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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mawdsley v Cosmosair Plc [2002] EWCA Civ 587 (18 April 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/587.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 587 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
(MR JUSTICE SINGER)
Strand London WC2A 2LL Thursday 18 April 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
SHEILA MAWDSLEY | ||
Claimant/Respondent | ||
- v - | ||
COSMOSAIR PLC | ||
Defendant/Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7421 4040 Fax: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR SIMON KILVINGTON (Instructed by Messrs Pannone & Partners, Manchester, M32 BU)
appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
(1) She pleads that Cosmos breached its duty under Regulation 4 of the Package Travel Regulations 1992 ("the Regulations"), in that its brochure contained "misleading information", and that under that Regulation Cosmos is liable for any loss suffered in consequence of that breach of duty.
(2) In the alternative, she claims damages for negligent misrepresentation.
(3) In the further alternative, she claims damages for breach of contract on the footing that the representations were a term of the contract with Cosmos for the purchase of the holiday; that she relied on the misrepresentations; and that, in consequence, she suffered the injuries which resulted from her fall.
"On the day in question the Claimant on day five was going down the first of the 11 steps of the 39 steps that they had to negotiate from the reception to the restaurant. She was holding the handle of the pushchair, which was facing downstairs. Her husband, having his back to the pushchair, was holding the foot area, a position in which wives and husbands can regularly be seen to take in carrying a pushchair downstairs. That is something which, whilst I cannot claim I can take judicial notice of, is accepted by all the parties as a fairly usual way of going down the stairs, and it is not suggested that they were adopting anything that was a negligent way of carrying the pushchair down the stairs. She says in her statement that she lost her footing and slipped, and I find that that is what happened."
"I take the view that there is absolutely no reason why an hotel, overlooked as the description said by the scenery described and as depicted in the photographs and having the facilities that were described, should not itself have been on fairly level ground."
"I see no reason to throw any doubt on the Claimant's assertion that that made her feel that since there were lifts in the main building, she and her husband would have no difficulty in transporting their children round the hotel either in or out of the pushchair or buggy that they took with them. One could reasonably suppose that the lift would provide access to the pool and to every other floor."
"...if you say there are lifts in the main building, it clearly implies that that will provide access to everything."
"Accordingly, they found that there were two ways that they could get to the restaurant. The ways that in fact have been described have been described as routes 1, 2 and 3. There was a route 4, which was from the bungalow to the reception, which does not appear to be relevant at that stage."
"On the evidence, I am satisfied that there is no way that the Claimant could have reasonably discovered this round about way to the restaurant, and accordingly I find that it was not a route which she ought to have taken. It is accepted by the Claimant, I believe, through her counsel, that had she known of that route, that would have been one which would not have put her to the risk and danger which the Claimant claims she was put to by virtue of the other two routes."
"In that case you can leave the buggy and the pushchair at the top."
"I also find it entirely reasonable, and it has not been challenged that the Claimant and her husband should take baby Charlotte in what is described as the pushchair."
"In my judgment, it was unsuitable for children, because for an hotel to provide the only available accesses to the restaurant which holiday makers had to use together with their children, via 24 or 39 steps, is not providing a hotel which is suitable."
"It was misleading to say that there was a lift in the main building because the lift only gave access to all the floors bar the restaurant."
"This is a situation in which I find as a fact that the claimant and her husband were required by the failure of the Defendants to supply lift access two or three times a day to negotiate stairs, carrying a pushchair in the way that they have described, which was a tricky situation. I will come back to that later on - the issue of foreseeability. But, in my judgment, the description of Mr Kilvington that she loses her footing because she was put in the position of going up and down steps with the pushchair and cannot watch her feet and the way she is descending is a fair and accurate way of explaining the matter. If you are having to concentrate in part on carrying the pushchair, your six-month old baby being in it, you cannot be paying as much attention as is reasonably necessary to where your feet are going on the stairs.
He also characterises it in this way. The Claimant was put in an unsuitable position by the misleading information and suffered injury by the lack of suitability of the premises, the lack of suitability being requiring her to carry a baby in a pushchair down 39 or up 24 steps to get to and from the restaurant. He said that is why the injury was suffered. Whilst we do not know precisely how she came to lose her footing, in fact it is reasonable to suppose in my judgment, that she did so because she was unable to pay sufficient attention to how she was descending the stairs because of the task that she and her husband had to perform so many times a day on so many occasions.
There is, in my judgment, a clear causal connection between the misrepresentation which directly put them in that difficult situation and the injury that was suffered. Therefore, the Claimant does satisfy the issue of causation in relation to each of the three grounds upon which the matter is argued."
"In my judgment any reasonable person considering the circumstances would say that, whilst not dangerous, it is a hazardous thing to require somebody to do two or three times a day in the way the claimant was required to do."
"The breach of contract was not a cause of the subsequent events which brought the plaintiff's accident."
"....this cannot be said to be an accident which was caused by the defendant's breach of contract. No doubt that circumstance was the occasion which brought about this conduct of the plaintiff but it in no way caused it. It was in no way something flowing probably and naturally from the breach of contract."
"The failure of the defendants to provide the equipment required may have been the occasion of the accident but it was not the cause of the accident."
"The breach of contract merely gave the plaintiff the opportunity to injure himself and was the occasion of the injury. There is always a temptation to fall into the fallacy of post hoc ergo properter hoc; and that is no less a fallacy even if what happens afterwards could have been foreseen before it occurs."
"There is, in my judgment, a clear causal connection between the misrepresentation which directly put them in that difficult situation and the injury that was suffered."