Overview
This Bill aims to change the way payments are set in personal injury cases to make up for the loss of future earnings. Personal injury is a legal term for an injury to the body, mind or emotions. A case can be made against someone who is legally responsible for causing personal injury.
Lump sum payments are often used as a way to settle personal injury cases. Lump sum payments tend to over or under compensate people. This is because predicting a person’s life expectancy and future needs is difficult.
Compensation in regular payments are called ‘periodical payment orders’ (PPOs). People can only get compensation as regular payments if both parties involved agree to this.
The Bill means the court must consider regular payments in every case. Where appropriate, lump sum payments could still be made.
You can find out more in the Scottish Government's Explanatory Notes document that explains the Bill.
Why the Bill was created
For people who suffer a personal injury, their compensation needs to be calculated in a fairer and more open way.
Similar changes to paying compensation are being made in England and Wales.
You can find out more in the Scottish Government's Policy Memorandum document that explains the Bill.
The Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill became an Act on 24 April 2019
Becomes an Act
This Bill passed by a vote of 112 for and 0 against or abstentions. It became an Act on 24 April 2019.
Introduced
The Scottish Government sends the Bill and related documents to the Parliament.
Related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill
Why the Bill is being proposed (Policy Memorandum)
Explanation of the Bill (Explanatory Notes)
How much the Bill is likely to cost (Financial Memorandum)
Information on the powers the Bill gives the Scottish Government and others (Delegated Powers Memorandum)
Opinions on whether the Parliament has the power to make the law (Statements on Legislative Competence)
Stage 1 - General principles
Committees examine the Bill. Then MSPs vote on whether it should continue to Stage 2.
Committees involved in this Bill
Who examined the Bill
Each Bill is examined by a 'lead committee'. This is the committee that has the subject of the Bill in its remit.
It looks at everything to do with the Bill.
Other committees may look at certain parts of the Bill if it covers subjects they deal with.
Who spoke to the lead committee about the Bill

First meeting transcript
23 October 2018

23 October 2018

30 October 2018

6 November 2018
What is secondary legislation?
Secondary legislation is sometimes called 'subordinate' or 'delegated' legislation. It can be used to:
- bring a section or sections of a law that’s already been passed, into force
- give details of how a law will be applied
- make changes to the law without a new Act having to be passed
An Act is a Bill that’s been approved by Parliament and given Royal Assent (formally approved).
Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee
This committee looks at the powers of this Bill to allow the Scottish Government or others to create 'secondary legislation' or regulations.
It met to discuss the Bill in private on 2 October 2018 and 23 October 2018.
Read the Stage 1 report by the Delegated Powers and Law Reform committee published on 24 October 2018.
Debate on the Bill
A debate for MSPs to discuss what the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill aims to do and how it'll do it.

Stage 1 debate on the Bill transcript
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani)
The next item of business is a debate on motion S5M-15169, in the name of Ash Denham, on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill at stage 1.
15:38The Minister for Community Safety (Ash Denham)
I am very pleased to be here to open the debate on the general principles of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill. I thank the convener and members of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee for their insightful scrutiny at stage 1 of what is quite a technical, detailed and, in places, complex bill. I welcome the committee’s positive support for the general principles of the bill, as set out in its report.
I also put on the record my thanks to the Finance and Constitution Committee and the Delegated Powers and Law Reform Committee for their additional scrutiny and consideration. Like the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, I am grateful to all those who provided evidence on the bill. Finally, I thank the Government Actuary’s Department, whose analysis and expertise have been invaluable in informing the bill.
For some time, the personal injury discount rate has been the subject of criticism. Prior to 2017, pursuers’ representatives expressed concern that the rate was, in effect, undercompensating pursuers, and a judicial review was sought. Since the most recent change, there has been criticism from defenders’ representatives and insurers, on the basis that setting the rate by reference to returns on index-linked gilts intrinsically overcompensates many pursuers. There have also been concerns that the duration between reviews has contributed to the scale of the impact of changes, as well as concerns about a general lack of transparency in the process.
When we consulted on the issue in 2017 and asked whether the law on how the discount rate is set should be changed, 78 per cent of respondents agreed that a change is necessary. During the various consultations, common concerns emerged to do with the fairness, clarity, certainty, regularity and credibility of the method and process for setting the rate.
The bill attempts to address those points. It will put in place a new statutory regime for calculating the discount rate that should be applied to future pecuniary losses in personal injury cases. In providing new methodology, the bill requires the Government Actuary’s Department to assume that the damages that are awarded for future loss will be invested in a notional investment portfolio, comprising set classes of investment asset. The portfolio has been designed to meet the objectives and match the characteristics of the “hypothetical investor”, as identified in the bill.
It is encouraging that, in its stage 1 report, the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee said:
“the Committee welcomes the additional clarity and transparency provided by having the method for calculating the discount rate set out in legislation.”
The committee noted that that view was shared by most of the respondents to its call for evidence.
As the bill stands, the rate will be reviewed every three years. Currently, there is no statutory requirement for the discount rate to be reviewed regularly. It is clear that the lack of a regular review is detrimental to all parties. Most consultees agreed that the rate should be reviewed on occasions specified in legislation.
The Scottish Government took account of respondents’ views and decided that a review should be carried out every three years, with the possibility of a review being instigated sooner than that, if circumstances require it. Such an approach will provide a significant degree of certainty, tempered with a proportionate degree of flexibility.
Stakeholders suggested that a three-year review period might mean that settlement of cases would be delayed if one of the parties anticipated that a more favourable rate would come into force, and argued that a five-year review period would go some way towards addressing that issue.
The Scottish Government’s view is that it is imperative that reviews are regular. In its stage 1 report, the committee said:
“the Committee believes—in the interests of finding that balance between flexibility and certainty—that five years would be preferable to three.”
As I said in my response to the report, we listened carefully to the people who gave evidence and we considered the committee’s conclusion. I agree with that conclusion. We will lodge an amendment at stage 2 to alter the frequency of review from every three years to every five years. The facility to call for an out-of-cycle review will, of course, remain.
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
I accept the minister’s point, in broad terms. Will she give some detail about the out-of-cycle review? In a five-year period, assumptions around investments can change radically. That happened at the turn of the millennium, when there was a stock market crash.
Ash Denham
Daniel Johnson makes a good point. The general point is that the rate must meet the needs of the hypothetical investor and ensure that they get the right amount of money, so that, at the end of the term, the money is exhausted and the person will not have been overcompensated, and, equally, will not have been undercompensated.
The member is right to say that economic conditions can change rapidly, which is why the bill provides for the facility to have an out-of-cycle review, so that if circumstances should change, the Scottish Government will be able to review the methodology and the distance between and frequency of rate reviews and so on, to ensure that the rate still meets the needs of the hypothetical investor.
The 2017 consultation provided options for those who might set the rate, some of which involved ministers and some of which did not. However, overall there was more support for the options that did not involve ministers. The bill therefore provides that the rate will be reviewed by the Government actuary, and the courts will continue to have the ability to apply a different rate should they decide to do so.
The policy decision to place the duty to review the discount rate on the Government actuary is consistent with and integral to the overall policy aim of reforming the law to make provision for a method and process for setting the discount rate that is clear, certain, fair, regular, transparent and credible. The policy approach has been to regard the determining of the rate as an actuarial exercise in which there should be no need to exercise political judgment. The bill will provide, in an accountable way, the framework in which the rate should be set, and thereafter the mechanics of determining the rate will sit with an appropriate professional. The Scottish Government thinks that that strikes an appropriate balance.
Currently, courts can make a periodical payment order for future pecuniary loss resulting from a personal injury only if the parties consent. In certain situations, periodical payments can be an attractive option to provide a guaranteed payment year on year for the duration of an award. The bill will, for the first time, require courts to consider imposing a periodical payment provided that the source of the funding is reasonably secure.
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
The committee had concerns about the fact that the court could impose on a pursuer who, for various reasons, might not want a continuing relationship with the defender. Will the minister comment on that?
Ash Denham
We have taken account of that. We recognise that there are many reasons why a PPO might not be suitable for a pursuer or a defender, but we think that the court would take that into account. Both parties would be entitled to put their views on whether they saw a PPO as acceptable, and the court would take those views into consideration before it made its judgment.
The bill also provides for the variation or suspension of PPOs and similar agreements. I note that the committee would like the Scottish Government to lodge amendments to attach more weight to the pursuer’s views when a court is asked to decide whether damages should take the form of periodical payments. I set out the Scottish Government’s thinking on that issue in my response to the stage 1 report, and I will continue to give it further consideration.
I also note that the committee asked the Scottish Government
“to outline how it will promote the use of PPOs beyond the public sector.”
The bill, of course, obliges the courts to consider the use of periodical payments in every case. Again, I have responded to the committee on that point, and I confirm that we intend to progress that matter with the Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service and that we will look carefully at what the Ministry of Justice intends to do on the same issue and see whether anything can be learned from that information.
The report made a number of other recommendations that require action on the part of the Scottish Government. I intend to touch on them in my closing speech.
I very much look forward to listening to the debate.
I move,
That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I call Gordon Lindhurst to speak on behalf of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee for up to eight minutes.
15:48Gordon Lindhurst (Lothian) (Con)
I trust that all members present have read our stage 1 report, which is a classic of the genre. Neil Findlay is not present on this occasion to ask me a question about that particular line. I would not comment on whether the report falls within Mark Twain’s definition of a classic as
“something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read”,
but I am sure that the minister has read it. I thank her and her officials for engaging constructively with the committee.
Personal injury cases might seem small in number, but the impact for the individuals affected and for their families is considerable. We are talking about catastrophic life-changing events, compensation for which should be calculated in a fair and transparent manner. That is also a matter of concern to those who pay the compensation.
The Association of British Insurers said that the current system was “broken” and that the bill took a “much more modern” approach:
“We are therefore very supportive of this legislation, which changes the framework for setting the rate to one that bears much more relation to what happens in reality.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 30 October 2018; c 3.]
The minister has helpfully set out the context and content of the bill, so I will focus my remarks on the committee’s findings.
We welcome the additional clarity on how the discount rate—the adjustment to a compensation award to cover future loss—is calculated. That welcome was shared by the majority of respondents to our call for views, but opinion was split on the detail of the bill, with pursuer representatives on one side and defender interests on the other.
The pursuers felt that any investment risk added to other risks, such as the cost of care or of modifying accommodation. Those were risks that the victim of injury would not face had they not been wrongfully injured, and they would be on top of the risk, or perceived risk, in seeking legal redress in the first place. The culmination of those risks could, in their view, lead to undercompensation.
From the defender perspective, the concern was overcompensation and that any discount rate not reflecting the ordinary and prudent investment was unfair and that adjustments to include higher-performing assets would result in better returns. That, as they saw it, was a blunt instrument.
The committee recognises that the calculation of compensation is not an exact science. The approach is of a hypothetical investor with a notional portfolio for a theoretical period of 30 years. We have little information on actual investor behaviour, but the point is not what people do in reality. Rather, it is to provide a standardised approach that works across a range of cases.
The committee asked for more detail on keeping the 30-year figure under review. We do not always receive a response to a committee report before the debate, but we did on this occasion. We can only hope that the minister’s fine example is not lost on her ministerial colleagues.
The discount rate has several adjustments factored in, which are intended to reduce the risk of undercompensation. They cover inflation, tax and investment advice, and underperformance. On balance, the committee is satisfied with that approach. We are also content with the role of the UK Government actuary in setting the rate, which, we heard, was a technical rather than a political exercise—accountability is to be found in setting the legislative framework.
We were also told of concerns about gaming the system—holding back or pushing forward proceedings to suit the timing of a review. One suggestion was to work from when the claim was raised, rather than the date that it is settled. We asked the Scottish Government to consider the merits of such a change. The minister’s response was reflective, if rather sceptical, although she has not ruled anything out, which we appreciate.
This is a complex policy area, and the impact on both the pursuer and defender must be appraised carefully. Let us not lose sight of what this bill is about. The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers told us:
“The award of damages is not an investment pot—it is not a reward. It is a sum of damages ... to look after somebody’s needs for the rest of their life.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 23 October 2018; c 26.]
I turn to the review period. A review held in 2017 was the first for 15 years, and its outcome was not well received by defenders or insurers. The bill proposes that the discount rate be reviewed every three years, with a review of the portfolio preceding every regular review and a ministerial power to call for out-of-cycle reviews. The committee considers that to be a suitably rigorous approach. In the interests of balancing flexibility and certainty, we recommend a five-year review cycle. I am pleased that the minister agrees and that, as she has said today, she is committed to lodging an amendment at stage 2.
On the matter of periodical payment orders, we asked that more weight be given to pursuers’ views. PPOs are regular instalments paid over time, rather than a lump sum on conclusion of a case. The minister has said that she will reflect on the matter, which is welcome, as is her willingness to explore how barriers to the take-up of PPOs can be overcome.
We thank all the witnesses who helped to inform our scrutiny. We are content that the bill’s provisions are consistent and credible and that the change in the law will balance the interests of pursuers and defenders. We look forward to further consideration of the points that I have outlined and which the minister has undertaken to look at in advance of stage 2.
The author Ambrose Bierce defined the future as
“That period of time in which our affairs prosper, our friends are true and our happiness is assured.”
His was a sardonic take on life, but the reality is that victims of personal injury face risk and uncertainty. They contend with trauma and ill health, often for long periods, which have resulted from catastrophic injuries that they have suffered. They encounter a legal process that often seems drawn out, and they should have a fair and transparent compensation system. We commend the general principles of the bill.
15:56Dean Lockhart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
I thank those who provided submissions on the bill and the witnesses who attended the three Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee sessions that were dedicated to the bill. As the minister said, the bill is technical, but it is important. It provides for a new statutory regime to calculate the personal injury discount rate that applies to compensation awards in personal injury cases.
Under Scots law, the role of compensation is to restore the injured party—to the extent that a financial award can—as closely as possible to the position that they were in before they were injured. When assessing the amount of a lump-sum award, courts take into account the net rate of investment return that a claimant might expect to receive from a reasonably prudent investment of the lump sum. That is referred to as the discount rate.
As the committee’s convener and the minister said, the committee heard evidence that pursuers and defenders want a more stable, transparent and fair method for setting the discount rate. The bill takes into account a number of factors in how the discount rate should be calculated.
First, the bill defines a hypothetical investor. It says that the discount rate should be calculated by reference to the assumption that the hypothetical investor will invest over 30 years and that they will invest in a notional portfolio that is made up of investments in a fixed class of assets. In addition, the bill proposes making a series of standard adjustments to the discount rate—an adjustment to reflect the impact of inflation; a deduction of 0.5 of a percentage point to represent the costs of tax and investment advice; and a further deduction of 0.5 of a percentage point, which is referred to as the further margin—to reduce the risk of undercompensation of the party that suffered loss. The bill also provides for regular reviews of how the discount rate is set and gives courts additional powers to impose periodical payment orders.
There was consensus among defender groups and pursuer groups on a number of areas, including the need to update the system; the need to increase the availability of periodical payment orders and give courts further powers on them; and the need for regular reviews of the discount rate. We are grateful that the Scottish Government is to follow the committee’s recommendation that the review cycle for the discount rate should be over five years instead of three years.
The committee heard differing views on particular aspects of the bill. I will raise three areas where there was a lack of consensus in the evidence.
There is concern among defender groups that the notional portfolio is overcautious and is too highly invested in fixed assets, which offer a lower return than higher-returning investments in equities. The proposed portfolio assumes that only 20 per cent of the investment would be in equities, which is lower than the percentage in a typical balanced investment portfolio. That is important because the interest rates on Government bonds have historically been much lower than the higher returns on equity investments.
Daniel Johnson
I thank the member for giving way. I accept some of what he is saying, but does he not accept that the language being used—the talk of a portfolio of balanced asset classes—is language that many people being awarded damages will simply not be able to navigate and that we also need to take that into consideration in relation to our so-called hypothetical investor?
Dean Lockhart
The member makes a fair point. That is why the further adjustments that we will come to—such as the 0.5 per cent deduction to pay for professional advice in this area to ensure that the injured person has all the necessary professional advice—are an important part of the protection mechanisms that the bill puts in place.
Defender groups acknowledged that the Government will have regularly to change and update the notional portfolio through secondary legislation to take into account market changes. With some time available before stage 2 of the bill, it would be advisable for the Scottish Government to stress test the composition of the notional portfolio to ensure that it does indeed provide the right balance of investments.
The second area that attracted differing views was the further margin adjustment of 0.5 per cent. Defender groups have expressed concern that this further margin adjustment will increase compensation payments beyond the level of 100 per cent, which is the general principle. They argue that a cautious portfolio, which is already baked into the legislation, is likely to produce overcompensation, so there is no need for a further adjustment to deal with the risk of undercompensation.
In the bill’s policy memorandum, the Scottish Government recognises that there is a probability of overcompensation as a result of the application of this further adjustment of 0.5 per cent. Although we understand the Government’s approach of legislating in favour of a risk of overcompensation rather than risking undercompensation, we have to recognise that this will come at a cost. The costs associated with paying more than 100 per cent of compensation will fall on insurers and ultimately on their customers, medical professionals, the national health service in Scotland, and other public bodies that self-insure.
Parliament should recognise as a matter of public policy that if the further margin provision of 0.5 per cent is passed into law, it comes at a cost.
John Mason
Will the member accept that it is inevitable that some people will be undercompensated and some will be overcompensated? It is not possible to exactly compensate everyone.
Dean Lockhart
That is a fair point to make, although the vast majority of the evidence sided with the probability that overcompensation would be the likely result of these new provisions.
The third area where there has been some disagreement relates to the assumption that the hypothetical investor will hold assets for 30 years. A longer period of investment would increase the likely returns and therefore increase the discount rate. It was not obvious from the evidence given to the committee why a period of 30 years should be used. We heard evidence to suggest that the average for a settled claim could be much longer and last around 40 to 45 years.
That led the committee to call on the Government to assess how the 30-year period would work in practice and we are grateful to the minister for confirming that her department will keep under review the operation of the 30-year period of investment to ensure that in reality it does not produce a significant divergence in returns.
Stewart Stevenson (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Will the member give way?
Dean Lockhart
I am literally about to wrap up.
The Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill is technical, but it is vitally important for those affected and we believe that it will provide greater clarity and certainty for everyone involved.
16:03Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
I, too, thank the clerks and members of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee for their excellent work at stage 1 of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill. I acknowledge the many organisations and individuals who participated in the consultation process.
Scottish Labour welcomes the introduction of the bill. The bill seeks to calculate personal awards of damages through the injury discount rate in a way that is
“clear, certain, fair, regular, transparent and credible”.
Ultimately, the bill is about providing security to those who have been injured through the actions of others, often leaving them with life-altering conditions and with substantial life decisions to make.
As members have noted, although this is a technical bill, at its heart is something fundamental and understandable. It is about protecting vulnerable people and making sure that we have in place a system that is fair and equitable, so that they can make the decisions that they need to make in very difficult circumstances. Importantly, it is also about finding the right balance so that our public bodies, in particular the NHS, do not incur unreasonable costs and liabilities. There is also the important point that undercompensating can lead to many such bodies having large bills. If we undercompensate—if we give people too little—often it is the NHS that ultimately picks up the bill.
Although Labour agrees with the broad principles that are outlined in the stage 1 report, we recognise that there are parts of the proposed legislation that need to be tested robustly as the bill proceeds through stages 2 and 3. I will outline two or three such areas in my speech. The first area that requires scrutiny is the make-up of the notional portfolio, which we have already heard about. Concerns have been raised that it is too cautious and too focused on fixed assets at the expense of equities, even though equities would deliver a higher rate of return.
However, we need to strike a cautious note, in particular around the notion of the hypothetical investor. Although it is reasonable to assume that vulnerable people will invest, it is not reasonable to assume that they will become investment experts, or that they should assume risk or that they require to be speculators. It is not reasonable that they have to put their damages award under a metaphorical mattress, but nor should we expect them to bet on the stock market and to base their future on such speculation.
