Background
Mr Ali, a taxi driver, had an
accident with the defendant’s driver on 30 November 2011. Negligence was not in
dispute however the quantum of damages was strongly disputed. The claimant’s
vehicle was written off in the accident and it was assessed as having a
pre-accident value in the sum of £3,900.
Rather than purchase a replacement
vehicle, he hired a replacement plated taxi for 113 days at a daily rate of
£293.58 per day amassing a total hire claim in the sum of £33,211.75. Hire only
ceased when the hire provider indicated they were no longer prepared to
continue with the hire albeit the reason they came to this decision is unknown.
Around the same time the claimant had
repairs carried out to his vehicle at a cost of £2,000 for which it appeared he
paid cash. Although he contended that these were temporary repairs there was
nothing to suggest this from the invoice produced. When questioned as to why he
did not have his vehicle repaired earlier his response was that he had to
borrow the money from two friends who were not in a position to lend it to him
earlier. Although witness statements were produced they did not disclose when
they were asked to lend the claimant the money.
The Defendant argued that the
contract fell within the ambit of the Cancellation of Contracts Made in a
Consumer’s Home or Place of Work etc. Regulations 2008. It was not disputed
that the hire agreements, of which there were two, were entered into at the
claimant’s home. Whilst one of the agreements included a right to cancel it did
not strictly comply with the regulations and the other agreement had no right
to cancel at all.
Furthermore, the defence argued that
the claimant was a consumer for the purpose of the regulations as he did not
only use the vehicle for earning a living but for social domestic and pleasure
purposes too.
In addition to the above, it was
submitted that the claimant may only recover the lesser of either the cost of
hiring a replacement or the loss of profit which would have been generated. A
passage from Clark and Linsell (20th edition) was relied upon, namely:
“It is generally reasonable for the owner of a damaged chattel to avoid any
loss of profit by hiring a substitute for the period during which his own is
under repair, in which case he is entitled to recover the cost of hiring as
damages for loss of use, subject to two qualifications, namely, that the actual
hiring of a substitute must be strictly pleaded and proved as special damage,
and that the hiring must be reasonable.
“The principle is that the claimant may recover what his chattel would
have earned if it had not been damaged – not that he may recover such
out-of-pocket expenses as he may actually have incurred ; and if, for example,
the cost of hiring exceeds the profit which could have been earner, only the
latter may be recovered.”
Finally, the period of
hire was disputed on the basis that the claimant had failed to mitigate his
loss and that only a ‘reasonable’ time for the claimant to source a replacement
vehicle could be allowed.
JUDGEMENT
The matter came before
Judge Saffman in the Leeds Combined Court Centre on 24 January 2014.
The court was of the view
that in order to ascertain whether the claimant was entering into the contract
as a consumer rather than for business purposes one must look at the proportion
of use of the vehicle. Only if the business use were ‘negligible’ could the
claimant be said to be a consumer. Extensive financial accounts had been
disclosed which showed that the claimant’s use of the vehicle as a taxi
accounted for 75% of the time. Additionally the court looked at the definition
of ‘consumer’ contained in the regulations themselves: “a natural person who, in making a contract to which the Regulations
apply, is acting for purposes which can be regarded as outside his trade or
profession.”
The judge therefore found
that the regulations did not apply to the contracts for hire as the claimant
was not a consumer for the purpose of this transaction.
As regards the recoverable
amounts, the judge formed the view that the claimant could only recover the
loss of profit for the vehicle whilst it was off the road (calculated at £52.20
per day) plus an additional £15 per day for the loss of use of the vehicle for
social, domestic and pleasure purposes.
In respect of the period
of hire the judge expressed some cynicism as to the timing of the ability of
the claimant’s friends to lend him the funds to enable him to repair his
vehicle. He found that the claimant could have sourced the funds earlier and
that the vehicle was only repaired as hire had ended. As such, the judge held
that the period of loss ceased one month after it was known that the vehicle
was a total loss, a period of 42 days.
In addition to this award,
the claimant’s loss of the vehicle was limited to the £2,000 spent on repairing
the vehicle. Damages were therefore awarded in the total sum of £4,822.40.
Additionally the court
awarded small claims track fixed costs as the judge felt that had the claim
been presented in its proper form the matter would have been allocated to the
smalls claims track.
We are seeing more
part-time taxi drivers supplement their other income in the current economic
climate so it may be that judges will be persuaded to follow these lines where
the facts are similar. The judge followed the reasoning in Singh v Aqua
De-scaling Ltd and it should be remembered that Mr Singh operated a number of
taxis. It is not clear whether the claimant here was in a similar position. If he
was, then the application of this case may be more limited than might first
appear.
It is not clear how the
court would view an argument that the claimant had no option but to hire a
replacement in order to maintain cash flow and/or fulfill contracts.
In Summary
- Where the accident damaged vehicle has a dual purpose seek disclosure of the split between work/business and social/domestic/pleasure purpose. This can be in the form of work diaries, mileage records etc.
- Consider whether the claimant operates a number or fleet of taxis. If they do, then the argument for loss of profit rather than hire of a replacement vehicle has better prospects.
- If the amount recovered is below the small claims track limit by however much, then argue that small claims track costs only will be recoverable.
The claimant’s application for permission to appeal
was granted by the Court of Appeal however reports suggest that the appeal has
been conceded by the respondents and settlement agreed. Unfortunately
therefore, we do not know on what exact basis the appeal may have been conceded
therefore we do not have any definitive answer to the questions posed by this
decision.
Original article can be found here.
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