![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tacagni v Penwith District Council [2013] EWCA Civ 702 (24 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/702.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 702 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM TRURO COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE CLARK QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
____________________
TACAGNI |
Claimant/ Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
PENWITH DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Second Defendant/ Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr T Petts (instructed by Wansbroughs) appeared on behalf of the Appellant.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
(A) Introduction
(B) The Facts
"It was dark but I could see the light at Jewsons in the distance and I just followed the fence back holding it with my left hand as I went. I followed the fence back and remembered bending down and fiddling with my left shoe with my left hand as it was rubbing between my toes… I remember fiddling with my shoe and putting my left hand out to steady myself on the fence and there was nothing there. I had just followed the fence back around and had not noticed or been aware that the fence had curved off and that I was actually on the start of the grass and I fell approximately 7 feet onto the road below. I didn't at any time think I was on the grass. If I had noticed that the fence had curved towards the road, I wouldn't have held onto it."
In the result, she fell from the verge down onto the roadway below and sustained injury.
"She was wearing flip flops and remembered tripping on them, put her hand out to catch a fence running down the side of the path to support herself. Unfortunately, the fence had terminated, she remembers falling… "
The claimant told the judge that she did not recall saying that she had tripped, but the judge found that the difference in accounts on these two occasions was not material on the issue of primary liability. He recorded that the fact was that, in virtual darkness, the claimant was using the wooden fence as a guide to help her down the path but did not appreciate that the fence curved to the left towards the road and to the drop from the verge onto the road. The judge found that she inadvertently followed the fence round and then, losing her balance or tripping, she fell forward over the vertical drop and struck her head on the road surface. In doing so, I would add she must have left the hard surface path and followed the fence across the grass verge for a distance of almost five metres or perhaps more. In cross-examination the claimant added:
"I just followed the fence back holding it with my left hand as I went … Just to keep me -- because my feet were hurting I had obviously been holding onto Stewart (sic) all the time and I was then on my own. It was dark, there was no …no reason. I couldn't walk properly, it was just what I happened to do."
"8. On 29 August 2007, I carried out an inspection of the Plantation and surrounding areas. It was following this inspection that I prepared the Open Spaces Inspection Sheet, which forms part of the attached document. I would stress there was no set period for such inspections to be carried out -- it was an ad-hoc system.
9. In the section dealing with 'falls', I recorded my concern, which was that at one section there was a small wall, about 2 foot high protecting the public from a 12 foot drop onto the main road beneath (both heights approximate). This is some distance away from where I now gather Ms Tacagni fell. The 2 foot wall is further away from Hayle centre.
10. Having regard to the layout of the path at that point, I was concerned for example that cyclists may come along the path, ie riding too fast, lose control and strike the wall, sending them over the top. I was similarly concerned also that children might run around at that point and come to harm. What distinguishes this area is that in some places there is a relatively narrow gap or break between the path and the wall/drop, so that when on the path you are closer to the edge. The break between the path and the wall does vary in width, as does the height of the wall.
11. On 29 August 2007 I did also observe that on the Hayle side of the post/rail fence (which I now understand is where the accident happened), there was no physical barrier between the wide grass verge and the main road beneath. Reference to this issue therefore also appears on the Works Request form prepared following that inspection, on 30 August 2007, where I suggested that a barrier be placed or at least a warning signage.
12. The Inspection Sheet / works request forms came to the attention of Brian Hosken afterwards [I interpolate to say that is Mr Bassett's manager]. He agreed to meet with me on site to investigate my assessment. Following this investigation he told me that he thought my recommendations were unnecessary, having regard to the risk. He relied heavily on the fact that the area had been in the same state for a very long time (I do not know precisely how long) and there had been no problems or other accidents reported. As far as I was concerned at the time, that was that. The same view incidentally was reached about the section of the 2 foot wall, ie nothing needed to be done."
"Because it was an unprotected drop onto the main road with high speed traffic … my concern was obviously for cyclists, young kids on bikes. There was no protection there to stop them flying into the road [some inaudible words followed] if someone lost control … "
(C) The Judge's Conclusions
"The standard of care in the law of negligence is the standard of an ordinary careful man, but in my opinion an ordinary careful man does not take precautions against every foreseeable risk. He can, of course, foresee the possibility of many risks, but life would be almost impossible if he were to attempt to take precautions against every risk which he can foresee. He takes precautions against risks which are reasonably likely to happen. Many foreseeable risks are extremely unlikely to happen and cannot be guarded against, except by the most complete isolation."
"34. My Lords, the majority of the Court of Appeal appear to have proceeded on the basis that if there was a foreseeable risk of serious injury, the Council was under a duty to do what was necessary to prevent it. But this in my opinion is an oversimplification. Even in the case of the duty owed to a lawful visitor under section 2(2) of the 1957 Act and even if the risk had been attributable to the state of the premises rather than the acts of Mr Tomlinson, the question of what amounts to "such care as in all the circumstances of the case is reasonable" depends upon assessing, as in the case of common law negligence, not only the likelihood that someone may be injured and the seriousness of the injury which may occur, but also the social value of the activity which gives rise to the risk and the cost of preventative measures. These factors have to be balanced against each other.
