Davidson Flashcards

1
Q

Define “non-pecuniary damages”

A
  • Damages that are not readily quantified financially
  • Pain and suffering beyond compensation for medical care and loss of income
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2
Q

Describe the Trilogy ruling

A

Supreme Court of Canada established a 100K cap on non-pecuniary damages (later given an inflation adjustment, and subject to certain exceptions)

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3
Q

Describe the reasons for caps on general (non-pecuniary) damages (4)

A
  1. LIMITLESS claims by the severly injured lead to extravagant awards (pain and suffering awards can be limitless since there is no cap)
  2. extravagant awards lead to SOCIAL BURDEN & affect AA
    - AA = Availability & Affordability
  3. victim would already be FULLY COMPENSATED for loss of income & future care
  4. ensures PREDICTABILITY of awards
    - creates a more appropriate environment for insurers as losses are more predictable
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4
Q

Identify exceptions to the Trilogy decision (caps removed) (3)

A
  1. Sexual abuse (S.Y. v F.G.C.)
  2. Defamation (Hill v Church of Scientology, Young v Bella)
  3. Negligence causing financial loss
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5
Q

Describe the reasons for the Supreme Court’s exceptions to Trilogy cap

A

There is no evidence that general damages in these exceptional cases would increase cost of insurance or social burden

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6
Q

Describe how the cap affects the level of equity in compensation between people with temporary or less severe injuries and those with permanent and more severe injuries

A
  • Minor injuries are OVER-compensated
  • Major injuries are UNDER-compensated
    (because past a certain severity, there is no longer a distinction based on severity)

The cap is constitutional and it is fair as the benefits are not meant to totally indemnify the injured person

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7
Q

Identify 3 relevant cases subsequent to the original Trilogy ruling

A
  1. Fenn v City of Peterborough (only case where award exceeded cap)
  2. Lindal v Lindal (commented on inflation-adjustment)
  3. ter Neuzen v Korn (cap became rule of law vs just a “judicial policy directive”)
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8
Q

Fenn v Peterborough - Facts

A

Plaintiff was severly injured in this case

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9
Q

Fenn v Peterborough - Issues

A

When can general damages EXCEED the 100K cap?
Considerations:
- Inflation adjustment since Trilogy?
- Should severity of plaintiff’s injuries be taken into account?

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10
Q

Fenn v Peterborough - Ruling 1,2

A

Original trial: not discussed in reading

Appeal:
- Plaintiff awarded 125K (higher than 100K cap)
- Took into account that Trilogy had appened 1 & 1/2 years ago so inflation would apply in this case. Moreover, this plaintiff was more injured than all plaintiffs in Trilogy case
(Supreme court didn’t comment because no appeal was filed)

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11
Q

Lindal v Lindal - Facts / Ruling 1,2

A

Ruling 1:
- Jury awarded plaintiff 135K

Appeal:
- Insurer appealed and award was reduced to 100K by BCCA (BC Court of Appeals)
(Plaintiff then appealed to the Supreme Court)

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12
Q

Lindal v Lindal - Issues

A

Issue:
- when should general damages exceed 100K Trilogy cap? (Trilogy explicitely mentioned cap can be exceeded in exceptional cases)

Considerations for exceeding cap:
- Is an inflation adjustment appropriate?
- Should severity of plaintiff’s injuries be considered?

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13
Q

Lindal v Lindal - Ruling 3 (Supreme Court)

A

Supreme Court supported BCCA decision but stated:
1. 100K should be indexed for inflation to a specific point in time (1978)
2. Severity of injuries should NOT be considered (general damages are not meant to be compensatory)

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14
Q

Lindal v Lindal: Implication of a Supreme Court appeal for Fenn v Peterborough

A

Likely outcome:
- Award lowered to an inflation-adjusted 100K (less than 2 years between Trilogy & Fenn v Peterborough, so inflation adjustment would result in award lower than the original 125K)
- Severity of plaintiff’s injury should not be considered

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15
Q

ter Neuzen v Korn - Facts

A

Plaintiff infected with HIV in medical procedure

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16
Q

ter Neuzen v Korn - Issues

A

When should general damages be above the 100K Trilogy cap?
- Here, the jury award exceeded the Trilogy cap (even after adjusting the 100K cap for inflation)
- Should the court just substitute its award for the Trilogy (lower award)?

17
Q

ter Neuzen v Korn - Ruling 1

A

Plaintiff awarded 460K in general damages
- Appeal court ordered new trial because 460K > Trilogy 100K cap (even indexed for inflation)

18
Q

ter Neuzen v Korn - Ruling 2

A

Original award of 460K over-turned (insurer succeeded in appeal)
- Since no general damages were awarded, the cap was not relevant
- If general damages had been awarded, the court would have capped the amount at the Trilogy limit anyway

19
Q

ter Neuzen v Korn - Ruling 3

A

Supreme Court reinforced the original Trilogy decision
- The cap was previously a “judicial policy directive”
- The cap is now a rule of law

20
Q

Lee v Dawson - Facts & Ruling 1

A

Lee was severly injured
- Jury at 1st trial awarded 2M, but judge reduced award to 294K (i.e. inflation adjusted 100K)
- Lee appealed to BCCA (BC Court of Appeals)

21
Q

Lee v Dawson - Issues / Arguments (regarding cap)

A

VIOLATES charter of rights
- cap discriminates against the seriously injured as less seriously injured victims are entitled to full compensation for pain & suffering whereas severily injured are not due to the cap.

INCONSISTENT
- cap is inconsistent with current community values
- communities are now more accepting of disabilities

Upper limit precludes juries from keeping up with the pace of social, economic and technological changes in society

22
Q

Lee v Dawson - Ruling 2 (appeal) + reasons (2), Ruling 3 (Supreme Court)

A

BCCA judges decision:
- Court recognizes it might be time to rationalize and examine the cap and the submissions seem compelling, but the court of appeals cannot overturn the trilogy
- Arguments based on Charter were rejected as awards for general damages were never meant to provide full compensation, so it should not be dependent of the seriousness of injury

Note:
- Supreme Court DECLINED to hear a further appeal (this means that SCC probably still supports the limit on non-pecuniary damages for personal injury & rational behind the decision)
- Cap remains in effect well into the future & the original rationale still considered valid