to torts where third party had the opportunity to rely on the employee’s appearance of authority, ie primarily the misrepresentation torts.

 

Very best wishes

Rachel

 

From: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>
Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2023 12:08 PM
To: Christine Beuermann <Christine.Beuermann@newcastle.ac.uk>; james_lee_kcl_ac_uk <james.lee@kcl.ac.uk>; obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: RE: UK Supreme Court on Vicarious Liability

 

If, as I think, we’re just returning to the Salmond test rephrased (Burrows [71]), how do we deal with these cases?

 

The first two cases are interesting.  

 

The reason why Mary M is rightly decided in my view, and should be decided in the same way in England, is not because the rape itself was an “unauthorised mode of an authorised act”. Such deliberate wrongdoing is completely outside of what was authorised. However, what enabled the wrongdoer to behave in this way was that he was authorised to detain suspects. It was that earlier wrongful act, ordering to get in the car, that was an unauthorised mode of an authorised act, that then enabled and led to the rape. And so vicarious liability for the consequences of the first facilitating wrong.

 

I thought that there was no liability in N v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police but I wonder if it might be reanalysed in the same way?

 

I don’t know the details of David  Carrick save from the press, but the key seems to me to identify some wrongful action anterior to the rape, that was an “unauthorised mode of an authorised act” and use that as the hook on which to attach liability. If, however, we cannot identify such an action, the claim should fail.

 

In none of these examples is there an assumption of responsibility by the defendant to the claimant, and so no hope of a non-delegable duty analysis.

 

I don’t think apparent authority helps much here. In none of these cases did the police officer have the apparent authority of another to rape the victim. The key is whether they committed a wrong anterior to the rape that enabled it, for which the employer can be vicarious liable.

 

From: Christine Beuermann <Christine.Beuermann@newcastle.ac.uk>
Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2023 11:59 PM
To: james_lee_kcl_ac_uk <james.lee@kcl.ac.uk>; obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: Re: UK Supreme Court on Vicarious Liability

 

I wonder what the SC might do in response to a vl claim brought in example 3 below following today’s judgment in BXB:  

  1. Woman pulled over for erratic driving by on-duty police officer in uniform; told to get in police car and raped on way home (liability - Mary M
  2. Uniformed (though off-duty) police officer sitting in car outside night club at 4am; first aider from club trying to make arrangements for an intoxicated woman to get home safely; police officer asked if everything ok from car and said he’d sort it; woman taken home and raped (liability - N v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police
  3. Multiple women raped by off-duty police officer who uses police-issued gun and handcuffs and states that no-one will believe their complaint against a police officer as ‘I am the law’ (David Carrick)  
  4. Off-duty police officer not in uniform and not identifying as police officer flashes at pedestrians (Wayne Couzens) (as opposed to the rape and murder of Sarah Everard where he did identify as a police officer)

 

Lord Burrows is correct to point out that the fact that authority over the claimant has been conferred on the tortfeasor by the defendant has never been enough to warrant the imposition of strict liability for the tort of another (I am deliberately avoiding the use of the term vicarious liability here as I have argued elsewhere that there is a different form of SLTA being imposed in sexual abuse cases, and cases of intentional torts more generally).  It has always been necessary to show that the tort occurred in at least the apparent (as opposed to actual) exercise of that authority or had some relevant connection with the apparent authority conferred on the tortfeasor.  It might be, however, that it is not as easy to detect an abuse of authority where the claimant is an adult who has been sexually abused, as opposed to a child.   

In cases involving children, the abuse of authority generally involves getting the child into a place where the abuse can occur.  It might also go to silencing attempts by the child to protest or report the abuse.  The exercise (and abuse) of authority in adult relationships though can be more subtle.  Lord Burrows said that it was not sufficient that but-for the authority vested in Sewell by the organising body of the Jehovah’s Witnesses BXB would not have remained friends with Sewell [70].  What might have been usefully explored by the Supreme Court, however, is how the presence of that authority shaped the relationship between BXB and Sewell and how she related to him as a result.  It is difficult to think that the fact they were friends might somehow mean that the authority conferred on Sewell over BXB by the Jehovah’s Witnesses could not be abused. 