The notional portfolio would need be updated regularly to keep up with market changes, but it is unclear whether the Scottish Government or the UK Government Actuary’s Department would be responsible for doing that. Likewise, it is unclear whether the series of adjustments that are set out in the bill would be adequate to cover the cost of inflation, tax and investment advice or underperformance. We must test all those aspects as the bill proceeds.
Periodical payment orders would allow courts to make awards for future economic loss and for payments to be made in a periodic manner, thereby increasing the security of such payments. We welcome that provision, which can mitigate against some of the uncertainty that is associated with lump sums. For vulnerable individuals in particular, it can provide welcome certainty. However, more weight should be given to a pursuer’s views when a court is asked to decide on a PPO and members have already raised that point. Ultimately, the bill should seek to empower those who seek compensation, instead of taking away any more of their control.
On the 30-year period, despite evidence that suggests that the average life expectancy following a serious personal injury claim with damages of more than £250,000 is 46 years, the bill creates an assumption that the hypothetical investor will hold their assets for a 30-year period. In her evidence, the minister stated:
“There is no authority on which to base that figure; it was chosen merely as a useful duration that was neither too short nor too long.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 6 November 2018; c 8.]
It is important that the period is examined and carefully considered so that the bill provides for a payment period that is realistic.
Labour welcomes the bill and supports its aim of creating a
“fair, ... transparent and credible”
personal injury discount rate. Although it represents progress, the bill is far from perfect and the proposed legislation must be tested robustly and scrutinised closely as it moves forward. Changes in the areas that I have mentioned will help strengthen the bill to provide greater security to those people who have been injured through wrongful action, while also protecting public bodies from unreasonable costs and liabilities. The bill will ensure that we have in place a just system that is fair and equitable. I look forward to following the bill’s progress through stages 2 and 3.
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame)
We move to the open part of the debate. Members have a generous four minutes for speeches.
16:09John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
The bill has been more interesting than I think that some committee members might have anticipated. The bill may affect a relatively small number of people, but how compensation is calculated is of immense importance. The whole question of a lump-sum settlement, and how it is invested, is a tricky one.
There seems to be widespread agreement that the present system, which is based on index-linked gilts, needs modernising, while keeping intact the fundamental principle of 100 per cent compensation so that neither party should gain or lose. As an aside, on the question of gilts, it seems to me that there is something fundamentally wrong when a saver gets a lower rate of interest than inflation. However, I accept that that is a wider question and beyond the scope of the bill.
Overall, I agree with the Government approach that we should move towards a cautious but low-risk portfolio. We heard evidence from defenders, including insurers and the NHS, of the risk of overcompensation. Clearly that would hit the premiums of others who take out insurance, or the public purse in the case of the NHS. However, evidence from pursuers’ spokespeople raised the risk of undercompensation, which is certainly not desirable when a person may have suffered horrendous life-changing injuries.
In practice, a perfect balance, with no risk of over or undercompensation, is impossible to achieve, as there will always be uncertainties in such cases; for example, some people live longer and some for shorter periods than had been expected. The Government has argued that we need a standardised approach, and most witnesses and the committee agree. However, there will always be disagreements on how a hypothetical investor will invest their lump sum and whether the assumption of a 30-year period is reasonable, as others have indicated. The Government has indicated that it is open to more than one rate if that seems to be needed, for example by having a 15-year rate and a 50-year rate as well, and that is welcome.
Particularly contentious for defenders has been the further margin adjustment of 0.5 per cent on the discount rate. On the one hand, that is seen as reducing the risk for the injured party; on the other hand, it is seen as moving away from the concept of 100 per cent compensation—no more, no less. We heard that the injured party or pursuer takes on a range of risks, including living for longer than expected, higher inflation, or stock markets plunging, as they did in 2008. On the other hand, if investments do well, the pursuer might gain.
Another interesting area, which I think that my colleague Angela Constance will touch on, is periodical payment orders. The discussion has focused on whether we should move away from the current position, in which PPOs happen only when both parties agree. As an outsider looking on, PPOs can seem an attractive option, as they can take away some of the injured party’s risk, for example the risk of living longer than expected. However, we heard arguments against PPOs, including the pursuer not wanting an on-going relationship with the defender; the financial solidity, or lack of it, of the defender; possible restriction of the pursuer’s need to spend more up front, for example on accommodation; and defenders not liking PPOs as they add uncertainty to their financial position and, in particular, to their financial statements.
The committee was reluctant to go the full way of giving courts complete autonomy on this. That is why conclusion 10 in our stage 1 report suggests an amendment that would provide for a statutory presumption in favour of the pursuer’s preference. I note the minister’s reluctance to limit the court’s ability to make the best decision, and I think that we need to consider that further after today’s debate and at stage 2.
I think that there is general support for the bill. The committee supports the general principles of the bill and I am happy to align myself with that position.
16:13Maurice Corry (West Scotland) (Con)
I, along with my colleagues, welcome this stage 1 debate on the bill. Suffering personal injury is never expected. No one ever wants to have to claim compensation for injuries that have been caused by wrongful behaviour. Through no fault of their own, individuals can find themselves in the midst of a confusing legal framework that does not always work in their favour.
It goes without saying that the framework for such cases must not only be in place, but must operate as clearly and fairly as possible—most definitely for the pursuer, but also for the defender. That is how we can ensure that those individuals are treated sensitively and by a credible system.
We can see that the current personal injury discount rate needs improvement. With a lack of frequent reviews, we have a process that can seem ambiguous and unclear to pursuers and defenders in civil action cases. I hope that the introduction of the bill will see a helpful adaption of how the personal injury discount rate is calculated, with careful consideration of periodical payment orders and how best to set the rate of return.
I offer my appreciation for the work of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee on the bill and generally. The committee’s insightful analysis of the bill has offered the scrutiny that is needed. I hope that its recommendations will help to further mould the bill and make an end result that works for everyone.
I have no doubt that the elements contained in the bill are well intentioned. Making the current calculations for allocating compensation fairer and more efficient is clearly necessary. The process for claimants can be technically murky, especially when they face what can be a very stressful period of uncertainty. We know that few personal injury cases need a discount rate to be applied, but it is still fundamental that the legal framework is absolutely clear for individuals and their family members, not to mention for defenders and their representatives. Making the legislation as clear as possible is in everyone’s interests.
The bill will modernise exactly how compensation will be calculated, and I support that. It allows for adjustments to be made to the discount rate and opens the possibility for PPOs to be changed in certain circumstances. Although there are varying opinions on how beneficial that will be, the principle behind those methods is most welcome.
I believe that the bill will be better attuned than the current legislation to how pursuers behave, especially regarding how compensation is invested. Indeed, the idea of a hypothetical investor, as set out in the bill, should encourage a more modernised framework that will allow for greater flexibility for the injured party as well as clarity.
Of course, there are aspects that will be worth examining in further detail. For example, the 30-year period for holding a pursuer’s assets is, for some, not long enough, yet I recognise that that measure is designed to cover a broad range of cases and will be revisited regularly; I hope that that will be the case as necessary. There is also a question of the extent to which the proposed investments and reductions can lead to under or overcompensation. Indeed, the principal aim is to award full compensation—not more, not less—and its importance for those who are involved should never be underestimated. Neither the pursuer nor the defender should be placed at a disadvantage. With that in mind, I hope that the bill’s end result will allow for adjustments that will accommodate for the needs of each individual. That will lessen the potential risk for pursuers and reduce the likelihood of their being undercompensated.
I welcome the bill at stage 1. Although further assurances and examination of certain aspects of the bill would be beneficial, I echo the support that has been given by the committee. Finding a standard that can be implemented across the board—and which works for each case, despite their differences—is quite rightly our goal. Therefore, I hope that the proposed calculations for setting the discount rate will lead to a more credible and fair outcome for those who are affected by personal injury and give the clarity that each party deserves.
16:17Angela Constance (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Although the number of people who are directly affected by the bill is small, the bill is nonetheless crucial. We should always remember whose interests are at the very heart of the bill: the people who have suffered an accident at work, a birth that did not go to plan, or negligence or lack of care by an individual or organisation, which mean that they live with the tragedy of no longer being who they were meant to be or leading the life that they had worked for or, indeed, had dreamed of.
The minister has helpfully put the legislation into the context of a wider programme of reform that abides by the principles of clarity, transparency and fairness. I will return later to the importance of principles.
In the time that I have, I will focus principally on periodical payment orders, because the committee heard substantial evidence about the risks that victims of personal injury bear with compensation, particularly if it is received in a lump sum. No matter how good the legislation, calculating an award for damages, particularly for future loss, is not an exact science and never will be, so the risk of undercompensation can be minimised but never removed.
We have to remember that damages are not surplus funds; they are meant to replace loss of earnings and meet future care costs. Professor Wass advised the committee about inflation-busting care costs, the unpredictability of life expectancy and the costs of specialised accommodation. All of those point to the advantages of a periodical payment order.
The bill will give the courts for the first time the power to impose, without the consent of either party, PPOs. Crucially, courts will only be able to do that where the continuity of payments is secure. However, in his evidence, Patrick McGuire from Thompsons Solicitors expressed concern about the potential for a victim to be forced to accept a PPO and how disempowering that could be for someone who has already suffered a catastrophic injury and endured a lengthy court process.
The committee recommended that the Government lodge amendments to give more weight to the views of the injured person and suggested a statutory presumption. In her transparent and clear response to the committee, the minister said that she did not want to undermine the ability of courts to make the best decision and that courts would inevitably weigh up the views of both pursuer and defender. Far be it from me to be disrespectful to our learned friends of the judiciary, but let us also not be deferential, because we know that little in life is inevitable.
That brings me back to principles: if we cannot have a presumption—and I am not convinced that we cannot—we should at least put some robust principles in the legislation relating to the views and voice of the injured person. There is precedent for that in the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000 and the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003, among other legislation. Under such provisions, the court or tribunal, after weighing up all the evidence and hearing all the views, could take decisions to infringe people’s liberty, although it would do so under a clear obligation to listen to the views of those impacted and to demonstrate a wide range of principles.
Let us not add to the feelings of powerlessness and of not being listened to that are all too frequent in the lives of those with significant disabilities, illness or injury. The minister went some way towards recognising that when she acknowledged that PPOs would not be for everyone, given that some people would need a clean break from those who had been responsible for their injury. I am glad that she gave a commitment in Parliament to continue to consider that issue.
16:21Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
As a member of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, which scrutinised the bill, I am grateful to have the opportunity to speak in the debate. Four minutes is not a lot of time to develop elegant arguments—
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I can give you five minutes.
Jackie Baillie
Oh, my goodness! I cannot guarantee that my arguments will be any more elegant. Let me cut to the chase and focus on two areas: the discount rate and periodical payment orders.
I appreciate that, as other members have pointed out, the Scottish Government’s intention is that there should be neither overcompensation nor undercompensation for people to whom awards for personal injury are made. The principle of 100 per cent compensation is right—albeit that, in practice, that might be difficult to achieve absolutely.
Those who are responsible for paying out compensation—the defenders—believe that the Government is being overgenerous in its calculations of what people with an award would do with their lump sum. Their view is that the Government is too cautious in its assumptions and that investors should invest in equities, rather than fixed assets, thereby potentially maximising their return. However, that clearly carries a level of risk that might be considered to be too high, given the volatility of markets. On the other hand, those who represent pursuers say that any portfolio should be based on no-risk investment. Although I am minded to agree, I think that the Government’s approach is sufficiently low risk and cautious that it strikes the right balance between the two competing interests.
To be honest, most normal people with a personal injury award have probably never considered an investment portfolio before. They will naturally err on the side of caution, wanting to be sure that they have a secure return for their money and that the money will meet their needs well over their lifetime. However, I know that people will invest on the basis of expert financial advice. The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers welcomed the inclusion of standard adjustments in the bill, but noted that the amount for financial advice and tax was underestimated. It would be helpful for the minister to review that before stage 2.
The second area that I will cover is periodical payment orders. I welcome them, because many people with personal injury awards may have to live with the consequences of their injury for many years and will require varying degrees of long-term care. Periodical payment orders are a useful way of dealing with someone’s needs over their whole lifetime, and they are flexible enough to be reviewed and adjusted if a person’s condition deteriorates significantly, for example.
However, for some people with personal injury awards, the preference is to take a lump sum. That might be because they want to buy a house or adapt their existing home. It might be because they have no faith in the organisation making the payment, because it might have caused the injury in the first place. Whatever the reason, it is important for the court to be flexible and a combination of lump sum and periodical payment might be the best option for some.
I ask the minister to give thought to the committee’s recommendation about giving more weight to a pursuer’s views when the court decides whether to award a PPO. I am entirely with Angela Constance on that. It would be disempowering for somebody who has faced that degree of personal injury to have that choice removed. I listened carefully to what the minister said to John Mason, but I am not convinced that the Government cannot go further towards meeting the committee’s recommendation.
It would also be helpful if she would ensure that, if there is a requirement to vary a PPO because of a change in circumstances, the pursuer would not need to bear the costs of doing so. That is an important principle that we will want to clarify.
As other members have said, it is a technical bill. The Scottish Government has, by and large, taken a balanced approach and, in the main, made the right policy choices, but I will not let the Government off the hook easily. There are always areas that can be improved and I look forward to the minister co-operating with the committee to ensure that we have a fair and transparent system of compensating those who have suffered personal injury.
16:26Stewart Stevenson (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
I have not been involved with the bill thus far, but I want to develop a number of its aspects; Jackie Baillie has touched on them already.
The committee’s convener, Gordon Lindhurst, mentioned the balance between pursuer and defender and the different views that can be taken. It is worth saying that the phrase “hypothetical investor” is a good one, because most people who will be in receipt of the kind of compensation that we are talking about are not knowingly investors in anything. They are often investors through their pensions without realising it. Many people have industrial life insurance, which was traditionally sold door to door and for which the money was collected every week, or they might have a life policy.
I had a life policy that I took out in 1975 and took the money out of 31 years later—that is almost exactly the period that we are talking about. I have just done the sums, and the discount rate was just under 6 per cent, but I have not taken account of the value of the insurance part of that, which would make the discount rate a little bit higher. That was before the crash, of course, and discount rates now look rather different. The bottom line is that the hypothetical investor about whom we are talking is a pretty cautious beast, and rightly so.
Jackie Baillie used the phrase “no faith” when she was talking about periodical payments, and that was a fair observation. The bill says:
“A court may not make an order for periodical payments unless it is satisfied that the continuity of payment under such an order would be reasonably secure.”
It then goes on to say that the payment must be assumed to be secure when it is a Government that is paying the money out. The one thing that is not in the bill, and which might usefully be added, is that when the court decides that it is satisfied about the continuity of payment, it should explain why it is satisfied, so that, if there is a different view, that view can be challenged. That is a technical point that protects the person who is in receipt of the compensation payment.
There has been some discussion about the costs of tax and investment advice. I am a bit dubious about the 0.5 per cent deduction. I have the feeling that the costs might be a bit higher than that in the real world, so I am not sure that 0.5 per cent is adequate to cover them. I do not speak with certainty, but it is a question that would usefully bear some—
John Mason
Will the member give way?
Stewart Stevenson
I will give way to somebody who knows more than I do about that matter.
John Mason
The committee received evidence—I do not know whether the member would agree with it—that perhaps the investment cost would be higher at the beginning and lower later on.
Stewart Stevenson
I am absolutely sure that the member is correct, but that goes to the heart of how the compensation is provided: whether it is paid in a lump sum up front or in periodical payments. The actuarial risks associated with the two are fundamentally different. When Dean Lockhart said that a longer period of investment would increase the discount rate, I did not agree. I think that the discount rate is what it is, and that is the actuary’s view. The discount cost goes up as the period increases—rather obviously, because there are more years over which the discount will apply.
Jackie Baillie
I will helpfully supply Stewart Stevenson with the discount rate that he was looking for. The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers supplied us with it: it is between 1.5 and 2 per cent per annum.
Stewart Stevenson
That is broadly what I would have expected, so I am obliged to the member for that.
Investors come in all shapes and forms. Over the years, with my wife, I have been an equity investor. We have twice lost all our money on an investment, and in 2008, my bank investment dropped by 96 per cent. Being in the equities market carries a substantial risk. Ultimately, investors in equities are the last creditors to get paid and they may find themselves paying in if the shares are not paid up in value.
The bill strikes a measured balance between the various options. I looked at it for the first time in the past 36 hours. It strikes me as a sensible piece of legislation, which I shall be happy to support.
16:32Gordon MacDonald (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
As the stage 1 report states:
“A person can claim compensation if they are injured through the wrongful behaviour of another person or organisation. The role of compensation is to put the person—to the extent that a financial award can—as close to the position they were in before they were injured as possible.”
The bill is necessary, as the Association of British Insurers explained. It said that
“The current framework for setting the discount rate is broken, because, as a result of the damages framework and decision making by the courts, the way in which the rate is set bears no relation to what pursuers do in reality.”
It continued by saying that
“we think that, broadly speaking, the old framework is broken and this new framework is a significant improvement.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 30 October 2018; c 2-3.]
However, there are issues that need further consideration, especially in relation to lump-sum payment adjustments and periodical payment orders. It is a legal principle that a successful pursuer should receive 100 per cent compensation—no more and no less. However, in order to do so, broad assumptions are being made in relation to life expectancy, future care costs and economic conditions.
The vast majority of claims are settled by a lump-sum payment that must support an individual for 30 years or more. As a result, the bill requires that a series of set adjustments be made to the rate, calculated on the basis of the hypothetical investor investing in the notional portfolio. These are the impacts of inflation: a deduction of 0.5 per cent to represent the costs of tax and investment advice, and a deduction of 0.5 per cent to reduce the risk of undercompensation.
The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers highlighted that
“On the standard adjustment rate, two rates are proposed in the bill—one to reflect investment charges and tax and the second to reflect other contingencies. The suggestion in the bill is 0.5 per cent. The committee needs to look at that area in more detail. The information that we have received suggests that the investment charges and the tax costs could be anything from 0.5 per cent up to 1.5 or 2 per cent.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 23 October 2018; c 25.]
Part 2 of the bill gives courts the power to impose periodical payment orders. Currently, PPOs are used only in the most serious personal injury cases, in which compensation for future loss makes up a significant part of the award. There are only a few such cases per year in Scotland. Thompsons Solicitors LLP expressed concern about a PPO being forced on an injured person, and stated that such a situation
“when a person does not want a PPO and wants the choice of a lump sum but the court makes the decision for them—can be very difficult for somebody at the end of what is often an extremely long road to compensation, as catastrophic injury cases inevitably are. The process of finally getting compensation is ultimately empowering and a decision that is forced on a person in many ways disempowers them. I caution against creating a situation whereby the decision can be forced on a victim. That is not necessarily the case for insurers, but if a victim wants a PPO, they ought to be able to argue for that and a court can make a decision irrespective of an insurer’s view.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 23 October 2018; c 32.]
In the future, if more personal injury cases result in PPOs being awarded, consideration must be given to how people’s changed housing circumstances can be funded. A person who has been seriously injured might be forced to move home, or require an extension to be built to their existing home. If they remain in their existing home, they might require adaptations to their house—for example ramp access, wider doors, lower kitchens or installation of a wet room, all of which require capital sums. If a periodical payment order is imposed, depending on the size of the PPO award they might not have the funds to meet the cost of alterations. As Jackie Baillie stated, there might be a need for a combined financing model to meet up-front housing costs.
Although I welcome the provisions in the bill, including greater use of PPOs, the concerns of pursuers or their representatives must be considered in moving the bill forward.
16:37Daniel Johnson
I apologise to members; they are getting a double whammy from me this afternoon. I hope that they do not seek damages as a result. I am working on the humour, Deputy Presiding Officer: that is my new-year resolution.