…So this appeal gives your Lordships the opportunity to say clearly that local authorities and other occupiers of land are ordinarily under no duty to incur such social and financial costs to protect a minority (or even a majority) against obvious dangers."
On the appeal this morning Mr Petts has relied upon that passage and indeed upon others in the Congleton case in challenging the learned judge's findings.
"18. So the question for me is whether this case falls within the ambit of the kind of situation Lord Hoffmann and their other Lordships in Tomlinson had in mind or whether, in all the circumstances of the case, it was reasonable for the Second Defendants to take further steps to see that users of the path in question were reasonably safe in using the path for the purposes for which they were permitted to be there. In deciding this issue, I must consider the degree of care/want of care which would be ordinarily looked for in a user of the path.
19. After careful consideration, I have concluded that the Second Defendants were in breach of their common duty of care towards the Claimant. I appreciate that there had been no previous similar accidents. I also accept that in broad daylight the width of the verge rendered the path reasonably safe for use. The problem, however, was that at night the path was unlit. Anyone inadvertently straying off the path at night, whether they be on bicycle or on foot, was in real danger. No warning signs of that danger had been placed at the start of the path. The fence clearly provided a precautionary barrier for part of the distance but anyone using the fence as a guide in the dark could inadvertently walk into danger. This situation was not, as Mr Petts submits, a remote possibility. It was, in my judgment, a very real possibility. Moreover, the cost of extending the fence along the 100m down to the pedestrian crossing near Jewson's was not great, even for a local authority subject to the familiar financial restraints. It could easily have done in 2001 when the fence itself was erected. Mr Barrett recognised the very real danger evident to a sensible, practical person. His manager failed to recognise it. In my judgment, it is no answer to say there had been no previous accidents on this stretch of the path. The position had to be looked at afresh, particularly in the context of a well-used but unlit footpath and cycle track open to the public at night time. In my judgment, fencing off the vertical drop would have been a proportionate reaction to the situation faced by the local authority in 2001."
(D) The Appeal
"…the learned judge:
(a) wrongly concluded that the risk of an accident such as happened to the Claimant (a pedestrian straying from the path at night by following the fence and falling off the edges of the verge onto the road below) was a 'very real possibility', instead of a remote possibility;
(b) further or alternatively, wrongly concluded that in all the circumstances the risk was such that the Applicant ought to have taken steps to prevent a pedestrian falling off the edge of the verge by erecting a fence along the 100m in question and/or erecting warning signs at the bottom of the path."
Those grounds are supplemented by a helpful skeleton argument and oral submissions from Mr Petts, which can be summarised, I think, in these terms. Mr Petts submits that the judge made too much of Mr Bassett's evidence. It is argued that Mr Bassett's concerns were in fact for cyclists and young children and not for adults negotiating this path at night without a torch and, to some degree, under influence of alcohol. Further, it was not foreseeable that someone would use this fence as a handrail, as the claimant did, and not appreciate that it was there for some quite different purpose. Even if a person was holding onto the rail, he or she should be expected to have noticed that he or she had left that path and was now on grass. Further, the claimant should have known from passing up the path only a few minutes before and, as Mr Petts adds to us this morning, that from her familiarity of the area from driving along this road on a regular basis she should have known what the layout was, and there was no fence immediately abutting the path for some considerable part of its length. Further, it is submitted, Mr Croft the claimant's partner had gone ahead of the claimant with no difficulty in following the correct route.
(E) My conclusion
"The common duty of care is a duty to take such care as in all the circumstances of the case is reasonable to see that the visitor will be reasonably safe in using the premises for the purposes for which he is invited or permitted by the occupier to be there."
"The facts of this case, as found by the judge, are not in dispute, and Mr Grice makes no attempt to urge different findings. In determining whether, on particular facts, the standard of care has fallen below that required of an occupier, the court will, of course, pay considerable respect to the judgment of the trial judge, but is required to assess for itself whether, on the evidence and the findings of the judge, a breach of duty has occurred."
Bearing in mind those principles, I look at the judge's evaluation of the result for the primary facts as found by him.
Lord Justice Lewison:
"The common duty of care is a duty to take such care as in all the circumstances of the case is reasonable to see that the visitor will be reasonably safe in using the premises for the purposes for which he is invited or permitted by the occupier to be there."
"The circumstances relevant for the present purpose include the degree of care, and of want of care, which would ordinarily be looked for in such a visitor."
In Thompson v Hampshire County Council [2004] EWCA Civ 1016, Rix LJ said at paragraph 31:
"Neither ditch nor culvert nor pathway were out of repair or in disrepair: it was simply that a walking path right next to a ditch presented certain dangers, at any rate at night in the absence of any illumination such as a torch. However, this is just such a natural danger to the user of a highway as he must be prepared to overcome by his own natural caution, and the taking of precautions: just as drivers must similarly take care against the hazards of road layouts. No driver would go out on an unlit road at night without the means of illuminating the road."
Lord Justice Laws:
Order: Appeal allowed