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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Toropdar v D [2009] EWHC 2997 (QB) (02 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/2997.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2997 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
133-137 Fleet Street London EC4A 1HD |
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B e f o r e :
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JEWEL AHMED TOROPDAR |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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"D" (a minor by the Official Solicitor as his litigation friend |
Defendant |
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Sixth Floor, 12-14 New Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1AG.
Telephone No: 020 7936 6000 Fax No: 020 7427 0093 DX: 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR. ALLAN GORE QC (instructed by Messrs. Bindmans LLP) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE:
"As the claimant was approaching the Education Centre the three vehicles on his left (particularly the van in the middle) obscured his view of who might be at or around the Education Centre; and the bulk of the bus obscured his view of who was or might be at the side or in front of the bus. The bus was empty, save for the driver, and appeared to the claimant to be so. But he had no way of knowing who was in front of the bus or along its nearside at the front. In the words of the Code he should have adjusted his speed as a precaution. To drive at a speed close to the legal limit on a street, and a location in the street, such as this on a summer Saturday afternoon falls, in my judgment, short of the standard of the careful driver, who needs to drive with the safety of children in mind at a speed suitable for the conditions, particularly when driving past bus stops (Highway Code paras 181-2)."
"Dr Ashton concluded that, if the claimant had been driving at 27.5 mph (i.e. higher than what I regard as acceptable) and had carried out precautionary braking before D went out of sight behind the bus (at which stage the claimant would probably have been in line with somewhere in the front half of the westernmost car) the collision either would not have occurred, because D would have cleared the path of the car, or his injuries would have been minor ones. A fortiori this would have been so if C was driving at 25 mph or slower, which is the sort of speed at which he should have been driving. According to Dr Ashton, if the claimant had been driving at 20 mph, and carried out precautionary braking, the car would have stopped before the collision site. I accept these conclusions."
"54. In Gough v. Thorne [1966] 1 WLR 1387, Lord Denning MR explained at page 390 that:
'A judge should only find a child guilty of contributory negligence if he or she is of such an age as to be expected to take precautions for his or her own safety; and then he or she is only to be found guilty if blame should be attached to him or her. A child has not the road sense nor the experience of his or her elders. He or she is not to be found guilty unless he or she is blameworthy.'
55. Salmon LJ expressed it slightly differently in the same case at page 1391, when he said that:
'The question as to whether the plaintiff can be said to have been guilty of contributory negligence depends on whether any ordinary child of 13 could be expected to have done any more than this child did. I did say "any ordinary child". I do not mean a paragon of prudence; nor do I mean a scatterbrained child; but the ordinary girl of 13.'
56. In Mullins v. Richards [1988] 1 WLR 1304 at 1308 to 1309, Hutchison LJ cited what Salmon LJ had said, as well as the statements in the Australian case of McHale v. Watson [1966] 115 CLR 199, that:
'The standard of care being objective, it is no answer for him [that is the child] any more than it is for an adult, to say that the harm he caused was due to his being abnormally slow witted, quick tempered, absent minded or inexperienced. But it does not follow that he cannot rely in his defence upon a limitation upon the capacity for foresight or prudence, not as being personal to himself, but as being characteristic of humanity at his stage of development and in that sense normal. By doing so he appeals to a standard of ordinariness, to an objective and not a subjective standard.' (Kitto J at page 213-214)."
Then,
"The standard by which [a child's] conduct is to be measured is not that to be expected of a reasonable adult but that reasonably to be expected of a child of the same age, intelligence and experience' (Owen J at page 234)."
"In my judgment, in those circumstances, there was presented to this defendant a situation which, as it developed, was fraught with potential danger. Four girls, obviously intent on crossing this busy highway hovering, for want of a better word – it is a word used by the defendant herself – undecided when to cross and in the case of the plaintiff and her friend, Miss Malby, hesitating for a second time in the middle lane. In those circumstances, with such a lapse of time available to the defendant to make a decision as what best to do, it was plainly incumbent upon her, as the driver of the motor car, to make her presence felt, not simply to slow down in anticipation that the girls would let her pass. In my view a reasonably careful and competent driver in this situation would have sounded the horn to bring home to the girls the real danger to which they were exposing themselves. Furthermore, for my part, I am satisfied that this defendant should have reduced her speed so as effectively to prevent this accident. That did not necessarily involve emergency braking. It would have involved moderate braking during the 400 yards or metres which were available to her from the moment that she saw the girls in a vulnerable position to the moment when the impact took place. In a sentence, in my view, this is an accident which should not have happened, and would not have happened had the motorist been exercising a reasonable standard of care."
"I bear in mind however the age of the plaintiff. Of course one can assume that she would be familiar with at least the basic elements of the Highway Code and the need for the pedestrians themselves to have regard for their own safety. But in my judgment, in the light of all the circumstances of this case, the culpability of the plaintiff is not to be realistically compared with the culpability of the defendant driver. I regard the driver as much more to blame, when one bears in mind that she was driving a motor vehicle. I would discount the damages on account of the contributory negligence of this particular plaintiff in these particular circumstances by one-third."
"I do not think it can be overstated that when motorists are driving near to a group of young children, and especially young boys, a very high standard of caution indeed is required. Here were three 11 year old lads, two had crossed the road, their companion, the plaintiff, was left stranded on the side from which they had come. The risk of him doing something silly in order to rejoin them ought to have been foreseen as a very high risk. The precautions the defendant did take were simply not adequate, in my view, to discharge his duty as the driver of a motor vehicle approaching the situation that he had seen."
"It seems to me that it may well be that the judge in this case was generous in his approach to the liability of the appellant; for it seems to me that the appellant undoubtedly must bear a substantial burden for this accident. He was the one who created the dangerous situation by stepping out as he did into the carriageway when the respondent's vehicle was so close. But nonetheless, bearing in mind the fact that this court has consistently imposed on the drivers of cars a high burden to reflect the fact that a car is potentially a dangerous weapon, I find it difficult to see how I could properly categorise the judge's apportionment in this case as plainly wrong."
"Like Lord Justice Latham, I would not necessarily have reached the same conclusion myself. But it was certainly a conclusion which the trial judge was entitled to reach, bearing in mind always that a motor car is a potentially lethal instrument."
"A car can do so much more damage to a person than a person can usually do to a car. … The potential 'destructive disparity' between the parties can readily be taken into account as an aspect of blameworthiness. …
16. We also accept that this court is always reluctant to interfere with the trial judge's judgment of what apportionment between the parties is 'just and equitable' under the 1945 Act. But a finding as to which, if either, of the parties was the more responsible for the damage is different from a finding as to the precise extent of a less than 50% contribution. There is a qualitative difference between a finding of 60% contribution and a finding of 40% which is not so apparent in the quantitative difference between 40% and 20%. It is rare indeed for a pedestrian to be found more responsible than a driver unless the pedestrian has suddenly moved into the path of an oncoming vehicle. That is not this case. The court 'has consistently imposed upon the drivers of cars a high burden to reflect the fact that the car is potentially a dangerous weapon': Latham LJ in Lunt v Khelifa [2002] EWCA Civ 801, para 20."