I would like to make a few brief remarks to reflect on comments that have been made in this afternoon’s debate. First and foremost, we have heard loud and clear from all across the chamber about the need to understand the requirements of the individual. The circumstances in which people find themselves when they are awarded damages are often life changing and catastrophic. As we have just heard from Gordon MacDonald, people might have to consider making changes to their homes. Angela Constance pointed out that the person might have to consider not living the life that they had expected to live. That was very well put.
The question, therefore, is this: what is it reasonable for an individual to have to consider, and what decisions is it reasonable for us to expect them to make? That is why I would like to touch on the hypothetical investor. Dean Lockhart set out well the rational considerations that we might expect a person to make about a notional investment portfolio and the balance that it might achieve, but we need also to ask ourselves about the general understanding of investment and about the decisions that people might make.
I gently put it to the chamber that people in such circumstances might not always make the most rational decisions. They will certainly be cautious, as we have heard from a number of members, but the hypothetical investor is quite different. As the bill progresses, we will need to consider whether we are dealing with the average or reasonable investor, or whether we need a portfolio that also accommodates the unreasonable individual or the vulnerable person who might not make the right decisions. We have had a great deal of discussion this afternoon about getting right the balance between undercompensation and overcompensation, but I suggest that we should seek to err on the side of overcompensation in order to accommodate those things. I know that that is part of the calculation process.
That brings me to a point that was made by John Mason when he illustrated some of the challenges. If we look at the past 20 years and think about what a reasonable investor might have done, we see that the situation has altered quite dramatically in quite short spaces of time. There was a time when gilts were seen as a rock-solid, no-brainer investment, but that has been turned on its head in the past 20 years, which is quite a short period. Likewise, the equities market has been back and forth in my adult life. The requirement for the calculation to reflect that and to be agile is important.
Although I understand the arguments that have been made by committee members about three years versus five years for review, it is important that we test flexibility so that when circumstances change—such as in a black swan event—and there are alterations in the underlying market assumptions about what a reasonable investment looks like, the change can be reflected. After all, in our living memories, we have seen such changes.
That brings me to adjustment factors. I understand that it is impossible to make it an exact science, but we need to test the amount that is factored in for investment and tax advice. It seems to be on the low side at 0.5 per cent but, again, that can change. As we speak, there are changes in the market with the development of technology and the lowering of costs, which need to be reflected.
I will touch on the arguments on PPOs that were made by Angela Constance and Jackie Baillie. The matter is important because PPOs provide an awful lot of benefits and advantages for a great number of people. We need to make sure that we are not being overly paternalistic. The presumption towards the pursuer’s wishes is hugely important, but as with much of the bill, we must seek balance. I instinctively feel that PPOs provide huge advantages to people with particular vulnerabilities and with a need for the certainty that a lump sum might not provide. I also note that there are advantages to PPOs over lump-sum awards to self-insured organisations and institutions, including public bodies.
My final point is about gaming the system, which Gordon Lindhurst raised and is a key point. The bill seeks balance: it seeks to speculate against a myriad of different considerations, some of which are not predictable or understood. Above all, it is important that the bill strikes the right balance and has the flexibility to continue to strike the right balance in the future.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I have time in hand, so I can give you seven to eight minutes, Mr Halcro Johnston. I am sure that you can use them.
Daniel Johnson
Seventy-eight minutes?
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Did I say 78? No, seven to eight minutes, for the avoidance of doubt. That has taken up a little bit of time.
Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
I understood what you meant, even if others did not.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Thank you very much. I like you, Mr Halcro Johnston, please proceed.
16:43Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
I join other members of the committee in thanking our clerking team for their typical diligence in preparing and supporting the drafting of the stage 1 report. I acknowledge the range of written and oral evidence that we have received as part of the process and I extend my thanks to all those who contributed.
The evidence has proved extremely useful in scrutinising the technical aspects of the legislation and providing members with an understanding of how the current law operates in practice. The bill has two major components: provisions relating to the application of the discount rate and those relating to periodical payment orders.
Near the beginning of our report, the committee recognises a very simple concept that remains an important principle of our law. The report states:
“The law requires that, where a person or body has acted wrongfully, they are liable to compensate anyone who suffers loss as a direct result.”
That straightforward maxim has global appeal. Although it is intrinsically linked with Scotland and our legal system, it has also had considerable influence around the English-speaking world and even beyond. In many ways, it gets to the essence of what we have been asked to consider in relation to damages.
Many of the people whom the provisions will touch have been wronged, often significantly, and have suffered considerable and, as Daniel Johnson said, often life-changing injuries and harm. In many cases, those individuals cannot work or their ability to earn is impaired. In the most extreme cases, they might be entirely dependent on care and support for the rest of their lives.
While there is a clear fundamental principle on the compensation of loss, how that principle is exercised can be opaque. As the wronged party, the pursuer is probably uppermost in all our considerations. As Maurice Corry highlighted, no one wants to be in a position in which they must claim compensation for injuries or accidents caused by wrongful behaviour.
However, for the reasons that members have highlighted, it is incumbent on Parliament to ensure an end result in which, as far as is possible, the law will neither under nor overcompensate. We understand compensation to be a fair reflection of loss but, equally, the committee has heard about the dangers of overcompensation. It is not a perfect science when we are considering a lifetime of injury, but we should at least begin with a solid regulatory framework that attempts to find a balance, because overcompensation will have an impact. In a successful personal injury action against the national health service, for example, compensation is a necessary part of righting a wrong. To overcompensate, however, is not about making a required payment but about a direct transfer of funds away from front-line services. We know that millions of pounds are paid out by NHS Scotland in such cases every year. As claims often take many years to process, the backlog of open cases against the NHS is expected to result in payments of hundreds of millions of pounds over the years.
Daniel Johnson
Will the member take an intervention?
Jamie Halcro Johnston
Of course.
Daniel Johnson
I thank Jamie Halcro Johnston for giving way. Given that he has 78 minutes to speak, perhaps he will thank me for it.
On his last point, does he also accept that, very often, it is the NHS that ends up picking up the bill if there is undercompensation, because it has to bear the brunt of the additional health costs that are incurred when the individual comes back to the service?
Jamie Halcro Johnston
I thank Daniel Johnson for that intervention. He is right; in a number of cases, it can be the NHS that picks up the bill—not in all cases, but certainly in some.
In actions against businesses, the effects often extend more widely. Inevitably, insurance bears the burden of payment in such cases, spreading the consequences beyond the defender and rippling throughout the wider economy. We should rightly be cautious in how the discount rate is applied in principle and in practice. Our recommendations readily acknowledge the importance of the rate to individuals and their families. The bill sets out the means by which it will be calculated. As some members have touched upon, we have considered the impact of the 30-year assumed period, as well as the assumptions on investor prudence. The minister’s responses in those areas have been welcome.
The committee recognises that almost all respondents to our call for evidence supported the provisions around periodical payment orders. As Jackie Baillie and Angela Constance both highlighted, we looked to the flexibility available to pursuers and recommended that the Scottish Government consider approaches that will offer a greater reflection of the pursuer’s views. The minister has suggested that that will impact the ability of the courts to look at a situation in the round. It will be interesting to see how such issues are considered in the later stages of the bill.
I have already touched on the opening speech given by my colleague Gordon Lindhurst. It was interesting to hear both Mr Lindhurst and Dean Lockhart comment on the areas in which defenders’ and pursuers’ groups agreed and disagreed on the terms of the bill as they were considered. As convener of the committee, Gordon also highlighted that there is little evidence of what the actual investor does, so we based all our considerations on a hypothetical investor.
The committee has recommended that the general principles of the bill be agreed to. However, I recognise that there was a significant divide in the evidence that the committee heard, which, we have recognised, can be crudely divided into arguments that are in the pursuer’s interests and those that are in the defender’s interests. I mention that solely as a caution: assuming that the bill proceeds today, an effective balance will have to be struck in any future amendments.
Last week, the committee received the minister’s response to our report. There are clearly areas that are still to be developed and I welcome the minister’s commitment to further careful consideration of calculating the discount rate with reference to when a settlement is reached, rather than when the injury occurred. Although I accept some of her reasoning, there remains scope for gaming actions by extending out the timescale for claims. I will watch with interest to see how the Government’s approach develops.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I gently remind members to use full names when referring to other members in the chamber.
I call Ash Denham to wind up the debate on behalf of the Government. Minister, if you can—you do not have to—please take us up to decision time.
16:49Ash Denham
Thank you, Presiding Officer. I will do my best to get the timing right.
I have listened with great interest to the debate and the speeches from across the chamber, which have been reflective and thoughtful. I welcome the general support that has been expressed for the bill.
The fundamental aspiration of the bill is to ensure fairness, clarity, certainty, regularity and credibility in the method and process for setting the rate. I am very pleased that the committee supports the bill’s general principles and is content that its provisions have been framed in the interests of achieving
“fairness and regularity ... across a range of cases”,
and for both sides of the argument. As the Faculty of Advocates commented,
“the Bill balances the interests of parties.”
It is clear that, in its scrutiny, the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee recognised that the process is not an exact science, as has been echoed in the debate. Although much has been made of investor behaviour, I welcome the committee’s view—which I share—that
“the point here is not what pursuers actually do but to provide a standardised approach that can work in the interests of fairness, regularity and credibility across a range of cases.”
Fortunately, there will, in relative terms, be very few people who will be affected by the discount rate or PPOs, but for those who are—those who have suffered what are often catastrophic injuries that change their lives for ever—the bill is incredibly important.
In my opening speech, I mentioned that if time allowed it I would like to turn to some more recommendations from the committee’s stage 1 report, so I will address a few of them now. I note that, as Gordon Lindhurst said, the committee believes that there is merit in applying the personal injury discount rate that is in force at the time when the claim is raised, rather than the discount rate that would apply when the claim was being settled. In that way, the committee hopes to avoid deliberate delaying of settlements by pursuers and defenders—the practice is sometimes known as gaming—when a change to the rate is anticipated that would obtain a more advantageous outcome. I have to say that I am not entirely convinced by that argument, but I listened carefully to what Gordon Lindhurst said. He was right to note that, at this stage, I have not ruled anything out. I will reflect further on the matter and give it careful consideration in order to establish whether there is a potential way forward.
The committee’s report raises the issue of the Motor Insurers Bureau. As I indicated in my response to the report, I would be happy to undertake to report back to the committee in 12 months on the outcome of our consideration of whether the Motor Insurers Bureau can be designated as a reasonably secure body.
The committee also wanted to know more about what would trigger a move to more than one personal injury discount rate. John Mason raised that issue in his highly reflective speech. As I set out in my response to the committee, ahead of each review, the Government Actuary’s Department will check the returns on the portfolio over different time periods—it will probably do so after 10 to 15 years and after 50 years. If the outcome of that exercise demonstrates a significant divergence in returns, that will point to use of more than one rate for different lengths of award being more appropriate in pursuit of the goal of 100 per cent compensation.
John Mason
The minister mentioned 100 per cent compensation. Is she still committed to that principle? Dean Lockhart feels that, overall, we are heading towards giving more to the pursuer, whereas Daniel Johnson suggests that we are going the other way and that there is too much risk for the pursuer. Does the minister feel that we are getting the balance right?
Ash Denham
The Government is committed to 100 per cent compensation. I will come on later in my speech to address other points that John Mason raised.
For the choice of the assumed investment period and the potential use of split rates, the GAD has cautioned against setting out an approach that is too formulaic, because that would be what it calls “spurious accuracy”. Therefore, interpretation of the outcomes will require judgment rather than application of a formula. However, I reassure Parliament that if the evidence points to the need for a formula, I am open to considering that option.
I will turn to other issues that have been raised during the debate. Dean Lockhart and Daniel Johnson mentioned the mix in the notional portfolio. In the 2017 consultation, a small majority were of the view that the most suitable investment approach was a mixed portfolio that balances a number of low-risk investments, because they believed that that was closest to actual pursuer behaviour in the real world. The matter has been the result of extensive analysis by both the GAD and an investment research firm, so I can assure Parliament that it has been looked at carefully and tested extensively, and that it will be kept under review.
Daniel Johnson
What are the minister’s reflections on my point that it is all well and good to come up with a portfolio for a reasonable investor, but that we need also to consider the unreasonable investor and the need to safeguard vulnerable individuals?
Ash Denham
Daniel Johnson is right to raise that point, but he must accept that what is proposed is a proxy that is intended to apply across a broad range of cases. Also, we expect that the person will take investment advice when they are looking at their lump sum, and will use the notional portfolio for that purpose.
A number of members mentioned periodical payment orders, including Angela Constance—in a speech that reminded us all why the bill is so important—and Jackie Baillie. I assure Parliament that I listened carefully to the points that those members and others made about what more the Government could do to increase uptake of PPOs, and to Jackie Baillie’s point about giving extra weight to pursuers’ views about PPOs. I will reflect on those points and see whether what the Government proposes can be strengthened for stage 2.
Not unsurprisingly, there are polarised views on the shape of the reforms: essentially, they have been split along the lines of pursuer and defender interests. It is clear that, although the principle of 100 per cent compensation must—and does—remain key, there are many issues aside from the personal injury discount rate that can impact on people achieving that. Any investment comes with a degree of risk, and the Scottish Government accepts that there is always a possibility of undercompensation or overcompensation. However, I am glad that the committee is satisfied with our approach, which is to apply adjustments with the aim of reducing the risk of underperformance and the probability of undercompensation.
The bill seeks to remove the exercise of determining the rate from the political arena, where there is the potential of pressure from external interests to attempt to influence the outcome. The review of the discount rate will be firmly focused on ensuring that those who have suffered loss and are awarded damages for future pecuniary loss receive the full compensation—neither more nor less. That should provide fairness to all parties that are involved. The GAD will publish its reasoning in pursuance of professional standards, along with a rate, which will ensure transparency in the process. As the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers said in its written evidence to the committee:
“We agree entirely with the Scottish Government’s approach of removing the possibility of political influence over the setting of the rate. There is no legitimate reason or necessity for political involvement. Setting the discount rate should be an actuarial task, not a political one.”
At the most fundamental level, the bill will ensure that reviews are carried out regularly, which should, in turn, ensure that the impacts of changes are minimised. We hope that the provisions on periodical payments will encourage use of PPOs and provide the courts with powers to impose them where they consider that the circumstances are right to do so.
I thank members for their contributions to what has been an interesting and informative debate, and for their support for the general principles of the bill.
18 December 2018
Vote at Stage 1

Vote at Stage 1 transcript
The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)
There is one question to be put as a result of today’s business.
The question is, that motion S5M-15169, in the name of Ash Denham, on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill, be agreed to.
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees to the general principles of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill.
18 December 2018
Stage 2 - Changes to detail
MSPs can propose changes to the Bill. The changes are considered and then voted on by the committee.
Changes to the Bill
MSPs can propose changes to a Bill – these are called 'amendments'. The changes are considered then voted on by the lead committee.
The lists of proposed changes are known as a 'marshalled list'. There's a separate list for each week that the committee is looking at proposed changes.
The 'groupings' document groups amendments together based on their subject matter. It shows the order in which the amendments will be debated by the committee and in the Chamber. This is to avoid repetition in the debates.
How is it decided whether the changes go into the Bill?
When MSPs want to make a change to a Bill, they propose an 'amendment'. This sets out the changes they want to make to a specific part of the Bill.
The group of MSPs that is examining the Bill (lead committee) votes on whether it thinks each amendment should be accepted or not.
Depending on the number of amendments, this can be done during one or more meetings.
First meeting on amendments
Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting held on 22 January 2019:

First meeting on amendments transcript
The Convener
Agenda item 2 is stage 2 of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill. I welcome the Minister for Community Safety, Ash Denham, who has joined us with her team: Alex Gordon, Scott Matheson, Jill Clark and Frances MacQueen.
Sections 1 and 2 agreed to.
Schedule
The Convener
Amendment 1, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 2 to 6.
The Minister for Community Safety (Ash Denham)
Good morning to the committee.
Currently, there is no statutory requirement for the discount rate to be regularly reviewed, and it is clear that a lack of regular review is detrimental to all parties. In consultation, most consultees agreed that the rate should be reviewed regularly on occasions that are specified in legislation.
In taking account of the views of respondents, the Scottish Government decided that a review should be carried out every three years, with the possibility of a review being instigated earlier if circumstances were to point to that need. That would provide a significant degree of certainty, tempered with a proportionate degree of flexibility.
Stakeholders have suggested that, with the three-year review, the settlement of cases might be delayed if one or other party anticipated a more favourable rate coming into force. They argue that a five-year review period would go some way to addressing that issue, which is sometimes known as “gaming”.
I have always maintained that the Scottish Government’s imperative is that reviews are regular. As I outlined in my response to the stage 1 report during the stage 1 debate, I have listened carefully to those who have given evidence and to the committee’s conclusion that
“in the interests of finding that balance between flexibility and certainty ... five years would be preferable to three.”
The amendments alter the frequency of review from every three years to every five years, but the facility to call for an out-of-cycle review remains.
I move amendment 1.
Amendment 1 agreed to.
Amendments 2 to 6 moved—[Ash Denham]—and agreed to.
The Convener
Amendment 11, in the name of Jackie Baillie, is grouped with amendment 13.
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
It was recognised by the minister that injured people are not necessarily ordinary investors—most would not invest in the stock market and those who do are likely to be quite risk averse. I recognise that the Scottish Government has tried to get the balance right. However, the committee needs to be sure that all the assumptions about deductions are accurate as any award will be for the rest of an individual’s life.
Amendment 11 seeks to address an area in which the Government has underestimated the cost of taxation and investment advice. The committee took evidence from the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers at stage 1 and it highlighted its concerns that the adjustments in schedule B1 should reflect as closely as possible the costs that are incurred by the pursuer.
I have had the opportunity to reflect further since the stage 1 report and I will point to several pieces of evidence in support of the amendment. First, the analysis of the Government Actuary’s Department showed that a reasonable allowance for expenses and tax might be anywhere between 0.5 and 2 per cent. I know that the Scottish Government preferred the lower end of that spectrum, but in its evidence to the committee the Government Actuary’s Department stressed
“that a larger adjustment could be plausibly justified.”
Secondly, Richard Cropper, from Personal Financial Planning, estimated the costs at 1.5 to 2 per cent and said that he believes that the Scottish Government figure is “materially under-estimated”. Paul Rosson, an independent financial adviser, said that the smaller the award, the closer to 2 per cent the costs are likely to be. That is simply for independent advice, and does not include any tax. He recognises that, although in the case of a moderate award the cost would be 0.5 per cent across the industry, that does not include any tax. Finally, Graeme Lind, from Tilney Financial Planning, which is based in Edinburgh, said that the standard rate would be 1 per cent plus VAT but that taxation would take the figure
“north of 1.5 per cent per annum”.
In arriving at a figure of 1.5 per cent, I have tried to recognise the broad range of factors. The general consensus, from the Government Actuary’s Department to the range of financial advisers, indicates that 0.5 per cent is just a shade too low to cover both taxation and investment advice.
I pause at that point and invite the committee and the minister to agree with me.
I move amendment 11.
The Convener
I invite Dean Lockhart to speak to amendment 13.
Dean Lockhart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Amendment 13 seeks to change the further margin adjustment from 0.5 per cent to 0.25 per cent. In its policy memorandum, the Government made clear that the further margin adjustment is to reduce the risk of undercompensation in certain cases. However, the policy memorandum also states that, as a result of the new further margin adjustment,
“there will inevitably be a probability of over-compensation”.
Many stakeholders see that as a departure from the principle of 100 per cent compensation. The underlying principle is that damages have the purpose of placing the injured person, as far as possible, in the position that they would have been save for the injury incurred, and the courts are very careful at the outset in setting the level of compensation where it is likely to meet future financial losses and care costs.
The bill is not designed to revisit the basic principles of restitution but is aimed at ensuring that the level of compensation as set by the court is adjusted to reflect how the damages may be invested over the longer term. Based on stakeholder feedback, there is legitimate concern that, with the 0.5 per cent further margin adjustment, the bill will change those underlying principles of fair, 100 per cent compensation, which will come at a cost to the NHS and other public bodies and, potentially, lead to higher insurance premiums.
