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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 >> Stanton v Collinson [2009] EWHC 342 (QB) (02 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/342.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 342 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
NEWCASTLE DISTRICT REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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WILLIAM THOMAS ROBERT STANTON (A Patient proceeding by his Father and Litigation Friend ROBERT STANTON) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LYNN DENISE COLLINSON (PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE OF MATTHEW ALEXANDER COLLINSON (DECEASED)) |
Defendant |
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Mark Turner QC (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mower, solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13 to 15 January 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Cox :
The Issues for Trial
"(i) Failed to wear a seat belt;
(ii) Sat on the lap of a fellow passenger who was, in turn, sitting in the front seat;
(iii) Encouraged the Deceased to drive fast;
(iv) Consumed alcohol to the extent that it impaired his ability to judge what was safe."
The Facts
" Beck, I think Beck, I'm presuming Beck got in first because there was somebody sat in seat where Beck was sat and like she pulled chair forward so we could climb into back and we got into back and then Billy got in front with Beck."
Asked to explain further she said that the Claimant was sitting on Becky's knee.
"All I can remember is getting in and sitting on William Stanton's knee."
Asked why she did this she replied:
" Amy Stimson had got in back and there were another lad in back and he were laid out on back seat. So I were stood at side of car so I had to sit in front because there were no other room so I sat in front with William.
What can you tell me about this lad who's laid out in the back.
Can just remember he were, I think he were really drunk, he were just laid on back seat and Amy got in and like squeezed in at side of him, that's all I can remember.
He were just sprawled out on back seat."
"I can just remember being sat on William Stanton's knee and I were, I think I were trying to hold on to side of door cus he were like going fast and it were like making us go like move out a bit cus we were going that fast.
It was making yer
We couldn't like sit still in a seat, you know like throwing us forward and that."
Getting in, sitting on the Claimant's knee and the feeling of going fast were the last things she could remember before the collision. Whilst I accept that her account has not been tested in the witness box it is relevant, in my view, that she gave this account spontaneously, and repeated it on several occasions, during an interview conducted soon after the accident.
The Claimant's Seating Position
"3.7 In Mr Henderson's view the person sitting on the other's lap in the nearside front seat would lead the other person towards the offside during the initial impact and would move across the driver, who would be restrained by the door. It is unlikely that their positions relative to each other would be reversed during the vehicle's subsequent movements, unless one or both were completely ejected from the vehicle. However there is no evidence of anyone being completely ejected. Therefore when the vehicle subsequently overturned the driver would be likely to end up over the other person's body.
3.8 The alternative scenario is that William Stanton was sitting on Rebecca Hart's lap. In Mr Henderson's view, for Rebecca to pass beneath William and land across the driver before the car overturned, William's entire body would have to be restrained by the cantrail above the driver's door. While his head injury is consistent with this scenario, in Mr Henderson's view he would be unlikely to escape without also suffering significant injury to his neck and/or upper body. Mr Henderson is not aware that he suffered any such injuries.
3.9 Therefore, in Mr Henderson's view, if the male that the witnesses say was lying partially over the girl's body was Matthew Collinson then, on balance of probabilities, it is more likely that Rebecca Hart was sitting on William Stanton's lap than vice versa. This scenario would not prevent William Stanton from suffering his head injury."
"3.10 In Dr Rattenbury's view, the description of the post collision scene by the witnesses does not allow a clear understanding of which male (Collinson or Stanton) was where. The statements do not appear consistent in terms of which parts of whose body were protruding through windows on which side of the car. Nor is it clear exactly how the three occupants in the front of the car would have moved in response to the impact, rotation and rolling of the vehicle. Dr Rattenbury does not believe who ended up on top of who, even if this could be determined, gives useful guidance as to exactly where and how the two front seat passengers of the car were sitting prior to the impact.
3.11 It is ultimately a matter for the Court to assess the witness evidence, which is contradictory in this case. However, Dr Rattenbury takes the view that the evidence of the rear seat passengers, in conjunction with the agreed likelihood of greater injury to the person on top means that the balance of probabilities is that Stanton was on top of Hart."
