Court of Appeal in Bryn
Alyn Denies Claimants' Appeal on "The Lister Point"
by Chantal Richard (as appeared in the ACAL Newsletter of 2003)
Over the last several months the Court of Appeal's decision in Various
Claimants v Bryn Alyn Community Holdings Ltd. (1) and Royal and Sun
Alliance (2) [2003] EWCA Civ85 ["Bryn Alyn"] has been the subject of
much discussion among practitioners of child abuse litigation. At first
glance the case appears to be a positive development for claimants
on the issue of limitation, yet it is a setback for claimants in terms
of the Court's decision on vicarious liability and "The Lister Point".
In Bryn Alyn the Court considers 'The Lister Point' at paragraphs 97 to108
of its decision. 'The Lister Point' references the House of Lords' groundbreaking
ruling in the case of Lister v. Hesley Hall Ltd. [2001] 2 WLR 1311 ["Lister"]
where the Lords concluded that an employer could be held vicariously liable
for the school warden's sexual assaults of children in his care.
Since Lister there has been some uncertainty about how widely the ruling could
be applied because the Lords left open the issue of the nature of the tort
committed by the warden - in other words, was the employer responsible for
the warden's intentional assault of the children at the home or were they responsible
for the warden's breach of duty in failing to protect the children in his care
from harm? The characterisation of the tortious conduct of the warden was not
particularly important in Lister because limitation was not at issue. However,
in cases where child abuse claims are being brought more than six years after
the expiry of the limitation period for trespass on the person, the nature
of the tort becomes extremely relevant. It is the blurring of the issues of
limitation and vicarious liability which have led to some confusion about the
application of the Lister ruling.
In cases of intentional sexual assault the limitation period is six years from
the time the assault was committed or if the victim was a child, then six years
from the time the child reaches the age of majority. The six year limitation
period is non-extendable. Thus if a claim for intentional assault is statute
barred as against the employee then it will be statute barred as against the
employer even if the employer would have been vicariously liable for the employee's
wrongful conduct had the claim been brought within the limitation period. By
contrast, the limitation period for acts of negligence is three years but this
timeframe may be extended if a court finds under section 14 of the Limitation
Act 1980 ["the Act"] that the claimant's relevant date of knowledge is less
than three years before the issuing of his or her claim or if the court is
prepared to exercise its discretion under section 33 of the Act to allow the
claim to proceed. An employer therefore may be held responsible for the negligent
acts of its employee even where the three year limitation period has expired
provided that sections 14 or 33 of the Act apply in the circumstances of the
case.
In order to clarify the Court's position in Bryn Alyn, it is worthwhile to
review some of the case law on vicarious liability in the context of child
abuse cases. The Lister decision overturned an earlier Court of Appeal ruling
in Trotman v. North Yorkshire County Council [1999] LGR 584 ["Trotman"]. In
Trotman the claimant was a handicapped teenager who was sexually assaulted
while on a foreign school holiday in Spain by the deputy headmaster of the
special school that he attended. The Court of Appeal denied that the deputy
headmaster's employer could be vicariously liable for the sexual assault because
the unauthorised act of assault was outside the deputy headmaster's scope of
employment.
In Lister, the House of Lords concluded that the Court of Appeal in Trotman
had applied the doctrine of vicarious liability too narrowly. The House of
Lords recognised that in cases where there has been intentional wrongdoing
by the employee it can be more difficult to assess whether the employer should
be vicariously liable for the wrongful act. In these cases a court has to examine
whether the employer should be liable for the intentional wrongdoing in any
event because the employee's wrongful conduct is so connected with acts that
the employer has authorised, that they may be properly regarded as being within
the scope of his employment. Ultimately in Lister the House of Lords held the
school liable for the warden's conduct because the torts he committed were
in the time and on the premises of the employer whilst the warden was also
busy caring for the children.