Although we want to avoid cases of undercompensation, this is a matter of public policy: it is widely recognised that if the further margin adjustment is set at 0.5 per cent, it will probably result in overcompensation, which comes at a cost. We must recognise that.
The Convener
Did the member wish to say anything about amendment 11 in the name of Jackie Baillie, or has he covered it? I should have invited him to speak on that as well.
Dean Lockhart
Very briefly, the underlying concern is the same. If we have a 1.5 per cent adjustment in addition to 100 per cent compensation, there is a risk that, over the longer term, that will result in overcompensation. There is wide recognition that the notional investment portfolio is cautious and would largely be made up of passive funds and debt fixed-asset investments. Those types of investments do not require active management, so such investment portfolios usually result in a lower management fee being incurred. My concern about amendment 11 is that we would end up revisiting the underlying principle of 100 per cent compensation if we changed the tax and investment charge adjustment to 1.5 per cent.
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
We received evidence on the issue that amendment 11 addresses during stage 1 and even since then we have had further briefings that go in opposite directions. The Association of British Insurers wants to go one way and the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers wants to go a different way.
There is a real issue here and we have considered it. However, I am not convinced by amendment 11. If we were to amend the bill in this regard, we would need to be a lot more sophisticated. For example, we had evidence that, at the beginning, people might have greater investment costs because they would need to take advice from scratch, whereas they would not need so much advice on an on-going basis, especially with a passive investment. That could be considered, but amendment 11 does not cover the issue. Another factor is the size of the settlement. With a very large settlement, a smaller percentage of it will go on investment advice and, with a small investment, the percentage will tend to be larger.
Therefore, we would not improve the bill a lot by making the adjustment 1.5 per cent instead of 0.5 per cent. I am persuaded by the argument that, although most investors will probably take the passive approach, if someone goes for an active approach and so spends a bit more in fees, over the long term, they should make more of a gain, which will match the extra costs.
I am not convinced by amendment 13 either. We took a lot of evidence and I think that we are all committed to the principle that people should be properly compensated. The evidence was that, inevitably, some people will be overcompensated and some will be undercompensated. That will always be the case, and we can never get round it, unless, I suppose, we have a different discount rate for every single person. It seems to me that the figure of 0.5 per cent is pretty reasonable. We could go higher or lower but, on the evidence that we heard during stage 1, I am convinced that we should stick to 0.5 per cent.
Angela Constance (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Like Mr Mason, I would be concerned that amendment 13 might lead to pursuers being undercompensated. Of course, the minister will have her own views on that.
On amendment 11, I accept that, during stage 1 evidence, some pursuer representatives felt that the adjustment may not be enough and the committee tested the minister on that when she was at the committee previously. I wonder whether, in her closing remarks, the minister could give us any thoughts about whether 1.5 per cent is too high and whether she would consider, prior to stage 3, a move to 0.75 per cent or 1 per cent, given that there are concerns.
The Convener
Does any other member wish to speak? If not, the minister may respond.
10:00Ash Denham
I am grateful to Jackie Baillie and Dean Lockhart for setting out the reasoning behind their respective amendments, although, in fact, they do opposing things. One would significantly increase the level of damages that are awarded to a pursuer and the other would decrease it. However, it makes sense for me to address both amendments at the same time.
The approach that we have taken in the bill on how the discount rate should be calculated is based on a portfolio that meets the needs of the hypothetical investor as described in the bill. The asset classes and percentage holdings that are contained in the notional portfolio have been balanced in such a way as to support an approach to investment choices that is capable of limiting volatility and also uncertainty. That is the starting point. Thereafter, the bill introduces two standard adjustments that the rate assessor must deduct from the rate of return that they have arrived at. The first is intended to take account of investment advice, management costs and taxation. The adjustment is set out in the bill, with regulation-making powers for the Scottish ministers to change the adjustment, if required.
The Scottish Government accepts that there will be a need to take investment advice and, indeed, one of the characteristics of the hypothetical investor is that they are properly advised. The Scottish ministers sought views from the Government Actuary’s Department on the appropriate level for the adjustment for tax and passive investment management costs—I think that Jackie Baillie raised that in her comments. Although GAD considered that the reasonable allowance for expenses and tax might fall into the range of 0.5 per cent to 2 per cent, it was also of the view that allowance at the lower end was likely to be more appropriate for a number of reasons. It is reasonable to assume that pursuers will shop around to get the most competitive fees, and it is reasonable to assume that pursuers will directly invest in passive funds. In the current environment, income yields, particularly on bonds, are low, which eases the possible pressure of higher tax charges, and there are further prudence deductions included elsewhere in the discount rate.
On the other hand, amendment 13 alters the second standard adjustment—the further margin adjustment—by reducing it to 0.25 per cent from 0.5 per cent. The intention of the further margin is to recognise that any investment, however cautious, carries some risk, and a proxy cannot take account of an individual’s particular circumstances.
As set out in the GAD report, the inclusion of the further adjustment is to improve the chances of the pursuer having sufficient funds to meet their damages. The composition of the portfolio and the level of adjustment, which are set out in the bill, have been carefully arrived at. They are the result of actuarial advice and an analysis of all the available evidence. I welcome the conclusion of the committee, as set out in its stage 1 report, that it was satisfied with that approach.
Altering either of the standard adjustments will alter the final discount rate and, in the case of Jackie Baillie’s amendment, the impact of increasing the level of adjustment for tax, investment advice and management costs to 1.5 per cent would be significant. For the illustrative examples that were included in the financial memorandum, it would increase the claim worth £3.6 million to £5.9 million, the claim worth £1.4 million to £2 million and the claim worth £0.77 million to £0.92 million. The balance would be tipped too far in favour of pursuers and their chances of being overcompensated would increase significantly. It is defenders who would have to fund those increases, be they private sector businesses or public sector services such as the national health service. I cannot imagine that we would want to place an unwarranted burden on businesses and our public services, any more than we would want to reduce the chances of a pursuer being properly compensated for their injury, which is what Dean Lockhart’s amendment would do.
It is worth stressing that, when we talk about overcompensation and undercompensation, we are talking about the likelihood or the probability of it happening; it is not an absolute. There is an element of risk involved for the pursuer, no matter what the award basis is. However, the analysis around the distribution of returns that are generated by the investment portfolio in the bill shows that, if the return were not to be adjusted, it would result in a 50 per cent chance of the pursuer being undercompensated, and a 50 per cent chance of a pursuer being overcompensated.
In my view, a 50 per cent chance of undercompensation is not acceptable, which is why a further adjustment is needed to reduce the chance of undercompensation. Altering the level of further margin downwards would alter the balance of risk faced by the pursuer to their detriment, such that the chance of being undercompensated would increase to an unacceptable level. I hope that it is of some reassurance that the Scottish ministers will review the portfolio, and these adjustments, ahead of each regular review. We take advice on these matters so that any changes will be the result of professional and expert advice and of sound analysis. I maintain that that is the appropriate approach to take. Both these amendments undermine the considered and balanced approach that has been adopted in the bill, and I urge Jackie Baillie and Dean Lockhart not to press their amendments.
The Convener
I ask Jackie Baillie for her closing comments and an indication of whether she wishes to press or withdraw amendment 11.
Jackie Baillie
The purpose of amendment 11, which was specifically based on expert advice and professional opinion and on the Government actuary’s own words, was to increase damages to cover taxation and investment advice, based on the practical experience of practitioners. I remind the minister that the Government actuary stressed
“that a larger adjustment could be plausibly justified.”
Although I understand that she put the adjustment at 0.5 per cent, the Government Actuary’s Department said that it could be substantially higher.
I would like to pick up on two members’ contributions. I am sad to say that Dean Lockhart is entirely wrong. Amendment 11 is about reflecting the real cost of tax and advice, based on evidence and on experts and practitioners with knowledge of what they are doing. The day of experts has not gone. They have been extremely helpful in providing advice to the committee, and not only at stage 1. Further information has been provided to committee members, hence the amendments that are lodged today.
The review of the portfolio ahead of each regular review that the minister talked about is welcome. I would be interested to know, perhaps at a later stage, as she will not have an opportunity to respond, who is going to be involved, and whether that review is going to be set out in statute. I would be minded to consider withdrawing the amendment if the minister were to agree to a discussion on the issue before stage 3. I am also struck by John Mason’s comments signalling that he would perhaps support a more sophisticated amendment that would reflect a variation in costs, and I am happy to consider that with him. Therefore, if the minister is willing to agree to a discussion, I will be happy to withdraw amendment 11. I encourage the committee not to support amendment 13.
The Convener
Minister, do you wish to respond to Jackie Baillie’s offer at this stage?
Ash Denham
Yes, I am happy to take Jackie Baillie up on her offer. I would be glad to meet her to discuss that if she is willing to withdraw amendment 11 at this stage.
Jackie Baillie
I am happy to do so.
Amendment 11, by agreement, withdrawn.
The Convener
Amendment 13, in the name of Dean Lockhart, has already been debated with amendment 11. I ask Dean Lockhart to wind up and indicate whether he wishes to move the amendment.
Dean Lockhart
John Mason was right when he said that we had received briefings on both sides of the argument, both for and against the further margin adjustment and how it might operate in practice. That reflects the fact that each adjustment cannot be viewed in isolation. They both operate in the same way to adjust the original damages award.
The bill sets out total adjustments of 0.5 per cent for tax and investment charges, and 0.5 per cent for further margin, making a total of 1 per cent. The amendments lodged by Jackie Baillie—
The Convener
We are looking for a brief winding up, as opposed to a general recap of the arguments at this stage, and for an indication of whether you wish to move the amendment.
Dean Lockhart
I will not press my amendment for the time being, but I reserve the ability to revisit amendment 13, depending on the other amendments that are lodged at stage 3.
Amendment 13 not moved.
The Convener
Amendment 7, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendment 9.
Ash Denham
We have taken the opportunity to lodge a stage 2 amendment in order to improve the readability of the text in paragraph 12 of the schedule, which introduces the notional investment portfolio. Amendment 7 will split subparagraph 1 into two subparagraphs, such that some of the text will be moved into a new subparagraph—1(A)—that will follow subparagraph 1, which comes ahead of the notional investment portfolio itself. The amendment makes connected adjustments to tidy up the narrative, including introducing the notional investment portfolio. It is merely a minor drafting amendment; the overall sense of the text will not be altered. The amendment will make no change whatever to the notional investment portfolio, which is set out in the table in subparagraph 2.
Amendment 9 will make a minor and separate adjustment in the provision for
“variation or suspension of agreed periodical payments.”
A reference to “injured person” will replace the slightly more descriptive wording in proposed new section 2H(2)(b)(ii) of the Damages Act 1996, so that it relies on the nearby definition of “injured person”. The result will be that the proposed new section will be unchanged, and the adjustment is consistent with the approach that is taken in various other provisions for periodical payments.
I move amendment 7.
Amendment 7 agreed to.
The Convener
Amendment 14, in the name of Dean Lockhart, is in a group on its own.
Dean Lockhart
Amendment 14 would require the Scottish Government to review the notional portfolio, as it is set out in the bill, before every review of the discount rate by the rate assessor, and to embed in the legislation the duty to consult stakeholders before doing so. The mix of investments in the notional portfolio is an important part of the framework for setting the discount rate. Given that investment markets are fast moving and that the nature of investments changes rapidly, it is important that the Scottish Government reviews the mix of investments before each review of the rate, and that it consults widely in doing so. A consultation approach would enable the Government to take account of the market conditions that exist between reviews, and of the change in investment practice that will inevitably happen between the five-yearly reviews.
I think that the Minister for Community Safety has accepted that, in practice, the Government will review the notional portfolio before each review of the discount rate, anyway. Our view is that it would be better to embed the review expressly in the legislation, and that the duty to consult should also be included. A formal duty to consult would have the advantage of making the position clear and the process more transparent.
I move amendment 14.
The Convener
If no member wishes to comment on amendment 14, I will give the minister the opportunity to respond.
Ash Denham
It is helpful to hear Dean Lockhart’s explanation of the intention behind amendment 14. He is right to suggest that the bill currently provides that
“the Scottish Ministers must have regard to the need to ensure that the notional portfolio remains”
appropriate, but it might be helpful if I outline the intended process that will be followed ahead of each regular review.
The first review will be carried out on the basis of the portfolio and adjustment figures that are set out in the bill. Ahead of the second and subsequent regular reviews, Scottish ministers will engage with GAD to review whether the portfolio is still appropriate, through desk-based research of low-risk portfolios; whether the margins are still appropriate; whether a dual rate is applicable, based on analysis from GAD and commenting on the extent to which investment returns differ over different time periods; whether the period over which the investment returns are to be assessed should be altered; and whether the retail prices index remains the appropriate measure of inflation.
10:15Decisions on any change to the portfolio, the adjustments, the period over which expected returns are based and the inflation measures are for Scottish ministers. Any changes will be made by regulations to be laid under affirmative procedure before the review commences. It follows that Scottish ministers could not carry out such a review without consulting others and without taking appropriate professional and expert advice, nor could they lay the necessary regulations to make changes without demonstrating that proportionate and relevant consultation had taken place. That said, I understand that including express provision on the face of the bill would formalise the situation. For that reason, I am happy for Dean Lockhart to press amendment 14.
If amendment 14 is agreed to by the committee, the Government will need to consider whether any drafting adjustments are necessary at stage 3 to ensure that the provisions will work properly, given the possibility of interim rate reviews in addition to rate reviews in the regular review cycle. That would be in addition to the need for the Government to ensure that the overall wording and structure of the provisions will achieve the desired result in the best and clearest way possible.
The Convener
Does Dean Lockhart wish to press amendment 14?
Dean Lockhart
I press amendment 14.
Amendment 14 agreed to.
Schedule, as amended, agreed to.
Section 3—Award, continuity and index-linking
The Convener
Amendment 12, in the name of Jackie Baillie, is in a group on its own.
Jackie Baillie
The purpose of amendment 12 is straightforward; it is designed to give effect to the committee’s recommendations in its stage 1 report. It would allow the pursuer’s voice to be heard in respect of their preference for either a periodical payment order or a lump sum, and would give weight to that preference. When Parliament debated the matter and Angela Constance and myself raised the issue, the minister helpfully said that she would reflect further on it. The amendment is designed to tease out that reflection.
Periodical payment orders are helpful—especially in cases of personal injury, which tend to be catastrophic and involve conditions that will be lifelong for the pursuer. A continuing regular payment would protect payment of on-going costs. That said, there will be circumstances in which a pursuer does not want a periodical payment order but would prefer a lump sum—for instance, where they want to make a large up-front capital investment, perhaps for an adapted house.
I do not want to see a circumstance, and I do not believe that the committee wants to see it, in which the pursuer is forced to have a periodical payment order. Pursuers have often taken a long road to compensation, particularly when there have been catastrophic injuries. Getting a positive decision and an award at the end of that process can be empowering. I do not want to remove that and disempower the pursuer at the final stage because their views have not been listened to. This is about ensuring that the court gives due weight to their preference.
I move amendment 12.
John Mason
Speaking on my own behalf and not necessarily on behalf of my colleagues, I agree with Jackie Baillie’s argument for amendment 12. Periodical payments are inherently good because they take away some of the risk that the committee has been debating for the past half an hour, and give people a constant income that they can live on. When vulnerable people are involved, that has to be a good thing.
However, there are some exceptions. As Jackie Baillie has already said, people may want a large capital sum up front, and I understand that the courts can split awards. There are also situations in which a pursuer wants a clean break from the defender and does not want an on-going relationship, even if it is purely legal.
The idea that the court could “impose” a PPO gets some of our backs up. We know that the courts will listen to both sides, but it would be good to require specifically that they do so. Amendment 12 would not give a veto to the pursuer, but re-emphasises that the pursuer’s desires and fears should be taken into account seriously by the court. If amendment 12 is pressed, I will be happy to support it.
Angela Constance
I am on the record as being sympathetic to what Ms Baillie is trying to achieve with amendment 12. We should be looking for extra efforts or assurances in the bill to ensure that meaningful consideration is given to the views of the pursuer, and that the court process does not add to the sense of powerlessness that people who have suffered a catastrophic injury might well feel. I suppose that I am less prescriptive about how that might be achieved. I just want to see it done in the bill in the best way, so that we are not reliant purely on the judiciary. It is important that the provision be in the legislation.
The minister gave a very clear commitment during the stage 1 debate, which she followed up in correspondence, that she would give the matter consideration prior to stage 3. I suppose that what I would like to hear today is the minister fleshing out how she will consider the issue. What is the scope of her considerations? How will she work with members across the political divide?
Dean Lockhart
I understand the sympathy and concerns that have been expressed by Jackie Baillie and others, but I have some concern about the wording of amendment 12 and the fact that it would cut across the court’s discretion to decide the form of payment that would be in the best interests of the injured party. Perhaps, instead of the provision being embedded in the bill, it could be covered by the rules of court.
I have concerns about proposed new section 2(A3)(b) of the 1996 act, because the statutory presumption would work
“unless the court considers that there are compelling reasons not to do so”.
“Compelling reasons” is a very high legal threshold to meet, so I think that, rather than there being a presumption in favour of PPOs, that would almost automatically result in PPOs, unless “compelling reasons” showed otherwise. I have concerns about the wording of amendment 12.
Ash Denham
I am grateful to Jackie Baillie for lodging amendment 12. During the stage 1 evidence sessions, I listened to people who had great concerns that the bill does not provide that the court, when considering whether to impose a PPO, should give precedence to the views of the pursuer. In my response to the stage 1 report, I explained that I was not keen to fetter the ability of the court to make the best decision according to the facts and circumstances at hand. I went on to say that I would, because of the strong support that had been expressed for an amendment providing that the court should have regard to the pursuer’s preference, give the matter further consideration.
I appreciate from what I heard at stage 1 that not giving effect to the views of the pursuer can be disempowering to those individuals. Having reflected further, particularly on the position of pursuers in such cases and the importance of not adding additional distress in an already very distressing situation, I am pleased to support the principle that underlies amendment 12. However, we need to think very carefully about how the provision could best balance the rights of the pursuers and defenders when aiming to give preference to the pursuer’s position. With that in mind, I offer to work with Jackie Baillie ahead of stage 3 to settle with her the precise approach to be adopted in order to address the matter appropriately.
I am sure that a revised version of amendment 12, in workable terms on which we can all agree, could be devised for lodging at stage 3. Accordingly, I ask Jackie Baillie not to press amendment 12.
The Convener
I ask Jackie Baillie to wind up, and to press or seek to withdraw her amendment.
Jackie Baillie
Angela Constance summed it up best for me when she said that the provision needs to be in the bill, so that it is absolutely clear. I think, therefore, that—I say it with due respect—Dean Lockhart is wrong to say that we could simply put it in guidance or in court rules.
I understand that what the minister is offering is to put the provision in the bill. On that basis, I will happily seek to withdraw amendment 12, and will work with the minister and other members to ensure that we get it right for stage 3.
Amendment 12, by agreement, withdrawn.
The Convener
Amendment 8, in the name of Stewart Stevenson, is in a group on its own.
Stewart Stevenson (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
I spoke in the stage 1 debate on this important bill and have identified a relatively small but important issue in relation to periodical payments. The bill provides for a more subtle and varied way of setting periodical payments—in the case of future pecuniary loss, for example, with or without the consent of the parties. There are, therefore, some important duties that the court must undertake.
The court could also be re-engaged in the issue of periodical payments under proposed new section 2C(2)(a) of the Damages Act 1996, because it might come back to the subject of periodical payments in varying previous orders. It is important that the whole issue of periodical payments be considered.
There is also provision under proposed new section 2C(4) of the 1996 act for a scheme under section 213 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. Of course, ownership of schemes might well change over the period in which periodical payments are to be made, which might be 60 or 70 years.
