PERSONAL INJURIES
Award in High Court to Cyclist Reduced on Appeal
There is a trend now in the courts in awarding less damages in personal injury cases. Even where a plaintiff who had an apparently ‘good’ award in the High Court, can run the risk that if the defendants appeal the award, their good award could be reduced.
An example of this occurred in a recent Court of Appeal case where the High Court had awarded the plaintiff €125,000 reduced to less than €66,000. The case involved a cyclist who was knocked off his bike by a bus. The cyclist fell onto the footpath. As the injury was not too serious, the plaintiff spoke with the bus driver and a Garda who was close by.
The plaintiff continued to travel to work and later that evening attended the Mater Rapid Injury Clinic in Smithfield. Here he learned that he had a fracture on his left elbow, an ankle sprain and a number of cuts and bruises. These injuries were later confirmed in the Mater Hospital.
The plaintiff also told the High Court that he had broken sleep and pains in his back, neck, and ankle. He received over 100 sessions of physiotherapy and 45 sessions with a chiropractor. He complained that he continued to have body pain several years after the accident.
The medical evidence indicated that the plaintiff’s injuries were reasonably mild, and this was contended by the defence who claimed that the plaintiff had exaggerated his injuries. In the High Court the doctors were agreed that the plaintiff’s complaints were way out of proportion to his physical injuries.
The Court of Appeal looked at how a court should assess personal injuries which were unsupported by medical evidence. The court found that there had been somewhat of a mischaracterisation of the medical evidence by the trial judge in the High Court, and that it was significant that no evidence was led from a clinical psychologist even though the plaintiff had been referred to one.
The Court of Appeal found that the High Court judge had erred in finding that there was a conflict of medical evidence and overlooking the fact that the doctors had largely agreed that there was no organic source of the plaintiff’s pain. The court commented that the trial judge apparently ignored the claim by the defence of malingering by the plaintiff.
The court found that there was merit in the defendant’s contention that the High Court judge sought to diagnose the plaintiff as suffering from a pain syndrome in the absence of any medical evidence.
The Court of Appeal ruled that the plaintiff’s elbow injury was in the ‘minor’ category in the Book of Quantum and reduced the general damages to €55,000. Regarding the special damages the Court of Appeal ruled that the trial judge took an erroneous approach in placing a value on these and accordingly reduced them to €10,688.
O’ Daly v. Bus Éireann – Irish Bus & Anor [2023] IECA 232.
A.C. FORDE & CO. LLP
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