Encouragement to Drive Fast
The Claimant's Failure to Wear a Seat Belt the Froom point
"When 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."
Section 4 provides that:
"'Fault' means negligence, breach of statutory duty or other act or omission which gives rise to a liability in tort or would, apart from this Act, give rise to the defence of contributory negligence."
"In determining responsibility, the law eliminates the personal equation. It takes no notice of the views of the particular individual or of others like him. It requires everyone to exercise all such precautions as a man of ordinary prudence would observe:"
"The share of responsibility
Whenever there is an accident, the negligent driver must bear by far the greater share of responsibility. It was his negligence which caused the accident. It also was a prime cause of the whole of the damage. But in so far as the damage might have been avoided or lessened by wearing a seat belt, the injured person must bear some share. But how much should this be? Is it proper to inquire whether the driver was grossly negligent or only slightly negligent? Or whether the failure to wear a seat belt was entirely inexcusable or almost forgivable? If such an inquiry could easily be undertaken, it might be as well to do it. In Davies v. Swan Motor Co. (Swansea) Ltd. [1949] 2 K.B. 291, 326, the court said that consideration should be given not only to the causative potency of a particular factor, but also its blameworthiness. But we live in a practical world. In most of these cases the liability of the driver is admitted, the failure to wear a seat belt is admitted, the only question is: what damages should be payable? This question should not be prolonged by an expensive inquiry into the degree of blameworthiness on either side, which would be hotly disputed. Suffice it to assess a share of responsibility which will be just and equitable in the great majority of cases.
Sometimes the evidence will show that the failure made no difference. The damage would have been the same, even if a seat belt had been worn. In such cases the damages should not be reduced at all. At other times the evidence will show that the failure made all the difference. The damage would have been prevented altogether if a seat belt had been worn. In such cases I would suggest that the damages should be reduced by 25 per cent. But often enough the evidence will only show that the failure made a considerable difference. Some injuries to the head, for instance, would have been a good deal less severe if a seat belt had been worn, but there would still have been some injury to the head. In such case I would suggest that the damages attributable to the failure to wear a seat belt should be reduced by 15 per cent.
Conclusion
Everyone knows, or ought to know, that when he goes out in a car he should fasten the seat belt. It is so well known that it goes without saying, not only for the driver, but also the passenger. If either the driver or the passenger fails to wear it and an accident happens and the injuries would have been prevented or lessened if he had worn it then his damages should be reduced. Under the Highway Code a driver may have a duty to invite his passenger to fasten his seat belt: but adult passengers possessed of their faculties should not need telling what to do. If such passengers do not fasten their seat belts, their own lack of care for their own safety may be the cause of their injuries. "
"I say that because it is clear from his judgment that he was prepared to, and did, consider to what extent the figure of 25 per cent suggested by Lord Denning had been exceeded during the 23 years since that decision, so as to see how readily the courts have been prepared to treat that figure as merely a guideline for the great majority of cases and how readily one should make an exception to it. The fact is that there has been no reported case of which counsel are aware where a passenger's failure to wear a seat belt has resulted in a finding of more than 25 per cent contributory negligence. I read the trial judge's comment as indicating simply that he saw the guidelines in Froom v. Butcher as being applicable. In so doing he did not go wrong."
" the Court of Appeal there was aware that legislation to that effect was being contemplated. Reference is made to that in the judgment of Lord Denning at p. 294C. So that was an aspect which was taken into account."
"17 A reading of that judgment shows that the Court of Appeal was not there seeking to put forward the figure of 25 per cent contribution as an absolute and immutable ceiling in every single case. But it clearly did wish to give guidance which would apply in the vast majority of cases, so that one could avoid what is described as 'an expensive inquiry into the degree of blameworthiness on either side, which would be hotly disputed' (see p. 296B).
18 It follows that, while in principle there could be exceptional cases which fall outside the range suggested, one would expect such cases to be rare. That indeed has proved to be the situation. There is value in having clear guidelines normally applicable, so as to aid parties in arriving at sensible settlements."
