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06 June 2023 | Jackson, The Next Phase: Discussion of the October Reforms

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Parklane Plowden in collaboration with Carter Burnett will be hosting an evening for Personal Injury and Clinical Negligence Solicitors on&nbsp;<strong>Tuesday 06 June</strong> to discuss Jackson, The Next Phase: Discussion of the October Reforms.&nbsp;</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The Implementation of the Extended Fixed Recoverable Costs (FRC) regime will come into place from the 01 October 2023. This event will provide the perfect opportunity to debate and discuss the October reforms which will soon be applicable to most Civil Litigation cases.&nbsp;</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The evening will be hosted by Head of Parklane Plowden's Head of Civil Team, <a href="https://www.parklaneplowden.co.uk/our-barristers/stuart-jamieson/">Stuart Jamieson</a> and Carter Burnett's directors, <a href="https://www.carterburnett.co.uk/our-team/lee-carter/">Lee Carter</a> and <a href="https://www.carterburnett.co.uk/our-team/jon-paul/">Jon-Paul Burnett</a>. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Carter Burnett's very own Solicitor Advocate <a href="https://www.carterburnett.co.uk/our-team/seamus-kelly/">Seamus Kelly</a> and Senior Costs Draftsperson <a href="https://www.carterburnett.co.uk/our-team/sean-linley/">Sean Linley</a> will be joining us as headline speakers.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Following the talk, there will be a Q&amp;A session.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>With changes to Fixed Recoverable Costs set to apply for claims where proceedings are issued on or after 1 October 2023 (except for personal injury), the Conference is expected to attract a bumper crowd.&nbsp;</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The tickets are £15 per person, drinks and nibbles will be provided.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>You can sign up to this event <a href="http://lexlinks.parklaneplowden.co.uk/doForm.aspx?a=0xF15D4A97E0E04123&amp;d=0x49EB4C9596DBE1A5^0xBDC0B87423493533|0x40F3E49C83A12815^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|0xF1B146662D144B75^0x8A1CDD2DB76555E3|0x9CB58EF48012E032^0x275BEF696DA441AD|0xA14B30AADF25AF0D^0x4538EA01547C6D9520542FC6B6F63C93|0x43D48F22BB6859DF^0x275BEF696DA441AD|0xD52134AC788FF0FE^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|">here</a>. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Invoices will be sent out one week before the event. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->

James Murphy secures settlement of £1.83m in transhumeral amputation claim

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The Claimant, aged 56, suffered a severe crush injury to his right dominant arm when he was pulled into a conveyor at work. The Claimant’s arm was amputated to save his life.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The Claimant has a short stump and advices received were initially equivocal about whether a myoelectric prosthetic would be beneficial or even operable by him.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Phil Davison of Sintons LLP arranged a trial supervised by Blatchford of Sheffield using interim payments which was successful such that the Claimant’s motivation and control of his arm were considered exceptional. The Claimant is self-caring and can use the arm well for many tasks. He additionally benefits from cosmetic and sports prosthesis.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Expert evidence relating to prosthetic use was received from Dr. Renjith Bose - Rehabilitation Medicine, Ms. Michelle Henry  – Care/OT, Ms. Carolyn Hirons - Specialist amputation physiotherapist and Mr. Abdo Haidar - Prosthetist.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The claim compromised at a hybrid settlement meeting.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>James worked with <a href="https://sintons.co.uk/our-people/phil-davison/">Phil Davison</a>, Partner at <a href="https://sintons.co.uk/about/">Sintons LLP</a>, on behalf of the Claimant.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->

