McFarlane v Tayside Health BoardMcFarlane v Tayside Health Board [2000] 2 AC 59[1] is a leading House of Lords decision concerning wrongful birth in the English law of negligence, though the case was Scottish. The specific ratio decidendi of the decision is debated, but the judgments provide guidance and authoritative discussion used in later cases.[2] FactsThe pursuers decided that they did not want to have any more children. The husband had a vasectomy. The surgeon was employed by Tayside Health Board, the defendant. After the surgery, the surgeon told the husband that contraceptives were no longer necessary. The wife became pregnant and gave birth to a healthy child.[3] ClaimThe pursuers alleged loss was caused by negligence on the part of the health board. The couple claimed on two bases: first, the physical discomfort suffered by the wife from the pregnancy, confinement, and delivery; second, the financial costs for the caring of and bringing up of a child.[4] The Outer House of the Court of Session dismissed the action. They held that a normal pregnancy could not constitute personal injury damages. The benefits of the child were held to have outweighed any of the cost associated.[citation needed] The Inner House of the Court of Session reversed the decision, saying that the wife was entitled to damages for the effects of pregnancy, and the benefits associated with parenthood were not required to be balanced against the loss.[5] House of Lords DecisionLord Slynn held that the doctor had a duty of care in regards to the pregnancy, but not towards the costs of rearing the child:[5]
Lord Hope held that the claim was entirely for economic loss, which is generally not recoverable. However, the benefits of the raising of the child were to be balanced with the costs of raising the child. Since the benefits are incalculable, but the costs are, the costs of raising the child are not recoverable as damages.[5]
Lord Steyn and Lord Millett both advanced policy arguments. Lord Millett argued that a society must consider the balance of cost and blessing as beneficial.[5] Lord Steyn advances a distributive justice argument, that the court needed to consider whether spreading the burden across society was just, which for wrongful conception, it was not.[5] See alsoReferences
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