Chapter 6 - Negligence
Chapter 6 - Negligence
Chapter 6 - Negligence
NEGLIGENCE
Introduction
Whereas the tort of negligence is concerned with the link between the
defendant’s behaviour and the risk that ought to have been foreseen.
When revising negligence, be careful not to let the everyday meaning of the
word distract you from the legal meaning of negligence.
Introduction
A breach of legal duty to take care which results in damage to the claimant.
Types of Negligence
1. Advertent Negligence
Also called willful negligence or recklessness.
Harm done is foreseen as possible or probable, but it is not willed.
Example: Person who drives furiously in a crowded street causes injury
to persons is said to have committed Advertent Negligence.
2. Inadvertent Negligence
Negligence as a result of ignorance, thoughtlessness or forgetfulness
Harm is neither foreseen nor willful.
Example: Doctor who treats a patient with negligence
Theories about Negligence
Subjective Theory of Negligence
The defendant may raise certain defences to the action. The most important
defences are that the claimant consented to run the risk of the injury (volenti
) or that the defendant was contributorily negligent.
Elements of the tort
Example
A drove his car over the speed limit and failed to keep a proper lookout, as he
was talking to the passenger next to him. A’s car struck B, a pedestrian,
causing personal injuries to B.
Analysing this event in terms of the legal categories, A owed a duty of care to
B as one road user to another.
A was in breach of the duty in speeding and failing to keep a proper lookout
(i.e. A was ‘negligent’).
B has suffered damage as a result of A’s negligence.
If B had failed to look before stepping into the road, it would be open to a
court to find that B had been contributorily negligent and reduce his damages
by the proportion which he was held to be responsible for the accident.
The interests protected
Negligence is the most important modern tort. Other torts are normally
identified by the particular interest of the claimant which is protected: for
example,
1. Defamation protects interests in reputation
2. Nuisance protects a person’s use and enjoyment of land.
Negligence, on the other hand, protects a number of interests and the only
unifying factor is the defendant’s conduct, which must be labelled as
negligent if liability is to arise.
The interests protected
Examples
A drives his car negligently and collides with B’s car. This causes personal
injuries to B and damage to his car (property damage). B may recover
damages from A for both these losses. B may lose wages as a result of his
injuries and may have to hire a car while his own is being repaired. Both these
losses are recoverable as consequential economic loss.
A asks his solicitor, B, to draw up a will leaving A’s property to C. B negligently
drafts the will with the result that C is unable to take his bequest under the
will. C may sue B in negligence, for the value of his lost bequest. The interest
protected here is C’s economic interest and C is said to recover damages for
pure economic loss. C has suffered no personal injuries or property damage
and his loss is said to be damage to the pocket or pure economic loss.
Problem areas
Medical negligence There have been claims that India is suffering a medical
malpractice crisis similar to that in the United States and UK. Doctors claim
that the threat of litigation leads to ‘defensive medicine’: i.e. carrying out
procedures in order to avoid being sued, rather than for the benefit of the
patient. The rise in the Caesarean section rate is often pointed to as an
example of defensive medicine
Liability in contract and tort
Where the parties have a contractual relationship, can there also be tortious
liability? The answer to this question has practical importance as if the
answer is yes, the claimant will be able to take advantage of tortious rules
which may be more advantageous. This is known as concurrent liability.
The most important of these will be the rules on limitation. These rules
govern the time period within which a claimant must bring an action. In
contract, time periods generally run from the time a contract is made and in
tort from the time damage is suffered.
This concerns the relationship between the defendant and claimant, which
must be such that there is an obligation upon the defendant to take proper
care to avoid causing injury to the claimant in all the circumstances of the
case.
It is accepted that negligence does not exist in a vacuum and that there is no
all embracing duty owed to the whole world in all circumstances.
When a negligence action is brought to court, the judge will usually be able to
rely on a precedent to determine whether a duty exists. But what if there is
no precedent? What test should the judge use to determine whether a duty
exists in this particular case?
Duty of care
Established duty situations: there are a number of situations in which the courts
recognise the existence of a duty of care. these usually arise as a result of some
sort of special relationship between the parties. examples include:
Legal principle
Since Mrs Donoghue had not bought the bottle of ginger beer herself she
could not make a claim in contract upon breach of warranty. She therefore
brought an action against the manufacturer of the ginger beer.
