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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stevens v County Borough Of Blaenau Gwent [2004] EWCA Civ 715 (15 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/715.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 715 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
(HHJ MASTERMAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
MR JUSTICE BODEY
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STEVENS (THROUGH HIS MOTHER AND LITIGATION FRIEND) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COUNTY BOROUGH OF BLAENAU GWENT |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Ian Murphy QC (instructed by Hugh James Solicitors) for the respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Potter :
Introduction
The facts
"[Mrs Stevens] was at home when this incident occurred and is now very concerned as to the security and safety of her family and property as these houses are two-storey and she has young children. I am therefore requesting locks for the windows in these premises, not only for security reasons but also for the added safety of the young children living there."
"(a) failing, despite several requests to do so, to fit safety catches to the second floor windows of the property.
(b) failing, despite requests to do so, to allow the claimant's parents to fit safety catches to the second floor window at the property.
(c) in the premises, exposing the claimant to a foreseeable and unnecessary risk of injury."
"Somehow Tom got himself up, perhaps by using the television unit, and then the radiator as stepping stones, onto the windowsill and from there, of course he would have no difficulty at all in freeing the window catches and I think that probably that is what happened and resulted in his fall."
"I am satisfied that the local authority declined to fit locks to the windows, and they did so on the grounds of fire safety … I accept that the local authority had a well-grounded fear of their tenants being trapped inside premises by fire. Mr Evans [Gwent's Housing Manager] was able to speak of that with personal experience because of incidents in that part of the South Wales valleys where there had been just that danger realised and people had lost their lives as a result of being trapped in houses by fire from which they could not escape. I do not know the precise circumstances of those cases but plainly a window which cannot be easily opened, or perhaps cannot be opened at all because a key has been lost, can contribute, if not actually cause, deaths in such circumstances, and therefore I accept that the local authority had to balance up the dangers that are posed by first and second floor windows and so on, and the possibility of people falling out of them, against the dangers of people being trapped inside buildings in a fire, and they took the decision, as really a blanket policy decision, that window locks should not be approved and, therefore, not fitted."
"16 … that given appropriate circumstances the local authority can be liable to a tenant in negligence, and I have had to ask myself whether in this case a duty of care, as in the case of Stockley, arose. It seems to me it can only arise, on the facts, in this one way, which is that the landlord council had been specifically warned of a danger, that they had been asked to help to abate or minimise that danger and that they had declined to do so and that it was unreasonable for them to so decline. There is an added feature in this case which is that the council had actually told Mrs Stevens not to take it upon herself to fit a safety catch." (emphasis added)
It is to be noted, as is not in dispute, that the last sentence is inaccurate. Mrs Stevens' evidence was that the remarks of the council had been directed to the use of locks, not "safety catches" of the type eventually fitted.
"17. …. the policy which the local authority relies on, namely, that of balancing one danger against another, is as a general rule justifiable. On the one hand there is the danger of a child falling out of a window, on the other there is the danger of individuals, including children, being trapped in a burning building and killed, and I find it very difficult to criticise the local authority for coming to the decision they did. In other words, I do not say that they were unreasonable in approaching it on that basis as a general rule but I think I have to look at the specific facts of this case … that the council was asked to look at a situation where one child had very nearly fallen out of a window and asked to decide whether in this particular case that danger should be averted by the fitting of some kind of lock or safety catch. It was a matter for them. I have to ask myself whether it was reasonable for them to decline to do so, and on the facts of this case and the evidence I have heard it seems to me crystal clear that the council did not give this matter individual consideration. It was simply dealt with on the basis of a blanket policy that window locks were not going to be approved. (emphasis added)
18. I do not find that the council applied their minds to this particular window in this particular case against the particular background of facts which I have described. It seems to me that there being a duty of care arising in these circumstances, that duty of care must extend to considering individual circumstances where there is a known danger and deciding whether the tenant should be assisted to minimise that danger, and here I think the council did not act in that way, and therefore I found it impossible to say that they have acted reasonably and, against that background, I come to the conclusion that Mrs Stevens, on behalf of her son, has established liability against the council and therefore that this action succeeds."
The parties' submissions
Conclusion
"Lord Wilberforce came to the conclusion that the authorities to which he had drawn attention supported the existence of a general duty upon occupiers in relation to hazards occurring on their land, whether natural or man-made. Later (on p.663) Lord Wilberforce considered the extent of the duty. The conclusion he came to can be summarised in this sentence:
In such situations the standard ought to be to require of the occupier what it is reasonable to expect of him in his individual circumstances.
…
It seems to me that from those authorities one can get the following guidance which is relevant to this case: that, once the local authority were apprised of the fact that a pipe was frozen and were aware, or should have been aware, that when the pipe thawed, it would be likely to burst and cause water to flow out into the property below, they were under a duty to do whatever was reasonable in the circumstances, having regard, as Lord Wilberforce stressed, to their capacity to act and their ability to abate or deal with the hazard.
So that the fact that a duty of some kind existed seems to me to be plain, and indeed was not strenuously contested by Mr Earlam, but he said (and this is really the crux of the case) that what the council did was an adequate and complete fulfilment by them of the duty which they owed and the difficult circumstances in which they were placed."
"… it seems to me that there was just sufficient material on which the judge could come to the conclusion that the council, knowing it was an emergency and having told her that they would get somebody out as soon as possible, should have impressed on her the importance of turning the stopcock off and should have given her some further advice as to how she ought to cope with that."
Lord Justice Carnwath:
Mr Justice Bodey: