Surrey facelift woman Penny Johnson awarded £6m damages
A woman has won more than £6m in damages against a plastic
surgeon who she said "played God" with her life.
Penny Johnson, from Godstone, Surrey, brought the High Court
case against Le Roux Fourie who she said carried out "experimental
surgery" in 2003.
The businesswoman said she suffered nerve damage in a facelift,
which led to her financial and IT consultancy business going into
administration.
Mr Fourie admitted liability but denied the surgery in Leeds was
experimental.
At the High Court, sitting in London, Mrs Johnson asked Mr
Justice Owen to award her a proportion of the £54m she said was her
potential loss, as a 50% shareholder, when Bishop Cavanagh Ltd
failed in 2009.
She said the stress of the litigation had made her condition
worse.
The judge gave his ruling in the case on Monday, awarding her
£6,190,884.92.
During the hearing, Mrs Johnson said her face was constantly
contracting as a result of the operation carried out at Bupa
Methley Park Hospital in Leeds.
Lost earnings
"I don't sleep and I have a permanent buzzing around my eye
which can be so intense that I can't think about anything," she
said.
Alain Choo Choy, QC for Mr Fourie said his client put the
potential business loss at only £9m.
During her absence, the company was managed by her husband,
Peter, with whom she now owns another business, BC Direct.
The bulk of the damages award relates to lost earnings, both
past and future.
In his ruling, the judge said Mrs Johnson was formerly a
confident, happy and outstandingly successful woman.
'Different person'
The negligent surgery had serious physical and psychological
consequences, resulting in anxiety and depression and had affected
her marriage.
As well as injuries to her face, Mrs Johnson suffered pain from
the replacement of pre-existing breast implants which was carried
out at the same time as the facelift.
"Their marriage has survived; but the claimant said in evidence
that she is no longer a wife to her husband," the judge said.
"He says that she is now a completely different person and that
their marriage is not what it used to be.
"They no longer go out together as they used regularly to do,
and have become detached from the close knit group of friends whose
company they used to enjoy."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-13500067