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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Owens v Lewis [2024] EWHC 609 (KB) (19 March 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/609.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 609 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
WREXHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Civic Centre Mold, CH7 1AE |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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DARYL OWENS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROSS LEWIS |
Defendant |
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Meghann McTague (instructed by DAC Beachcroft Claims Ltd) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13 and 14 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Keyser KC :
Introduction
The Accident: evidence and facts
1) The idea to use the quad bike was that of the defendant, though he had the permission of neither his grandfather (who owned the vehicle) nor his father (who was its keeper at the time) to drive it on the public highway.
2) The defendant was neither licensed nor insured to drive the quad bike on the public highway. This is common ground.
3) No helmets were available and there was no discussion about wearing helmets. This is common ground.
4) The claimant did not express any reluctance to ride on the quad bike and did not take any persuading to do so. For reasons that I have already indicated, I consider that he has no genuine recollection of the circumstances of this accident, though I accept that he believes he does. I also regard it as inherently implausible that, especially when in company with his two friends, the claimant would have expressed any reluctance, far less any objection.
5) I do not know whether the claimant said anything about having expected to walk to the intended location. He might have done, as he had not, I accept, expected a quad bike to be available. But, whether he did or not, I find that he did not express any preference or wish to walk rather than go on the quad bike.
6) The quad bike was intended for the use of the driver only. It was not designed for passengers and ought not to have been carrying passengers. This is common ground.
7) The claimant knew that the quad bike was intended for the use of the driver only. He admitted that he knew it was not intended for carrying passengers on the rear. I reject his claim to have believed that it was designed to take a passenger on the seat. It was obvious from the design of the quad bike that it was only to carry the driver; the seat was clearly for one person only, namely the driver, and the rear rack was plainly not designed for passengers. (Additionally, there was a sign on the vehicle indicating that no passengers were to be carried. The claimant would not, however, necessarily have seen this.)
8) Although it was in my view clearly dangerous to carry passengers on a quad bike designed to carry only the driver, the defendant did not think it dangerous and had no concerns about doing so. He accepted this in cross-examination, though the very fact that he took his 12-year-old sister as a passenger rather speaks for itself.
9) The defendant was driving the quad bike along the public highway at a speed of about 25 mph to 30 mph when the accident occurred. Even if he was proceeding at his lower estimate of about 20mph, this was significantly too fast to be proceeding along a hard-surfaced highway when (a) there were passengers, (b) two of those passengers were on the rear rack, (c) each of those two had one hand full with a dog, and (d) they were not wearing helmets. If the quad bike had been travelling at walking speed, the claimant would have been unlikely to fall off and, if for some reason he did so, he would have been very unlucky to be badly hurt. But a passenger in his position and without a helmet would obviously be quite likely to fall off and be highly likely to suffer significant injury if he did so, if the vehicle were travelling at 20 mph or above.
10) Precisely why the claimant came off the quad bike is not proven. In particular, it is not proven that the position of his left leg in relation to the rear nearside wheel had anything to do with the accident. It is also not proven that the claimant failed to keep a firm hold of the rear rack on the quad bike. What can be said, however, is that he came off because his position on the rear of the quad bike with an inadequate handhold and nothing to secure him, was inherently precarious.
Medical Evidence
1) There is no evidence that the claimant had a pre-existing vulnerability to cranial trauma.
2) In the accident, the claimant suffered a right-sided scalp laceration and subgaleal soft tissue swelling at the vertex extending to the right frontal region. The CT head scan revealed a coronally-orientated undisplaced right para-midline frontal bone fracture with suture diastasis, a 6mm right acute subdural haematoma, multiple haemorrhagic contusions affecting primarily the right inferior frontal lobe, and evidence of sulcal effacement indicative of mass effect. The head injury would be defined as moderate – severe on the Mayo classification, and as severe on the Anneger's criteria.
3) Duration of post-traumatic amnesia was assessed at around 8 days.
4) The only physical neurodisability resulting from the index accident has been loss of sense of taste and smell, though there were some early signs of damage to vestibular function (for which an assessment is required) and there have also been neuropsychological sequelae.
