The issue at hand is summarised in Lord Hope of Craighead's leading judgment:
The precise meaning of what the courts will deem to be an "impecunious hirer" was explored. As Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead states:
"Lack of financial means is, almost always, a question of priorities. In the present context what it signifies is inability to pay car hire charges without making sacrifices the plaintiff could not reasonably be expected to make."
Lord Hope of Craighead states:-
"Mr Lagden's case raises an issue which is of concern to those innocent motorists who wish to hire a car while their own car is being repaired but, for economic or financial reasons, have no choice but to use the services of a credit hire company. It is of concern too to the motor insurance industry, as the effect of the services which the credit hire companies provide has been to increase substantially the cost of claims which must be met by insurers on behalf of the motorists who were responsible for these accidents. It arises from the decision in Dimond v Lovell [2002] 1 AC 384 that only the spot hire rate of hiring an alternative vehicle is recoverable, and not the higher rates charged by credit hire companies. The question is whether that decision applies to a claimant who, due to lack of funds or for any other reason which is reasonably foreseeable, has no alternative but to use the services of a credit hire company."
Circumstances of Lagden v O'Connor
The claimant's car was damaged as a result of the defendant's negligence and required to be repaired at a garage. The claimant, who was unemployed and could not afford to pay for the hire of a replacement car while his own car was off the road, signed an agreement with a credit hire company whereby it provided a hire car at no cost to him by way of the provision of a 26-week credit facility, to allow for the company to recover its charges from the negligent driver's insurers, and an insurance policy to provide payment in the event of non-recovery within that period. The fees involved in those services were reflected in a higher rate for the car hire than the equivalent spot hire rate charged by traditional car hire firms for a similar vehicle. The defendant admitted liability but disputed the claim for damages, which included £659 in respect of the credit hire company's charges. In relation to the claim for £659 the judge held that an impecunious claimant who could not afford to hire a replacement car at commercial rates or obtain a loan for that purpose had no option but to obtain a credit hire package with additional benefits that would ordinarily be irrecoverable and was therefore entitled to recover the whole cost of the package from the tortfeasor. The Court of Appeal upheld the judge's decision.
Decision
Held:
(1) that in approaching the question of damages payable to an injured party whose expenditure in mitigation had been augmented by his impecuniosity, the court was not precluded from considering the injured party's lack of means as being a factor too remote to be taken into account, but would apply the principle that a wrongdoer had to take his victim as he found him and had to bear the consequences if it was reasonably foreseeable that the injured party would have to borrow money or incur some other kind of expenditure to mitigate his damages.
(2) Dismissing the appeal (Lord Scott of Foscote and Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe dissenting), that although only an amount equivalent to the spot hire rate of hiring an alternative vehicle would normally be recovereable by a claimant who, deprived of the use of his car by the negligence of the defendant, had used the services of a credit hire company, and not the cost or the additional benefits obtained by the use of such a company, if it was shown that the claimant's impecuniosity was such that he would have been unable to obtain a replacement car had he not used a credit hire company, the reasonable additional charges of that company would be recoverable as damages, it being reasonably foreseeable that there would be some car owners who would be unable to obtain a replacement car other than by use of a credit hire company; and that, accordingly, the judge had been correct in allowing recovery of the whole cost of the claimant's car hire.
Comment
(1) that in approaching the question of damages payable to an injured party whose expenditure in mitigation had been augmented by his impecuniosity, the court was not precluded from considering the injured party's lack of means as being a factor too remote to be taken into account, but would apply the principle that a wrongdoer had to take his victim as he found him and had to bear the consequences if it was reasonably foreseeable that the injured party would have to borrow money or incur some other kind of expenditure to mitigate his damages.