The trial judge was held not to have treated the 25 per cent figure in Froom as an absolute ceiling, but to have sought to arrive at a just and equitable decision, which could not be said to be clearly wrong.
" might perhaps exist under the 1978 Act where an adult was deliberately carrying someone on his or her lap in the front seat of a vehicle with no seat belt or other fitted restraint being applied to the person, particularly if that person was a child. I can see an argument that the blameworthiness of that adult with a child on his or her lap could be assessed at more than 25 per cent since such a child (or, indeed, an older person) might be in a potentially more vulnerable position than would a person sitting directly on the front passenger seat in the normal way. The child is in closer proximity to the facia and windscreen of the car. No doubt factual expert evidence would be required to establish that there was greater vulnerability. But that is not this case, because here the Part 20 defendants were aware that the claimant was restrained by a lap belt, and indeed the mother had herself fitted it around the child."
"(i) that the claimant, being then aged 24 and having passed his driving test two years before the accident, was both older and a more experienced driver than the defendant;
(ii) that the claimant had deliberately left off his seat belt, probably for some time;
(iii) that the driving of the defendant was no worse than careless this was a case of momentary inattention and
(iv) that the claimant would have suffered no, or at least only moderate, injuries if he had been wearing a seat belt."
"42. I accept that, no doubt largely as a result of the efforts of bodies such as ROSPA, the public at large has been educated as to the importance of wearing seat belts and that public awareness of the value of seat belts has grown hugely since 1975. However, it does not appear to me to follow that the guidance given by the Court of Appeal in Froom needs to be revisited. Rather the question appears to me to be this: can it be said that the Court of Appeal in Froom under-estimated the desirability of wearing seat belts or failed to take due account of the benefits of doing so, both in terms of avoiding deaths and serious injuries and saving the cost to the NHS of treating injured drivers and passengers. If the answer to that question were to be in the affirmative, then I would readily understand why it could be said that public policy requires reconsideration of the Froom guidelines.
43. However, when one looks at the judgment of Lord Denning in Froom, it is striking how alert the court was as early as 1975 to the vital importance of wearing seat belts."
"46. Whilst I accept that public awareness of the vital importance of wearing seat belts has increased markedly since 1975, it appears to me that judicial awareness, both in Froom and in the numerous cases which followed it, of the dangers of not doing so is clear. The public costs consequences of failing to belt up are self-evident. That being so, I do not accept that in this respect public policy calls for a review of the approach laid down in Froom."
"(1) The principles or guidelines in Froom v Butcher were laid down over 30 years ago in 1976 and circumstances have changed since then. The wearing of seat belts has become compulsory and it is now more blameworthy not to wear a seat belt than it was in 1976.
(2) A rigid rule of the kind laid down in Froom v Butcher is unjust especially to defendants where the claimant would have suffered no or no significant injury but for his failure to wear a seat belt.
(3) Such a rigid rule is inconsistent with section 1(1) of the 1945 Act which provides that the damages 'should be reduced to such extent as the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant's share in the responsibility for the damages.' A rigid rule cannot be just and equitable.
(4) To permit an increase in the maximum figure of 25% would help to deter people from failing or refusing to wear a seat belt and would therefore increase road safety and so further the public interest.
(5) In these circumstances, although in one sense this is a private law case, the issues remain questions of public importance which should be determined. It could be treated as a test case."
"There is no evidence that there is an urgency about the resolution of what [counsel] says are the important points of principle."
And that:
"I am not persuaded that the public interest requires permission to appeal to be granted, even if I were persuaded of the potential merits of the appeal."
Should the Claimant's Damages be Reduced?
"What injuries if any, would William Stanton have probably sustained even if he had been wearing his seat belt as a sole occupant of the passenger seat?"
"the severity of any such impact would probably have been reduced by the restraining effect of the lap belt against his lower body, with a resultant reduction in the severity of his injury. Thus we agree that seat belt use would, on the balance of probabilities, have been beneficial in significantly reducing the severity of his head injury, but complete prevention of serious injury to the head, face or neck would be likely."