From: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>
Sent: Tuesday 16 January 2024 15:38
To: Matthew Hoyle; Jason W Neyers; obligations
Subject: RE: Psychiatric Injury In UKSC
As two people have written to express surprise at my
endorsing this decision, I should add that I endorse the result, and not all
the reasoning of the majority.
For example, we are told:
(at [48], see also [4] and [140]).
That can’t be right. If I negligently break the leg of a mother carrying
her child, causing her to fall and injure the infant, is there no claim by the
child for their foreseeable injuries because they are the effect of the injury
of another person? Does it matter whether the initial leg breaking was an
“accident” or not?
That statement of “general principle” is just a mistake. Distinctions
like that are only of benefit to torts examiners looking for ludicrous points
with which to trip up hapless students.
Similarly, the resurrection of “proximity”, despite the rejection of the
Caparo test that had employed it by the Supreme Court Robinson v
Chief Constable of West Yorkshire is a surprise. What other discarded 90s
idea will make a comeback next? Kylie and Jason?
The hospitals had failed to treat someone and the claimants had suffered
psychiatric injury when the patient died. That there is no general duty to take
steps to protect others had proven decisive in the very last decision of the
court in the previous year (HXA v Surrey).
Despite the heroic (?) efforts of Lord Burrows ([212]-[223]) I can’t see
how the assumption of responsibility by hospital to patient can possibly create
a duty owed to their relatives (cf BNL v Playboy Club).
I realise that courts are the prisoners of how counsel choose to argue
the case before them, but this was a straightforward case of non-feasance. If
counsel insist on only citing cases narrowly about psychiatric injury, or don’t
take important points of first principle, then ultimate appellate courts need
to instruct them to go further. Those courts also need to have the collective
memory to recall cases that they had decided from a few short years before from
related areas.
FWIIW, I have uploaded a short note on the case on to SSRN.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=2684360
From: Matthew Hoyle <MHoyle@oeclaw.co.uk>
Sent: Tuesday, January 16, 2024 1:26 PM
To: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>;
Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca>;
obligations <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: RE: Psychiatric Injury In UKSC
If you think this area of the law is all about
‘proximity’ (cf. [129]-[130]) (and that somehow an undertaking supplies
proximity (at [132])) you will probably be inclined to see McLoughlin/Alcock
as an extension rather than a limitation.
If you think that, and that physical harm is of the
same genus as financial loss (at [130]), and you think no duty in a failure to
protect case, then its not hard to say equally no proximity in a misfeasance
case either, or that it all turns on social factors or a basket of policy
considerations (see [137]-[139]).
Matthew
Hoyle
Barrister
One Essex Court
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From: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>
Sent: Tuesday, January 16, 2024 12:17 PM
To: Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca>; obligations <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: RE: Psychiatric Injury In UKSC
Yes. But
that is not this case.
From: Jason W Neyers <jneyers@uwo.ca>
Sent: Tuesday, January 16, 2024 12:13 PM
To: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>; obligations <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: RE: Psychiatric Injury In UKSC
Dear Rob:
But your analysis only works in a situation of true
nonfeasance (failure to act) not in a situation of misfeasance (acting). So if
the Doctor was performing a surgery and was negligent, leading to a gruesome
death then there should/could be liability. The fact that there was an
undertaking only to the patient would be irrelevant just as the fact that there
was only an undertaking by a builder to their employer for the construction of
a house would not preclude a claim by a third party injured when the building
collapsed on them (since the third party claim is a DvS one, an
interference with a primary right through action, rather than a HBvH
one)
The judgments in Paul v Royal Wolverhampton seem to skirt around that issue or
worse perhaps even deny it on some readings.
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: Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>
Sent: Thursday, January 11, 2024 5:54 AM
To: obligations <obligations@uwo.ca>
Subject: Psychiatric Injury In UKSC
Mildly
interesting decision on psychiatric injury in Paul v Royal Wolverhampton [2024]
UKSC 1.
https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/uksc-2022-0038.html
Simplified,
in all three cases a doctor or health authority fail to diagnose a
life-threatening medical condition, leading to the patient’s death. The
claimants are relatives who suffer psychiatric injury as a result of the death.
Majority
hold (rightly) no duty of care owed.
The
majority decision is long, but on a quick fisking through, we find the right
reason (Lords Leggatt and Rose giving the main substantive judgment, with which
Lord Briggs, Sales and Richards agree, with a short concurrence by Lord
Carloway) at [138]. Lord Burrows dissents.
I do not
owe you a duty to protect you from illness. A fortiori I do not owe third
parties who might be impacted by your illness a duty of care.
If,
however, you attend a hospital clinic, a (special) duty of care is assumed
towards you. The doctor who treats you comes under a duty to protect you from
harm. If you are then sent home and die, when careful treatment would have
cured you, the hospital is potentially liable.
The
question is whether the hospital assumes a duty not only towards the patient
but towards third parties who might possibly be impacted?
One way of
thinking about this is that there would be a contract with the patient if they
provided any consideration for the treatment. To whom is that (special) duty
owed?
And the
answer is: to the patient only.
Rather
oddly, it seems that the case was not argued on this basis (see Lord Burrows
[212]).
There is
muchr more in the judgments than the above but I am doubtful as to whether
making it more complex than that assists.
RS
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