Davidson Flashcards
Define “non-pecuniary damages”
- Damages that are not readily quantified financially
- Pain and suffering beyond compensation for medical care and loss of income
Describe the Trilogy ruling
Supreme Court of Canada established a 100K cap on non-pecuniary damages (later given an inflation adjustment, and subject to certain exceptions)
Describe the reasons for caps on general (non-pecuniary) damages (4)
- LIMITLESS claims by the severly injured lead to extravagant awards (pain and suffering awards can be limitless since there is no cap)
- extravagant awards lead to SOCIAL BURDEN & affect AA
- AA = Availability & Affordability - victim would already be FULLY COMPENSATED for loss of income & future care
- ensures PREDICTABILITY of awards
- creates a more appropriate environment for insurers as losses are more predictable
Identify exceptions to the Trilogy decision (caps removed) (3)
- Sexual abuse (S.Y. v F.G.C.)
- Defamation (Hill v Church of Scientology, Young v Bella)
- Negligence causing financial loss
Describe the reasons for the Supreme Court’s exceptions to Trilogy cap
There is no evidence that general damages in these exceptional cases would increase cost of insurance or social burden
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
- 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
Identify 3 relevant cases subsequent to the original Trilogy ruling
- Fenn v City of Peterborough (only case where award exceeded cap)
- Lindal v Lindal (commented on inflation-adjustment)
- ter Neuzen v Korn (cap became rule of law vs just a “judicial policy directive”)
Fenn v Peterborough - Facts
Plaintiff was severly injured in this case
Fenn v Peterborough - Issues
When can general damages EXCEED the 100K cap?
Considerations:
- Inflation adjustment since Trilogy?
- Should severity of plaintiff’s injuries be taken into account?
Fenn v Peterborough - Ruling 1,2
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)
Lindal v Lindal - Facts / Ruling 1,2
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)
Lindal v Lindal - Issues
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?
Lindal v Lindal - Ruling 3 (Supreme Court)
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)
Lindal v Lindal: Implication of a Supreme Court appeal for Fenn v Peterborough
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
ter Neuzen v Korn - Facts
Plaintiff infected with HIV in medical procedure