Returning to example 3 with the police above, it does not seem unreasonable to suggest that the authority vested in the police officer by the state is being abused even though the relationship between the victim and the tortfeasor was initially social.  Example 4, in contrast, does not seem to be sufficiently connected with any authority vested in the police officer by the state so that the imposition of vl is unlikely. 

There is similar evidence of the abuse of authority in BXB:  there was a risk of disfellowship if the instructions of an Elder weren’t followed [11]; BXB was told that concerns she raised with Sewell about his inappropriate kissing caused trouble [12]; attempts to withdraw from the relationship with Sewell caused a response from both Sewell and other Elders [13]; BXB felt it was her job to try and convince Sewell that he should go to the Elders for help (which is what she was doing when she was raped) [16]; BXB didn’t feel she could report the rape because of the possible effect on her family’s status with the Jehovahs’ Witnesses [16]; BXB felt she had to forgive Sewell because of the teachings of the Jehovah’s Witnesses (all para references from Nicola Davies LJ judgment at the CA). 

I respectfully suggest that these factors are more than just background ([70]).  They inform the picture of the apparent authority conferred on Sewell by the Jehovah’s Witnesses and how it was exercised by Sewell.   

Lord Burrows is correct that the rape was not so closely connected with acts that Mark Sewell was authorised to do that it can fairly and properly be regarded as committed by him while acting in the course of his quasi-employment as an elder.  But it wasn’t the relationship between the Jehovah’s Witnesses and Sewell that was most relevant to the rape (as opposed to the cleaning and driving examples Lord Burrows gives at [76]).  It was the relationship between the Jehovah’s Witnesses and BXB, the authority held by the Jehovah’s Witnesses over BXB and the fact that the authority was conferred on Sewell and subject to abuse.   

 


From: James Lee <james.lee@kcl.ac.uk>
Sent: 26 April 2023 11:31
To: obligations@uwo.ca <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: UK Supreme Court on Vicarious Liability

 

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Dear Colleagues,

 

Today has seen judgment in the latest UK Supreme Court decision on vicarious liability, Trustees of the Barry Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses v BXB [2023] UKSC 15 https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uksc-2021-0089-judgment.pdf. Lord Burrows gives the judgment for the Court, and cites several ODGers (congratulations all!).

 

The case concerned a rape committed against the claimant by a man, when they were both members of a congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses. The wrongdoer was a Mark Sewell, who had congregational responsibilities first as a ministerial servant and then as an elder. He and his wife became friends through the congregation with Mr and Mrs BXB. Having grown concerned about Sewell’s behaviour, Mrs B suggested that she and Sewell’s wife speak to another elder, who was Sewell’s father Tony. Tony asked that they both support Mark. Sewell continued to pursue Mrs BXB romantically, and she rejected him. Sewell perpetrated a rape against Mrs BXB at his home. Mrs B had initially reported the rape to the Congregation, who found the allegations unproven. She later reported the crime to the police and he was subsequently convicted.

 

Mrs BXB suffered psychiatric harm following the trauma of the rape, and later sued the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ organisation(s) alleging that they were vicarious liable for the rape (as well as alleging negligence on the part of the other elders in failing to investigate). (I say organistions(s) because there was a threshold point during the hearing about the correct defendant but it was not ultimately determinative – see [59]-[64]).

 

The appeal to the UKSC required consideration of stages 1 and 2 of vicarious liability (perhaps “stage zero” being that a tort has been committed by a tortfeasor): whether there was a relevant relationship between Sewell and the Congregation capable of giving rise to vicarious liability as being akin to employment; and then whether the close connection between that relationship and the tort was satisfied. Lord Burrows holds that stage 1 is satisfied, but that stage 2 is not. The claim therefore fails.

 

Lord Burrows traces over two decades’ worth of primarily House of Lords and UK Supreme Court authority on vicarious liability, including the expansion and contraction of liability with which members of this list will be familiar. His Lordship provides a summary of the present position at para [58] (which is too long to quote here, but is a reaffirmation of the restatement of the law in Barclays and Morrisons from 2020).

 

His Lordship states that,

 

“[58](v) The same two stages, and the same two tests, apply to cases of sexual abuse as they do to other cases on vicarious liability. Although one can reasonably interpret some judicial comments as supporting special rules for sexual abuse, this was rejected by Lord Reed in Cox. The idea that the law still needs tailoring to deal with sexual abuse cases is misleading. The necessary tailoring is already reflected in, and embraced by, the modern tests.”

