Tort Revision Sheets
Tort Revision Sheets
Tort Revision Sheets
Negligence - a breach of legal duty to take care which results in damage to the claimant.
This definition of negligence can be broken down into four component parts that a claimant
must prove to establish negligence. The legal burden of proving each of these parts falls upon
the claimant.
★ The claimants was owed a Duty of Care
★ There was a breach of that duty of care
★ The claimant suffered damage as a result of that breach (Causation)
★ The damage suffered was not too remote
The duty of care concerns the relationship between the defendant and the claimant, which must
be such that there is an obligation upon the defendant to take proper care to avoid causing
injury to the claimant in all circumstance of the case.
There are two ways in which a duty of care may be established:
-the defendant and the claimant are within one of the ‘special relationships’
-outside of these relationships, according to the principles developed by case law
Donoghue v Stevenson
Mrs Donoghue and a friend visited a cafe. Mrs Donoghue’s friend bought her a bottle of ginger
beer. The bottle was made of opaque glass. When filling Mrs Donoghue's glass, the remains of
a decomposed snail floated out. Mrs Donoghue developed gastroenteritis as a result.
Lord Atkin explained the narrow rule. ‘A manufacturer of products, which he sells in such a
form as to show that he intends them to reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they
left him with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination, and with the knowledge
that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products will result in
an injury to the consumer’s life or property, owes a duty of care to the consumer to take that
reasonable care.
Caparo v Dickman
The case considered the liability of an auditor for financial loss suffered by investors. However,
it also set out the three points which a court must consider whether a duty of care exists.
The three points are:
-Reasonable foresight of harm
-Sufficient proximity of relationship
-That it is fair, just and reasonable to impose a duty
Effectively redefined the neighbour principle such that it adds the requirement that there must
be a relationship of sufficient proximity and that the imposition of a duty of care must be fair,
just and reasonable.
EXCEPT
There is a duty to act positively if there is a special relationship or a relationship of
power/control between the parties. Examples include:
-Prison officers and prisoners (Home Office v Dorset Yacht Co)
-Employer and employee (Employers Liability)
-Occupier and Visitor (Occupier’s Liability)
-Parent and Child (Carmarthenshire County Council v Lewis - D was a local authority
employed a teacher who left a 4 year old child alone for about 10 minutes while she did other
things. The child left the classroom onto a busy road, where he caused a lorry driver to swerve
and collide with a telegraph pole. The lorry driver was killed and his widow sued the education
authority. It was held that the education authority had taken charge of the child and had a duty
to take reasonable care to prevent him from causing harm to others.
Special Protection
The law of negligence has no statutory basis. Developed through cases, meaning that when
considering whether or not a duty of care exists, the courts have flexibility to take policy
considerations into account and steer the evolution the the tort of negligence accordingly. This
flexibility has also allowed the courts to protect certain classes of defendant from liability in
negligence and also to provide additional help to certain classes of claimant bringing action.
★ Unborn Children: Burton v Islington Health Authority - held that a duty of care is owed
to an unborn child and is actionable on birth
Congenital Disabilities (Civil Liability) Act 1976 - gives a right of action to any child
who is born alive and disabled in respect of the disability, if it is caused by an occurrence
which affected the mother during pregnancy, or the mother or child during labour,
causing disabilities which would have otherwise not been present.
★ Police, Rescuers and Public Authorities - No general duty of care, would open the
floodgates. Been extended to the fire service. In regards to ambulance service, there is no
general duty to respond to a call, although once a call has been answered, the service
owes a duty to the named individual at a specific address.
-Hill v CC of West Yorkshire
-Capital and Counties plc v Hampshire County Council
-Kent v Griffiths
-Roberts and London Ambulance Service
Tort Revision
Breach of Duty
The second element of negligence is breach of duty. Having established that a duty of care
exists in law and in the particular situation, the next step in establishing liability is to decide
whether the defendant is in breach of that duty - in other words, whether the defendant has not
come up to the standard of care required by the law.