The House of Lords had to decide whether a duty of care existed as a matter
of law. The House of Lords held that the manufacturer owed her a duty to
take care that the bottle did not contain foreign bodies which could cause her
personal harm. This is known as the narrow rule in Donoghue v. Stevenson –
that a manufacturer of goods owes a duty of care to their ultimate consumer.
Duty of Care
“You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can
reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour. Who, then, in
law is my neighbour? The answer seems to be persons who are so closely and
directly affected by my act that I ought reasonably to have them in my
contemplation as being so affected when I am directing my mind to the acts or
omissions which are called in question.”
Duty of Care
Facts
The case considered the liability of an auditor for financial loss suffered by
investors. However, it also set out the three points which a court must
consider to establish whether a duty of care exists.
Legal principle
The three points are:
It has often been remarked that the boundaries between these three
concepts [from Caparo] are somewhat porous but they are probably none the
worse for that.
The basic elements that need to be considered in establishing duty of care are :
Note: Please don’t engage in a discussion of the elements of the duty of care
if you are tackling a problem question that deals with an established duty
situation. You will waste words and time going through the Caparo test if the
problem involves, say, an incident between road users. You should simply say
that there is an established duty situation and move on to the key issues
raised by the question.
Duty of care
Exceptions
There is a duty to act positively if there is a special relationship or a relationship
of power or control between the parties. examples include:
prison officers and prisoners
employer and employee
occupier and visitor
parent and child
Duty of Care
Unborn children
The existence of a duty of care requires reasonable foresight of harm.
However, in the case of unborn children, the defendant might not realise that
the female claimant is pregnant, although it is quite possible that a person’s
negligence might harm an unborn child.
In Burton v. Islington Health Authority [1993] QB 204 (CA) it was held that a
duty of care is owed to an unborn child which becomes actionable on birth.
Duty of Care
In Hill v. Chief Constable of West Yorkshire [1989] AC 53 (HL) it was held that
the duty of the police is to the public at large.
The mother of his last victim sued the police for negligence for failing to catch
culprit, alleging numerous missed opportunities. The House of Lords held that
the police owed no duty of care towards Susan Hill to protect her from the
Ripper on the basis that if such claims were allowed, the police would be
inhibited in the exercise of their professional judgement and that a significant
amount of police resource would be diverted from investigating crime to the
defence of civil cases brought against them.
Breach of Duty
Apart from three elements of Duty of care, here learners are required to
check fourth requirement (i.e) Did the defendant fall below the required
standard of care?
Breach of Duty
Deceased boarded a bus run by the appellant. Since the bus was overcrowded
the deceased along with other passengers got on to the roof of the bus as
there was no accommodation available inside the bus. He took his seat on the
right side. The deceased was struck by an overhanging branch of a tree and
he fell down on the ground sustaining multiple injuries in his forehead, chest
etc. He died on the day following as a result of the injuries suffered. The
mother and the brother of the deceased lodged a claim of Rs. 20,000 by way
of compensation against the appellant and the insurer.
Court held that driver and the conductor were neglient. Inviting passengers to
travel on the roof amounts to rash and negligent act and a great amount of
care and caution is expected from them.
Breach of Duty
This action arises out of an unfortunate accident to six young children in the
old mansion house in the King's Park, Glasgow, which belongs to the
appellants. At that time the mansion house was being used inter alia for the
service of teas to visitors to the park.
Two members of picnic party were carrying big urn containing hot tea to the
tea room. Suddenly one of the person lost the grip of the handle of the urn
thereby injuring the children. It was alleged that manager could not anticipate
such an event would happen as a consequences of tea urn being carried
through passage and therefore, had no duty to take precautions against the
occurrence of this event.
Breach of Duty
“The standard of foresight of the reasonable man is, in one sense, an impersonal test.
It eliminates the personal equation and is independent of the idiosyncrasies of the
particular person whose conduct is in question. Some persons are by nature unduly
timorous and imagine every path beset with lions. Others, of more robust
temperament, fail to foresee or nonchalantly disregard even the most obvious
dangers. The reasonable man is presumed to be free both from over-apprehension
and from over-confidence, but there is a sense in which the standard of care of the
reasonable man involves in its application a subjective element. It is still left to the
judge to decide what, in the circumstances of the particular case, the reasonable
man would have had in contemplation, and what, accordingly, the party sought to be
made liable ought to have foreseen. Here there is room for diversity of view, as,
indeed, is well illustrated in the present case. What to one judge may seem far-fetched
may seem to another both natural and probable.”