 

(One might interject that one set of judicial comments that had perhaps given the impression that there was room to argue about whether such cases were different were from Lord Reed himself in Morrisons [2020] UKSC 12 at [23] and [36])

 

On stage 1, Lord Burrows analyses the nature of the role of an elder within the organisation. Sewell had duties assigned to him, pursued those duties in furtherance of the aims of the organisation, was appointed (and later removed) through prescribed process, and he fitted within an institutional hierarchy.

 

Lord Burrows agrees with most of the reasoning of the courts below on this point, but says “it was a mistake for them to drift into talking about creating the risk of rape by the elder being assigned the activities he was given. In relying for this on Lord Reed’s judgment in Cox at para 30, they were incorrectly confusing the criteria for satisfying the first stage test with the underlying policy justification for vicarious liability. The creation of the risk of rape should not have been included within the criteria for deciding whether the relationship was akin to employment.” (at [69]). This issue had caused some confusion at the hearing, and at least some of the submissions on the part of the claimant did indeed seem to conflate the general idea of risk creation as a policy justification with a specific judgement about responsibility for risk on a particular set of facts (which might shade more towards a fault-based approach).

 

On stage 2, Lord Burrows disagrees with the courts below, holding that they applied the wrong test and took into account irrelevant aspects of the facts. There was no close connection between the relationship and the rape. This was, finds his Lordship, because the rape was not committed while Sewell was carrying out activities in his role as an elder. “The lack of direct connection to the role assigned to him as an elder makes these facts significantly different from the institutional sex abuse cases” (at [74]). Lord Burrows gives five more reasons, questioning whether on these facts there were material similarities with cases in which vicarious liability had been found in sexual abuse cases.

 

[81] “In my view, therefore, the close connection test is not satisfied. The rape was not so closely connected with acts that Mark Sewell was authorised to do that it can fairly and properly be regarded as committed by him while acting in the course of his quasi-employment as an elder.”

 

Lord Burrows also judges (at [82]) that this is justified (as “a final check”) by underlying policy concerns.

 

Overall, from an initial reading, it seems to me that Lord Burrows’s judgment affirms the modern approach on stage 2, but the exact limits of the close connection test at stage 3 remain somewhat elusive, beyond it being clear that the Supreme Court feels that there should be some point at which liability should stop. There was difficulty drawing the line in argument before the Court, Lord Burrows notes

 

76. “Thirdly, James Counsell KC submitted that Mark Sewell never took off his “metaphorical uniform” as an elder. It was put to him by the court that that would mean that there would be vicarious liability even if he committed the tort of negligence, injuring a customer, while carrying on his cleaning business. He accepted that that would not be so and qualified his submission by saying that the metaphorical uniform was never taken off in his dealings with members of Barry Congregation such as Mrs B. But that is also an unrealistic submission. It cannot seriously be suggested that there would be vicarious liability if, for example, Mark Sewell was driving Mr and Mrs B and their children in his own car to the airport for their holidays and Mrs B was injured in an accident caused by his negligent driving. In my view, Mark Sewell was not wearing his metaphorical uniform as an elder at the time the tort was committed.”

 

However, one may respectfully question whether the cleaning business or airport driving examples are closer to the facts here, when compared to cases which have established liability such as Mohamud, arguably. It is also far from clear that previous (but still recent) more expansive authorities at Court of Appeal level in clergy sexual abuse cases would be decided in the same way now. On the other hand, the more restrictive approach seen in cases involving football clubs are likely in line with the latest UKSC position (and indeed permission to appeal was refused by the UKSC last August in one such case Blackpool Football Club v DSN [2021] EWCA Civ 1532)

 

Best wishes,

James

 

--

James Lee

Professor of English Law

The Dickson Poon School of Law

Somerset House East Wing, room SW1.12
King's College London
Strand
London WC2R 2LS

 

E-mail: james.lee@kcl.ac.uk

  

Profile: https://www.kcl.ac.uk/people/james-lee

 

“Not Time to Make a Change? Reviewing the Rhetoric of Law Reform” Current Legal Problems Lecture Recording: https://youtu.be/XM9ri1dYM98