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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Maguire v Lancashire County Council [2004] EWCA Civ 1637 (11 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1637.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1637 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BLACKPOOL COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE APPLETON)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
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KENNETH MAGUIRE | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
LANCASHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | Defendant/Respondent |
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(Computer-Aided Transcript of the Palantype Notes of
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
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The Appellant appeared on his own behalf
MR M WHYATT (instructed by Messrs Peter Rickson & Partners, Preston PR2 3JJ) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"We inspected the footpath on the 16th December 1996 [that is shortly after the accident] and found it to be unfit for purpose in that there were marked differences in made levels in the immediate area around the inspection chamber cover. We calculate that the levels differed by as much as 75 - 100mm (3 - 4"), most pronounced on the western side, with gradients in the order of 2:1 or more. The differing levels and severe gradients constitute a risk which would be further exacerbated during the hours of darkness.
3.2. The footpath was found to have been repaired and levelled to a satisfactory condition at a subsequent inspection conducted on 3rd January 1997."
"7. The composition of the foot path results in it being somewhat flexible and because of this there are minor undulations caused by ground movement, tree roots and the like.
8. At the point where Mr Maguire is said to have fallen there was a drainage cover which was raised slightly above the level of the pathway by a maximum of 1 inch at the highest point of the raise.
9. I did not consider that the defect was dangerous although I decided that repairs were necessary and I instructed repairs to be carried out with a response time of category 3, which is for minor works which should be completed within 5 weeks of the instruction."
So that was the scene of the location at the time of the accident.
"11. Mr Kenny during the course of cross-examination asked the claimant to mark on the photograph at page 75, precisely where his foot landed. That, as a matter of record, he did in the trial bundle with a red cross. There is in the report from Mr Cuddy at page 73 a diagram, and that diagram gives an approximate difference of levels at Points to A to A as being between three and four inches. When the photograph, at page 75, is looked at where the claimant says his left foot landed, his left foot would have simply landed in a position where the ground beneath him was, instead of being flat, slightly uphill. It is fair to say that the major difference in levels as it appears from the photograph, in fact, appears between the edge or verge of the path and the rise going up to the level of the manhole cover, but that was not where the claimant said he trod.
12. What the claimant said in cross-examination about his accident was that: 'It set my ankle over' and he gave a demonstration so that his ankle turned underneath him, in other words an inversion injury. It did not cause him to fall over he just stumbled.
13. Frankly, this court has the greatest difficulty in accepting from the claimant that the mechanism of the accident and the place of the accident is, on a balance of probabilities, more likely than not to be correct. I struggle to see how he could have suffered the accident he said he suffered by his foot landing where he says, and marked on the plan, it did."
"17. It is also plain and it does not help the claimant that the surveyor's report is not given in terms of the conditions of liability set out in the highway dis-repair cases, the most that Mr Cuddy is prepared to say about the footpath is that:
'The differing levels ... and severe gradients constitute a risk, which would be further exacerbated during the hours of the darkness'.
18. The claimant during the course of cross-examination accepted that he had run this route before but he had never fallen at this location. He had seen people jogging there as well. There is an athletics club at Stanley Park and they use this pathway as a running area. He also admits that in summer there is very considerable pedestrian traffic for this is close to the entry to the model village, which is a considerable tourist attraction, as indeed is Stanley Park itself; well patronised by people walking around the path in the park.
19. The trial bundle shows that the previous solicitors had made rigorous enquiries of the Highway Authority to try and discover whether there were any previous accidents at the site. A huge amount of industry has gone into that endeavour and the answer is not one that is favourable to the claimant's endeavours to make out a case that the highway was dangerous. There is no example of any accident involving this particular piece of highway at this spot. There is, moreover, no recorded complaint of any danger here either, from any member of the public."
"... the highway was in such a condition that it was dangerous to traffic or pedestrians in the sense that, in the ordinary course of human affairs, danger may reasonably have been anticipated from its continued use by the public; ..."
"23. Well the relevant factors are - and it does not seem to have been attended to for quite a number of years - that there have been during those years a very considerable pedestrian usage and also a not insignificant usage by joggers. There is not one recorded similar incident, accident or even complaint and in those circumstances, coupled with my misgivings about whether, on balance, the claimant could possibly have suffered an inversion injury by treading on that part which he says he trod on, it seems plain to me that the claimant's case is doomed to failure. All that the surveyors have said in their report was that it was a risk.
24. This court, bearing in mind what Lord Justice Steyn has said, has got to be satisfied that it was dangerous and it seems to me that, given the history of the site, the court cannot be satisfied that the claimant has proved that it was dangerous. In those circumstances, the claim fails and there will be judgment for the defendant against the claimant on the claim."
ORDER: Appeal allowed with costs here and below; judgment for the claimant on the issue of liability and the matter remitted to the County Court on the issue of quantum.