The Lords in Lister were divided on the question of how to characterise the
torts committed by the school warden. Lords Steyn, Clyde and Hutton were not
clear on the issue but Lord Hobhouse held that the employer was vicariously
liable because the warden had breached the duty owed to the children in his
care. On the other hand, Lord Millett explicitly rejected the notion that the
school was vicariously liable for the warden's failure to perform his duty
but did hold the school responsible for the warden's intentional assaults.
Due to the lack of clarity on this point in Lister, the nature of the tort
committed is the central issue that needed to be determined by the Court of
Appeal in Bryn Alyn. In order for three of the fourteen claimants to succeed
in their case against the managers of the home, Lord Auld explained at paragraph
103 of the decision: "[t]he question that arises for decision on this appeal
is whether a claim against a carer who, in the course of his employment, deliberately
abuses a child, is an action in negligence or other breach of duty for personal
injuries within section 11?"
Unfortunately the Court of Appeal in Bryn Alyn chose to follow the minority
decision of Lord Millett in Lister and concluded that the employee's deliberate
acts of sexual abuse were distinct from any duty of care delegated to him by
the employer. Thus, the claims for personal injury arising out of the deliberate
acts of abuse were not caught by section 11 of the Limitation Act and were
therefore governed by the non-extendable six year period of limitation such
that the employer could not be vicariously liable.
It is understood that the three claimants in the Bryn Alyn case are in the
process of appealing the issue of liability to the House of Lords. While one
hopes that the claimants will be successful on this aspect of their appeal,
it may be difficult for them to persuade the House to overlook or distinguish
its earlier decision of Stubbings v. Webb [1993] 1 All ER 322. In this case,
Lord Griffiths with whom the other Lords agreed, explained that he would not
construe breach of duty as including a deliberate assault or rape. Here, a
30 year old claimant brought an action against her stepfather and stepbrother
for damages suffered as a result of physical and sexual abuse by the stepfather
when she was a child between the ages of 2 and 14 and rape by the stepbrother
when she was 12 years old. The House held that her claims were subject to the
six year limitation period for trespass on the person which had long since
expired and were therefore statute barred.
As in Stubbings v. Webb, the House of Lords on the Bryn Alyn appeal may be
again reluctant to characterise the deliberate acts of sexual abuse as amounting
to either negligence or breach of duty owed to the claimants in order to overcome
what is really a limitation problem. The Court of Appeal expressed its reservations
with such an approach at paragraph 107 of its decision and acknowledged that
to deploy such an argument would be contrary to the unanimous reasoning of
the House of Lords in Stubbings v. Webb.
Although it ruled against them on liability, the Court of Appeal did express
its sympathy with the three Bryn Alyn claimants who were caught by the six
year non-extendable limitation period. Referring to the anomaly that can arise
in some child abuse cases such as Seymour v. Williams [1995] PIQR 470 where
a mother was held liable in negligence for failing to protect the plaintiff
from abuse by her father even though the plaintiff's claim against her father
for the abuse itself was dismissed for being out of time, the Court in Bryn
Alyn commended the Law Commission's proposal for legal reform in this area.
Lord Justice Auld made the following comment at paragraph 100 of the decision
about the Law Commission's proposal to include claims for personal injury in
the same regime of an extendable three year limitation period with discretion
to disapply: "For what it is worth, we warmly commend such a proposal. Early
statutory implementation of it would obviate much arid and highly wasteful
litigation turning on a distinction of no apparent principle or other merit.'
Even if the Bryn Alyn claimants are successful in convincing the House of Lords
that the acts of abuse by staff at the home can be construed as claims for
negligence or breach of duty such that the employer would be held vicariously
liable, there will be claimants in other cases who will have the same set of
factual circumstances and their claims will be rejected on the basis that they
are statute barred as against the abusive employee and the employer. It seems
then that the most sensible solution to ensure some certainty across the board
is to lobby for reform of the relevant sections of the Limitation Act.
|