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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Busby v Berkshire Bed Company Litd [2018] EWHC 2976 (QB) (09 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/2976.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 2976 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
B e f o r e :
____________________
CLAIRE BUSBY |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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BERKSHIRE BED COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Neil Block Q.C. (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 16th ,17th, 18th, 19th October 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Cotter Q.C. :
Content
Introduction | ( page 2 paragraph paragraph 1) |
Outline facts | ( page 2 paragraph paragraph 3) |
Claimant's case | ( page 4 paragraph paragraph 14) |
Defendant's case | ( page 4 paragraph paragraph 18) |
Law | ( page 5 paragraph paragraph 20) |
Evidence | ( page 5 paragraph paragraph 24) |
Expert Evidence | (page 6 paragraph paragraph 27); |
Assessment of witnesses | ( page 6 paragraph paragraph 28) |
Overview of expert witnesses | ( page 7 paragraph paragraph 37) |
Findings of fact | ( page 8 paragraph paragraph 41) |
The Gliders Issue | ( page 13 paragraph paragraph 64) |
The cause of the accident | ( page 19 paragraph paragraph 99) |
Liability | ( page 24 paragraph paragraph 130) |
Conclusion | ( page 28 paragraph paragraph 155) |
Introduction
Outline facts
(a) Two ottoman divan bases which were designed to be joined together and retained in place by a clip over the edges of the two bases and a screw through the lids. The main attraction of ottoman bed bases is their storage capability. The lid of the divan base is designed to be lifted, with the assistance of gas struts taking the weight of the mattress, revealing the storage space.
(b) A Naturelle 120 mattress
Claimant's case
Defendant's case
Law
Evidence
Expert evidence
Assessment of witnesses
"the delivery men confirmed they would be back the following week. They did not mention any problem with the claimant's double bed or the fact that there were two castors missing on the right-hand side divan at the foot of the bed."
However Samuel Nash's witness statement as confirmed in his oral evidence was that he was told by the delivery men that-
"..there was a problem with my mum's bed in that two feet were missing at the bottom of the bed"
Overview of Expert witnesses
(a) inserting a glider into the socket creates marks on the internal face of the socket. None of the sample sockets had internal marks as received, but each was marked after a glider had been inserted and removed. The vacant socket attached to the left-hand base unit of the bed had internal marks consistent with a glider stem having been inserted.
(b) The marks on the left-hand base unit were consistent with clips having been present when the divans were the same height.
(c) Taking into account the compression of the mattress, the slope caused by the lack of gliders would have had little effect upon the tipping point of a rigid body lying on the mattress.
Findings of fact
"To ensure that the sockets in the holes are clear we check each hole with a glide that is grounded down at the end to be able to insert it into the hole to check the whole is clear. The principal reason (for) the grinding down (of) the end of the test glide is so that it does not lock into the socket as the glide are designed to do"
".. Claimant did not deal with the defendant's employees when they attended her home".
Such matters could only have been pleaded upon specific instructions and directly conflict with both the witness statement and her oral evidence which dealt with her interaction with the employees in greater detail.
"the left side of the bed was sitting on the floor and lower where mums head was. Her head was resting on the floor against the bed and she was in shock trying to talk but unable to move. I clearly remember this image, her face the room and feet missing on the bed."
In his oral evidence he stated
"I remember as clear as the day, the divan was sitting on the floor"
This would have been a terribly distressing incident for this 14 year-old boy and no doubt one he has thought about over and over in the years that have passed. It is concerning that he states that he could see the left-hand side of the bed was lower when Ms Busby and Mr Marshall who had been sleeping on the bed had not noticed it and also, as the photograph taken by Mr Hazier shows, any bedding would probably have obscured the foot of the bed. Indeed nobody else present at the accident scene remembers the left-hand bed being lower or that castors/gliders were missing. I also note the comments in his witness statement that-
"It's only after the accident that we discovered the feet on one side were missing…..",
yet on his recollection elsewhere he stated that it was immediately apparent when entering the room. In his oral evidence he said that Natalie found out that the gliders were missing. Mr Nash left the property that night and has not been back for two to three years until 2015 when he spoke to solicitors. I find that his recollection of noting the absence of gliders is not reliable. That brings me to a central issue of fact.
The gliders issue (were all gliders present when the Defendant's employees left on 7th August 2013?)
"I remember very clearly that there was a problem with one of the twin's beds. It had a storage lid which did not pop up properly. I also remember there was a problem with some of the feet on the beds. They were going to have to come back with replacement or missing parts but I cannot remember the specifics of the problems as there were a couple of problems with the beds. I recall that there were no problems with mine on my sister's beds but there was a problem with one of the boy's beds and I remember something about the headboards but not the specifics. I also remember that there was a problem with my mum's bed in that two feet were missing at the bottom of the bed……..
My mum was aware the bed company had to come back as there are a few things wrong with the beds. I did not say anything to mum about the feet missing from her bed. This is because there were a number of problems with the beds and it didn't occur to me to mention it. It is only after the accident that we discovered the feet on one side were missing and mum are not known anything about the missing feet before the accident."
a) The evidence of Samuel Busby;
b) The evidence about the difficulty opening of the lids in the days between the delivery and the accident;
c) The ease with which it appears the paramedics were able to split the two bed bases after the accident. There has been no mention in any evidence of the need to remove a screw between the two beds;
d) The combined view of the lay and expert evidence that significant tensile force is required to pull a glider out of the socket once installed and that during/as a result of this process the socket sometime comes out as well;
e) The inherent implausibility of someone choosing to remove and not replace two gliders before or after the accident for no good reason. If a glider was pulled out by accident it could simply be replaced;
f) The fact that nobody has mentioned, or found, gliders or a screw left in the bedroom at any stage.
