Bukit Tinggi Hospital v Navin Sharma [2025] MLJU 3236 — Court of Appeal Recalibrates Medical Negligence Damages
通过 齐慧冰医生, Advocate & Solicitor & qualified medical doctor · Published 6 May 2026 · Case commentary
TL;DR: The Court of Appeal in Bukit Tinggi Hospital Sdn Bhd & Anor v Navin Sharma A/L Karam Chand & Anor [2025] MLJU 3236 has shifted how Malaysian courts assess damages in medical-negligence cases. The decision signals a more restrained, evidence-driven methodology — particularly for dependency claims, pain and suffering and loss of amenities (PSLA), and aggravated damages. The practical effect: plaintiffs with rigorous evidence will continue to recover substantial damages; loosely-pleaded claims will be cut down. This article unpacks what changed and what it means for both claimants and defendants.
The case in brief
The dispute concerned medical-negligence claims against Bukit Tinggi Hospital and a treating professional. The trial court awarded damages across the conventional heads. On appeal, the Court of Appeal reassessed each head with a notably more restrained methodology — emphasising contemporaneous evidence, causal nexus, and quantifiable economic loss rather than general or “atmospheric” assessment.
The three substantive shifts
1. Dependency claims — sharper proof of dependency
Dependency claims (where the deceased patient’s family claims for loss of financial support) now require clearer evidence of the deceased’s net income, recurring contribution patterns, and the dependants’ actual dependence. Loose claims based on the deceased’s gross earnings without deduction for personal expenses, or general assertions of family dependency, will be discounted.
Practical effect: family-side preparation must include payslips, tax returns (EA forms / Form B), bank statements showing recurring contributions, and clear testimony about household financial arrangements. Where the deceased was self-employed, contemporaneous accounts and proof of trade are essential.
2. PSLA — evidence-based, not category-based
Pain and suffering and loss of amenities (PSLA) was traditionally awarded by reference to broad injury categories and historical scale figures. The Court of Appeal in Bukit Tinggi has emphasised individualised assessment based on the actual functional, psychological, and lifestyle impact on the specific plaintiff — supported by medical and (where relevant) psychiatric evidence.
Practical effect: generic scale-based PSLA submissions (“Category 4 spinal injury = RM 200,000”) will lose ground to evidence-led submissions (“Plaintiff was a competitive cyclist now confined to sedentary work, with documented loss of pre-injury activities and psychiatric reports of adjustment disorder”).
3. Aggravated damages — sharply circumscribed
Aggravated damages now require specific evidence of conduct that aggravated the harm beyond the underlying negligence itself. The Court of Appeal made clear that not every defended medical-negligence case will attract aggravated damages — the defendant’s denial of liability, by itself, is not aggravating conduct. What aggravates: dismissive treatment by the practitioner, post-incident concealment, false or misleading statements during the patient’s care, or systemic failings the defendant knew of and ignored.
Practical effect: aggravated damages must be pleaded specifically, with evidentiary particulars, and proved at trial. Generic claims for aggravated damages “by reason of the defendant’s conduct” will be struck out or assessed at nominal levels.
What this means for plaintiffs
Three priorities now matter more than ever:
- Independent expert evidence — for each head of loss. Breach, causation, prognosis, future care requirements, and life-expectancy assessments must each be addressed by a credentialed expert. The Court of Appeal in 福福娜 对 苏福慕 医生 [2007] 1 MLJ 593 framework still governs liability; Bukit Tinggi now layers a quantum-evidence discipline on top.
- Economic loss documentation. Payslips, EA forms, employment letters, future-earning trajectories. For self-employed plaintiffs and entrepreneurs, audited accounts and forensic-accountant projections. For young plaintiffs, statistical earning-table evidence (e.g., Department of Statistics Malaysia data on graduate earnings).
- Psychological and lifestyle impact evidence. Where psychological harm is claimed, psychiatric reports with diagnostic clarity (DSM-5 or ICD-11 criteria). For lifestyle loss, contemporaneous evidence of the plaintiff’s pre-incident activities — gym memberships, club affiliations, sporting records, family photographs documenting pre-incident life.
This is exactly the evidentiary discipline we apply at Chris & Partners. 戚惠冰医生的医学训练 means we identify the right experts, brief them efficiently, and present medical evidence in court the way doctors actually communicate.
What this means for defendants (hospitals, doctors, insurers)
Bukit Tinggi gives defendants stronger ground to challenge each head of damages individually. Defendant strategy should now emphasise:
- Particulars-stage applications to compel the plaintiff to particularise each head of damage with evidentiary support before discovery
- Specific challenges to dependency calculations — cross-examination on net-income deductions
- Challenging PSLA scale figures with evidence the plaintiff’s actual functional impact is below scale
- Striking out unpleaded or under-pleaded aggravated-damages claims
Insurers will likely revise their reserve calculations downward for well-defended cases.
How Bukit Tinggi fits the broader case-law trajectory
The Malaysian Federal Court and Court of Appeal have been moving toward more evidence-driven quantum assessment for some time. 福福娜 对 苏福慕 医生 [2007] 1 MLJ 593 modernised the duty to advise of risks. Zulhasnimar v Dr Kuppu Velumani [2017] 5 MLJ 438 reaffirmed Bolam-Bolitho for diagnosis and treatment. Bukit Tinggi continues this trajectory on the damages side — confirming that Malaysian medical-negligence law is maturing toward the same evidence-rigorous methodology applied in English, Singaporean, and Australian appellate practice.
Practical steps for plaintiffs considering a medical-negligence claim post-Bukit Tinggi
- Preserve medical records immediately — formal Personal Data Protection Act 2010 request to the hospital and treating doctors.
- Document financial and lifestyle impact contemporaneously — keep a journal of pain, restriction, missed activities, and income loss.
- 免费30分钟咨询 with a doctor-lawyer firm to assess viability before incurring expert-report costs. Our medical negligence practice page details how we approach claim assessment.
- Mind the limitation period — three years from the date of knowledge under section 24A Limitation Act 1953; six years general. Government hospitals require notice under the Government Proceedings Act 1956.
FAQ — Bukit Tinggi Hospital v Navin Sharma [2025]
Does Bukit Tinggi apply to all medical-negligence cases? Yes — as a Court of Appeal decision it binds all High Courts and Sessions Courts in Malaysia. It applies to public and private hospital cases alike.
Will damages awards now be smaller? Smaller on average for thinly-pleaded claims, but unchanged or larger for well-evidenced claims. The decision raises the evidentiary floor, not the ceiling.
Should I still claim aggravated damages? Yes — where the facts genuinely support them. Plead them specifically with particulars. Don’t include aggravated damages by rote in every medical-negligence claim.
What about claims against government hospitals? Bukit Tinggi applies. Additionally, you must give notice to the Attorney General under the Government Proceedings Act 1956 before suing.
How does the doctor-lawyer angle help me as a plaintiff? We read medical records the way doctors do, identify the right experts, brief them efficiently, and translate complex medical evidence into language a Judge can act on. Post-Bukit Tinggi, that evidentiary discipline is what separates successful claims from underwhelming awards.
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