Mitigation of loss: fixed-date assessment

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>A dismissed employee has a duty to mitigate their loss. Section 123(4) Employment Rights Act 1996, which deals with principles of calculating an employee’s loss, states that the duty to mitigate is the same as owed under the common law. Similar principles apply when assessing losses in a discrimination case.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The duty to mitigate loss is no more and no less than to act reasonably. It is a factual question and dependent upon particular circumstances. It does not mean that a dismissed employee <em>must</em> take the first job that they can, but if that job offer was at the same or similar rate of pay and there is no particular issue with it, then a respondent would likely persuade a court or tribunal that it was unreasonable not to take it and mitigate their loss.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>There is no duty on a dismissed employee to prove that they have mitigated their loss. The burden of proving that a dismissed employee has failed to mitigate their loss rests with the party making the assertion, usually the respondent employer. It is well understood that if a party who bears that burden does not put before a court or tribunal evidence of a failure to mitigate, then such submissions are unlikely to be successful. What has to be shown is that the claimant acted unreasonably.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>From a tribunal’s perspective, when incorporating a finding of failure to mitigate in its assessment of loss, can this be done through a percentage chance assessment? This was a point considered recently by the EAT.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In <strong><u>Edward v Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust</u></strong> [2023] EAT 33, the claimant employee was an NHS Band 5 data quality officer who was downgraded to a band 4 role following an assessment that he was incapable of working at a band 5 level. The respondent did not offer the claimant a band 4 job and dismissed him, which the ET held to be victimisation. The ET accepted that he was not redeployed because he had brought a grievance that the decision to put him on a performance improvement programme was discriminatory.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>At Remedy stage, when considering the loss of earnings award, the consideration was of the period from the expiry of his notice period (June 2018) to when he started a new job (December 2020).</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The respondent had argued that the claimant had not mitigated their loss by making applications for band 4 NHS work for which he was best suited. The claimant’s evidence was that there was a particular e-mail exchange with the respondent’s HR that led him to believe that in any request for a reference it would state that he was currently under investigation under disciplinary actions, but he nonetheless applied for non-NHS work. The claimant also used agencies and it was via an agency that he was interviewed for an NHS role in November 2019. The ET considered that the fact that he was interviewed for an NHS role should have encouraged him to revise his pessimistic view about likely success of getting employment within the NHS.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>It was on that basis that when assessing loss of earnings and the respondent’s argument of a failure to mitigate by the claimant, the ET reduced by 50% the losses from November 2019 (when he interviewed for the NHS role) to December 2020 (when he started a new role) to reflect a failure to mitigate loss by applying for NHS work and the many band 4 roles available.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The 50% reduction as a result of an identified failure to mitigated was challenged on appeal. The Claimant argued that the tribunal erred in applying a percentage reduction to the period of loss between November 2019 and December 2020.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Reliance was placed on the EAT’s previous decision in <strong><u>Gardiner-Hill v Roland Berger Technics Ltd</u> </strong>[1982] IRLR 498 to submit that the ET should have made a finding on the balance of probabilities as to when the Claimant would have found alternative employment and at what rate of earnings.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Following <strong><u>Gardiner-Hill</u></strong>, an ET would given consideration to 3 issues. Firstly, what steps were reasonable for the claimant to have to take to mitigate their loss. Secondly, did the claimant take reasonable steps to mitigate their loss. Thirdly, to what extent would the claimant have mitigated their loss had they taken those steps?</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In considering those issues, the ET would identify a date, i.e. within a certain time period, when such reasonable steps would have resulted in mitigation of loss and assess losses accordingly. The findings are to be made on a balance of probabilities.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Was it an error of law for the ET to not follow that approach in <strong><u>Edward</u></strong>?</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The respondent Trust argued that <strong><u>Gardiner-Hill</u></strong> should no longer be followed and that the EAT should depart from its previous judgment in that case on the basis of exceptional circumstances. The respondent argued that the assessment should instead be on a loss of a chance percentage assessment and that such an approach was not considered in cases after <strong><u>Gardiner-Hill</u></strong> on the issue of mitigation. Tribunals, of course, make such percentage chance assessments routinely already, e.g. Polkey reductions, Chagger assessments.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>On closer analysis of <strong><u>Gardiner-Hill</u></strong> it was identified that it did not address the question of whether the fixing a date approach required a finding on the balance of probabilities, or some broader assessment of the chances of finding a new job. It seems that as an approach its usage is based on it being the done thing rather than any particular policy or principle.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In <strong><u>Hakim v The Scottish Trade Unions Congress</u> </strong>UKEATS/0047/19 the EAT had followed the fixing a date approach, but recognised that there <em>may</em>&nbsp;be a case where a percentage can be used, if there is little or no actual evidence to go on. The general sense from that decision is that it would be rare to have adopt such an approach and doing so would require careful reasoning to justify it.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Ultimately, the approach that the EAT took in <strong><u>Edward</u></strong> was to continue to follow the fixing a date approach in <strong><u>Gardiner-Hill</u></strong> largely because the approach now has “considerable pedigree”. Whilst the ET had adopted a percentage-based approach in <strong><u>Edward</u></strong>, the EAT considered that it ought to have been possible to have made a finding on the balance of probabilities in this case and accordingly the appeal was upheld. It will be recalled from the above that the failure to mitigate argument concerned one particular band of jobs in the NHS and the ET had heard some evidence as to the prevalence of those jobs for it to make such an assessment.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Accordingly, the fixed-date assessment made on a balance of probabilities should be used when assessing losses from identified mitigation of loss.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->