"the deliveryman confirmed that they would be back the following week. They did not mention any problem with the claimant's double bed or the fact that there were two casters missing on the right-hand side the divan at the foot of the bed.
The court's approach.
Conclusion on the "gliders issue"
"I recall noticing a small personal or disabled lift in the premises and I was told we could use it. However it wasn't suitable"
There was no lift.
The cause of the accident
"it was on this particular date that I went into her bedroom and noticed that there were no feet on the corner of the bed. The bed is two large divans pushed together and each divan has feet on each corner. As you are looking at the bed from the doorway, it was the left-hand divan where the two front feet were missing. The quilt was still on the bed and it had all been pushed back together. Left-hand divan and bed look lower than the right-hand side. I sat on the bed and when I stood up it was like the mattress pushed me off. It felt very weird and did not look or feel right in the whole corner of that side of the bed. I believe I took some video footage of it because it was very strange."
"I was in bed with my partner John. He was laid (on) the right-hand side of the bed with his head near the headboard and his feet at the end of the bed. I was on his left side, in the middle of the bed, lent over him. My back was facing the window and my head was facing the bathroom. We were being intimate
I sat up intending to lay down on the bed with my feet near the headboard and my head at the foot of the bed. As I manoeuvred from a kneeling position to lay down, I sat on my left buttock to swing my legs round from underneath me. As I went to roll back, my body seemed to continue rolling backwards and my legs and feet were catapulted over my head. My head was slightly off the edge of the bed at the time I continued rolling backwards and landed directly on the top of my head forcing my neck backwards and forwards. I felt with the full weight of my body directly onto the top of my head. My head was right next to the base of the bed my back was up against the end of the divan and mattress. I knew immediately that I'd seriously injured myself because my head did not seem connected to my body and I had no feeling from the neck down. My legs and body then slumped to the right towards the window"
"… on top of me facing me. She sat up and rose off me intending to sit back on her bottom when she seemed to just roll off the bed. If you're looking at the bed from the doorway it is a large bed and I was laid on the left-hand side. As Claire went to sit down beside me she just carried on going. I remember the image clearly of her falling off the bed with her feet in the air. It was one of those rolls you see in life in slow motion. She came up slowly and sat back and kept rolling backwards"
"patient was having sex with partner when she fell backwards off the bed head over heels landing on the floor"
"kneeling off edge of bed fell backwards and flipped back overhead" (emphasis added)
"patient was kneeling on the edge of the bed and fell backwards onto a flat carpeted floor" (emphasis added)
"kneeling on edge of bed; fell back and flipped back overhead"
" she was kneeling in the middle of the bed and went to sit down on her left buttock and move her legs from underneath her by swinging them around the right as she lay back the end of the bed appeared to give way causing her roll backwards off the bed".
Reference is then made to the missing "castors", but significantly in my view letter continues-
"The claimant also purchased the mattress which is recommended to her by the store and the springiness of the mattress may have contributed towards the accident"
This ties in with the statement made by Ms Bubsy that the mattress was very springy.
" On 15 August 2013 the claimant was kneeling on the bed. Claimant intended to manoeuvre her legs from beneath her. In the process of undertaking this manoeuvre the claimant sat back and the bed moved causing her legs to go over her head" ( emphasis added).
Liability
Consumer Protection Act 1987
"..any person who, by putting his name on the product or using a trade mark or other distinguishing mark in relation to the product, has held himself out to be the producer of the product;
This means that if there was a defect in the product then subject to establishing causation (which has not been stablished in this case) the Defendant would be liable.
3 Meaning of "defect".
(1)Subject to the following provisions of this section, there is a defect in a product for the purposes of this part if the safety of the product is not such as persons generally are entitled to expect; and for those purposes "safety", in relation to a product, shall include safety with respect to products comprised in that product and safety in the context of risks of damage to property, as well as in the context of risks of death or personal injury.
(2)In determining for the purposes of subsection (1) above what persons generally are entitled to expect in relation to a product all the circumstances shall be taken into account, including—
(a)the manner in which, and purposes for which, the product has been marketed, its get-up, the use of any mark in relation to the product and any instructions for, or warnings with respect to, doing or refraining from doing anything with or in relation to the product;
(b)what might reasonably be expected to be done with or in relation to the product; and
(c)the time when the product was supplied by its producer to another;
and nothing in this section shall require a defect to be inferred from the fact alone that the safety of a product which is supplied after that time is greater than the safety of the product in question.
.
'… (iv) The question to be resolved is the safety or the degree or level of safety or safeness which persons generally are entitled to expect. The test is not that of an absolute level of safety, nor an absolute liability for any harm caused by a harmful characteristic. (v) In the assessment of that question the expectation is that of persons generally, or the public at large. (vi) The safety is not what is actually expected by the public at large, but what they are entitled to expect …' (Emphasis in the original.)
Breach of contract
"Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either as arising naturally, i.e. according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself, such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the contract as the probable result of the breach of it. Now, if the special circumstances under which the contract was actually made were communicated by the plaintiffs to the defendants, and thus known to both parties, the damages resulting from the breach of such a contract, which they would reasonably contemplate, would be the amount of injury which would ordinarily follow from a breach of contract under these special circumstances so known and communicated…"
Negligence
" The law cannot take account of everything that follows a wrongful act, it regards some subsequent matters is outside the scope of its selection "
Conclusion