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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Yetkin v London Borough of Newham [2010] EWCA Civ 776 (13 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/776.html Cite as: [2011] PTSR 1295, [2010] EWCA Civ 776, [2011] QB 827, [2011] 2 WLR 1073, [2010] RTR 462 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HEGARTY QC
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
HQ08X01989
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
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Mrs Pervin Yetkin |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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London Borough of Newham |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr A Weitzman (instructed by Browne Jacobson) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 28 June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Smith:
Introduction
The facts
The judge's decision
The judge's reasoning
"I proceed, therefore, on the footing that it remains good law that where a Highway Authority, in the exercise of its statutory powers and duties, creates a danger to users of the highway which would not otherwise have been present, it may well be held to owe a duty of care to any users of the highway who suffer damage by reason of the danger in question."
So it appears that the judge had well in mind that he was dealing with the duty in respect of positive acts and not with a mere failure to act.
The judge then mentioned a passage from paragraph 102 of Lord Brown's speech in Gorringe and cited a long passage from paragraphs 35 and 36 of Lord Hoffmann's, both of which he thought supported Mr Weitzman's submissions and to both of which I will return in due course. At paragraph 132, he considered Mr Weitzman's submission that, whether the judge were to find that it was Mr Mahmood or Mrs Yetkin who had failed to comply with the traffic signals, any danger created by the bushes should have been obvious to a careful road user, whether driver or pedestrian. In that sense, therefore, the bushes were not a 'trap'. Further, if it had been Mr Mahmood who had caused the accident by driving through over the crossing while the lights were red against him, there would be no policy justification in imposing an additional duty of care on the local authority. Also, if Mrs Yetkin attempted to cross when it was unsafe, the law would not impose a duty on the local authority to protect her against her own carelessness.
"Foreseeability is no longer the touchstone of liability in negligence - if indeed it ever was."
Whilst he accepted that the bushes were a significant cause of the accident and an obvious danger, he did not think they could be regarded as a 'trap'. He continued:
"It was, as it seems to me, an obvious danger for someone attempting to cross the southern carriageway from the central reservation. It should have been perfectly possible for a pedestrian in Mrs Yetkin's situation to lean forward and, if necessary, step forward on to the very edge of the carriageway itself before committing herself to cross. Any such pedestrian should certainly have done so before attempting to cross when the lights were or might have been in favour of vehicular traffic. In reality it does not seem to me that the position is significantly different from that which would face a pedestrian seeking to cross a busy road from behind a large parked vehicle. It is true that, in many cases a pedestrian would have a choice as to whether to cross at that point. But if he chose to do so, it is obvious that he would have to take great care before passing beyond the offside of the vehicle. But I find it difficult to think that the driver of the vehicle in question would owe any duty of care to the pedestrian in such circumstances.
134. In the present case, on my findings, Mrs Yetkin chose to disregard the signal and attempted to cross the road whilst the lights were still showing green in Mr Mahmood's favour. In doing so, she could not have properly addressed the obvious danger presented by the shrubs and bushes in the central reservation. Indeed, she ought to have done so before crossing even if the lights had been her favour. But in that latter scenario Mr Mahmood would have been plainly liable to her: and it could hardly be fair and reasonable to impose upon the Council a duty of care which might have enabled him to claim contribution in respect of his own negligence. In all the circumstances, I have come to the conclusion that the Council did not owe a duty of care to either pedestrians such as Mrs Yetkin or motorists such as Mr Mahmood in respect of the overgrown condition of the shrubs and bushes in the central reservation."
The appeal to this court - submissions
Discussion
"This remained the law when the duty was transferred (from parishes) to highway authorities. An individual who had suffered damage because of some positive act which the authority had done to make the highway more dangerous could sue for negligence or public nuisance in the same way as he could sue anyone else. The highway authority had no exemption from ordinary liability in tort. But the duty to take active steps to keep the highway in repair was special to the highway authority and was not a private law duty owed to any individual. Thus it was said that highway authorities were liable in tort for misfeasance but not for non-feasance. Sometimes it was said that the highway authority was "exempt" from liability for non-feasance, but it was not truly an exemption in the sense that the authority had a special defence against liability. The true position was that no one had ever been liable in private law for non-repair of a highway. But all this was changed by section 1(1) of the Highways (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1961. The public duty to keep the highway in repair was converted into a statutory duty owed by the highway authority to all users of the highway giving a remedy for breach".
"It is not sufficient that it (the highway authority) might reasonably have foreseen that, in the absence of such warnings, some road users might injure themselves or others. Reasonable foreseeability of physical injury is the standard criterion for determining the duty of care owed by people who undertake an activity which carries a risk of injury to others. But it is insufficient to justify the imposition of liability upon someone who simply does nothing: who neither creates the risk nor undertakes to do anything to avert it."
"35. Of course it is in the public interest that local authorities should take steps to promote road safety. And it would also be unwise for them to assume that all drivers will take reasonable care for their own safety or that of others. If a driver kills or injures someone else by ignoring an obvious danger, it is little consolation to the victim or his family that the other driver was wholly to blame. And even if the careless driver kills or injuries only himself, the accident may have a wider impact upon his family, his economic relationships and the burden on the public services. This is why section 39 of the 1988 Act is framed as a broad public duty. …..But the public interest in promoting road safety by taking steps to reduce the likelihood that even careless drivers will have accidents does not require a private law duty to a careless driver or any other road user. …
36. Nor does it follow that the council should be liable to compensate third parties whom careless drivers have injured. The drivers must take responsibility for the damage they cause and compulsory third party insurance is intended to ensure that they will be able to do so: compare Stovin v Wise [1996] AC 923, 958. "
"My Lords, I must make it clear that this appeal is concerned only with an attempt to impose upon a local authority a common law duty to act based solely on the existence of a broad public law duty. We are not concerned with cases in which public authorities have actually done acts or entered into relationship or undertaken responsibilities which give rise to a common law duty of care. In such cases the fact that the public authority acted pursuant to a statutory power or public duty does not necessarily negative the existence of a duty."
"I would add moreover this further distinction. Unless in those cases the court were to find the authority's various responsibilities capable of giving rise to a common law duty of care, those wronged children, themselves wholly blameless, would go uncompensated, however inadequately their interests had been safeguarded. In the highway context, by contrast, the claimant will almost inevitably himself have been at fault. In these circumstances, it seems to me entirely reasonable that the policy of the law should be to leave the liability for the accident on the road user who negligently caused it rather to look to the highway authority to protect him against his own wrong."
"Road users are not, however, entitled to rely upon the highway authority with regard to the various other hazards of road use. They are not entitled to suppose that their journeys will be free from these or that the need for care will generally be highlighted so as to protect them from their own negligence.
What I have said thus far is in the context of road accidents involving negligence on the part of at least one of the road users involved. But that is because I find it difficult to contemplate a case in which a road accident could occur without such negligence unless either (a) it results from the physical state of the road (in which case, as already explained, liability will in any event rest upon the highway authority), or (b) the highway authority will, irrespective of any particular statutory power or duty, be liable in a conventional common law negligence action for having enticed the motorist to his fate by some positive act. Assuming that the road user is not to be regarded as negligent, he must inevitably have been misled into ignoring whatever danger precipitated his accident. Although motorists are not entitled to be forewarned of the ordinary hazards of highway use, plainly they must not be trapped into danger.
"103. There seems to me, therefore, no good reason for superimposing upon such general powers and duties as are conferred upon highway authorities a common law duty of care in respect of their exercise."
Lady Justice Black
Lord Justice Laws