A wide range of things place a significant duty on the court, when it decides that “continuity of payment” is “reasonably secure”, to explain why it has come to that conclusion. Courts might frequently simply point to the relevant part of the act. However, given that there are private sector ways of securing periodical payments, it would be proper that the person who is likely to be in receipt of a periodical payment is able to understand why the court concluded that payment will be reasonably secure, and that they could, in extremis, if they felt it necessary, challenge that decision outwith the legislation, by other means. That would also allow the person’s representatives to challenge the decision during the court process, if they had doubts about the security of a periodical payment.
That is the basis on which I have lodged amendment 8. I hope that colleagues around the table are prepared to support it, as I have no vote in the matter.
I move amendment 8.
The Convener
Although I do not disagree in principle with what Mr Stevenson said, there are a couple of matters on which I would appreciate clarification. First, if a pursuer makes a periodical payment order application on a certain basis, would not the assumption be that the pursuer is satisfied about security of payment?
The second issue is more to do with the wording of amendment 8 and how it fits with the other provisions in section 3 of the bill. Mr Stevenson alluded to the fact that, under proposed new section 2C of the Damages Act 1996, the court will be required to make an assumption that continuity of payment is reasonably secure. If the act requires the court to make that assumption, I am not sure how the court can be required to give reasons for that assumption. I take on board the point that the court might make an order relating to a scheme that is not covered by the various bodies or, for example, the guarantee under proposed new section 2C(1)(a)(i) of the 1996 act, but I wonder whether the wording is right. Perhaps Mr Stevenson can come back on those two points.
If no other member wishes to comment, I invite the minister to respond.
10:30Ash Denham
Thank you, convener. I am grateful to Stewart Stevenson for lodging amendment 8.
Courts issue opinions or notes as a matter of course to give the reasons for their decisions. That is a long-standing practice and is part of the right to a fair trial that is guaranteed by article 6 of the European convention on human rights.
In cases that fall within those provisions, it is likely that the reasoning will be that the party that is funding the PPO will fall within the sources that are identified in the legislation as being reasonably secure, and there will have been no evidence to contradict that position. Nevertheless, there might be others whom the court is satisfied are reasonably secure, so it will be important to expose the reasoning.
I am happy for Stewart Stevenson to press amendment 8, while reserving the possibility of lodging Government amendments at stage 3 to make any necessary technical changes to ensure that his provision dovetails with existing provisions.
Stewart Stevenson
The minister has mentioned some specific issues. The important thing is that, even when the pursuer is applying to the court for a periodical payment order, the court is in control of the outcome. In particular, what it is proposed be inserted at new section 2C(2)(a) of the Damages Act 1996 means that the court will be
“specifying the method by which the payments are to be made”.
The court therefore clearly will have control over the way in which periodical payments will be made.
Proposed new section 2C can, of course, enable an application to be made to the court for variation of provision, but it does not require that that be done. It is therefore important that there is clarity at the outset about the court’s decision making, in this regard.
The minister helpfully pointed out that it is not—shall we say?—particularly novel to require the court to explain its workings. On that basis, I am certainly happy to watch what the Government might do by way of further modification of the provision at stage 3, if that is required, but I would like to press amendment 8.
Amendment 8 agreed to.
Section 3, as amended, agreed to.
Section 4—Variation or suspension of settlement
The Convener
Amendment 15, in the name of Dean Lockhart, is grouped with amendment 16.
Dean Lockhart
Amendment 15 is a probing amendment to ascertain the intended operation of the section. It seeks to clarify that the court may not award a further, or additional, lump sum when considering an application to vary the PPO. In other words, the court may not increase the size of the overall original settlement. That would avoid the risk of the court being asked to reopen the original settlement when considering how to vary the PPO award in future.
Amendment 15 is not intended to prevent the court from being able to award a lump sum instead of a periodical payment that might be required, depending on the individual’s circumstances. Instead, it seeks to clarify that the court cannot award a new lump sum over and above the quantum of the original award.
That is important because, otherwise, the benefits of finality and certainty of damages would be undermined. The single award concept is crucial for reasons of finality and certainty for the pursuer and the defender, and the provision in the bill would create uncertainty and the potential for awards to be reopened in particular circumstances.
There might be another way of addressing the issue by retaining the words “in addition to”, while adding clarification at the end of the subsection to say that any payment of an additional lump sum will not increase the quantum of the original compensation awarded. I am happy to work with the minister to clarify the operation of that section.
I move amendment 15.
Ash Denham
Once again, I thank Dean Lockhart for providing a bit more detail on his amendments.
On amendment 15, it might be helpful if I first summarise how awards of damages for personal injury may be made. The methods of award—that is, either a lump sum or periodical payment—are not mutually exclusive, and a pursuer who receives their award by way of an order or agreement for periodical payments will rarely receive their entire award in that way. At the point at which a settlement figure is agreed or ordered, the pursuer might already have experienced losses—for example, their past salary or past care or treatment—and their settlement might therefore include a capital sum to allow them to purchase a piece of equipment to assist them. Such payments would be made in a lump sum, and only future pecuniary losses could be made in the form of periodical payments. Indeed, the award or settlement might provide for those future losses to be addressed through a mix of lump sum and periodical payments.
That flexibility for the courts is maintained in the bill’s provisions relating to the variation of periodical payments, and if we were to restrict or hamper that flexibility, it would mean that, if a court were presented with evidence that a pursuer’s losses had increased due to a change in their condition, it would no longer be open to the court to award a lump sum in addition to the periodical payments as originally awarded. It would be restricted to a choice between varying the level of the periodical payments or replacing the whole of the periodical payments with a lump sum when increasing the level of compensation.
Additionally, the court can vary an order or agreement only where there is actual change in the pursuer’s condition and the change itself results in significant over or undercompensation. Proposed section 2F of the 1996 act, which is inserted by section 4 and relates to orders, and proposed section 2H, which relates to agreements, do not permit the court to reopen the original award altogether. Therefore, what is set out in amendment 15 would not be the right approach.
On amendment 16, the bill already includes a causation link to the original injury on two fronts: the original court order must include provision enabling an application to be varied in the future, and any change in condition has to result in significant over or undercompensation. The bill does not change the underlying principles in Scots law that require a causal connection between the injury and the loss for which the pursuer is to be compensated. Therefore, if the original order awarding periodical payments includes no provision for variation to be made in the future, the court might not even entertain an application from either party to vary. Where the court enables future variation in this way, it must specify the sort of change in the pursuer’s condition that must occur before an application can be made. In so doing, the original court order will be acting in the light of and subject to the essential rule in law of a causal connection between the injury and the loss.
As a result, there is already a clear and necessary link between the original injury and the circumstances that might result in variation. The reference in proposed section 2F(3)(b)(ii) to “the injured person” being “significantly over- or under-” compensated also links the variation to the original injury and makes it clear that what we are talking about is a significant, not trivial, change to the pursuer’s condition. In addition, amendment 16 refers to a change being “attributable” to the injury, but it is not clear how that would work where the change is actually an improvement, as that would not be “attributable” to the injury. Put simply, the bill needs say nothing more to achieve what amendment 16 seems to be designed to achieve and in my view, therefore, it is not needed.
For the reasons that I have given, I urge the member not to press amendment 15 and not to move amendment 16. If he does so, I ask the committee to reject the amendments.
Dean Lockhart
On amendment 15, I thank the minister for clarifying how the provisions in this section are intended to work. I am concerned about the drafting of the subsection in question, but I am happy not to press amendment 15 if I can work with the minister on wording that might address my concerns before stage 3.
Ash Denham
I am happy to do that.
Dean Lockhart
Thank you very much.
The minister slightly pre-empted my arguments in favour of amendment 16, but she is completely right to say that causation is an inherent underlying principle of Scots law and that there needs to be a link between the original injury and the change in medical condition. Amendment 16 was designed to add to the provisions in proposed new section 2F, which already set out how and when a court can review a PPO. During the committee’s evidence session on the bill, we heard—from BTO Solicitors LLP, in particular—that an explicit reference to the requirement for the change in condition being the cause of the additional compensation is missing from proposed new section 2F. I am happy not to move amendment 16 if I can work with the minister to clarify that the underlying principle of causation will be embedded in the bill at stage 3.
Ash Denham
We have been quite clear that amendment 16 is not needed, because what it seeks to do is already covered in the bill.
The Convener
Jackie Baillie wishes to say something.
Jackie Baillie
I am pre-empting your next question, convener, when you will ask whether members are content for Dean Lockhart to withdraw amendment 15. I will wait for your question.
The Convener
Indeed. The procedure has got slightly out of sync. Are members content for Dean Lockhart to withdraw amendment 15?
Jackie Baillie
No, I am not content. I seek to press amendment 15. I am entirely happy with the minister’s response so, in pressing amendment 15, I am inviting the committee to vote it down.
The Convener
The question is, that amendment 15 be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Convener
There will be a division.
For
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (North East Scotland) (Con)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Against
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
MacDonald, Gordon (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
The Convener
The result of the division is: For 3, Against 6, Abstentions 0.
Amendment 15 disagreed to.
The Convener
I invite Dean Lockhart to move or not move amendment 16.
Dean Lockhart
I will not move amendment 16.
The Convener
Do any members object to amendment 16 not being moved at this stage?
Jackie Baillie
Yes—I am going for a clean sweep. I wish to move amendment 16 on the basis that I am entirely content with the minister’s response. I therefore encourage the committee to vote against it.
I move amendment 16.
The Convener
The question is, that amendment 16 be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Convener
There will be a division.
For
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (North East Scotland) (Con)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Against
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
MacDonald, Gordon (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
The Convener
The result of the division is: For 3, Against 6, Abstentions 0.
Amendment 16 disagreed to.
Amendment 9 moved—[Ash Denham]—and agreed to.
Section 4, as amended, agreed to.
After section 4
The Convener
Amendment 10, in the name of the minister, is in a group on its own.
Ash Denham
I listened to those who raised concerns during stage 1 evidence sessions about the costs involved should a pursuer return to the courts to have an order for periodical payments varied due to a change in their physical or mental condition that would result in their being significantly overcompensated or undercompensated by the damages being awarded for future pecuniary loss.
When I attended the committee to give evidence at stage 1, I was asked to consider whether I could commit to ensuring that such costs fall on defenders, as that was regarded as a fairer approach. I undertook to look at how the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Act 2018 would interact with the bill. Although the matter did not feature as a conclusion or a recommendation in the committee’s stage 1 report, it was raised again during the stage 1 debate.
As I indicated in my recent letter to the committee, I agree that the right approach is to ensure that, where such proceedings are raised, the pursuer should continue to receive the protection of qualified one-way costs shifting, or QOCS. That is in the spirit of the 2018 legislation as it relates to personal injury actions. Therefore, amendment 10 will replicate the protection of QOCS as provided for in the 2018 act but it will be adapted for applications that relate to the variation or suspension of an order for periodical payments. Therefore, regardless of who raises such proceedings—be it the defender or the pursuer—the pursuer will not be required to meet those expenses.
10:45Where parties have agreed periodical payments without recourse to the courts, or where they have settled an action through an agreement and a subsequent action that relates to variation or suspension arises, the same default position will apply, which is that the pursuer will be protected by QOCS unless the agreement provides differently. In that way, the amendments will not interfere with what has already been agreed between the parties. The protection will extend to proceedings where the injured person is represented by someone such as a guardian or judicial factor or someone who is acting under power of attorney. In those cases, the proceedings may not be in the injured person’s name.
I move amendment 10.
The Convener
Before other members come in, I will raise a point about drafting and the form that the amendment takes. I will put to one side the principle of the amendment, which, as the minister correctly says, brings periodical payment orders in line with the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Act 2018. It may be for members of the minister’s team to explain the basis for the approach, but why has it not been done as a simple amendment to the 2018 act, where all the other expenses rules relating to QOCS in the area are contained, rather than by an amendment to the Damages Act 1996, which, after 20 years of amendments and use, is becoming a rather clumsy beast?
Perhaps the minister can come back in on that, because I am not persuaded that that is the best way to do it. Perhaps I should clarify that it might be easier to deal with the issue by simply putting into section 8(2) of the 2018 act a subparagraph (c), which would include any application for a variation of a periodical payment order or the suspension of a right in relation to such an order, or an appeal in relation to any such order. That would put the provision in the 2018 act, rather than reproducing lengthy provisions about the issue in a completely different act.
I am happy for the minister to intervene to clarify that.
Ash Denham
I thank the convener for raising that. It is perhaps important that I put a few notes on the record about why it has been done in that way. The Government gave careful consideration to how best to deal with QOCS in a new section—2J—as contained in amendment 10. Although I accept that section 2J is quite long, that is necessary to cover the details that are required in the context of the other provisions for periodical payments. However, the main rule is captured succinctly in subsections (1) and (2). My view is that it is worth stating that there, for reading alongside the other provisions on periodical payments, and that that allows the provisions on periodical payments—including the way that QOCS operates in connection with them—to stand as a complete set or as one package.
The remaining details are narrated in subsections (3) to (9), partly by free-standing propositions and partly by referring to the civil litigation legislation, where it is appropriate. There is no neat way of shortening that—at least, not without compromising on the absolute clarity that is needed in the context of the provisions for periodical payments. No matter how it is done, the essence of subsections (3) to (9) is essential for everything to work as intended. For example, we need to set out the precise proceedings that are to be covered by the rule in subsections (1) and (2), what the rule is subject to in two different situations and how properly to tie in the provisions with the civil litigation legislation, where that is required.
Critically, the rules that are stated up front in subsections (1) and (2) cannot be missed. Moreover, I suggest that those key subsections are pretty simple in their own terms for the reader to follow.
I hope that that answers your question, convener.
The Convener
I am not sure that it does, because, if one looks at the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Act 2018, one sees fairly detailed provisions in section 8. I am not persuaded that the drafting set out in amendment 10 is necessary.
Jackie Baillie
I am not going to argue about the drafting; I will stick to the principle of amendment 10 in the name of the minister, which I very much welcome and support. I raised the issue during the stage 1 debate and she promised to reflect on it. I am delighted that she has done so and I agree with the approach that has been taken, so I will support amendment 10.
The Convener
As no other member wishes to speak, I ask the minister to wind up.
Ash Denham
To reiterate, the approach that the convener set out is not one that we want to take; we want to do it specifically in the way that is set out in amendment 10. I hope that that answers the convener’s question.
The Convener
Very well—thank you. The question is, that amendment 10 be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Convener
There will be a division.
For
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
MacDonald, Gordon (Edinburgh Pentlands) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
Abstentions
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (North East Scotland) (Con)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
The Convener
The result of the division is: For 6, Against 0, Abstentions 3.
Amendment 10 agreed to.
Sections 5 to 9 agreed to.
Long title agreed to.
The Convener
That ends our consideration of the bill at stage 2. I thank the minister and her team.
Before we move on to the next agenda item, I suspend the meeting briefly to allow the minister and her officials to leave.
10:52 Meeting suspended.10:53 On resuming—
22 January 2019
Additional related information from the Scottish Government on the Bill
Revised explanation of the Bill (Revised Explanatory Notes)
Stage 3 - Final amendments and vote
MSPs can propose further amendments to the Bill and then vote on each of these. Finally, they vote on whether the Bill should become law
Debate on the proposed amendments
MSPs get the chance to present their proposed amendments to the Chamber. They vote on whether each amendment should be added to the Bill.
Documents with the amendments considered at this meeting on 19 March 2019:

Debate on proposed amendments transcript
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Christine Grahame)
The next item of business is stage 3 proceedings on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill. In dealing with the amendments, members should have the bill as amended at stage 2, the marshalled list and the groupings of amendments.
The division bell will sound and proceedings will be suspended for five minutes for the first division of the afternoon. The period of voting for the first division will be 30 seconds. Thereafter, I will allow a voting period of one minute for the first division after a debate.
Members who wish to speak in the debate on any group of amendments should press their request-to-speak buttons as soon as possible after I call the group. Members should now refer to the marshalled list.
Section 3—Award, continuity and index-linking
15:30The Deputy Presiding Officer
Group 1 is on periodical payments: pursuer’s wishes. Amendment 1, in the name of Jackie Baillie, is the only amendment in the group.
Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
I am pleased to speak to amendment 1 in the first group of amendments at stage 3 of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill—that is a mouthful.
Amendment 1 reflects the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee’s scrutiny of an area in which it made a recommendation for change to the Scottish Government and on which I lodged an amendment at stage 2, which I was asked to withdraw by the Minister for Community Safety to allow for further discussion. That discussion has resulted in the amendment that is before the chamber today.
In essence, amendment 1 will require the court to have special regard to not just a pursuer’s needs, but their preferences. Many pursuers will have been through a lengthy process in an effort to obtain recompense for personal injury that might well have been severe and catastrophic. In my view, it is essential that the pursuer’s voice is heard throughout the process. Amendment 1 is designed to ensure that at the final stage of the process, a pursuer’s views will have been listened to and given full consideration by the judge. The pursuer’s preference as to whether to receive a lump sum or a periodical payment must be a principal factor at the forefront of the court’s mind.
The language of amendment 1 is careful to avoid creating a presumption, as it does not give the pursuer the right of veto, but I would be very surprised if it were not a key factor in a judge’s decision. I certainly expect that the requirement on the court to treat the pursuer’s preference, as well as their needs, as a principal factor will have a real impact on the court’s decision-making process in every case.
I am grateful to the minister and her officials for working with me to give effect to the committee’s recommendation.
I move amendment 1.
Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD)
I am grateful to Jackie Baillie for setting out clearly the background to amendment 1. I did not sit through the evidence that the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee sat through. However, earlier in the session, the Justice Committee dealt with the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Bill, which touched on many of the same issues. We wrestled with the fact that, in relation to what are often very significant payments, individuals could come under pressure from members of their family or their wider friend group to opt for a large lump sum, which might not necessarily be invested in their best interests. There was also the issue that, with a lump sum as opposed to a periodical payment, the pursuer would be liable to pay a legal fee to their solicitor, over and above the normal costs.
Jackie Baillie’s setting out of the rationale for the approach is very helpful. Nobody would wish the pursuer’s interests to be ridden roughshod over. For the benefit of me and other Justice Committee members who wrestled with these matters during our consideration of a different piece of legislation, it would be helpful if Jackie Baillie or, indeed, the minister could clarify how safeguards could help avoid situations arising that are clearly not in the interests of the individual concerned.
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
I am happy to support amendment 1.
Many members of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee felt that a move towards more periodical payment orders would be a good idea. For those of us looking in from the outside, they are often a good answer, because they take away the risk and the need to make decisions about investments and other such issues, which many people are not comfortable with. However, the point was also made that some people might not trust the defender to keep on paying the money and that some people might just want to break the relationship with the defender and receive a standalone amount.
It is fair to say that the courts might have considered such matters anyway, but it does no harm to re-emphasise that the courts should take into account what the pursuer is looking for.
The Minister for Community Safety (Ash Denham)
It was very helpful to meet Jackie Baillie to discuss the amendment that she lodged at stage 2, which was intended to allow the pursuer’s voice to be heard in respect of their preference for a periodical payment order or a lump sum.
Jackie Baillie and other members have spoken about their desire to address the sense of powerlessness that people who have suffered a catastrophic injury might well feel in the event that an order for periodical payments is imposed. Although that is a very difficult thing to capture, it does not mean that it cannot be done.
We have had a productive discussion since stage 2, and we have come away with a better understanding of each other’s position on the issue. I have always indicated that I had some sympathy with the principle underlying the stage 2 amendment. My concerns lay in the way in which the stage 2 amendment would have been given effect, which I believe would have gone too far and could have created some legal difficulties.
In highlighting the pursuer’s preferences as a key consideration, it is important for balance to be struck so that the pursuer’s position is not treated as paramount, an overly rigid presumption is not created and the pursuer is not given a unilateral veto. In addition, the defender should not be put at a substantial disadvantage compared with the pursuer, which would put at risk the defender’s right to a fair hearing.