(2) Dismissing the appeal (Lord Scott of Foscote and Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe dissenting), that although only an amount equivalent to the spot hire rate of hiring an alternative vehicle would normally be recovereable by a claimant who, deprived of the use of his car by the negligence of the defendant, had used the services of a credit hire company, and not the cost or the additional benefits obtained by the use of such a company, if it was shown that the claimant's impecuniosity was such that he would have been unable to obtain a replacement car had he not used a credit hire company, the reasonable additional charges of that company would be recoverable as damages, it being reasonably foreseeable that there would be some car owners who would be unable to obtain a replacement car other than by use of a credit hire company; and that, accordingly, the judge had been correct in allowing recovery of the whole cost of the claimant's car hire.
Comment
A couple of key themes in credit hire cases are explored in this case: a) impecuniousity; b) mitigation of loss.
Impecuniousity
The precise meaning of what the courts will deem to be an "impecunious hirer" was explored. As Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead states:
"Lack of financial means is, almost always, a question of priorities. In the present context what it signifies is inability to pay car hire charges without making sacrifices the plaintiff could not reasonably be expected to make."
Lord Hope of Craighead states:-
"The full cost of obtaining the services of a credit hire company cannot be claimed by the motorist who is able to pay the cost of the hire up front without exposing himself or his family to a loss or burden which is unreasonable.....In practice the dividing line is likely to lie between those who have, and those who do not have, the benefit of a recognised credit or debit card. It ought to be possible to identify those cases where the selection has been made on grounds of convenience only without much difficulty."
Mitigation of Loss
Lord Hope of Craighead comments on the general duty a claimant has to ensure that the loss suffered is 'reasonably incurred'. He states:-
"[T]he principle is that he must take reasonable steps to mitigate his loss. The injured party cannot claim reimbursement for expenditure by way of mitigation that is unreasonable. So the motorist cannot claim for the cost of hiring another vehicle if he had no reason to use a car while his own car was being repaired—if, for example, he was in hospital during the relevant period or out of the country on a package holiday. If it is reasonable for him to hire a substitute, he must minimise his loss by spending no more on the hire than he needs to do in order to obtain a substitute vehicle. If the defendant can show that the cost that was incurred was more than was reasonable—if, for example, a larger or more powerful car was hired although vehicles equivalent to the damaged car were reasonably available at less cost—the amount expended on the hire must be reduced to the amount that would have been needed to hire the equivalent."
The onus on proving that the claimant could have mitigated his loss is on the defendant in such cases. As Lord Hope of Craighead states:-
"It is for the defendant who seeks a deduction from expenditure in mitigation on the ground of betterment to make out his case for doing so. It is not enough that an element of betterment can be identified. It has to be shown that the claimant had a choice, and that he would have been able to mitigate his loss at less cost. The wrongdoer is not entitled to demand of the injured party that he incur a loss, bear a burden or make unreasonable sacrifices in the mitigation of his damages. He is entitled to demand that, where there are choices to be made, the least expensive route which will achieve mitigation must be selected. So if the evidence shows that the claimant had a choice, and that the route to mitigation which he chose was more costly than an alternative that was open to him, then a case will have been made out for a deduction. But if it shows that the claimant had no other choice available to him, the betterment must be seen as incidental to the step which he was entitled to take in the mitigation of his loss and there will be no ground for it to be deducted."
"Applying those principles to the present case, I would hold that the defendant's insurers have not made out a case for the deduction which they seek. The evidence showed that Mr Lagden had no choice but to use the services of the credit hire company and that, if he was to make use of these services, he had no way of avoiding the additional benefits that were provided to him. The principles which I would apply are of general application. But it by no means follows that the same result must follow in every case where the innocent motorist uses the services of a credit hire company. The criterion that must be applied is whether he had a choice—whether it would have been open to him to go into the market and hire a car at the ordinary rates from an ordinary car hire company."
Comment
The application of the principles in Lagden v O'Connor has led to defendants instructing companies to provide hire reports to try to show that the claimant could have chosen cheaper alternatives and mitigated the loss he incurred. The defandant solicitor will also try and recover as much financial information as possible from the pursuer where impecuniousity is pled to try and prove that he was not although it is notable that the onus of proving impecuniousity is with the Pursuer.