Supreme Court makes a decision on mixed injury cases

The Civil Liability Act 2018 and the Whiplash Injury Regulations 2021 made under it have specified the amount of damages payable for pain, suffering and loss of amenity (‘PSLA’) caused by a qualifying whiplash injury.  Those tariff amounts are significantly lower than common law damages would be for such injuries.

Whiplash injuries are often suffered in conjunction with other injuries that do not attract a statutory tariff but remain to be compensated at common law, so called ‘mixed injury’ cases.

The issue raised in the test cases before the Supreme Court was how a court should calculate the overall award in mixed injury cases.  In particular how should any PSLA which is found on the facts to be concurrently caused by both the whiplash and non-whiplash injury be compensated?

As the Supreme Court noted, although the sums at stake in the test cases are small many thousands of cases will be affected by the decision on the appeals.  Further, as the cost of awards are ultimately passed on to consumers via motor insurance premiums the decisions potentially affect the level of all motor insurance premiums.

The issue before the Supreme Court was one of statutory interpretation of Part 1 of the Civil Liability Act 2018, specifically the meaning of sections 3:

‘…(2) The amount of damages for the [PSLA] payable in respect of the whiplash injury … is to be an amount specified in regulations … (8) Nothing in this section prevents a court, in a case where a person suffers an injury or injuries in addition to an injury or injuries to which regulations under this section apply, awarding an amount of damages for [PSLA] that reflects the combined effect of the person’s injuries (subject to the limits imposed by regulations under this section).’

The Supreme Court considered three possible interpretations:

  1. The Master of the Rolls’ approach, supported by the defendants on their appeal, of adding only an amount for damages for the non-concurrent PSLA caused by the non-whiplash injury to the tariff sum, because the tariff sum fully compensates for all PSLA caused by the qualifying whiplash injury including any which was also caused by a non-whiplash injury. Double recovery would therefore not arise.
  2. The claimants’ primary approach, supported by the interveners but rejected by the entire Court of Appeal below, of adding together the tariff amount and the common law amount for PSLA for the non-whiplash injuries with no deduction for the resulting double recovery.
  3. The Court of Appeal majority’s approach, supported by the claimants as their fall-back position, of adding together the tariff amount and the common law amount for the non-whiplash injury and then standing back to consider whether to make a deduction to address any double recovery which results subject to a caveat that such deduction could not take the overall damages below the level that would have been awarded for the non-whiplash injuries alone – a modified “Sadler” approach .

In his leading judgment, with which the rest of the panel agreed, Lord Burrows held that the claimants’ primary argument that double recovery was permitted by the Act was untenable.  The second approach was therefore rejected.  The question was then how the Act provided that double recovery should be dealt with.

The Law Society say they are ‘pleased’ with the approach.

Law Society of England and Wales president Nick Emmerson said:

“We are pleased to see the Supreme Court’s judgment.

“We had welcomed the previous findings of the Court of Appeal that damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity for claimants who have suffered a non-whiplash injury should be considered independently of the tariff for the whiplash injury.

“It is now important for these cases to be considered as quickly as possible so that parties suffering from mixed injuries are able to access justice promptly.”

Want to have your say? Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Read more stories

Join nearly 3,000 other family practitioners - Check back daily for all the latest news, views, insights and best practice and sign up to our e-newsletter to receive our weekly round up every Thursday morning. 

You’ll receive the latest updates, analysis, and best practice straight to your inbox.

Features