Breach of Duty
“I have not been referred to any Indian or English authority in which a duty of care may
have been recognised in favour of a Passenger who keeps his elbow out. But absence
of a direct precedent to cover the facts of the instant case does not imply that no
duty situation can be recognised in this case”.
“It cannot be disputed that the driver of a bus which carries passengers owes a duty of
care for the safety of passengers. While driving he must have the passengers in
contemplation and he must avoid acts or omissions which can reasonably be
foreseen to injure them and in deciding what acts or omissions he should avoid, he
must bear in mind the normal habits of passengers. It is a matter of common
experience that passengers who sit adjoining a window very often rest their arm on
the window sill by which act the elbow projects outside the window”.
NOTE:
Don’t confuse the terms duty of care and standard of care. The standard of
care determines whether a particular duty of care has been breached. You
should always consider the existence of the duty itself before discussing
whether or not a particular defendant has reached the appropriate standard
required to absolve him or her from liability.
Breach of Duty
Legal principle
the standard of care for doctors is ‘the standard of the ordinary skilled man
exercising and professing to have that special skill’. there were conflicting
views from practitioners on the use of relaxants and restraints. As there were
therefore doctors who would have acted in the same way, the doctor treating
the claimant had acted in accordance with a competent body of medical
opinion and was therefore not negligent.
Breach of Duty
However, the Bolam test has also been criticized for being too protective of
professionals. in medical negligence cases in particular, it has been argued
that the test allows practitioners to set their own standards, rather than
having those standards set by the courts.
Breach of Duty
Unskilled defendants
The general standard of care in negligence is an objective test, judged against
the standards of the reasonable person. this means that no allowance is
made for the inexperience or lack of skill of the defendant.
Children
Child defendants are expected to reach the standard of care reasonably
expected of ordinary children of the same age.
Sporting events
Spectators and competitors in sporting events may be owed a lower
standard of care than the general standard.
Note: Many students fail to consider all the circumstances when deciding
whether there has been a breach of duty. Therefore, if the facts of the
question present an opportunity for you to discuss their possible effects on
the standard of care, you should do so.
Breach of Duty
Magnitude of risk
The magnitude of the risk is determined by the likelihood of it occurring
and the seriousness of the potential injury.
Bolton v. Stone [1951] AC 850 (HL); Miller v. Jackson [1977] QB 966 (CA)
Concerning: standard of care; likelihood of injury
Facts: Both cases involved damage caused by cricket balls which had been
hit out of the ground. In Bolton v. Stone the ground had been occupied and
used as a cricket ground for about 90 years, and there was evidence that
on some six occasions in a period of over 30 years a ball had been hit into
the highway, but no one had been injured. In Miller v. Jackson cricket balls
were hit out of the ground eight or nine times a season.
Legal principle: A greater risk of damage than normal increases the
standard of care required of a potential defendant. Negligence was not
found in Bolton v. Stone but was in Miller v. Jackson.
Breach of Duty
Seriousness of injury
If the defendant knows that a specific individual is at risk of suffering greater damage
than normal, the defendant may be required to reach a higher standard of care.
Legal principle: The only way to remove the risk would have been to close the
affected part of the factory until it had dried out. This would have been
expensive and disproportionate to the relatively small risk of injury.
Therefore, the greater the risk of injury, the more a defendant has to do to
reduce or eliminate that risk, even if it is costly. The defendant will not
generally be able to rely on the fact that the cost of precautions was too
expensive to excuse their breach of duty. Impecuniosities is not a defence to a
breach of duty.
Breach of Duty
Social value
Where the defendant’s behavior is in the public interest, it is likely to require
the exercise of a lower standard of care.
However, this does not mean that the defendant is justified in taking any risk.
Emergency services, for example, must still take care in passing red traffic
signals and remember to use their sirens and lights to alert other road users
to their presence.
Breach of Duty
This is a Latin phrase which means ‘the thing speaks for itself’.
In certain circumstances courts will be prepared to find a breach of duty against
the defendant without hearing detailed evidence and therefore prima facie
negligence. There are three conditions which must be satisfied for the claimant to
be able to use res ipsa loquitur.
Causation
The claimant must show a causal link between the defendant’s act or
omission and the loss or damage suffered. This is often referred to as the
‘chain of causation’.