I am pleased to say that I do not have any difficulties along those lines with amendment 1. The amendment refers not just to the pursuer’s needs but to the pursuer’s preferences. This addresses the very human aspect of the pursuer’s position, about which a number of members have spoken.
However, amendment 1 goes beyond simply ensuring that the court takes into account the views of the pursuer, as it could do anyway. The amendment expressly highlights the needs and preferences of the pursuer as something for the court to “have special regard to”.
From the particular language used, it may be expected that the things highlighted will weigh heavily as key considerations at the forefront of the court’s mind when it is deciding between the options for the form of the award. Indeed, all things being equal, it may be expected that the pursuer’s needs and preferences will be given priority by the court.
I believe that amendment 1 strikes the appropriate balance while ensuring that the pursuer’s preferences as well as needs are specifically recognised in the bill. Accordingly, I am happy to support amendment 1.
Jackie Baillie
I welcome the minister’s contribution and the contributions of members across the chamber. I was not the only one who raised the matter at stage 1. My colleague Angela Constance did likewise and it is something that the committee considered to be important.
John Mason was right to reference the use of periodical payment orders as the mechanism to reduce risk and ensure that awards are made over the lifetime of a pursuer. The reality is that we will see a combination of lump sums and periodical payments in play but ultimately—I reassure Liam McArthur about this in particular—we want the pursuer’s voice to be heard at the end of a lengthy court process and to ensure not only that their needs are met but that their preferences are taken into consideration. I am sure that the court would be alive to some of the external pressures that pursuers may face.
I ask the chamber to support amendment 1 because it is the right thing to do. I press my amendment.
Amendment 1 agreed to.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Group 2 is on periodical payments: drafting amendments. Amendment 2 is grouped with amendments 3 to 8.
Ash Denham
All the amendments in the group fall into the category of minor and tidying in nature.
Amendments 2, 4 and 5 relate to an amendment moved by Stewart Stevenson and agreed to by the committee at stage 2 to place a requirement on the court to set out its reasons for being satisfied that the continuity of payments is reasonably secure.
At the time, I reserved the possibility of lodging Government amendments to make any necessary technical changes at stage 3, so as to ensure that the wording of the provision added by Stewart Stevenson fully dovetailed with the related provisions. Amendments 2, 4 and 5 therefore make some minor adjustments to the text in order to do that. I think that they speak for themselves. The substance of Stewart Stevenson’s addition at stage 2 is not affected.
Amendments 3 and 6 to 8 have come about as a result of a change suggested by the Association of British Insurers. The ABI expressed the view that, in new section 2(1A) of the Damages Act 1996, which would be introduced by section 3(1)(c) of the bill, in the reference to a court not making
“an order for periodical payments unless it is satisfied that the continuity of payment under such an order would be reasonably secure”,
“would be” should be changed to “is”.
As well as making the wording chime more closely with the introduction of the assumptions that follow in new section 2C(1) of the 1996 act, the change would bring the drafting more in line with the equivalent provision that applies in England and Wales. Importantly, the conditional element of the matter is not lost altogether, as new section 2C(1) continues to refer as necessary to what “would be” the case.
Although we are satisfied that no difference could arise in practice under the wording used, we are content to make the change. The same point arises elsewhere in section 3 and once in section 4, so similar changes are made for consistency in those places.
I move amendment 2.
Amendment 2 agreed to.
Amendments 3 to 7 moved—[Ash Denham]—and agreed to.
Section 4—Variation or suspension of settlement
Amendment 8 moved—[Ash Denham]—and agreed to.
Schedule—Investments: setting rate of return
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Group 3 is on rate of return: standard adjustments. Amendment 9, in the name of the minister, is the only amendment in the group.
Ash Denham
I explained at stage 2 that the approach taken in the bill on how the discount rate should be calculated is based on a portfolio that meets the needs of the hypothetical investor as described in the bill. The asset classes and percentage holdings contained in the notional portfolio have been balanced in such a way as to support an approach, in terms of investment choices, that is capable of limiting volatility and uncertainty.
The bill also includes two standard adjustments that the rate assessor must deduct when arriving at the rate. Amendment 9 deals with the first of those. It is intended to take account of investment advice, management costs and taxation. The adjustment is set out in the bill, with regulation-making powers for the Scottish ministers to change the adjustment if required. The Scottish Government accepts that there will be a need to take investment advice, and indeed one of the characteristics of the hypothetical investor is that they are properly advised.
Prior to the introduction of the bill, Scottish ministers sought views from the Government Actuary’s Department on the appropriate level for the adjustment for tax and passive investment management costs. Although GAD considered that the reasonable allowance for expenses and tax might fall into the range of 0.5 to 2 per cent, it was also of the view that an allowance at the lower end was
“likely to be more appropriate”.
That is because it is reasonable to assume that pursuers will shop around for competitive fees and will directly invest in passive funds; because, in the current economic environment, income yields, particularly on bonds, are low, which eases the possible pressure of higher tax charges; and because further prudence deductions are included elsewhere in the discount rate.
At stage 2, Jackie Baillie lodged an amendment that sought to increase the standard adjustment for tax and investment management costs from 0.5 to 1.5 per cent. I pointed out that the composition of the portfolio and the level of adjustments that are set out in the bill are the result of analysis, actuarial advice and available evidence. The methodology and adjustments have been carefully calibrated with a view to ensuring that, in so far as possible, the principle of 100 per cent compensation is adhered to. They are a complete package of measures, with the further adjustment ensuring that the possibility of undercompensation is at an acceptable level.
I was also clear that, from the Government’s point of view, Jackie Baillie’s proposed increase would tip the balance too far in favour of pursuers. Too high a percentage for the deduction under consideration would increase significantly the chances of pursuers being overcompensated, which would go against the principle of achieving the right levels of compensation and would pass an undue burden on to defenders, including public services such as the national health service.
During stage 2, Jackie Baillie withdrew her amendment on the basis that we would have an opportunity to discuss the issue further. It was helpful, after stage 2, to meet Jackie Baillie and exchange our views. I was able to advise that we would be working with the Ministry of Justice to get early access to any relevant evidence on tasks and investment management costs arising from its very recent call for evidence ahead of the review in England and Wales, and we have done that.
With that information to hand, we sought further advice from the Government Actuary’s Department. I have considered its advice, which points to a small uplift in the adjustment being required. Its advice is given in the context of the portfolio contained in the bill, and its view is that there have been small increases in the fees that would apply. Specifically, in GAD’s view, there is a small increase in appropriate passive fund manager fees, reflecting evidence from the call and further consideration of the charges that might apply for the Scottish portfolio. It is also GAD’s view that, based on the evidence from the call, it would be appropriate to include a small allowance for charges for platform fees in order to access the funds and for obtaining advice.
15:45Amendment 9 would therefore increase the standard adjustment from 0.5 to 0.75 per cent to allow for such increases. I am content that, based on impartial and professional advice, that is the appropriate change to make—and, indeed, that not to make it would be to ignore such advice. The change would ensure that, as far as possible, pursuers would be properly compensated through the application of the discount rate that would be arrived at through the application of the new methodology. The percentage in amendment 9 represents an important aspect of getting that right.
I move amendment 9.
Dean Lockhart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
As we have heard, amendment 9, in the name of the minister, would increase the standard adjustment to the discount rate for investment charges and taxation to 0.75 per cent from the 0.5 per cent that was originally set out in the bill.
The Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee’s stage 1 report on the bill considered that adjustment to the discount rate and, after considering evidence from those on all sides of the argument, concluded that, on balance, it was content with the adjustment rate being set at 0.5 per cent.
At stage 2, the minister told the committee that a 0.5 per cent standard adjustment recognised that investors would shop around to get the best possible rate for investment charges, and that the notional investment portfolio would largely comprise passive funds that would not require active management and would not incur significant investment charges. As she set out in her opening remarks, the minister also told the committee that she accepted the advice of the Government Actuary’s Department on the adjustment level being set at around 0.5 per cent.
Given that background, increasing the standard adjustment to 0.75 per cent runs the risk of departing from the fundamental Scottish legal principle of fair compensation. Although Scottish Conservatives understand the Government’s approach of legislating in favour of overcompensation rather than risking undercompensation, we have to recognise that that would come at a cost. The costs that are associated with paying more than 100 per cent compensation would fall on public bodies in Scotland, such as the national health service and other public bodies that self-insure.
John Mason
Does Dean Lockhart accept that it is not possible to get to a position in which everyone is correctly compensated by 100 per cent? It is inevitable that some will be undercompensated while others will be overcompensated.
Dean Lockhart
That is a fair comment. The figure has to lie somewhere on a spectrum. However, based on the evidence that the committee heard, increasing the adjustment to 0.75 per cent would take us quite far on that, and towards the risk of overcompensation. As I said, the reality is that the cost of paying more than 100 per cent compensation will fall on public bodies in Scotland.
For the reasons that I have set out, Scottish Conservatives will not support amendment 9.
Jackie Baillie
I welcome the opportunity to speak on amendment 9 in the name of the minister.
At stage 1, the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee took evidence about standard adjustments. As the minister has referenced, at stage 2, I lodged an amendment on the amount that should be allowed for the impact of taxation and the cost of investment advice. As we have heard, the Scottish Government’s position was to allow for 0.5 per cent, which was considered by some commentators to be just too low to reflect the actual cost of advice and taxation.
The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers provided expert evidence from a range of independent financial advisers, all of whom suggested that 0.5 per cent was too low and that the real costs were likely to be between 1.5 and 2 per cent, based on their experience of dealing with personal injury cases. My amendment was duly cautious in seeking to set the rate at 1.5 per cent.
I pray in aid the Government Actuary’s Department’s analysis of the personal injury discount rate, which it published. The minister rightly suggested that its recommendation on a rate that would reflect tax liability and fees for advice was likely to be anywhere in the range of 0.5 to 2 per cent. The minister and the Scottish Government chose to place the rate at the lower end of the scale. However, I point out that the Government Actuary’s Department also said that it would be appropriate for the rate to be set higher.
The minister referenced the fact that there is a review south of the border by the Ministry of Justice, and she has helpfully considered that in her further deliberations. Again, I welcome the helpful discussion with the minister and her officials. They reflected further and have lodged an amendment to adjust the rate upwards to 0.75 per cent. That is not as much as I would have liked and not as much as the evidence suggests we may require, but I recognise that it is a step in the right direction. I will therefore support amendment 9, but I ask the minister to assure the Parliament that she and her officials will keep the rate under review and change it in the light of experience to avoid any suggestion of undercompensation.
Liam McArthur
I am conscious that I do not have the background on the bill that Dean Lockhart, Jackie Baillie and the minister have. I was reassured to an extent by what the minister said about her engagement with the Government Actuary’s Department. There is clearly a balance to be struck here, and the committee came to the conclusion that it is not an exact science.
I was struck by the response that the minister gave recently in a written answer to a parliamentary question from my colleague Alex Cole-Hamilton. She wrote:
“The Scottish Government expects that the UK Government will continue to cover the costs arising from the change in the discount rate to the extent that the rate in Scotland is in line with the rate in England and Wales. The Scottish Government will continue to pass this funding to the NHS in Scotland.”—[Written Answers, 13 March 2019; S5W-21903.]
That is helpful, but it rests heavily on the rate in Scotland being in line with that in England and Wales. As I understand it, that may not be the case in this instance, and I wonder how the shortfall will be met. Has the minister had discussions with not just the Government Actuary’s Department but health colleagues about the potential implications for any financial liability to the NHS?
Also, will a revised financial memorandum be published? As I understand it, there was not one ahead of stage 3, which was rather unhelpful for those of us who were trying to get our heads round the implications of the change that the minister is proposing.
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
I echo Jackie Baillie’s comments. The discount rate was the subject of some debate and discussion at stage 1, and rightly so. We are talking about the money that is made available to people for them to get their affairs in order having been awarded compensation. Although much of the talk is of what might be reasonable or what people might typically obtain, we must also consider people whose compensation falls outside the range of reasonable expectations. As John Mason rightly said, some people may be overcompensated and some may be undercompensated, but we need to ensure that we protect the most vulnerable, because the people who we are talking about are undoubtedly vulnerable.
The range of values that the Government Actuary’s Department arrived at was 0.5 to 2 per cent. Although it said that the appropriate rate would be in the lower end of the range, 0.75 per cent is well within the lower end. Like Jackie Baillie, I would like to hear from the minister how the rate will be kept under review and how, if it is found to be insufficient, it might be revised in future.
The increase is welcome, albeit that it does not go as far as we on the Labour benches would like.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
I call on the minister to wind up.
Ash Denham
I will address a number of points. First, on the point that Dean Lockhart raised, I expect the new rate to save defenders money when it comes in in September, and that includes the NHS.
The MOJ’s call for evidence on matters relating to investments was extremely timely, and amendment 9 is based on the most recent evidence. GAD analysed the evidence from that call by the MOJ with reference to the portfolio in the bill, and it revised its advice. It would not be appropriate not to act on the advice that I was given. I want the adjustment in the bill to reflect the most up-to-date evidence that is available, and that is what the amendment will do.
Of course the adjustments will be kept under review, and I note that that is in the bill as well, just to reassure Daniel Johnson on that point.
I press amendment 9.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
The question is, that amendment 9 be agreed to. Are we agreed?
Members: No.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
There will be a division. As this is the first division at stage 3, the Parliament will be suspended for five minutes.
15:54 Meeting suspended.15:59 On resuming—
The Deputy Presiding Officer
We will now proceed with the division on amendment 9.
For
Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Arthur, Tom (Renfrewshire South) (SNP)
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Beamish, Claudia (South Scotland) (Lab)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Bibby, Neil (West Scotland) (Lab)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Campbell, Aileen (Clydesdale) (SNP)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Cunningham, Roseanna (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Dugdale, Kezia (Lothian) (Lab)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Fee, Mary (West Scotland) (Lab)
Findlay, Neil (Lothian) (Lab)
Finnie, John (Highlands and Islands) (Green)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Freeman, Jeane (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP)
Gibson, Kenneth (Cunninghame North) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Gougeon, Mairi (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP)
Grant, Rhoda (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Haughey, Clare (Rutherglen) (SNP)
Hepburn, Jamie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (SNP)
Hyslop, Fiona (Linlithgow) (SNP)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Kelly, James (Glasgow) (Lab)
Kidd, Bill (Glasgow Anniesland) (SNP)
Lamont, Johann (Glasgow) (Lab)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lochhead, Richard (Moray) (SNP)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Derek (Renfrewshire North and West) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Martin, Gillian (Aberdeenshire East) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Matheson, Michael (Falkirk West) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McArthur, Liam (Orkney Islands) (LD)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Paterson, Gil (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)
Rumbles, Mike (North East Scotland) (LD)
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Somerville, Shirley-Anne (Dunfermline) (SNP)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Sturgeon, Nicola (Glasgow Southside) (SNP)
Swinney, John (Perthshire North) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
Watt, Maureen (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
Yousaf, Humza (Glasgow Pollok) (SNP)
Abstentions
Ballantyne, Michelle (South Scotland) (Con)
Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Burnett, Alexander (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
Carlaw, Jackson (Eastwood) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Chapman, Peter (North East Scotland) (Con)
Corry, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Fraser, Murdo (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Golden, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Harris, Alison (Central Scotland) (Con)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Mason, Tom (North East Scotland) (Con)
Mitchell, Margaret (Central Scotland) (Con)
Mundell, Oliver (Dumfriesshire) (Con)
Scott, John (Ayr) (Con)
Simpson, Graham (Central Scotland) (Con)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Stewart, Alexander (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Tomkins, Adam (Glasgow) (Con)
Wells, Annie (Glasgow) (Con)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)
The Deputy Presiding Officer
The result of the division is: For 84, Against 0, Abstentions 26.
Amendment 9 agreed to.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
Group 4 is on rate of return: drafting amendments. Amendment 10, in the name of the minister, is grouped with amendments 11 to 14. [Interruption.] Please—I am trying to say something and I cannot even hear myself.
I call the minister to move amendment 10 and speak to all of the amendments in the group.
Ash Denham
All the amendments in this group relate to an amendment that was moved by Dean Lockhart at stage 2 and that was agreed to by the committee. That amendment reworked the duty of the Scottish ministers in relation to the notional portfolio. The duty previously involved having regard to the need to ensure that the notional portfolio remains suitable for the hypothetical investor. After the amendment was accepted, it involved including the conduct of a review on suitability, incorporating a requirement to consult appropriate persons.
At the time, I reserved the possibility of bringing forward Government amendments to make any necessary drafting changes at stage 3, not only to ensure that the provisions would work properly, given the possibility of interim rate reviews, but to ensure that the overall wording and structure of the provisions reaches the desired result in the best and clearest way possible.
Amendments 10, 11, 12 and 14 make modest adjustments to the text in connection with the review of the portfolio. They align the wording of the text with the provisions cross-referred to; reflect the fact that the on-going assessment of the portfolio, and the making of regulations if necessary, are really just parts of a single process; directly tie the necessity of regulation making to the suitability of the portfolio for the notional investor; tidy the structure and wording of the provisions; and give a useful signpost for the reader to the description of the notional investor. However, the substance of what Dean Lockhart added at stage 2 is not affected by those amendments. They preserve the need to assess the notional portfolio ahead of each five-year cycle of review, along with a duty to consider whether regulations are necessary.
Amendment 13 is different. Interim reviews, by their nature, are likely to be needed where there are urgent or extraordinary circumstances. Amendment 13 therefore excludes interim reviews from the scope of the provisions that were added by Dean Lockhart at stage 2.
I move amendment 10.
Amendment 10 agreed to.
Amendments 11 to 14 moved—[Ash Denham]—and agreed to.
The Deputy Presiding Officer
That ends consideration of amendments.
19 March 2019
Final debate on the Bill
Once they've debated the amendments, the MSPs discuss the final version of the Bill.

Final debate transcript
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani)
As members are aware, at this point in the proceedings, the Presiding Officer is required under standing orders to decide whether, in his view, any provision of the bill relates to a protected subject matter: that is, whether it would modify the electoral system and franchise for Scottish parliamentary elections. In the Presiding Officer’s view, no provision of the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill relates to a protected subject matter. Therefore, the bill does not require a supermajority in order to be passed at stage 3.
We move to the debate on motion S5M-16394, in the name of Ash Denham, on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill.
16:05The Minister for Community Safety (Ash Denham)
I thank members of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee for their careful and helpful consideration of the bill; I have very much welcomed the committee’s thorough scrutiny of the bill. It is clear that members appreciated the importance of getting things right; they also appreciated that the process is not always straightforward. I thank the committee clerks, too, for their hard work.
I also thank the stakeholders who contributed views and opinions as part of parliamentary scrutiny of the bill. The Scottish Government has had useful engagement with stakeholders. At times, we heard differing and—dare I say it?—opposing views on some aspects of the bill, which is perhaps not surprising, given that there are pursuers on one side and defenders on the other.
Despite the differences, there is a commonly held view that the current process for setting the discount rate is flawed, and that the law needs to be changed to make it better. The context of the bill is therefore the widely held view, which is born of extensive consultation over the past seven years, that the law on how the discount rate is set needs to be changed.
I will briefly remind members of the key provisions in the bill, and what they are intended to achieve. Part 1 reforms the law on setting the personal injury discount rate. The provisions are intended to ensure that the method and process for setting the discount rate are—as far as is practical—clear, certain, fair, regular, transparent and credible. The fact that there have been seven years of consultation on the matter serves to demonstrate that this is not an easy subject and that there are no easy answers.
The bill provides that the job of reviewing and assessing the rate will, in the first instance, fall to the Government Actuary’s Department. We have adopted an approach whereby determination of the discount rate is regarded as an actuarial exercise that should be free from political interference. In any system for setting a personal injury discount rate, there must be an element of political judgment. The approach that the bill takes separates the actuarial exercise from political judgments, with the latter being set out transparently in the legislation. The scrutiny process for the bill has provided the necessary parliamentary accountability to ensure that we have a framework that is fit for purpose. It will be for the Government actuary to apply the methodology and arrive at the rate. We are of the view that his professionalism and expertise make him the best fit for that role.