CLINICAL NEGLIGENCE | ‘LAW WITH LUNCH’ WEBINAR SERIES 2023

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>This June our ‘Law with Lunch’ webinar series of bitesize, lunchtime talks return with Parklane Plowden's award-winning Clinical Negligence team to bring you updates covering the legal issues of the moment.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Hylton Armstrong kicks off the series discussing: Do you have an agenda? A practical guide to drafting agendas for discussions between experts.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Tuesday 27th June | 12:30 - 13:30 - Zoom</strong> - <a href="http://lexlinks.parklaneplowden.co.uk/doForm.aspx?a=0xF15D4A97E0E04123&amp;d=0x49EB4C9596DBE1A5^0xBDC0B87423493533|0x40F3E49C83A12815^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|0xF1B146662D144B75^0x8A1CDD2DB76555E3|0x9CB58EF48012E032^0xEC411CDC9B1E2FC1|0xA14B30AADF25AF0D^0x4538EA01547C6D9520542FC6B6F63C93|0x43D48F22BB6859DF^0xEC411CDC9B1E2FC1|0xD52134AC788FF0FE^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|"><strong>Sign up here</strong></a></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Megan Crowther and Jade Ferguson will be discussing Schedules of loss: narrative or numbers? </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Thursday 06th July | 12:30 - 13:30 - Zoom</strong> - <a href="http://lexlinks.parklaneplowden.co.uk/doForm.aspx?a=0xF15D4A97E0E04123&amp;d=0x49EB4C9596DBE1A5^0xBDC0B87423493533|0x40F3E49C83A12815^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|0xF1B146662D144B75^0x8A1CDD2DB76555E3|0x9CB58EF48012E032^0x6BB157CF2E0420B9|0xA14B30AADF25AF0D^0x4538EA01547C6D9520542FC6B6F63C93|0x43D48F22BB6859DF^0x6BB157CF2E0420B9|0xD52134AC788FF0FE^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|"><strong>Sign up here</strong></a></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Howard Elgot will be discussing Litigation Capacity - A Practical Guide</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Wednesday 12th July | 12:30 - 13:30 - Zoom</strong> - <a href="http://lexlinks.parklaneplowden.co.uk/doForm.aspx?a=0xF15D4A97E0E04123&amp;d=0x49EB4C9596DBE1A5^0xBDC0B87423493533|0x40F3E49C83A12815^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|0xF1B146662D144B75^0x8A1CDD2DB76555E3|0x9CB58EF48012E032^0x769BA4E033A7AED8|0xA14B30AADF25AF0D^0x4538EA01547C6D9520542FC6B6F63C93|0x43D48F22BB6859DF^0x769BA4E033A7AED8|0xD52134AC788FF0FE^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|"><strong>Sign up here</strong></a></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Please contact <a href="mailto:events@parklaneplowden.co.uk">events@parklaneplowden.co.uk</a> if you have any queries. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->