Factual causation
The breach of duty must be the factual cause of the damage. The general test
used by the courts to determine factual causation is known as the ‘but for’
test.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
Facts: A workman, an epileptic, was set to work painting the roof inside a factory,
which necessitated his doing the work from a platform some 23 feet above the floor of
the factory. There were no guard-rails . The workman fell from the platform and was
killed.
In this case, had appropriate railings been installed, the claimant would not have not
fallen off the platform while having the seizure.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
Facts
A patient was turned away from a casualty department by a doctor who
refused to examine him. He later died of arsenic poisoning. It was shown that
the man would not have recovered even if the doctor had treated him.
Legal principle
The hospital was not liable for the clear breach of duty in failing to treat the
patient. The failure to treat was not the cause of death. The patient would
have died just the same.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
a third-party act;
an act of the claimant; or
an act of nature.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
Facts: As a result of the defendants’ negligence, the claimant suffered a leg injury. This
left his leg seriously weakened. He later fell when attempting to descend a steep flight
of steps with no handrail, suffering further serious injuries. He did not seek assistance
in climbing the stairs.
Legal principle: The claimant’s act in attempting to descend a steep staircase without
a handrail in the normal manner and without adult assistance when his leg had
previously given way on occasions was unreasonable. The court held that his act was
a novus actus interveniens which had broken the chain of causation. As a result, the
defendants were not liable in damages for his second injury.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
Act of nature
Intervening acts of nature will not generally break the chain of causation.
However, the defendant will not normally be liable where the intervening act of
nature is unforeseeable and separate from the initial negligent act or omission.
Remoteness
The final element required in establishing negligence is the extent of the damage
suffered by the claimant which should be attributable to the defendant.
In other words, for how much of the claimant’s loss should the defendant be
responsible?
Remoteness is sometimes referred to as ‘legal causation’ or ‘causation in law’.
It is basically a test to identify whether injury caused was a remote consequences of
the wrongful act or omission of the defendant. Failure to prove by the plaintiff will
result into non imposition of liability on the defendant.
It is based on a belief that a person can visualise only the natural and proximate
consequences.
Now the test of remoteness has drifted from earlier established notion that
he who does the first wrong shall answer for all consequential damages.
Two important tests laid down by courts are test of directness and test of resonable
forseeability.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
The test in Re Polemis does not limit liability for the direct consequences of a
negligent act, however severe or unforeseeable those consequences may be.
It has been criticised for its unfairness in that respect.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v. Morts Dock and Engineering Co Ltd (The Wagon
Mound) (No 1) [1961] AC 388 (PC)
Concerning: remoteness of damage
Facts: The defendants negligently leaked a quantity of bunkering oil into Sydney
Harbour from a tanker. This oil drifted into the claimant’s wharf where it mixed
with assorted debris. Welding was taking place in the wharf. The claimants sought
(and received) assurances that it was safe for them to continue welding. However,
sparks from the welding ignited the oily wadding which caused fire to spread to
two ships, damaging them. The wharf was also damaged.
Legal principle: At first instance, the trial judge applied the principles from Re
Polemis, finding that the defendants were liable for the fire damage, since the
damage to the wharf was a foreseeable consequence of the leakage.
On appeal, the Privy Council reversed the decision, holding that the correct test
for remoteness is reasonable foreseeability of the kind or type of damage in fact
suffered by the claimant.
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
Court observed:
“Even a fool may be wise after the event. But it is not sight of a fool, it is the
foresight if a reasonable man which alone can determine responsibility. “
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
The tests in Re Polemis and The Wagon Mound (No 1) cannot be reconciled.
The decision in Re Polemis was taken by the Court of Appeal and has never
been overruled, since The Wagon Mound (No 1) was heard by the Privy
Council.
As such both cases remain good law. However, The Wagon Mound (No 1) is
now accepted by the courts (including the Court of Appeal) as the relevant
test to follow in questions of remoteness.
Indian courts have accepted the test of reasonable foressablity as laid down
in the Wagon mound’s case
Causation and Remoteness of Damage
1. Contributory Negligence: It was the Common law rule that anyone who by his
own negligence contributed to the injury of which he complains cannot
maintain an action against another in respect of it. Because, he will be
considered in law to be author of his wrong.
2. Ex turpi causa non oritur actio: A plaintiff will be unable to pursue legal
remedy if it arises in connection with his own illegal act