The bill also establishes a timeline for review of the discount rate. That is important, because we are aware that the impact of no change having been made for more than 15 years was considerable. The bill, as introduced, provided for a review every three years, but we listened to stakeholders and the committee on that point and amended the bill at stage 2 to reduce the frequency from every three years to every five years, on the basis that the committee considered that such an approach would represent a
“balance between flexibility and certainty”.
One of the most complex aspects of the bill is the methodology for calculating the discount rate. The bill provides a framework for doing that.
It is important to remember that at the heart of the bill are people who have suffered significant, if not catastrophic and life-changing injury, and their right to fair and full compensation. An award for damages is designed to compensate a wrongly injured person for the losses and harm that are caused by the injury—no more and no less.
That is easy to say, but hard to do. The most likely cause of a person’s damages not being enough or being too much stands separate from calculations around the discount rate: it is the assessment of the person’s life expectancy. There are no absolutes; we can only improve or diminish the chances of overcompensation or undercompensation happening.
When I talk about a framework, that terminology is important. The composition of the portfolio, the standard adjustment and the assumption about the award duration are fully integrated and operate together to produce the discount rate. They are a package. For example, a riskier portfolio would attract a different adjustment for tax and investment management costs.
The courts will now have the ability to impose orders for periodical payment, which is provided for in part 2. It is worth noting that the intention behind the bill’s provisions that require a court to consider whether an award should take the form of a periodical payment order, and whether to make such an order without the consent of the parties, is to address effectively the current scenario, which has sometimes been described as the defender holding the trump card, because the defender can, in effect, overrule the pursuer by simply not agreeing to their preferred method of award. I am sure that we all agree that there are good reasons for remedying that position. Where there is disagreement, it is considered that the best independent arbiter is the court—not one or other of the parties that are involved.
I am convinced that the provisions in the bill will result in methods and processes that are clear, certain, fair, regular, transparent and credible.
I move,
That the Parliament agrees that the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill be passed.
16:11Gordon Lindhurst (Lothian) (Con)
I, too, thank my colleagues on the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee for their work on the bill, and I thank the minister for her work on the bill, including her timely response to the committee’s stage 1 report. Not least, I also thank the clerks and legislation team who have assisted me and all the members who have been involved at all stages of the bill’s passage.
Throughout our consideration, there has been genuine recognition, by everyone, of a number of principles. The first is the importance of the proposed legislation, which will add clarity and transparency by providing a statutory framework for calculating the personal injury discount rate. Clarity and transparency are hugely important to a person who has undergone life-changing events. A number of colleagues laid that out unambiguously during the stage 1 debate, when they described how a person’s life might never be the same again following a life-changing incident, if they become unable to earn and will be reliant on care for the rest of their life. Although they might be few in number, cases that involve the discount rate for future losses will benefit from the bill.
The second principle is 100 per cent compensation and the overarching goal of working out a system that would limit undercompensation or overcompensation as much as possible, while recognising that, of course, there can be no exact science for that—as the minister said—and acknowledging the effects of not getting it right for pursuer or defender. Defenders include not just insurers to whom we might have to pay higher premiums. They also include public bodies that we, as taxpayers, fund—for example, the national health service, which could, as we heard during stage 1, be at risk in both overcompensation and undercompensation scenarios. Broadly speaking, the bill has tried to strike the right balance, and I hope that it has been largely successful in that.
Some of the committee’s concerns at stage 1 have been ironed out during subsequent stages. During stage 1, and in my role as convener of the committee, I raised in our report members’ concerns about gaming, a term that relates to cases in which a settlement might be delayed if one or other party anticipates a more favourable rate coming into force. It was welcome that the minister changed the review period of the discount rate to five years. Keeping up to date with market changes is essential in ensuring that the legislation stays relevant, unlike the current process for setting the discount rate, under which a review that was held in 2017 was the first in 15 years.
A number of members from across the chamber have raised the importance of the pursuer’s views in determining periodical payment orders or lump-sum awards. PPOs can be preferable for some people because they give the certainty of a regular income over time. Others prefer a lump sum in order, for example, to pay for accommodation at the outset.
Amendment 1 at stage 3 set a slightly different tone from amendments at stage 2, by asking that the court
“have special regard to the pursuer’s needs and preferences”,
rather than making a presumption in favour of the pursuer’s preferences.
As the minister said in responding to the committee at stage 1, it is important not to undermine or limit the courts’ ability to make the best decision based on all the facts and circumstances of a particular case. Amendment 1 should not prevent courts from making the best decisions, but I would welcome further comment from the minister on how she envisages a court approaching the matter.
Concerns remain about amendment 9, as outlined earlier by my colleague, Dean Lockhart. The goal of the bill is to stick to the 100 per cent compensation principle as far as possible. Witnesses at stage 1 told the committee that:
“The award of damages is not an investment pot—it is not a reward. It is a sum of damages that is awarded to look after somebody’s needs for the rest of their life.”—[Official Report, Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, 23 October 2018; c 26.]
There is a risk that amendment 9 will take us beyond the 100 per cent principle and could have significant knock-on effects on insurance premiums and public bodies.
The committee was content with the 0.5 per cent standard adjustments, as, it appeared, the minister was—at least at that stage. Although the change to that is, on the face of it, only a small change, in practical terms it could make a huge difference. That late change by the Government will need to be carefully reviewed, as appropriate, with measures being taken by the Scottish ministers by way of regulation, where appropriate.
16:16Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
I, too, thank the clerks and members of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee for their excellent work on the bill. Speaking on the bill, I feel something of an interloper, given the substantial work and the very difficult subject matter that the committee has been dealing with.
I acknowledge and give my thanks to the many organisations and individuals who participated in the drafting and consultation process. Undoubtedly, their work means that we have a stronger bill in front of us.
Labour supports the bill and welcomes its aim of creating a fair, transparent and credible personal injury discount rate and damages regime. The bill seeks to protect people who have suffered significantly and who, in many cases, will undoubtedly be vulnerable, and to provide greater clarity, transparency and security to those who have been injured through wrongful behaviour.
Ultimately, the bill will ensure that the damages system in place is fair and equitable. It is about creating a system that empowers those who seek compensation, rather than taking away more of their control. As the minister correctly set out in her opening remarks, there are no easy answers. The bill represents a series of balances that have been struck. Through consideration at stages 1 and 2, most of those balances have been struck well.
Let me address some of the amendments that have been agreed to. The bill undoubtedly represents progress. As I said, there is a debate about where the balances have been struck, and we were pleased that progress has been made. Amendment 1 will ensure that the court awarding damages will be required to have special regard to the pursuer’s needs and preferences when deciding whether to impose a periodical payment order. As we have heard, there is a balance to be struck between the preferences of the individual and the ability of the court to decide on the best outcome, given all the facts before it. Amendment 1 strikes that balance, and the bill is stronger for it. It is an important change, which will provide greater security, protection and reassurance for those who pursue damages through the courts.
I turn to amendment 9. Throughout the passage of the bill, Labour has put forward arguments about how we can make the process fairer for pursuers. We welcome the Government doing likewise in some areas, but we have concerns about amendment 9—we feel that it could have gone further. When the bill was drafted, the Government underestimated the cost to the pursuer of inflation, taxation and investment advice. We are pleased that the Government has raised the level of standard adjustment from 0.5 to 0.75 per cent so as to take into account the impact of taxation and the costs of investment advice and management. People will need that advice and support, because they will undoubtedly be facing decisions that they have never had to make before, and speaking to professionals with whom they do not regularly or normally have contact. It is important that people are provided with that level of support.
As I said, it is disappointing that the Government chose to set a rate at the lower end of the range and one that is lower than many would have wanted. Although we support amendment 9, it is important that the matter is kept under review. I welcome the minister’s remarks on that point in debating the amendment.
The bill is an important step forward in providing security to those who have suffered what will often have been traumatic and life-altering events. There is, of course, more that could have been done to provide greater protection to the most vulnerable people who find themselves seeking damages, but the bill is an important step forward.
We urge the Government to keep the measures under review and to be willing to revise and reform the bill’s provisions when it has been enacted, not least with regard to the standard adjustments, as I have outlined.
Labour supports the bill, because it will help to protect vulnerable people who have been injured. Although we recognise its flaws, we welcome its passage and the fact that it will create a fairer, more transparent and more credible personal injury and damages awards regime.
16:21Liam McArthur (Orkney Islands) (LD)
I welcome the opportunity to make a few brief remarks although, like Daniel Johnson, I feel like a bit of an interloper in the debate.
Like others, I pay tribute to the members of the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee and its clerks for all the work that they have done on a bill that is technical but hugely important, particularly for people who find themselves having to make a compensation claim. Those people are often vulnerable, and they will possibly be at a low point in their life.
The committee was absolutely right to observe in its stage 1 report:
“The number of people affected by personal injury cases where the discount rate applies may be small but the means of calculating their compensation is of vast importance to them and their families, as well as to pursuer and defender interests (the NHS included) and the insurance industry.”
That encapsulates what we are trying to wrestle with.
As I observed during the earlier proceedings, I have had some engagement with the issues through the Justice Committee’s work on the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Act 2018. During that process, the importance of clarity and transparency, which Gordon Lindhurst and Daniel Johnson have made points on, were at the forefront of our thoughts. They are absolutely key. There is a need to try to avoid the risk of undercompensation and, indeed, overcompensation. As the committee observed, that is “not an exact science”. A balance has to be struck.
I will make a couple of observations that follow on from the earlier exchanges, when the amendments were discussed.
I am very grateful to Jackie Baillie for setting out the background to her amendment. I realised that the process was iterative. I am also grateful to John Mason for his observations on that. As I said during the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Bill scrutiny process, we were concerned then about lump sums being awarded and then not necessarily being used in the best interests of the individual concerned. There was also the risk of some of the lump sum being assigned to legal representatives, and the issue of the compensation that was needed to manage the costs over a lifetime was very much at the heart of what we sought to achieve. A balance has been struck through Jackie Baillie’s amendment to ensure that the pursuer’s needs, interests and wishes are properly respected and reflected in any judgment that the court comes to as a result of the process.
The other concern related to amendment 9. I will not rehearse that, but I was slightly concerned about what the minister set out in response to a recent parliamentary question from Alex Cole-Hamilton, which bears repeating. She said:
“The Scottish Government expects that the UK Government will continue to cover the costs arising from the change in the discount rate to the extent that the rate in Scotland is in line with the rate in England and Wales. The Scottish Government will continue to pass this funding to the NHS in Scotland.”—[Written Answers, 13 March 2019; S5W-21903.]
It is not entirely clear to me how the shortfall will be made up where those rates diverge.
I know that the minister is acting on actuarial advice, but I am interested to know what conversations have taken place with her health colleagues. It would also be interesting to know why an updated financial memorandum was not published ahead of stage 3.
I recognise that there is an opportunity to review the process. Some colleagues wish the rate to be somewhat higher than the minister proposed and others are concerned that it has increased since stage 1. There is a balance to strike and it is impossible to get the approach absolutely right in every instance, but there are concerns about the process that led to this point.
The bill is welcome. Like the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Act 2018, it appears to strike the best balance. The bill ensures that people who pursue personal injury cases have the clarity, transparency and security that they need, and it has fairness very much at its heart. On that basis, Scottish Liberal Democrats will support the motion at decision time.
16:25John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
I very much welcome the fact that the bill has got to stage 3. It seems that we have not had many major disputes over amendments this afternoon.
A lot of the bill is about getting the right balance between pursuers and defenders. We do not want to overcompensate or undercompensate but, to be frank, it is impossible to get every case exactly 100 per cent compensated. In fact, it can be argued that every case is inevitably overcompensated or undercompensated. We then have the question whether it is acceptable to have 50 per cent of people overcompensated and 50 per cent of people undercompensated. The Government feels that that is unacceptable and that we should reduce the numbers who are undercompensated, and I tend to agree.
Two contentious issues have been the further margin adjustment and the adjustment to cover tax and financial advice. The Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee had conflicting evidence on both. The further margin adjustment is to be 0.5 per cent. The Association of British Insurers and others argued fairly persistently for a reduction to 0.25 per cent, and we also heard arguments for an increase, as even 0.5 per cent will leave substantial numbers undercompensated if they live longer or if inflation is higher, for example. On balance, I feel that 0.5 per cent is reasonable and gets the balance about right.
The figure on which the Government has moved is that for tax and financial advice. Again, the committee found it difficult to pin down witnesses, but the general feeling was that 0.5 per cent might not be sufficient. We particularly felt that, at the start of the process, immediately after a lump sum had been awarded, most recipients would be seriously beyond their comfort zone and would need substantial amounts of advice.
I am therefore comfortable that the Government has moved to 0.75 per cent. As Ash Denham said, she has acted on the most up-to-date advice. Gordon Lindhurst said that there was a risk of more than 100 per cent compensation, but some people—just fewer of them—will inevitably get less than 100 per cent. Labour and Daniel Johnson said the opposite—they feel that we should have gone further. There is a lack of information on what pursuers do with a lump sum, and maybe that needs to be looked at and studied more.
Part of me wonders how many such figures should be in primary legislation, which is more difficult to change, and how many could have been in regulations. However, we are at stage 3 now, so it is a bit late in the day to change that.
Another issue has been exactly where periodical payment orders sit in the scheme of things. They seem an attractive option to many of us, as they considerably reduce the risk—for example, from inflation or a longer life expectancy—that a pursuer is subject to. However, we heard evidence that some victims are against PPOs, perhaps because they do not trust the defender to pay or because they do not want any on-going relationship with the defender. We are not trying to tie the hands of the courts, but many of us did not feel that it would do any harm to give the courts a strong indication—as amendment 1 has done—of Parliament’s thinking that they should take seriously the pursuer’s wishes.
Today, at stage 3, we have a bill that will greatly modernise the previous system. Even though the committee’s witnesses did not agree on their detailed evidence, I think that they agreed that the proposal is a step in the right direction and that we should be legislating on this matter. In particular, the idea that investors would put all the money into gilts—traditionally, that has been the safer thing to do—has increasingly seemed unlikely in practice.
It is good that the Government has engaged on the points about which the committee had concerns, and that we have been able to reach a fair degree of consensus today. The Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee does not deal with a lot of legislation, but I think that we have given the bill very thorough and fair scrutiny, and I am sure that we would be open to handling more legislation in future.
16:30Jamie Halcro Johnston (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
I welcome the opportunity to speak in this final stage of the bill. As members will be aware, I have been involved with the bill in each of its stages: I spoke at stage 1, I was involved in the committee at stage 2, and I am speaking in the stage 3 debate today.
The bill’s principles have remained constant. It is right that we make provision to compensate in full those who have suffered injuries, while recognising that overcompensation brings its own problems.
There has been a long wait for a fairer method of setting the discount rate for personal injury cases. Prior to the bill’s introduction, the existing method had simply not been reviewed for an extended period. As a consequence, the changes that we now see are significant.
When I spoke in the stage 1 debate, I highlighted the importance of the subject that we are dealing with, which bears some brief repetition. Although they seem technical, ultimately the rules that we are laying out will ensure that individuals—many of whom have been grievously wronged—are compensated. That compensation can mean that the vital support that someone needs to lead a full life is in place, or it can save them the extensive additional costs that their injuries may incur.
As the bill has progressed, there have been several positives. The stage 2 amendments have been broadly welcomed. They have created a better bill. The extension of the review cycle from three to five years is certainly an improvement. As members have mentioned, that mitigates a number of the concerns that had existed about gaming the system, which threatened to drag legal action out, creating problems not only for the defender, but for the courts. The requirement to consult ahead of reviews of the discount rate and the recognition of the need to consider changed approaches will improve the reviews and make them more worthwhile exercises.
At stage 3, we have had a number of technical amendments. I will not dwell too long on them. Amendment 9, which is the main Government amendment of substance, relates to the change to the adjustment for investment charges and taxation, raising it by 0.25 per cent to 0.75 per cent. The minister will be aware that, in our stage 1 report, the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee outlined that it was content with the approach previously presented in the bill relating to the two standard adjustments. The new change is not a minor one, and we do not have a full sense of the cost to businesses and the public sector of making it. In response to a written question to ministers that I submitted last year, it seemed as though they did not have a full picture of the cost of such damages claims to the public purse. In terms of its impact on local authorities, for example, we seem to have drawn a blank.
Much of the discussion on the bill was based on the previous 0.5 per cent adjustment and—as we might expect—that was the basis of the evidence that was taken by the committee. It is therefore disappointing that such an amendment was lodged at this time.
Jackie Baillie’s amendment 1 is the key change on periodical payments. I heard the discussion at stage 2 and appreciate that we have been presented with something quite different from earlier amendments. The amendment proposes that “special regard” be given to the pursuer’s wishes when a court is considering its approach to a PPO. Ultimately, that leaves the decision to the court to make, in light of individual circumstances. The committee heard evidence that pursuers may be concerned about being seen to be forced into future relationships with the defender through a PPO. Ultimately, it ought to remain a decision for the courts in light of individual circumstances, but amendment 1 provides additional scope for the pursuer to be at the heart of the decision-making process.
The bill is worth supporting. In many ways, it is overdue. I appreciate that ministers have taken some cognisance of the committee’s recommendations and the issues that have been raised in the chamber. That said, concerns remain—I think that they are legitimate—about how the changes will operate in practice, and questions remain, particularly on the substantive issue of the standard adjustment that I have spoken about.
16:34Jackie Baillie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute to this stage 3 debate on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill. I congratulate the bill team, the minister and the committee clerks. I thank them and the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers for assisting our consideration of the bill. I think that this is the second bill that the minister has taken through Parliament, which is an achievement of which she should feel proud.
Some might regard the bill as very dry and technical, but it will have a profound effect on those who need to seek compensation. That said, I hope that the provisions of the bill will not apply to many people, because we are talking about people who experience catastrophic and life-changing events. It is clearly desirable that few people experience such trauma and its consequences, but the bill does an important job in focusing on dealing with compensation—how it is calculated and how it is paid.
During the committee evidence-taking stage, it was clear that, although pursuers and defenders had very different views on whether there was likely to be overcompensation or undercompensation, there was agreement about the need for fairness and clarity. The Scottish Government is clear that the policy intention is to achieve 100 per cent compensation for people to whom a personal injury award is made, and I think that we all agree with that objective.
Those who are responsible for paying out compensation—the defenders—believe that the Government is being overgenerous and that its assumptions about investment are far too cautious. For example, defenders suggest that investors will invest in equities and not just in fixed assets, on which there is a lower return. Those who represent pursuers believe that any notional portfolio of investment should be on a no-risk basis and that there might be a danger of undercompensation.
Having listened to the evidence, I think that the Scottish Government’s approach is right. It is not that there is no risk; it is that there is a low risk, which strikes an appropriate balance between defenders’ and pursuers’ interests. At the end of the day, most people with a personal injury award will not have considered an investment portfolio previously. They are likely, as most of us would be, to err on the side of caution.
There might still need to be further work on the standard adjustment for financial advice and tax, but I recognise that we have pushed the Government further than it was originally comfortable going. As I said in the stage 3 proceedings on amendment 9, I welcome the minister’s move to a rate of 0.75 per cent. That is an increase of 0.25 per cent on the previous figure, but I will take it. The standard adjustment is under consideration by colleagues south of the border in the Ministry of Justice and the United Kingdom Government. I was therefore ever so slightly bemused by the Scottish Tories arguing against the position of the UK Tories, before they all decided to abstain after someone clearly phoned the front bench—but there we go.
There is no doubt that the change is a step in the right direction, but, after considering the evidence that the committee heard, we should acknowledge that it might not be enough. A range of reputable financial advisers who are experts in personal damages pointed to a much higher level of costs for tax and advice. I will not rehearse the arguments again, other than to say that even the Government actuary suggested a range of costs, from 0.5 per cent—yes, that is at the lower end—up to 2 per cent. Therefore, I ask that the minister ensures that the issue is kept under close review and that the figure is adjusted with experience, should that become necessary.