Standard of Care was generically defined in Blyth v Birmingham Water Works - a wooden plug
in a water main became loose in a severe frost. The plug led to a pipe which in turn went up to
the street. However, this pipe was blocked with ice, and the water instead flooded the
claimant’s house. The claimant sued in negligence. Alderson B defined negligence as: the
omission to do something which a reasonable man guided upon those considerations
which ordinarily regulate the conduct of human affairs, would do, or doing something
which a prudent and reasonable man would not do.
What is causation?
The claimant must show a causal link between the defendant’s act or omission and the loss of
damage suffered. Otherwise known as the chain of causation.
Factual Causation
The breach of duty must be the factual cause of the damage. The general test used by the courts
to determine factual causation is known as the ‘but for’ test.
Cork v Kirby Maclean (Lord Denning) - if the damage would not have happened but for the
particular fault, then that fault is the cause of the damage; if it would have happened just the
same, fault or no fault, the fault is not the cause of the damage.
The question is ‘But for the defendant’s breach of duty, would the loss or damage have
occurred?’
Proof of damage is essential within negligence. Rothwell v Chemical & Insulating Co Ltd, the
HoL held that symptomless problems and risk of future illness/anxiety are not able to gain
compensatable.
Remoteness
The final element required in establishing negligence is the extent of the damage suffered by
the claimant which should be attributable to the defendant. Remoteness is often referred to
‘legal causation’.
Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v Morts Dock and Engineering Co Ltd (The Wagon Mound) - the
defendants negligently leaked a quantity of bunkering oil into Sydney Harbour from a tanker.
This oil drifted into the claimant’s wharf where it mixed with assorted detritus including cotton
wadding. Welding was taking place in the wharf. The claimants sought (and received)
assurances that it was safe for them to continue welding. However, sparks from the welding
ignited the oily wadding which caused fire to spread to two ships, damaging them. The wharf
was also fouled.
At first instance, the trial judge applied the principles from Re Polemis, finding that the
defendants were liable for the fire damage, since the fouling to the wharf was a foreseeable
consequence of the leakage. On appeal, the Privy Council reversed the decision, holding that
the correct test for remoteness is reasonable foreseeability of the kind or type of damage in fact
suffered by the claimant.
Contributory Negligence
Unlike consent and illegality, contributory negligence is not a complete defence but a partial
defence that reduces the level of damages payable to the claimant. It applies when the
claimant’s carelessness has in some way caused, or contributed to, his own injuries.
Standard of Care
The standard of care is that of the reasonably prudent person. In other words, a defence of
contributory negligence will succeed if it can be established that the claimant failed to
recognise that he was jeopardising his own safety if this would have been obvious to the
ordinary person.
Apportionment of Blame
If a defendant establishes contributory negligence, the court will look at the contribution of both
parties to the harm suffered by the claim and apportion a percentage of responsibility to each
party. The claimant’s damages will be reduced by that percentage. There are two factors to take
into account when deciding to apportion blame; causation and culpability.
● Courts will only compensate medically recognised illnesses rather than claims for
distress, sorrow, or grief. They are also more likely to be awarded compensation if it
comes from a physical injury Attia v British Gas
● The four main policy considerations in a personal injury case for the courts:
○ Difficulty in differentiating grief and psychiatric illness
○ People ‘looking’ for compensation
○ Floodgates of liability
○ Disproportionate liability concerns
● Types of victim:
○ Primary Victim : A victim who has reasonable fear for own safety and been placed
in physical danger by D’s negligence
○ Secondary Victim: Witnesses or those involved in the immediate aftermath
● Primary Victim - provided physical harm is foreseeable. Psychiatric harm does not have
to be (Page v Smith - The claimant had suffered from ME over a period of time and was
in recovery when he was involved in a minor car accident due to the defendant's
negligence. The claimant was not physically injured in the collision but the incident
triggered his ME and had become chronic and permanent so that he was unable to return
to his job as a teacher. He was successful at his trial and awarded £162,000 in damages.
Held: Provided some kind of personal injury was foreseeable it did not matter whether
the injury was physical or psychiatric. There was thus no need to establish that
psychiatric injury was foreseeable. Also the fact that an ordinary person would not have
suffered the injury incurred by the claimant was irrelevant as the defendant must take his
victim as he finds him under the thin skull rule.)