5) The clinical picture is consistent with a single severe cranial impact, but multiple impacts cannot be excluded. The traumatic brain injury was a consequence of both linear and rotational forces.
6) If head protection ought to have been worn, the appropriate form of protection would have been a motorcycle helmet. The standard to which motorcycle helmets are obliged to comply is the equivalent of a fall from a vertical height of around 3 metres onto a hard, flat surface, and motorcycle helmets are tested to withstand both linear and tangential impacts.
7) If the claimant had been wearing a properly secured motorcycle helmet, the scalp laceration, the skull fractures and the underlying acute subdural haematoma would have been avoided. The brain injury would have been mitigated; but the experts disagreed as to the extent of that mitigation.
Contributory Negligence: the law
"(1) Where any person suffers damage as the result partly of his own fault and partly of the fault of any other person or persons, a claim in respect of that damage shall not be defeated by reason of the fault of the person suffering the damage, but the damages recoverable in respect thereof shall be reduced to such extent as the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant's share in the responsibility for the damage."
"A court must deal broadly with the problem of apportionment and in considering what is just and equitable must have regard to the blameworthiness of each party, but 'the claimant's share in the responsibility for the damage' cannot, I think, be assessed without considering the relative importance of his acts in causing the damage apart from his blameworthiness."
"[I]t is necessary when applying section 1(1) of the 1945 Act to take account both of the blameworthiness of the parties and the causative potency of their acts."
At [27] Lord Reed noted that: "It is not possible for a court to arrive at an apportionment which is demonstrably correct." He continued at [28]:
"It follows that the apportionment of responsibility is inevitably a somewhat rough and ready exercise (a feature reflected in the judicial preference for round figures), and that a variety of possible answers can legitimately be given. That is consistent with the requirement under section 1(1) to arrive at a result which the court considers 'just and equitable'. Since different judges may legitimately take different views of what would be just and equitable in particular circumstances, it follows that those differing views should be respected, within the limits of reasonable disagreement."
"in assessing contributory negligence the age of the claimant will be taken into account, so that the objective standard of care is to be measured by what is reasonably to be expected of a child of the same age, intelligence and experience"
(Campbell v Advantage Insurance Co Ltd [2021] EWCA Civ 1698, [2022] QB 354, at [43]). As I shall mention below, that corresponds to the general rule applicable to the standard of care required of a defendant.
Summary of the Submissions
"[L]ooking at the matter overall, it seems an ambitious submission to me that the passenger in such a case should be considered equally to blame with the driver. I proceed on the basis of a maximum reduction of 30% in respect of the issue of contributory negligence."
Discussion
1) The admission requires unpacking. The carrying of passengers was particularly negligent in circumstances where (a) each passenger would have at least one hand full with a dog, (b) no passenger was properly secured to the quad bike, and those on the rear rack were perched with at least one leg over the side and only the bar on the rack to hold onto with one hand, (c) no passenger had a helmet, and (d) the quad bike was to be driven on the public highway.
2) I find that there was a further particular of negligence, namely driving at an excessive speed in the circumstances. Of course, the defendant ought not to have been driving on the road or with passengers at all. But if he did so he ought at least to have driven at a speed that presented the minimum possible risk of injury to the passengers. As I have mentioned, the claimant would have been highly unlikely to suffer a significant injury by falling from the quad bike if it had been proceeding at walking speed. But if (as was almost inevitable once it joined the public highway, and as I find as a fact to have been the case) it was proceeding at a speed of or near to 30 mph, the risk both of coming off the quad bike and of suffering serious injury in that event was obvious.
Note 1 I have no doubt but that this wording comes from those who drafted the statement, not from the claimant himself. [Back] Note 2 It is also correct as a matter of fact. The Department for Transport’s testing standards are in the public domain. [Back] Note 3 The only reference that I can find to the defendant’s date of birth has been redacted, so that I cannot read it. [Back] Note 4 There is no positive evidence that this was a motivating factor. But one has some knowledge of what it is like to be sixteen and the possibility is plausible. [Back]