I will touch very briefly on periodical payment orders. I welcome the Government’s support for my amendment 1. Angela Constance and I pursued the matter in committee and during the stage 1 debate in the chamber. Quite simply, my amendment ensures that, at the end of a lengthy and often distressing court process, the views of the pursuer will be given due consideration by the judge, before they decide whether to make the award as a periodical payment or as a lump sum.
Overall, I hope that the bill will make a positive difference to the experience of people who have pursued a claim for personal injury. I will therefore be pleased to support the bill at decision time.
16:39Angela Constance (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Throughout the parliamentary process for the bill, it has been repeated, including by Jackie Baillie, that although the number of people who will be directly affected by it will—I hope—be small, the minister has brought before us a crucial bill. As I said during the stage 1 debate, the bill is crucial to those who have suffered the consequences of, for example, an accident at work, a birth that did not go to plan or a lack of care or negligence by an individual or organisation, leaving individuals to live with the tragedy of no longer being who they were meant to be or not being able to lead the life that they had worked for or dreamed of.
As Liam McArthur pointed out, while this is a discrete bill, it is also part of a wider package of reform.
I will focus principally on periodical payment orders. As we know, the committee heard a substantial amount of evidence about the risks that victims of personal injury bear in relation to compensation, particularly if it is received in a lump sum. We can be confident that the legislation that is now before the chamber is much improved—it was good to begin with but it is improved as a result of stages 2 and 3. However, no matter how good the bill is when it comes to calculating an award for damages, particularly for future loss, it is fair to say—as John Mason has often said—that that is not, and never will be, an exact science. The risk of undercompensation can be minimised, but it can never be removed entirely.
It is important to remember that damages are not surplus funds. They are meant to replace loss of earnings and provide for future care costs. Professor Wass gave very powerful evidence, advising the committee of inflation-busting care costs, the unpredictability of life expectancy and the costs of specialist services and accommodation. All of that points to the advantages of a periodical payment order. The bill will, for the first time, give the courts the power to impose periodical payments—crucially, where the continuity of payments is secure.
However, the committee also heard evidence from Patrick McGuire from Thompsons Solicitors and others, who expressed concern about a victim potentially being forced to accept a PPO and how disempowering that could be for someone who has already suffered a catastrophic injury and had to endure a lengthy court process. The minister herself acknowledged that some pursuers will want a clean break from those responsible for their injury. Jackie Baillie rightly pointed out that, in the future, we will see PPOs combined with a smaller lump sum.
The committee recommended that the Government lodge amendments to give more weight to the views of the injured person. During stage 1, the minister gave a very clear commitment to take matters forward. I am pleased that she has done that, in collaboration with other members, particularly Jackie Baillie. It is apt that the matter was addressed in the first and subsequent amendments considered during today’s stage 3 proceedings. The wording in amendment 1 that the court must have
“special regard to the pursuer’s needs”
is apt and somewhat poignant.
I welcome the fact that the minister found a way forward to ensure that the voice and preferences of those who have suffered injury are listened to and given appropriate weight, and that therefore we are not adding to the feeling of powerlessness that is felt too frequently in the lives of those with significant disabilities, illness or injury. As the minister highlighted, the bill’s objectives are to be clear, transparent and fair. In my view, the bill meets those objectives, and I congratulate the minister and her bill team.
16:43Daniel Johnson
I will try hard not to repeat the arguments I have already laid out and will touch on some of the points that have been usefully made in the debate.
John Mason set out a good analysis at the beginning of his remarks, asking what we want to achieve. There are two approaches—trying to get it right every time, which is an impossibility, and minimising the situations in which there is undercompensation. Ultimately, that is the approach that the Government has taken, and it is undoubtedly the right approach. If we seek to average off, there will be individuals who, through no fault of their own, are disadvantaged. We must have a regime that seeks to avoid that. The fact that some of those representing defenders say that the Government has been overgenerous is—dare I say it?—possibly a good sign. We cannot have a system whereby the net result is right; it has to be a system whereby we get it right more often than not. That is why, throughout the scrutiny of the bill, I have asked not just what a reasonable person might do, but what a more vulnerable person might do under such circumstances.
The most relevant question that John Mason posed was about what pursuers do with the money that they receive. We do not know. That will have to be monitored and reviewed, because, as Jackie Baillie pointed out, we cannot expect those who are awarded damages to suddenly become investment experts and to always make the right investment decisions. The bill involves a series of balances, and that might be the most important one. We must continue to view such people as vulnerable people. They cannot be expected to become investment experts overnight, which is why it was no surprise that amendment 9 was a matter of some debate. It is important that the issue is kept under review.
I turn to the point about public bodies and what happens when there is undercompensation or overcompensation. In both situations, our public bodies are the ultimate guarantors. We should be concerned about situations in which there could be overcompensation, with the result that public bodies such as the NHS might have to fork out higher payments. However, with undercompensation, there is a risk that those same bodies will have to meet the needs of people who are undercompensated. There is a risk that the shortfall that could arise would have to be met by social services and health services, which would have to support people in that position because they did not have enough money from the damages that were awarded. It is far from a one-sided situation; there are two sides, which need to be balanced.
Liam McArthur rightly highlighted two key interactions. We must be mindful of the changes that are being made by the UK Government—that is true of front-bench members of the UK Government in relation to the amendments that they seek to support or otherwise. To a degree, the Civil Litigation (Expenses and Group Proceedings) (Scotland) Bill and the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill will work in consort. They both deal with how private individuals can seek redress through the courts for situations that are not their fault but which will have a significant impact on them.
We cannot have another regime like the one that we have had, whereby the world moves on and the legislation is unable to keep up. It is clear that, with the welcome five-year review provision, the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill has the necessary flexibility and the ability to keep up, but we must make sure that all aspects, including all the calculations of discounts, are reviewed, because the world moves on. Where those discounts are baked into the legislation, there will have to be careful consideration of how they are updated.
Ultimately, the bill will help those who have suffered a great deal, and we hope that it will be a great help to people who pursue compensation through the courts.
16:48Dean Lockhart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
I am very pleased to contribute to this afternoon’s stage 3 debate on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill. I thank those who provided submissions to the Economy, Energy and Fair Work Committee, the witnesses who attended our meetings and the committee, the minister and her team for the constructive approach that has been taken.
As other members have said, although the bill is technical in nature, it is also very important. It provides for a new statutory regime to calculate the personal injury discount rate that applies to compensation awards in personal injury cases. The Scottish Conservatives welcome its passage. As Angela Constance said, although the discount rate will apply in only a relatively small number of cases, the impact on the individuals and families concerned will be life changing. The additional transparency and clarity that the bill will provide are to be welcomed.
Under Scots law, the role of compensation is to restore the injured party—to the extent that a financial award can—as closely as possible to the position that they were in before they were injured. When they assess the amount of a lump-sum award, courts take into account the net rate of investment return that the injured person might expect to receive from a reasonably prudent investment of that lump sum. That is what is referred to as the discount rate. As virtually every member has said, that calculation is not always a science. However, despite having some reservations in relation to the investment charges adjustment, which was the basis of our discussion of amendment 9, the Scottish Conservatives will support the bill at decision time.
Before the bill’s introduction, there was general consensus among defender and pursuer groups on the need to update the system, to increase the availability of periodical payment orders, to give courts further powers to introduce PPOs and to have regular discount rate reviews. I am pleased that, after revisions at stages 1 and 2, the bill now deals with those issues.
We are pleased that the minister lodged amendments at stage 2 to change the review cycle for the notional portfolio to every five years instead of every three years. It is also important that, in changing to a five-year cycle, the Scottish Government recognised the nature of fast-moving investment markets and changes to investment practice within that period, introducing a formal duty to consult stakeholders as part of that review cycle. I am grateful to the minister for supporting my amendment to that effect, as it has the advantage of making the legislation clearer and more transparent, which is one of the bill’s objectives.
There are still some concerns that the notional portfolio that is set out in the bill is too cautious—that it is too highly invested in fixed assets, which offer a lower return than investments in equities. Likewise, some stakeholders still believe that the Scottish Government is being cautious in its approach to having a 0.75 per cent standard adjustment for investment charges and taxation. We have heard the arguments on that before, but it must be seen in the context of the further margin adjustment of 0.5 per cent, which acts as an additional buffer to avoid undercompensation. We understand the Government’s approach to legislating in favour of a risk of overcompensation rather than undercompensation, but, as I mentioned, we have to recognise that that comes at a cost.
Some members—including Liam McArthur—have explored the implications of what those costs might be to the NHS in Scotland and other bodies that self-insure. Costs could also be borne by small businesses when claims exceed their insurance limit of indemnity.
It will be important for the Scottish Government to assess the bill’s operation and to continuously assess the change to the standard adjustment and other mechanics of the bill to make sure that the bill and those changes do not have unintended consequences.
The Scottish Conservatives will vote for the bill at decision time. We welcome many aspects of it and we hope that it will work in the interests of all stakeholders.
16:52Ash Denham
I thank those members who have contributed to the debate and I would like to take a moment to address some of the points that have been raised.
Gordon Lindhurst asked for more detail on what “special regard” would mean for the courts in practice. Of course, it will be for the courts to interpret and apply that provision in the circumstances of a particular case. It is not appropriate for us to go too far in speculating on how that provision will be applied in practice. I hope that I have reassured the member on that point.
Gordon Lindhurst and Liam McArthur raised the point about the difference between the discount rate in Scotland and the rate in England and Wales and what effect that might have on funding for the NHS. Until the respective reviews are completed, we will not know whether there will be different rates. In the financial memorandum, which was specifically mentioned by Liam McArthur, we set out the position as clearly as we can at the moment.
We should remember that the impact of the discount rate can be mitigated by the use of periodical payments. The provisions in the bill that relate to PPOs will be helpful to bodies such as the NHS, which will be deemed a secure funder.
Daniel Johnson and Jackie Baillie mentioned amendment 9. I reiterate that the amendment was the result of advice given to the Scottish Government after analysis by GAD of the most up-to-date evidence available. The rate will be subject to review ahead of each regular rate review and—to reassure Daniel Johnson—it can be adjusted by regulations if the evidence points to the need to do so. In that way, the legislation is, in a sense, future proofed, because it can be updated by regulation.
I note John Mason’s comments on amendment 9 and welcome his general comment on the modernising effect of the bill.
Finally, in her contribution, Angela Constance reminded us of the crucial fact that damages are not surplus funds. That was a point well made.
The bill may seem dry and technical, but often it is a detailed and considered approach that is precisely what is needed to address the complexities and challenges that arise when developing a broad solution for what are all individual and unique cases. Although fair and full compensation is at its heart, nevertheless the bill aims to strike a balance, remembering that overcompensation is to the detriment of the defender and their insurer. If the balance is tipped too far, ultimately it is the general public who pay, either through funding our public services, such as the NHS, or by paying more for their insurance premiums.
Equally, where their funds run out sooner than anticipated, the pursuer will usually have to fall back on the state for their care and possibly other needs. That point was raised by Daniel Johnson. I hope that it is clear that we have listened carefully to what has been said by stakeholders, the committee and other MSPs during stages 1 and 2. I have been pleased to support the committee’s amendments at stage 2; we have agreed some minor amendments to those today to ensure that they work as intended.
We know that there are many reasons why a pursuer may not want to have any part of their damages paid through an order for periodical payments. Those reasons might be very practical, for example if there is an element of contributory negligence involved, and therefore the damages award has been accordingly reduced. It may be that the investment of a lump sum is the most viable way of making up any shortfall, even if there are risks associated with that strategy. Members spoke eloquently about the powerlessness that a pursuer might feel should a PPO be imposed against their wishes. I have sympathy with that, so I was happy to meet Jackie Baillie on that point to discuss the issues and see whether we could reach an accommodation on what would be an appropriate amendment to the bill, bearing in mind that there were legal constraints around what could be done. I think that Jackie Baillie has got the right balance in her amendment in that regard.
Overall, the bill has picked a very careful path through the competing demands of pursuer and defender interests. It was defender interests, supported by the committee in its stage 1 report, who pressed for change in the frequency of review from three years to five years. I lodged some amendments of a minor nature that were agreed to today that respond to points raised by the Association of British Insurers after its scrutiny of the bill, and I was pleased to lodge amendments that were agreed to at stage 2 that ensure that where proceedings to vary an order for periodical payments are raised, the pursuer should continue to receive the protection of qualified one-way costs shifting, as that is in the spirit of the legislation as it relates to personal injury actions.
The amendment debated earlier that increased the standard adjustment for tax and investment management costs simply preserves the interdependencies and therefore the integrity of the methodology for reaching a new rate and ensures that it remains robust and fit for purpose.
On that note, it would be helpful to focus on one of those provisions in particular. I would like to talk about the hypothetical investor, because that is the constant in the bill. Any changes to the investment portfolio, whether they be of the asset type or the percentage allocation, can be made only where the end result is that the notional portfolio remains suitable for investment by the hypothetical investor. The characteristics of the hypothetical investor have been carefully formulated to capture the likely investment objectives of a pursuer.
Importantly, the bill has been future proofed so that the Scottish ministers have the tools and flexibility to ensure that all the components necessary to arrive at a rate, or rates, can be kept up to date. That will allow ministers to ensure that the legislative framework for setting the rate remains appropriate.
Finally, I repeat my thanks to all those who gave evidence to help to improve the bill during its parliamentary passage, and I commend the motion in my name.
The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)
That concludes proceedings on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill at stage 3.
19 March 2019
Final vote on the Bill
After the final discussion of the Bill, MSPs vote on whether they think it should become law.

Final vote transcript
The Presiding Officer (Ken Macintosh)
There is only one question to be put as a result of today’s business. Because it is a question on a bill at stage 3, we will have a division. The question is, that motion S5M-16394, in the name of Ash Denham, on the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill at stage 3, be agreed to. Members should cast their votes now.
For
Adam, George (Paisley) (SNP)
Adamson, Clare (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP)
Allan, Alasdair (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP)
Arthur, Tom (Renfrewshire South) (SNP)
Baillie, Jackie (Dumbarton) (Lab)
Baker, Claire (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Lab)
Balfour, Jeremy (Lothian) (Con)
Ballantyne, Michelle (South Scotland) (Con)
Beattie, Colin (Midlothian North and Musselburgh) (SNP)
Bibby, Neil (West Scotland) (Lab)
Bowman, Bill (North East Scotland) (Con)
Briggs, Miles (Lothian) (Con)
Brown, Keith (Clackmannanshire and Dunblane) (SNP)
Burnett, Alexander (Aberdeenshire West) (Con)
Campbell, Aileen (Clydesdale) (SNP)
Carlaw, Jackson (Eastwood) (Con)
Carson, Finlay (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)
Chapman, Peter (North East Scotland) (Con)
Coffey, Willie (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
Cole-Hamilton, Alex (Edinburgh Western) (LD)
Constance, Angela (Almond Valley) (SNP)
Corry, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Crawford, Bruce (Stirling) (SNP)
Cunningham, Roseanna (Perthshire South and Kinross-shire) (SNP)
Denham, Ash (Edinburgh Eastern) (SNP)
Dey, Graeme (Angus South) (SNP)
Doris, Bob (Glasgow Maryhill and Springburn) (SNP)
Dornan, James (Glasgow Cathcart) (SNP)
Dugdale, Kezia (Lothian) (Lab)
Ewing, Annabelle (Cowdenbeath) (SNP)
Ewing, Fergus (Inverness and Nairn) (SNP)
Fabiani, Linda (East Kilbride) (SNP)
Fee, Mary (West Scotland) (Lab)
Findlay, Neil (Lothian) (Lab)
Finnie, John (Highlands and Islands) (Green)
FitzPatrick, Joe (Dundee City West) (SNP)
Forbes, Kate (Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch) (SNP)
Fraser, Murdo (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Freeman, Jeane (Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley) (SNP)
Gibson, Kenneth (Cunninghame North) (SNP)
Gilruth, Jenny (Mid Fife and Glenrothes) (SNP)
Golden, Maurice (West Scotland) (Con)
Gougeon, Mairi (Angus North and Mearns) (SNP)
Grahame, Christine (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP)
Grant, Rhoda (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Gray, Iain (East Lothian) (Lab)
Greene, Jamie (West Scotland) (Con)
Greer, Ross (West Scotland) (Green)
Halcro Johnston, Jamie (Highlands and Islands) (Con)
Harper, Emma (South Scotland) (SNP)
Harris, Alison (Central Scotland) (Con)
Harvie, Patrick (Glasgow) (Green)
Haughey, Clare (Rutherglen) (SNP)
Hepburn, Jamie (Cumbernauld and Kilsyth) (SNP)
Hyslop, Fiona (Linlithgow) (SNP)
Johnson, Daniel (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab)
Johnstone, Alison (Lothian) (Green)
Kelly, James (Glasgow) (Lab)
Kerr, Liam (North East Scotland) (Con)
Kidd, Bill (Glasgow Anniesland) (SNP)
Lamont, Johann (Glasgow) (Lab)
Lennon, Monica (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Leonard, Richard (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lindhurst, Gordon (Lothian) (Con)
Lochhead, Richard (Moray) (SNP)
Lockhart, Dean (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Lyle, Richard (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP)
MacDonald, Angus (Falkirk East) (SNP)
Macdonald, Lewis (North East Scotland) (Lab)
MacGregor, Fulton (Coatbridge and Chryston) (SNP)
Mackay, Rona (Strathkelvin and Bearsden) (SNP)
Macpherson, Ben (Edinburgh Northern and Leith) (SNP)
Maguire, Ruth (Cunninghame South) (SNP)
Mason, John (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP)
Mason, Tom (North East Scotland) (Con)
Matheson, Michael (Falkirk West) (SNP)
McAlpine, Joan (South Scotland) (SNP)
McArthur, Liam (Orkney Islands) (LD)
McDonald, Mark (Aberdeen Donside) (Ind)
McKee, Ivan (Glasgow Provan) (SNP)
McMillan, Stuart (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP)
McNeill, Pauline (Glasgow) (Lab)
Mitchell, Margaret (Central Scotland) (Con)
Mundell, Oliver (Dumfriesshire) (Con)
Neil, Alex (Airdrie and Shotts) (SNP)
Paterson, Gil (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP)
Rennie, Willie (North East Fife) (LD)
Robison, Shona (Dundee City East) (SNP)
Ross, Gail (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (SNP)
Rumbles, Mike (North East Scotland) (LD)
Ruskell, Mark (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)
Sarwar, Anas (Glasgow) (Lab)
Scott, John (Ayr) (Con)
Simpson, Graham (Central Scotland) (Con)
Smith, Liz (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Smyth, Colin (South Scotland) (Lab)
Somerville, Shirley-Anne (Dunfermline) (SNP)
Stevenson, Stewart (Banffshire and Buchan Coast) (SNP)
Stewart, Alexander (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con)
Stewart, David (Highlands and Islands) (Lab)
Stewart, Kevin (Aberdeen Central) (SNP)
Swinney, John (Perthshire North) (SNP)
Todd, Maree (Highlands and Islands) (SNP)
Tomkins, Adam (Glasgow) (Con)
Torrance, David (Kirkcaldy) (SNP)
Watt, Maureen (Aberdeen South and North Kincardine) (SNP)
Wells, Annie (Glasgow) (Con)
Wheelhouse, Paul (South Scotland) (SNP)
White, Sandra (Glasgow Kelvin) (SNP)
Whittle, Brian (South Scotland) (Con)
Wightman, Andy (Lothian) (Green)
Yousaf, Humza (Glasgow Pollok) (SNP)
The Presiding Officer
The result of the division is: For 112, Against 0, Abstentions 0.
Motion agreed to,
That the Parliament agrees that the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill be passed.
The Presiding Officer
The motion has been agreed to and therefore the Damages (Investment Returns and Periodical Payments) (Scotland) Bill is passed. [Applause.]
19 March 2019