[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 >> Williams v Hawkes [2017] EWCA Civ 1846 (21 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1846.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1846 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM
Cardiff County Court
Mr Recorder Lloyd Williams QC
A93YP887
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
____________________
Martyn Williams |
Respondent/ Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Jeffrey Llewellyn Hawkes (Executor of the Estate of Derfyl Llewellyn Hawkes, Decease) |
Appellant/ Defendant |
____________________
Catherine Collins (instructed by Slater & Gordon (UK) LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis:
Introduction
Background Facts
Expert Evidence
"We are agreed that if a steer is presented with a novel environment including flashing lights and noise, such as those that would be experienced near a major road at night, its behaviour is very likely to be unpredictable. This would be the case for a steer of any breed."
They both also said this, with regard to relevant characteristics, at paragraph 20 of the joint memorandum:
"At specific times or under specific circumstances such as when they are frightened, cattle in general can behave unpredictably and with great force and hence dangerously towards those around them."
The Judgment Below
"38. Mr O'Leary points out, as I have done already, that there is no lay evidence as to how the steer behaved in the moments before the accident. There is, however, the evidence of Professor Eddison as to how it would probably have behaved. That is evidence I am entitled to take into account and give such weight as seems appropriate. I have already rehearsed the evidence of Professor Eddison but I remind myself that the probability is that the steer was still acting under the effects of the stimulus which had caused it to be set in motion when it had jumped the fence. It would have become frightened and unpredictable. This was a condition that would have become worse as it wandered through unknown territory leading from the field for the road. During that journey, as well as being in darkness, the steer would have had to have leapt or pushed its way through various other fences or hedges which, once again, would have acted as separate stimuli on the steer, thus increasing its propensity to unpredictability. It would have continued in that manner until it reached the road. At that point, it would have been subject to further stimuli from the lights of cars and the noise of vehicles passing by.
39. I accept Professor Eddison's evidence that as the claimant approached in his vehicle, the steer would have reacted since it was still acting under the effect of the stimuli it had been exposed to. That it would act in an averse fashion to avoid further stimuli and that this was due to the fact that it was still in its flighty state. The steer's reaction would have been to run. It is not possible for me to say that he ran towards the claimant's car or whether he ran away, always remaining in the nearside lane, but I am satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the steer would have run and that that would have been caused by the particular characteristic, namely that cattle, particularly Charolais' have a propensity to act in a wholly unpredictable manner when subject to averse stimuli.
40. I therefore find that at the material time the steer was acting in accordance with the particular characteristic identified by both experts in the agreed statement and expanded upon by Professor Eddison in his evidence and I further find that the characteristic was, in fact, causative of this accident. It follows, therefore, that although I find Mr Hawkes Senior and Mr Hawkes Junior's conduct to have been impeccable, and that their care of this animal and generally was a matter to be lauded, I find in favour of the claimant and there be judgment for the claimant."
The Law
"The purpose of the Animals Act 1971 was to simplify the law. Sections 1 to 6 of the Act made new provision regarding strict liability for damage done by animals. They replace the old rules of the common law...."
"2. Liability for damage done by dangerous animals.
(1) Where any damage is caused by an animal which belongs to a dangerous species, any person who is a keeper of the animal is liable for the damage, except as otherwise provided by this Act.
(2) Where damage is caused by an animal which does not belong to a dangerous species, a keeper of the animal is liable for the damage, except as otherwise provided by this Act, if—
(a) the damage is of a kind which the animal, unless restrained, was likely to cause or which, if caused by the animal, was likely to be severe; and
(b) the likelihood of the damage or of its being severe was due to characteristics of the animal which are not normally found in animals of the same species or are not normally so found except at particular times or in particular circumstances; and
(c) those characteristics were known to that keeper or were at any time known to a person who at that time had charge of the animal as that keeper's servant or, where that keeper is the head of a household, were known to another keeper of the animal who is a member of that household and under the age of sixteen."
"…means that requirement (b) will be met in most cases where damage was caused by dangerous behaviour as described in requirement (a)."
