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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Carty & Ors v Carroll [2005] EWCA Civ 1446 (02 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1446.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1446 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BRISTOL COUNTY COURT
(MR RECORDER LINDBLOM QC)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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ANTHONY VALENTINE CARTY | ||
RAQUEL MERCEDES WHITE | ||
GRAEME JOHNSON | Claimants/Respondents | |
-v- | ||
PETER DAN CARROLL | ||
PAUL HAWKINS | Defendants/Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court.
The Respondents did not attend and were not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
"Mrs Skov-Newton said that as the second claimant, having reversed from the laundry, drew her car forward so as to drive uphill, she waved at her, warning her to stop; and that the second claimant saw her doing this. She said she believed the second claimant's actions were 'quite deliberate'. She said that she believed the second claimant must have been aware of the one way regulation. In effect, Miss Skov-Newton alleged that the second claimant wilfully flouted the one way regulation.
The second claimant's account of this incident was rather different. She said that she inadvertently transgressed the one way regulation, having taken a right turn from the car park leading from the supermarket and travelling up the hill towards Mounton Road, and was told by a passing pedestrian that the manoeuvre she had carried out was an illegal one. The second claimant said this was a genuine mistake on her part. She said the traffic sign had been damaged and was not easy to notice.
For the four defendants it was submitted that this was a deliberate and dangerous motoring manoeuvre, which the second claimant undertook because, selfishly, she wanted to save time. I do not accept that submission. I prefer the evidence of the second claimant to that of Mrs Skov-Newton. Again, however, even if I had been led to conclude, on the evidence I have heard, that the second claimant wilfully drove as badly as was alleged on this occasion, in the absence of any evidence that she regularly behaved in this fashion I would not have regarded this single incident as a reasonable basis for the belief, or suspicion, that the second claimant - or the first - would be likely to act irresponsibly when using the swimming pool. Such a view, in my opinion, was not one that was reasonably open to the defendants as trustees."
Mr Pearce-Smith, who appears on behalf of the applicants, does not now challenge the findings of the Recorder in respect of this incident. It follows that he accepts that the matter has to be considered upon the basis that Miss White had not deliberately driven down a one-way street.
"The second defendant [that is Dr Hawkins] said that before he was able to reach the pony, the second claimant [Miss White] pick up a ball and threw it towards him and his daughter and then turned [and] walked away. He said the second claimant's dog chased the ball, caught it just in front of the pony and then went back to the second claimant."
The judge continued at the next but one paragraph as follows:
"The second claimant firmly denied any wrong-doing on her part. She denied having acted maliciously or recklessly. She said that she would not have wanted to put her dog at risk, let alone act in such a way as to pose a threat to a horse or its rider.
Having heard the evidence of both the second claimant and the second defendant about this incident, I accept her account of it. I accept that she did not act in a deliberate or malicious way. I accept that she did not intend to cause any injury to the second defendant's daughter, or to the pony. It is my impression that the second defendant was upset by what had taken place at the pool earlier in the afternoon and that, as a result of this, he was inclined to believe - mistakenly in my view - that the second claimant was motivated by a desire to cause injury to his child. I do not believe that the second claimant wanted to do that. I do not believe that she acted out of spite or malice towards the second defendant or his daughter, however discourteous she may have been when she and the second defendant met at the pool."
"In so far as this incident bore on the decision of the defendants to deny the first and second claimant's permission to use the swimming pool - and it does seem to me that this was the principal reason for the withholding of consent to the assignment of the licence - it is my conclusion that the defendants took an unreasonably negative view of the second claimant's actions. It seems to me that had the defendants reflected sensibly on what had happened on the occasion I have described, they would have appreciated how extremely unlikely it would have been for the second claimant to have wanted to cause serious injury, or worse, to an 11 year old child. Indeed, it seems to me that this notion is itself symptomatic of the defendant's unreasonableness in the decision they took. In other words, the very idea that the second claimant could be so grossly irresponsible in her attitude to the child's safety was one that no reasonable trustee could have entertained in the circumstances as they were when the incident occurred, no matter how poor relations had become between the parties by this stage."
In my judgment, that is a conclusion that the Recorder was entitled to reach.
"... the defendants' basis for thinking that there was a serious risk of any insurance being affected or of insurers attaching any significance to the matters which it is said would have had to be disclosed is to say the least tenuous - no evidence was called from any insurer or broker nor, so far as I can see ... was there any evidence, even second-hand, of any discussion with or information from any broker on this subject: compare the second defendant's evidence at the end of his [cross-examination] at bundle 89-90."
He had previously said in a comment, with which I agree:
"That appears to me a hopeless, not to say highly unmeritorious, argument. First, I do not see how a defendant can, to show a reasonable refusal of consent to an assignment, rely on his own unreasonable belief as creating either an obligation to disclose inaccurate matters to insurers or a fear that insurers might as a result decline cover. Second, if the belief about the second claimants' conduct at the time of the meeting in the road was, as the judge found, unreasonable, then it seems improbably as a matter of insurance law or practice that the defendants' obligation was to disclose to insurers incorrect facts (based on that unreasonable belief)..."