● Secondary Victim - psychiatric illness must be reasonably foreseeable to a victim of
normal fortitude (Bourhill v Young - The claimant was a pregnant fishwife. She got off a
tram and as she reached to get her basket off the tram, the defendant drove his
motorcycle past the tram at excessive speed and collided with a car 50 feet away from
where the claimant was standing. The defendant was killed by the impact. The claimant
heard the collusion but did not see it. A short time later, the claimant walked past where
the incident occurred. The body had been removed but there was a lot of blood on the
road. The claimant went into shock and her baby was stillborn. She brought a negligence
claim against the defendant's estate.Held:No duty of care was owed by the defendant to
the claimant. There was not sufficient proximity between the claimant and defendant
when the incident occurred.)
● Lord Wilberforce’s Alcock Control Mechanisms to Restrict Liability
○ Proximity of Relationship with immediate victim must be a ‘close relationship of
love and affection’ (Only presumed for spouses, parents and children)
○ Proximity in time and space to a ‘high degree’. Note that a live TV broadcast does
not cover this. (Galli-Atkinson - Lord Justice Thorpe, Lord Justice Latham, Mr
Justice Wilson. The claimant’s daughter fatally injured in car accident, dying
shortly after. The mother came upon the scene, witnessed a police cordon at the
scene of the accident and was told of her death. She later saw the injuries at the
mortuary and suffered psychiatric reaction. Held: Her appeal succeeded. The
aftermath could be seen to include more than one component. The test was as to
proximity. Latham LJ explained that the deceased’s mother’s visit to the mortuary
could not be excluded from the events regarded as a part of the aftermath of the
accident. Those events stretched from ‘the moment of the accident until the
moment [the mother] left the mortuary’. In this case there could be seen to be one
unbroken chain of events between the discovery of the body and the events at the
mortuary. An event might be made up of a number of components as could the
aftermath ‘provided that the events alleged to constitute the aftermath retain
sufficient proximity to the event’.)
○ Sudden shock - means that the injury is a cause. Being informed of and accident
does not fulfill this. (Sion v Hampstead - The claimant’s son was seriously injured
in a motor-cycle accident. He was taken to hospital and the staff failed to diagnose
that he was bleeding from his kidney. The son went into a coma three days after
the accident having suffered a heart attack. His condition deteriorated and he was
placed in intensive care but unfortunately died fourteen days after the accident.
The claimant remained at his son’s bedside throughout and suffered psychiatric
injury as a result of witnessing his son’s deterioration. He brought an action
against the hospital alleging their negligent treatment of his son caused him to
suffer psychiatric injury. The hospital applied to have the claim struck out as
disclosing no cause of action. Brooke J found for the hospital and the claimant
appealed.Held: The appeal was dismissed. Staughton LJ: “In my opinion there is
no trace in that report of "shock" as defined by Lord Ackner, no sudden
appreciation by sight or sound of a horrifying event. On the contrary, the report
describes a process continuing for some time, from first arrival at the hospital to
the appreciation of medical negligence after the inquest. In particular, the son's
death when it occurred was not surprising but expected.”)
● If you negligently give distressing news you may be liable (AG v Tameside and Glessor
HA -Brooke LJ Negligence, Professional Negligence, Personal Injury The choice of the
telephone as a means of alerting and re-assuring people, who had received treatment
from a health worker later found to be HIV+, was proper. The was no breach of a duty
care, even though some people called had suffered distress. ". . . once the defendants had
decided to inform their patients at all, they were under a duty to take such steps to inform
them as were reasonable, having regard both to the foreseeable risk that some of them
might suffer psychiatric injury (or any existing psychiatric injury might be materially
aggravated) upon receipt of the information " and "the judge has to perform the familiar
role of considering the factual evidence carefully, listening to the expert evidence, and
forming a view as to whether in all the circumstances these public health authorities fell
below the standards reasonably to be expected of them when they selected their preferred
method of communicating the information to the patients." )
● Impact of White v CC of South Yorkshire - there is a duty to protect employees from
psychiatric harm and is no different from their duty to protect all people and unwitting
agents. Difficult to argue unwittingly harmed because of D’s negligence but it is possible
(W v Essex CC)
Rescuers - who suffer physical injury is foreseeable (Haynes v Harwood)