Chapter 8: Psychiatric Harm Flashcards
1 Introduction
Please note that a claim for psychiatric harm is not a separate tort! The tort is still negligence; the
loss is psychiatric harm. Once a duty of care is established the claimant must go on to prove the
other elements of negligence to succeed ie breach, causation, remoteness and lack of defences.
Policy reasons behind the limitations placed on the recovery of pure psychiatric harm: Floodgates:
A significant increase in the class of claimants who could recover. When you read the facts of Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 1 AC 310, consider the potential number of psychiatric claims if there were no constraints on duty (those in the stand, at the match, watching on TV, listening on the radio, coming to the aftermath).
Crushing liability
Imposing damages out of all proportion to the negligent conduct. For example, consider the liability of a negligent driver if anyone who witnessed the accident could claim for psychiatric harm caused.
Fraudulent claims
Historically the courts have been wary of psychiatric harm as there is a
perception that such harm is easier to ‘fake’ than physical injury (linked to diagnostic uncertainty). The courts worry about claimants making fraudulent or exaggerated claims
(due to diagnostic uncertainty) which could not be adequately checked or controlled.
Effect of increased availability of compensation on potential claimants,
For example, a
disincentive to rehabilitation.
Psychiatric harm
In this context, psychiatric harm is a form of psychiatric illness that the
claimant has suffered as a result of the perception of traumatic events. The phrase ‘nervous
shock’ (old terminology) is a commonly used label to describe these cases. The psychiatric
harm must be either:
(a) A medically recognised psychiatric illness; or
(b) A shock-induced physical condition (such as a heart attack).
1.1 Primary and secondary victims distinction
This distinction is crucial because the courts apply different tests for establishing whether a duty of care is owed depending on whether the claimant is a primary victim or a secondary victim. It is important to note that there may also be an actual victim ie a person who has
suffered physical harm only or physical harm and psychiatric harm.
Primary Victim
A primary victim is someone who suffers psychiatric harm as a result of
reasonable fear for their own physical safety (objective test). They are involved in the traumatic event and are therefore in the area of danger (the danger zone).
Note that the primary victim does not suffer physical injury. If they do, then they are an actual victim and would bring an ordinary negligence action for their personal injury, including their consequential psychiatric injury which would be recoverable.
Key case: Dulieu v White [1901] 2 KB 669
The claimant was a pregnant barmaid when the defendant negligently crashed his coach and
horses through a wall in her pub. She suffered severe shock leading to her child being born with a cognitive impairment. She was a primary victim as she had reasonably feared for her own physical safety.
Key case: Page v Smith [1996] 1 AC 155
The claimant was involved in a car crash caused by the defendant’s negligence. The claimant
suffered no physical injury, but the crash worsened his ME (Myalgic Encephalopathy) so as to
render him permanently disabled. He was a primary victim because his condition arose from
reasonable fear for his own physical safety.
Secondary Victim
A secondary victim suffers psychiatric harm due to fear for someone else’s
safety, normally a close relative. They are not in reasonable fear for their own physical safety. They witness the traumatic event (or its immediate aftermath), and suffer psychiatric harm as a result, but are not involved in the event/in the area of danger.
Key case: Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire [1992] AC 310 HL
All claimants in this claim were secondary victims. Some of the claimants were at the football
ground at the time of the disaster, but none were in danger or reasonably feared for their own
safety. They suffered psychiatric harm as a result of witnessing their relatives/friends in danger.
Other claimants were not at the grounds at the time but suffered psychiatric harm after finding
out about the disaster and rushing to the ground and, in some cases, having to identify the dead
bodies of their relatives.
Example
Neither bystanders nor rescuers are given any special status in this area of law. As with any other claimant they must be classified as either a primary or secondary victim. If a rescuer or bystander suffers psychiatric harm as a result of reasonably fearing for their own physical safety, then they will be a primary victim.
Cullin v London Fire & Civil Defence Authority [1999] PIQRP 314
The claimant fire fighter
suffered psychiatric injury after witnessing two colleagues trapped inside a burning building. In
his rescue attempt, he was exposed to danger or reasonably believed he could be subjected to physical injury and was therefore a primary victim.
White v Chief Constable of the South Yorkshire Police [1999] 1 All
ER 1.
The claimants were police officers on duty during the Hillsborough football stadium disaster. They assisted in removing the dead bodies and carrying the injured to safety as well as trying to resuscitate spectators. Their action was for post-traumatic stress disorder. Their status as employees
Status as employees & professional rescuers
Did not convert them from secondary to primary victims (it is
easier to establish a duty if you are a primary victim). They were secondary victims as they had not been exposed to danger, so the ordinary criteria for establishing a duty in respect of secondary victims applied.
Key case: McFarlane v EE Caledonia Ltd [1994] 2 All ER 1
Objective Test & Not Subjective
The Court of Appeal considered liability for psychiatric harm (PTSD) suffered by the claimant
after an oil rig disaster (Piper Alpha). During the disaster, the claimant was aboard a rescue vessel which remained in the area, but at a safe distance, collecting other survivors. The court rejected the claimant’s claim as a primary victim for psychiatric harm, because they did not feel that the claimant was in fact in reasonable fear for his physical safety at the time
The Court of Appeal also rejected his claim as a rescuer, stating that recovery was limited to those actively involved in the rescue, not mere bystanders. He was thus treated as a secondary victim and his claim failed as he was unable to establish the more stringent requirements for a successful claim as a secondary victim.
1.2 Summary
- Psychiatric harm is a type of loss, not a tort.
- Where the claimant’s loss is pure psychiatric harm, the courts might adopt a different approach to establishing a duty of care.
- In this area of law, the courts classify claimants into one of three types of victim: actual, primary or secondary.
- An actual victim is a person who has suffered physical harm only or physical harm and psychiatric harm.
- A primary victim is in the danger zone and suffers psychiatric harm as a result of reasonable fear for their own physical safety.
- A secondary victim suffers psychiatric harm due to fear for someone else’s safety. They
witness the event or immediate aftermath but are not in the danger zone. - Bystanders and rescuers are not given any special status in this area of law. They are classified as actual, primary or secondary victims in the ordinary way
- Primary victims
2.1 Primary victims: The test for duty of care is that psychiatric harm is recognized in law in the form of depression or other diagnosable mental health conditions
In Page v Smith [1996] 1 AC 155 it was held that in order to determine whether a primary victim is
owed a duty of care, the defendant must reasonably have foreseen that the claimant might suffer physical injury as a result of their negligence. If physical injury was reasonably foreseeable, the normal principles for determining the existence of a duty of care would then apply. This test for establishing a duty of care is a much easier test to satisfy than the test for
establishing a duty of care to secondary victims (the Alcock criteria as discussed later). The first step, however, is to ensure the psychiatric harm suffered is recognised in law.