Nevertheless, he went on to explain that that interpretation did not deprive s.2 (2)(b) of all content. He said this in paragraph 46:
"Some forms of accidental damage are instances where this requirement could operate. Take a large and heavy domestic animal such as a mature cow. There is a real risk that if a cow happens to stumble and fall onto someone, any damage suffered will be severe. This would satisfy requirement (a). But a cow's dangerousness in this regard may not fall within requirement (b). This dangerousness is due to a characteristic normally found in all cows at all times. The dangerousness results from their very size and weight. It is not due to a characteristic not normally found in cows 'except at particular times or in particular circumstances'."
Lord Hobhouse and Lord Walker reached a similar conclusion. At paragraph 157 Lord Walker said this:
"It is common knowledge (and was known to the appellants in this case) that horses, if exposed to a very frightening stimulus, will panic and stampede, knocking down obstacles in their path (in this case an electric fence, a post and barbed wire fence behind that, and then high undergrowth) and may continue their flight for a considerable distance. Horses loose in that state, either by day or by night, are an obvious danger on a road carrying fast-moving traffic. The appellants knew these facts; they could decide whether to run the unavoidable risks involved in keeping horses; they could decide whether or not to insure against those risks. Although I feel sympathy for the appellants, who were held not to have been negligent in the fencing of the field, I see nothing unjust or unreasonable in the appellants having to bear the loss resulting from their horses' escape rather than the respondent (who suffered very serious and painful injuries in the accident, although he was wearing a seatbelt and slowed down as soon as he saw the first horse in his headlights)."
Lord Slynn and Lord Scott disagreed. They thought that no liability should attach where the animal (in that case a horse) had, confronted with abnormal circumstances, reacted in a way which was normal for a horse in such circumstances.
Discussion on the issues arising in the present appeal
"In my view the real and effective cause of the accident… was the release of the animals on to the road and their remaining there. There was no evidence that the galloping of the horses aggravated the situation…. I cannot bring myself to the view that the galloping and panicking of these horses was responsible for the damage occasioned by the plaintiff and to his motor car. It was the presence of the horses on the highway that was causative of the damage sustained."
He concluded that the plaintiff had failed to prove that it was the galloping and/or panicking of the horses that was responsible for the damage caused.
"In this case, however, it is indeed difficult to conclude that it was anything other than the particular characteristics of these horses once they had been terrified which led to their escape and to this accident taking place. They were still not behaving in the ordinary way in which they would behave when taken on the road. One witness referred to them bolting; another to them trotting across the road in front of the vehicles; they crashed into the vehicles rather than the other way about. It is precisely because they were behaving in the unusual way caused by their panic that the accident took place."
"I also agree with the decision of the Court of Appeal on the facts in the present case. Horses are large and heavy animals. But it was not this innate physical characteristic of the defendants' horses which caused the road accident. The horses escaped because they were terrified. They were still not behaving ordinarily when they careered over the main road, crashing into vehicles rather than the other way about. Hale LJ [2002] QB 769, 776 concluded that it was precisely because they were behaving in this unusual way caused by their panic that the road accident took place. That conclusion, on the evidence, seems to me irrefutable and to be fatal to the case of Dr and Mrs Henley…."
Lord Hobhouse's conclusions were to like effect. He among other things said this at paragraph 69:
"Horses are not normally in a mindless state of panic nor do they normally ignore obstacles in their path. These characteristics are normally only found in horses in circumstances where they have been very seriously frightened. It is only in such circumstances that it becomes likely that, due to these characteristics, the horse will cause severe damage... There is no ambiguity about the facts of this case…."
Lord Walker also specifically endorsed the approach of Hale LJ on causation. Amongst other things, he said this at paragraph 161:
"However the essential point is that in order to recover the claimant had to show that the damage which he had suffered was caused, not merely by the horses escaping and being on the main road, but by the characteristics which are capable of founding strict liability under section 2(2)—in short, a frightened horse's propensity to bolt, to continue to flee, and to ignore obstacles in its path."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Hickinbottom: