Title: LAW OF TORTS
1LAW OF TORTS
- Negligence Duty of Care
- Clary Castrission
- clary_at_40k.com.au
2How will we cover negligence?
- Duty of Care at common law
- Civil Liability Act and Duty of Care
- More CLA and Breach of Duty
- Damage and Particular Duty Areas
- More Particular Duty Areas
3Negligence- Duty of Care
- Snails
- Overview of negligence
- Arriving at a Duty of Care
- Categories
- The harder ones
- Proximity and Reasonable Foreseeability v
Incrementalism - Some interesting applications
- Unborn children and the wrongful life cases
- Legislative reform
4NEGLIGENCE AND FAULT IN TORTS
FAULT
NEGLIGENCE
INTENTION
TRESPASS
NEGLIGENCE the action
CARELESS
5NEGLIGENT TRESPASS
- Intentional or negligent act of D which
directly causes an injury to the P or his /her
property without lawful justification - The Elements of Trespass
- fault intentional or negligent act
- injury must be direct
- injury may be to the P or to his/her property
- No lawful justification
6NEGLIGENT TRESPASS
- While trespass is always a direct tort, it is not
necessarily an intentional act in every instance.
It may be committed negligently - Negligent trespass is an action in trespass not
in negligence - Where the facts of a case permit, it is possible
to frame an action in both trespass and
negligence on the same facts - Williams v. Molotin (1957) 97 CLR. 465.
7What is Negligence?
- It is the neglect of a legal duty
- Negligence v carelessness
- The law takes no cognisance of negligence in the
abstract. It concerns itself with carelessness
only where there is a duty to take care and where
failure in that duty has caused damage. (Lord
MacMillan in D v S) - Tame v NSW (2002) 211 CLR 317
8Negligence The Elements
Duty of care
Negligence
Breach
Damage
9Negligence The Early Cases
- Heaven v. Pender (1883)
- The dicta of Brett MR
- whenever one person is by circumstances placed in
such a position with regard to another, that
every one of ordinary sense who did think would
at once recognise that if he did not use ordinary
care and skill in his own conduct with regard to
those circumstances he would cause danger or
injury to the person or property of the other
(person) a duty arises to use ordinary care and
skill to avoid such danger.
10Donoghue v. Stevenson 1932 AC 562
- Facts
- Understanding the relationships
11Donoghue v Stevenson (cont)
- Dicta of Lord Atkin
- The rule that you are to love your neighbour
becomes in law, you must not injure your
neighbour, and the lawyers question, who is my
neighbour? receives a restricted reply. You must
take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions
which you can reasonably foresee would be likely
to injure your neighbour. Who then in law is my
neighbour? The answer seems to be persons who are
closely and directly affected by my act that I
ought reasonably to have them in mind to the acts
or omissions which are called into question (at
599)
12The Manufacturers Duty
- Grant v Australian Knitting Mills (1936)
- The application of the rule in D v S
- 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 consumers life or
property, owes a duty to the consumer to take
that reasonable care - Baar v Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Authority
(1970) 92 WN (NSW) 472
13What did Lord Atkin mean?
- What Lord Atkin did was use his general
conception to open up a category of cases giving
rise to a special duty The process may be
described either as the widening of an old
category or as the creation of a new and similar
one. The general conception can be used to
produce other categories in the same way. - Lord Devlin in Hedley Byrne Co Ltd v Heller
Partners Ltd 1964 AC 465 (at 524)
14Established Categories
- Type of Harm
- Type of Defendant
- Type of Plaintiff
- Manufacturer to consumer
- Makers/repairers to users of chattels
- Teachers to pupils
- Occupiers of land to visitors
- Skilled professionals to their clients
- Highway workers to highway users
15Checking In
- Snails
- Overview of negligence
- Arriving at a Duty of Care
- Categories
- _________
- The harder ones
- Proximity and Reasonable Foreseeability v
Incrementalism - Some interesting applications
- Unborn children and the wrongful life cases
- Legislative reform
16Duty of Care in General
- Where there is physical loss or injury (or an
established category), duty is relatively easy to
identify. - Rylands v Fletcher (1868) LR 3 HL 330
- Where nature of harm is more difficult to
identify or quantify, it gets tougher.
17- WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE DUTY DOES NOT FIT AN
ALREADY EXISTING CATEGORY?
- What is needed is a conceptual framework that
will promote predictability and continuity and at
the same time facilitate change when it is
needed. (McHugh J in Perre v Apand (1999)) - Principle v Category
- Principle Proximity and Reasonable
Foreseeability - Category Incrementalism
- There is still much disorder and confusion-
Kirby J Perre v Apand
18What is Reasonable Foreseeability?
- Question of identity of the plaintiff
- Question of law
Is the P reasonably foreseeable (as person or
member of a class of people) likely to be
affected by Ds actions?
19Reasonable Foreseeability Case Law
- Some illustrations
- Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R. Co. (1928
- Chapman v. Hearse (1961)
20Reasonable Foreseeability Established Category
Of Duty of Care
- Wyong Shire Council v Shirt (1980) 146 CLR 40 per
Brennan J - risk must be real in the sense that a
reasonable person would not brush it aside as
far-fetched or fanciful. - Koehler -v- Cerebos (Australia) Limited 2005
HCA 15 - McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ (majority)
- The central inquiry remains whether, in all the
circumstances, the risk of a plaintiff
sustaining a recognisable psychiatric illness was
reasonably foreseeable, in the sense that the
risk was not far fetched or fanciful 33
21Needs Something Else
- Sullivan v Moody (2001) 207 CLR 562
- The fact that it is foreseeable that a careless
act on the part of one person may cause harm to
another does not mean the first is subject to a
legal liability
22Proximity
- Jaensch v. Coffey (1984)
- (Proximity involves) notions of nearness or
closeness and embraces physical proximity (in the
sense of space and time), circumstantial
proximity such as an overriding relationship of
employer and employee or of a professional man
and his client, and causal proximity in the sense
of the closeness or directness of the
relationship between the particular act or cause
of action and the injury sustained. (per Deane
at 584-585)
23The High Point of Proximity
- Bryan v Maloney (1995) 182 CLR 609
- A duty of care arises under the common law of
this country only where there exists a
relationship of proximity between the parties
with respect to both the relevant class of act or
omission and the relevant damage. (at 543)
24Proximity Criticised
- The High Court has expressed reservations about
the usefulness of the notion of proximity in
recent times - Sutherland SC v Heyman (1985)
- Hill v Van Erp (1997)
- Perre v Apand (1999)
- Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty Ltd v Anzil
(2000)
25Proximity - Criticised
- Sullivan v Moody (2001) 207 CLR 562
- Facts
- Judgment
- Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Hayne Callinan JJ
- 573 foreseeability of harm is not sufficient
to give rise to a duty of care - 578 The formula is not proximity.
Notwithstanding the centrality of that concept,
for more than a century it gives little
practical guidance in determining whether a duty
of care exists in cases that are not analogous to
cases in which a duty has been established
26Incrementalism
- It is preferable, in my view, that the law
should develop novel categories, rather than by a
massive extension of a prima facie duty of care
restrained only by indefinable considerations
which ought to negative, or limit the scope of
the duty or the class of persons to whom it is
owed. - Brennan J in Sutherland Shire Council v Heyman
(1985) HCA
27The Anns 2-Stage Test The UK Way
- Anns v Merton London Borough Council 1978 AC
728 - 2-Stage Test (Wilberforce)
- It requires first a sufficient relationship of
proximity based upon foreseeability - and secondly considerations of reasons why there
should not be a duty of care.
28Australia Elaborates on Anns
- Jaensch v. Coffey (1984) per Deane J. p587-8
- A duty situation could arise from the following
combination of factors - A reasonable foreseeability of real risk of
injury to P either as an identifiable individual
or a member of a class of persons, and - The existence of proximity between the parties
with respect to the act or omission - Absence of any rule that precludes such a duty
29The 3-Stage Caparo Test
- Caparo Industries Plc v Dickman 1990 2 AC 605
- Was damage to P reasonably foreseeable
- Was relationship between P and D sufficiently
proximate, and if so - Would it be fair, just and reasonable to apply DOC
30Perre v Apand (1999) 198 CLR 180
- Facts
- High Court gets the chance to explore the current
state of duty of Care
31Gaudron in Perre
- Prox is too ambiguous First, proximity as the
second stage in a three stage test has no more
content than it did when it was used as the
unifying criterion Gaudron at 10 - Too powerful would prevent incrementalism.
Concern that Caparo would be used in any case,
even where there is an established duty category - Too troublesome Fair, just and reasonable is
troublesome- They are of little use, if they
are of any use at all, to the practitioners and
trial judges who must apply the law to concrete
facts arising from real life activities.
Gaudron at 12
32Gaudron Concluding
- Need for predictability
- When legal practitioners are unable to predict
the outcome of cases with a high degree of
probability, the choice for litigants is to
abandon or compromise their claims or defences or
to expose themselves to the great expense and
unpredictable risks of litigation. Gaudron at
20 - Incrementalism is best compromise
- Until a unifying principle again emerges,
however, the best solution is to proceed
incrementally from the established cases and
principles. Gaudron at 25
33Kirby J
- Look at other jurisdictions
- Reasonable foreseeability falls short, so
proximity has a role to play - If on the other hand, proximity were to be
confined to its original historical purpose as a
measure of nearness and closeness between the
parties in dispute, it cold yet provide a
meaningful gateway, in addition to reasonable
foreseeability of harm, to afford the starting
point for the allocation of a legal duty of care
or exemption from its burden. Then it would
remain necessary to weigh candidly the competing
policy considerations relevant to the imposition
of a duty of care. Kirby at 24
34Kirby J applying Caparo
- Foreseeability
- Proximity
- Policy
35Wrapping up the approaches
- The quest for the unifying principle
- - Anns 2-Stage Test
- - Caparo
- Incremental Approach A compromise
- - Brodie v Singleton Shire Council (2001) 206 CLR
512
36Checking In
- Snails
- Overview of negligence
- Arriving at a Duty of Care
- Categories
- The harder ones
- Proximity and Reasonable Foreseeability v
Incrementalism - ----------------------
- Some interesting applications
- Unborn children and the wrongful life cases
- Legislative reform
37Interesting Duty Application 1
- The unborn child
- There can be no justification for distinguishing
between the rights of a newly born infant
returning home with his /her mother from hospital
in a bassinet hidden from view on the back of a
motor car being driven by his proud father and of
a child en ventre sa mere whose mother is
being driven by her anxious husband to the
hospital on way to the labour ward to deliver
such a child ( Per Gillard J in Watt v Rama) - Lynch v Lynch (1991)
- Watt v Rama 1972 VR 353
38Unborn Child
- Wrongful life cases
- Harriton v Stephens 2006 HCA 15 (9 May 2006)
Appeal dismissed (7 to 1 majority) - Crennan J (Gleeson CJ, Gummow Heydon JJ
agreeing), Hayne J and Callinan J in separate
judgments dismissed the Appeal - Kirby J dissented
39Harriton v Stephens
- Crennan J (Gleeson CJ, Gummow Heydon JJ
agreeing) - 244 It was not Dr P R Stephens's fault that
Alexia Harriton was injured by the rubella
infection of her mother. Once she had been
affected by the rubella infection of her mother
it was not possible for her to enjoy a life free
from disability. ... Dr P R Stephens would have
discharged his duty by diagnosing the rubella and
advising Mrs Harriton about her circumstances,
enabling her to decide whether to terminate her
pregnancy he could not require or compel MrsÂ
Harriton to have an abortion.
40Harriton v Stephens
- Crennan J (Gleeson CJ, Gummow Heydon JJ
agreeing) - 249 It is not to be doubted that a doctor has
a duty to advise a mother of problems arising in
her pregnancy, and that a doctor has a duty of
care to a foetus which may be mediated through
the mother403. However, it must be mentioned
that those duties are not determinative of the
specific question here, namely whether the
particular damage claimed in this case by the
child engages a duty of care. To superimpose a
further duty of care on a doctor to a foetus
(when born) to advise the mother so that she can
terminate a pregnancy in the interest of the
foetus in not being born, which may or may not be
compatible with the same doctor's duty of care to
the mother in respect of her interests, has the
capacity to introduce conflict, even incoherence,
into the body of relevant legal principle
41DUTY TO RESCUE
- There are two separate issues in rescue
- The duty to rescue
- The duty of care owed to the rescuer
- There is no positive legal obligation in the
common law to rescue - The law does not cast a duty upon a man to go to
the aid of another who is in peril or distress,
not caused by him Hargrave v Goldman (963) - There may however exist a duty to rescue in
master servant relationships or boat owner and
guest relationships for instance - Horsley v Maclaren (The Ogopogo) (1971) 22 DLR
- One is only required to use reasonable care and
skill in the rescue
42 THE DUTY OWED TO RESCUERS
- The rescuer is generally protected torts
recognizes the existence of a duty of care owed
to the rescuer. - The issue of volenti-non fit injuria This
principle does not seem to apply in modern tort
law to rescue situations. - The cry of danger is the summons to relief. The
law does not ignore these reactions of the mind..
It recognizes them as normal and places their
effects within the range of of the natural and
the probable and for that matter the
foreseeable per Cardozo J in Wagner v
International Railway Co. (1921) - Chapman v Hearse
- Videan v British Transport Commission (1963)
(rescue attempt to get a child trespassing on
railway line) - Rescuers may recover for both physical injuries
and nervous shock - Mount Isa Mines v Pusey (1970)
- The US fire-fighters Rule does not apply in
Australia and the UK - Ogwo v Taylor (1988) AC 431
43IMPACT OF THE CIVIL LIABILITY ACT ON THE DUTY OF
CARE
- The Civil Liability Act 2002 together with the
Civil Liability Amendment (Personal
Responsibility) Act 2002 govern the law of
negligence in NSW. - The Civil Liability Act 2002 was enacted 28th
May 2002 and received assent on 18 June 2002 - Rationale behind the legislation
- to limit the quantum of damages for personal
injury and death in public liability instances
resultantly lowering insurance premiums. - to discourage over litigation, by the
imposition of restrictions and obligations and
responsibilities upon plaintiffs and counsel
44Civil Liability Act 2002 Duty of Care
- Statute overrides the common law and that any
negligence claim commenced since 20 March 2002
will be governed by the Civil Liability Act 2002.
- Next lecture, we will consider the application
of - Â
- general duty of care provisions of s.5B
- situations of obvious/inherent risks under ss.5F
to I and - situations of dangerous recreational activities
under ss.5J to N.
45The Rationale for Reform
- It's my view that this country is tying itself
up in tape because of over litigation, a
long-term trend to see us litigate for
everything, to try to settle every problem in our
lives...by getting a big cash payment from the
courts....a country as small as ours can't afford
to have the American-style culture of
litigation". (Bob Carr)
46The Rationale for Reform
- We need to restore personal responsibility and
diminish the culture of blame.That means a
fundamental re-think of the law of negligence, a
complex task of legislative drafting.There is no
precedent for what we are doing, either in health
care or motor accident law, or in the legislation
of other States and Territories.We are changing
a body of law that has taken the courts 70 years
to develop (Bob Carr)
47The Approach to Reform Governments View
- We propose to change the law to exclude claims
that should never be brought and provide defences
to ensure that people who have done the right
thing are not made to pay just because they have
access to insurance (Bob Carr) - We want to protect good samaritans who help in
emergencies. As a community, we should be
reluctant to expose people who help others to the
risk of being judged after the event to have not
helped well enough (Bob Carr)
48Wrap-Up
- Snails
- Overview of negligence
- Arriving at a Duty of Care
- Categories
- The harder ones
- Proximity and Reasonable Foreseeability v
Incrementalism - Some interesting applications
- Unborn children and the wrongful life cases
- Legislative reform
49TORTS
- Civil Liability Act An Overview of the Duty of
Care - Clary Castrission
- Clary_at_40k.com.au
- Later lectures will focus on other aspects of
the Act (viz breach of duty and damages)
50Overview for Tonight
- S35
- Duty of Care- s5B
- Duty Areas under the CLA
- Risk (will cover in defences)
- Assumption of Risk ss5F- I
- Recreational Activities s5J- 5N
- Public Authorities ss40-46
- Good Samaritands ss55- 58
- Volunteers ss59
- Mental Harm ss27-33
51Claims excluded from operation of the Civil
Liability Act s3B(1)
- (a) civil liability of a person in respect of an
intentional act that is done by the person with
intent to cause injury or death or that is sexual
assault or other sexual misconduct committed by
the person - (AND A WHOLE BUNCH OF OTHERS LIKE DUST DISEASES,
SMOKING ETC) - See s3B as it lists where CLA and Motor Accidents
Compensation Act 1987 overlap
52Duty of Care
- S 5B(1) A person is not negligent in failing to
take precautions against a risk of harm unless - (a) the risk was foreseeable (that is, it is a
risk of which the person knew or ought to have
known), and - (b) the risk was not insignificant, and
- (c) in the circumstances, a reasonable person in
the persons position would have taken those
precautions. - (2) In determining whether a reasonable person
would have taken precautions against a risk of
harm, the court is to consider the following
(amongst other relevant things) - (a) the probability that the harm would occur if
care were not taken, - (b) the likely seriousness of the harm,
- (c) the burden of taking precautions to avoid the
risk of harm, - (d) the social utility of the activity that
creates the risk of harm.
53Section 3B V s5B
- Deliberate Act intended to cause harm s3B (not
covered by act) - Omission which causes harm s5B (covered by the
act) - Deliberate Act without due care NOT intended to
cause harm Drinkwater v Howarth 2006 NSWCA 222
54Duty of Care commentary
- Section 5B(1) provides a person is not negligent
unless (b) the risk was not insignificant. - Wyong Shire Council v Shirt (1980) 146 CLR 40
risk must be real in the sense that a
reasonable person would not brush it aside as
far-fetched or fanciful. - It is unclear whether not insignificant in
Section 5B(1)(b) is more restrictive than not
far-fetched or fanciful in Wyong Shire Council v
Shirt
55Wyong Shire Council v Shirt
- Â Mason J
- 13 ... when we speak of a risk of injury as
being foreseeable we are not making any
statement as to the probability or improbability
of its occurrence, save that we are implicitly
asserting that the risk is not one that is
far-fetched or fanciful. Although it is true to
say that in many cases the greater the degree of
probability of the occurrence of the risk the
more readily it will be perceived to be a risk,
it certainly does not follow that a risk which is
unlikely to occur is not foreseeable.
56Duty of Care in Certain Situations contained in
the Act
- Duty Areas
- Risk (will cover in defences)
- Assumption of Risk s5F-I
- Recreational Activities- s5J to s5N
- Public Authorities (ss40-46)
- Good Samaritans (ss55-58)
- Volunteers (ss59-66)
- Mental Harm (ss27-33)
57Part 5 Liability of Public Other Authorities
- Sections 40 to 46
- Provides specific additional protection for
public authorities including - the Crown
- Government departments
- Local councils
- Other prescribed bodies
58Part 5 Liability of Public Other Authorities
- Section 42 sets out the principles to apply in
determining whether a public or other authority
has a duty of care or has breached a duty of care
including - the functions required to be exercised by the
authority are limited by the financial and other
resources that are reasonably available to the
authority for the purpose of exercising those
functions, - the general allocation of those resources by the
authority is not open to challenge, - the functions required to be exercised by the
authority are to be determined by reference to
the broad range of its activities (and not merely
by reference to the matter to which the
proceedings relate), - the authority may rely on evidence of its
compliance with the general procedures and
applicable standards for the exercise of its
functions as evidence of the proper exercise of
its functions in the matter to which the
proceedings relate. - Council of the City of Liverpool v Turano Anor
2008 NSWCA 270
59S45- Roads Authorities
- (1) A roads authority is not liable in
proceedings for civil liability to which this
Part applies for harm arising from a failure of
the authority to carry out road work, or to
consider carrying road work, unless at the time
of the alleged failure the authority had actual
knowledge of the particular risk the
materialisation of which resulted in the harm. - (2) Doesnt create duty of care simply because
the roads authority had actual knowledge of the
risk. - (3) Carry out roadwork defined to include
construction, installation, maintenance,
inspection, repair. - This done to overturn recent HCA decision in
- Brodie v Singleton Shire Council Council
Ghantous v Hawkesbury City Council (2001) 206 CLR
512
60Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council 2006 NSWCA 126
- Facts
- S45 (3) In this section
- "carry out road work" means carry out any
activity in connection with the construction,
erection, installation, maintenance, inspection,
repair, removal or replacement of a roadwork
within the meaning of the Roads Act 1993 . - Roads Act 1993 (dictionary)
- "road work" includes any kind of work, building
or structure (such as a roadway, footway,
bridge) that is constructed, installed or
relocated on or in the vicinity of a road for the
purpose of facilitating the use of the road as a
road. and "carry out road work" includes carry
out any activity in connection with the
construction, erection, installation,
maintenance, repair, removal or replacement of a
road work.
61s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
- Hodgson JA (Beazley JA Giles JA agreeing)
- 34 In my opinion, this case does come within s45,
on either of two bases. 35 First, where that
part of a road used for pedestrian purposes has
been altered by the installation of a footpath
and a gutter, leaving what may be called a nature
strip in between, it is in my opinion an unduly
narrow view of what constitutes a road work to
say that, while the made footpath is a road work
and the gutter is a road work, the nature strip
between them is neither a road work nor part of a
road work. In my opinion the better view is that
the whole of the area for pedestrian purposes,
comprising the made footpath, the nature strip
and the gutter, comprises a road work.
62s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
- Hodgson JA (Beazley JA Giles JA agreeing)
- 36 Second, in any event, where there is a hole in
that part of a road which is a nature strip
within the area used for pedestrian purposes, it
would be road work to fill and make good that
hole. That view is not in my opinion precluded by
the use of the words constructed and
installed in the definition of road work in the
Roads Act, which, unlike the relevant definition
in s45 of the Civil Liability Act, is an
inclusive definition and not an exhaustive
definition. Once it is accepted that to fill and
make good the hole would be road work, then the
question would arise whether failure to do this
would be failure to carry out any activity in
connection with the construction, erection,
installation, maintenance, repair or replacement
of a road work within s45(3). In my opinion, it
would be although the words construction and
installation, and the indefinite article a in
front of road work, could be taken as inapt for
the filling and making good of a hole, on balance
I think it would be too narrow an approach to
hold that the words do not extend to such
activity.
63s45 - Porter v. Lachlan Shire Council
- Hodgson JA (Beazley JA Giles JA agreeing)
- 37 On either basis, s45 applies on the first
basis, the allegation would be that the
respondent failed to maintain a road work, and on
the second basis, it would be that the respondent
failed to construct or install a road work.
64s.45 Actual KnowledgeNorth Sydney Council v-
Roman 2007 NSWCA 27
65s.45 North Sydney Council-v- Roman
- Held, allowing the appeal, per Basten JA (Bryson
JA agreeing) - 1. For the purposes of s.45 actual knowledge must
be found in the mind of an officer within the
council having delegated (or statutory) authority
to carry out the necessary repairs. - 2. The evidence demonstrated that no Council
officer at a decision-making level had actual
knowledge of the particular pothole and
therefore the appellant did not have such
knowledge. Accordingly, the exception to s.45 was
not engaged and the statutory immunity prevailed.
- Note McColl JA (dissenting)
66Parts 8 Good Samaritans
- S56
- For the purposes of this Part, a "good samaritan"
is a person who, in good faith and without
expectation of payment or other reward, comes to
the assistance of a person who is apparently
injured or at risk of being injured. - s57
- (1) A good samaritan does not incur any personal
civil liability in respect of any act or omission
done or made by the good samaritan in an
emergency when assisting a person who is
apparently injured or at risk of being injured.
67Part 8 Good Samaritans
- S58 where liability not exempted
- Where good samaritan caused the injury in the
first place - The good samaritan was under the influence of
drugs/alcohol AND failed to take reasonable care - The good samaritan was impersonating emergency
service worker, policeman or pretending to have
the skills to address the current injury
68Part 9 Volunteers (ss59-66)
- Section 60 Defines community work to mean work
that is not for private financial gain and that
is done for a charitable, benevolent,
philanthropic, sporting, educational or cultural
purpose. It excludes community service orders
imposed by a court.
69Volunteers (cont)
- Section 61 No civil liability for a volunteer
doing community work, but does not extend to - Criminal acts (s62)
- Acts while intoxicated AND volunteer failing to
exercise reasonable care (63) - Actions outside the scope of the charitable
organisation contrary to instructions (s64) - Where the volunteer is required by State law to
be insured (s65) - Or motor vehicle accidents (s66)
70Mental Harm
- At common law- only type of pure mental harm
where this liability is recognised psychiatric
illness - Thus grief or sorrow doesnt sound damages Mount
Isa Mines v Pusey (1970) 125 CLR 383
71Mental Harm pre Annetts
- Suffer from a recognised psychiatric illness
- Be a person of reasonable fortitude
- Be subject to a sudden shock
- Have directly perceived the accident or its
immediate aftermath
72The 2 major cases
- Both heard together
- Tame v NSW (2002) 211 CLR 317
- Annetts v Australian Stations Pty Ltd (2002) 211
CLR 317
73Affecting Factors
- Was illness result of sudden shock?
- Cases of protracted suffering, as opposed to
sudden shock could raise difficult issues of
causation and remoteness of damage. Difficulties
of that kind are more appropriately analysed with
reference to the principles of causation and
remoteness, not through an absolute denial of
liability. (Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, Gummow , Kirby
and Hayne JJ in separate jments) - Direct perception of distressing events?
- Relationship between primary and secondary victim
- Relationship between Plaintiff and Defendant
74Ipp Report
- ... the law has said that a duty to avoid
causing mental harm would be imposed only in
relation to harm caused by shock that this
duty was owed only to persons who were physically
near to the scene of the shocking events at the
time they occurred, or who witnessed their
immediate aftermath and that the duty was owed
only to those who witnessed the shocking events
or their aftermath with their own unaided
senses. (138, 9.12)
75Ipp Report Continued
- The fundamental proposition which Tame/Annetts
seems to establish is that reasonable
foreseeability of mental harm is the only
precondition of the existence of a duty of care.
It also establishes, however, that a duty of care
to avoid mental harm will be owed to the
plaintiff only if it was foreseeable that a
person of normal fortitude might suffer mental
harm in the circumstances of the case if care was
not taken. This test does not require the
plaintiff to be a person of normal fortitude in
order to be owed a duty of care. It only requires
it to be foreseeable that a person of normal
fortitude in the plaintiffs position might
suffer mental harm. In this sense, being a person
of normal fortitude is not a precondition of
being owed a duty of care. (138, 9.13) (Original
emphasis)
76Mental harm
- 27 Definitions
- In this Part
- "consequential mental harm" means mental harm
that is a consequence of a personal injury of any
other kind. - "mental harm" means impairment of a persons
mental condition. - "negligence" means failure to exercise reasonable
care and skill. - "personal injury" includes
- pre-natal injury,
- impairment of a persons physical or mental
condition, and - disease.
- "pure mental harm" means mental harm other than
consequential mental harm.
77Mental Harm
- 29 Personal injury arising from mental or nervous
shock - In any action for personal injury, the plaintiff
is not prevented from recovering damages merely
because the personal injury arose wholly or in
part from mental or nervous shock.
78Mental harm
- 30 Limitation on recovery for pure mental harm
arising from shock - (1) This section applies to the liability of a
person ("the defendant) for pure mental harm to
a person ("the plaintiff") arising wholly or
partly from mental or nervous shock in connection
with another person ("the victim") being killed,
injured or put in peril by the act or omission of
the defendant. - (2) The plaintiff is not entitled to recover
damages for pure mental harm unless - the plaintiff witnessed, at the scene, the victim
being killed, injured or put in peril, or - the plaintiff is a close member of the family of
the victim.
79Mental harm
- 32 Mental harmduty of care
- A person ("the defendant") does not owe a duty of
care to another person ("the plaintiff") to take
care not to cause the plaintiff mental harm
unless the defendant ought to have foreseen that
a person of normal fortitude might, in the
circumstances of the case, suffer a recognised
psychiatric illness if reasonable care were not
taken. - Codifies the common law test for foreseeability
of risk of mental harm in Tame v NSW Annetts v
Australian Stations Pty Ltd 2002 HCA 35
80Mental harm
- 33 Liability for economic loss for consequential
mental harm - A court cannot make an award of damages for
economic loss for consequential mental harm
resulting from negligence unless the harm
consists of a recognised psychiatric illness.
81Overview for Tonight
- S35
- Duty of Care- s5B
- Duty Areas under the CLA
- Risk (will cover in defences)
- Assumption of Risk ss5F- I
- Recreational Activities s5J- 5N
- Public Authorities ss40-46
- Good Samaritands ss55- 58
- Volunteers ss59
- Mental Harm ss27-33
82Practice Question
- Arnold was a serving police officer who attended
the scene of an horrific train derailment in
Katoomba NSW, whereby six people were killed and
many were injured. - He was among the first ones at the scene
following the derailment and was involved in the
rescue operation by providing emergency first-aid
and assisting the injured from the carriages. - Arnold searched through the train where he saw
dead bodies in horrible condition, as well as
badly injured people. One of them, he recognised
to be his high-school friend, Steve. - Arnold suffered post traumatic stress syndrome,
nervous shock and major depressive disorder. - State Rail had failed to ensure the trains
deadmans safety device was operating - Arnold brought a claim for damages against State
Rail alleging he had suffered psychiatric injury
due to the negligence of State Rail in failing,
inter alia, to ensure the trains deadmans
safety device was operating, or was designed so
as to operate in the event of the incapacitation
of the driver. - Did State Rail owe Arnold a Duty of Care?
83TORTS LECTURE
- PARTICULAR DUTY AREAS
- Clary Castrission
- clary_at_40k.com.au
- (p) 02 9221 4030
84Road Map for Tonight
- Products Liability
- Defective Structures
- Professional opinions - done
- Nervous Shock- done
- Council and Public Authorities- done
- Commercial Premises
- Hotelier/Publican to Intoxicated Patron
- Pure Ecomic Loss
-
85PRODUCT LIABILITY
- Common law
- Donoghue v Stevenson 1932 AC 562
- Grant v Australian Knitting Mills 1936 AC 85
- 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 consumers life or
property, owes a duty to the consumer to take
that reasonable care
86PRODUCT LIABILITY
- Relevant Statutes
- Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)
- Pt 4 Performance of the Contract (ss.30 to 40)
- Pt 6 Actions for Breach of the Contract (ss.51
to 56)
87PRODUCT LIABILITY
- Relevant Statutes
- Fair Trading Act (NSW)
- Part 4- NSW Consumer Safety and Information
Requirements
88PRODUCT LIABILITY
- Relevant Statutes
- Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth)- now Competition
and Consumer Act 2010 (from 1 January 2011) - Absolute mammoth! Australian Consumer Law in
Schedule 2 of Div 2 of Part XI - See www.consumerlaw.gov.au
89Professional Opinion
- Civil Liability Act
- - s.5O Civil Liability Act 2002 Peer
professional opinion (ie. The UK Bolam test) - S.5P Civil Liability Act 2002 Duty to warn
remains
90DEFECTIVE STRUCTURES
- Builders
- Bryan v Maloney (1995) ATR 81- 320
- Architects
- Voli v Inglewood Shire Council (1963) 110 CLR
74 -
91Commercial Premises
- Thompson v Woolworths (Queensland) Pty Ltd (2005)
221 CLR 234 at 246-247 - Timberland Property Holdings Pty Ltd v Bundy
2005 NSWCA 419 at 25-27).
92Hotelier/Publican to Intoxicated Patron
- Cole v South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football
Club Limited (2004) 217 CLR 469 - Facts
- Held
93Cole v South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football
Club Limited (2004) 217 CLR 469
- Majority 4 to 2 (McHugh Kirby JJ dissenting) no
duty of care owed by the Club - Gleeson CJ
- 14.Although there are exceptional cases, as Lord
Hope of Craighead pointed out in Reeves v
Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis6, it
is unusual for the common law to subject a person
to a duty to take reasonable care to prevent
another person injuring himself deliberately. A
duty to take care to protect an ordinary adult
person who requests supply from risks associated
with alcohol consumption is not easy to reconcile
with a general rule that people are entitled to
do as they please, even if it involves a risk of
injury to themselves. - 17. It is possible that there may be some
circumstances in which a supplier of alcohol
comes under a duty to take reasonable care to
protect a particular person from the risk of
physical injury resulting from self-induced
intoxication7. However, the appellant cannot
succeed in this case unless there is a general
duty upon a supplier of alcohol, at least in a
commercial setting, to take such care. I do not
accept that there is such a general duty.
94Cole v South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football
Club Limited (2004) 217 CLR 469
- Gummow Hayne JJ
- 65. The appellant's contention that her collision
with the driver's vehicle was caused or
contributed to by the Club's negligence in
continuing to serve her alcohol, when the Club
knew or should have known that she was
intoxicated, was a contention that depended upon
taking a number of steps, some (perhaps all) of
which may be contested. - 66. First, what exactly is meant by "serving" the
appellant alcohol? Does it encompass, or is it
limited to, selling alcohol which it is known
that the appellant will consume? Does it extend
to selling, to others, alcohol which it is
suspected that the appellant will consume? How is
the Club to control what other patrons may do
with bottles of alcohol which the Club sells
them? Given the uncertainties about how and from
whom the appellant obtained alcohol during the
second half of the day, these are questions that
go directly to the formulation of the duty which
is said to have been breached. - 67. Secondly, the evidence of what the Club knew,
or could reasonably be taken to have known, of
what alcohol the appellant took during the day
was very slight...
95Cole v South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football
Club Limited (2004) 217 CLR 469
- Gummow Hayne JJ
- 68. Unsurprisingly, there was no evidence which
would have revealed that servants of the Club
could have (let alone reasonably should have)
been able to observe how much the appellant drank
during the morning. That is, as we say,
unsurprising when it is recalled how many patrons
attended the Club. About 100 or 120 had attended
breakfast. Some of those patrons stayed at, and
no doubt others came to, the clubhouse and the
ground to attend the several football games to be
played that day. There was, therefore, a large
and shifting population to observe. If it is said
that the Club owed the appellant a duty to
monitor and moderate the amount that she drank,
it owed all its patrons such a duty... - 69.Next, what level of intoxication is said to be
relevant? Does it mean not lawfully able to drive
a motor car? Some drivers may not drive a motor
car if they have had any alcohol. Other drivers
may be unfit to drive after very few glasses of
alcohol. Does "intoxicated" mean, as the primary
judge held, "loss of self-control or judgment
which is more than of minor degree"16? If that
is so, many drinkers will arrive at that point
after very little alcohol. - 70.All of these questions would have to be
answered in deciding what duty of care was owed.
None can be answered in isolation. All would
require consideration of the purpose for which it
is said that the duty alleged is to be imposed.
96Cole v South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football
Club Limited (2004) 217 CLR 469
- Callinan J
- 131 I am also of the opinion that in general -
there may be some exceptional cases - vendors of
products containing alcohol will not be liable in
tort for the consequences of the voluntary
excessive consumption of those products by the
persons to whom the former have sold them. The
risk begins when the first drink is taken and
progressively increases with each further one.
Everyone knows at the outset that if the
consumption continues, a stage will be reached at
which judgment and capacity to care for oneself
will be impaired, and even ultimately destroyed
entirely for at least a period.
97PURE ECONOMIC LOSS
- What is pure economic loss?
- Indeterminacy
- Liability of the defendant to an indeterminate
class, for an indeterminate time, and in an
indeterminate amount Ultramares Corp v Douche
(1931) 174 NE 441
98Pure economic loss
- 2 types
- Negligent statements leading to pure economic
loss - Negligent acts leading to pure economic loss, and
991. Negligent Misstatement Causing Economic Loss
- Early on no liability. Pulsey v Freeman (1789)
Norton v Asburton 1914 AC 932 - Why?
- Words are more volatile than deeds. They travel
fast and far afield. They are used without being
expended and take effect in combination with
innumerable facts and other words. Yet they are
dangerous and can cause vast financial damage..
Damage by negligent acts to persons or property
on the other hand is more visible and obvious
its limits are more easily defined. (per Lord
Pearce in Hedley Byrne Co v Heller 1964 AC
465 at 534.
100Hedley Byrne Co v Heller
- Facts
- How could DOC arise? Special Relationship
- If someone possessed of a special skill
undertakes quite irrespective of contract to
apply that skill for the assistance of another
person who relies on such skill, a duty of care
will arise (per Lord Morris) - Mutual Life Citizens Assurance v Evatt 1971
AC 793
101Shaddock Associates Pty Ltd v Parramatta CC
(1981) 150 CLR 225
- Held
- Whenever a person gives information or advice
to another upon a serious matter in circumstances
where the speaker realises, or ought to realise,
that he is being trusted to give the best of his
information or advice as a basis for action on
the part of the other party and it is reasonable
in the circumstances for the other party to act
on that information or advice, the speaker comes
under a duty to exercise reasonable care in the
provision of the information or advice he chooses
to give.
102THE ISSUE OF SKILL
- With all respect I find it difficult to see why
in principle the duty should be limited to
persons whose business or profession includes
giving the sort of advice or information sought
and to persons claiming to have the same skill
and competence as those carrying on such a
business or profession, and why it should not
extend to persons who, on a serious occasion,
give considered advice or information concerning
a business or professional transaction. (Gibbs J
in Shaddock)
103Later Clarifications
- Butcher v Lachlan Elder Realty (2004) 218 CLR 592
- The mere fact that a person had engaged in the
conduct of supplying a document containing
misleading information did not mean that that
person had engaged in misleading conduct it was
crucial to examine the role of the person in
question (Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ) - Tepko Pty Ltd v Water Board (2001) 206 CLR 1
104Factors the court will look at
- Nature of relationship
- Special skill (either actually possessing it or
holding oneself to possess it) - Nature of subject matter
- Reliance- reasonable reliance creates DOC, actual
reliance establishes breach - Context of interchange professional? Social?
Information requested?
1052. Negligent Act causing pure economic loss
- Originally- no common law DOC Leigh Sullivan v
Aliakmon Shipping Co Ltd 1986 AC 785 - Why?
- What is pure economic loss caused by negligent
act? - Indeterminacy
- Perre v Apand (1999) 198 CLR 180
106THE CALTEX PRINCIPLECaltex Oil (Aust) Pty Ltd
v The Dredge Willemstadt (1976) 136 CLR 529
107THE CALTEX PRINCIPLECaltex Oil (Aust) Pty Ltd
v The Dredge Willemstadt (1976) 136 CLR 529
- Held- Mason J
- Liability arises when A defendant can reasonably
foresee that a specific individual as distinct
from a general class of persons will suffer
financial loss This approach eliminates the
prospect that there will come into existence
liability to an indeterminate class of persons.
(at 593)
108Australia beyond Caltex
- Indeterminacy Johns Period Furniture v
Commonwealth Savings Bank (1980) SASR 224 - Christopher v Motor Vessel Fiji Gas 1993 Aust
Tort Reports 81-202 - Johnson Tiles v Esso Australia 2003 Aust Tort
Reports 81-962 - 1.Reasonable foreseeability of injury
- 2. Whether there is a relationship of proximity
and - 3. Identification and consideration of competing
salient features for and against the finding of a
DOC
109Wrap-Up
- Products Liability
- Defective Structures
- Professional opinions - done
- Nervous Shock- done
- Council and Public Authorities- done
- Commercial Premises
- Hotelier/Publican to Intoxicated Patron
- Pure Economic Loss
-
110TORTSBreach of Duty
- Clary Castrission
- clary_at_40k.com.au
111Roadmap
- S5B
- Understanding standard of care
- Foreseeability of risk
- Calculus of negligence
- An Application Waverly Council v Ferreira 2005
- Res Ipsa Loquitur
- Professional Negligence
112Duty of Care
- S 5B(1) A person is not negligent in failing to
take precautions against a risk of harm unless - (a) the risk was foreseeable (that is, it is a
risk of which the person knew or ought to have
known), and - (b) the risk was not insignificant, and
- (c) in the circumstances, a reasonable person in
the persons position would have taken those
precautions. - (2) In determining whether a reasonable person
would have taken precautions against a risk of
harm, the court is to consider the following
(amongst other relevant things) - (a) the probability that the harm would occur if
care were not taken, - (b) the likely seriousness of the harm,
- (c) the burden of taking precautions to avoid the
risk of harm, - (d) the social utility of the activity that
creates the risk of harm.
113Breach of Duty
- Standard of Care
- What standard of care is owed?
- Standard of care owed by the reasonable person in
the circumstances - What would the reasonable person do in the Ds
position - Duty breached
- Did the Ds actions fail to meet that standard?
- Probability of risk
- Magnitude of harm
- IF SO
- Was the response of the d to this reasonable?
- Calculus of negligence (from s5B), where
relevant, consider - Reasonability of precautions
- Social utility
- Any relevant professional or statutory standards
114Breach of Duty from Shirt
- If reasonable person in defendants position
would have foreseen risk to the P, then - ... it is then for the tribunal of fact to
determine what a reasonable man would do by way
of response to the risk. The perception of the
reasonable mans response calls for a
consideration of the magnitude of the risk and
the degree of the probability of its occurrence,
along with the expense, difficulty and
inconvenience of taking alleviating action and
any other conflicting responsibilities which the
defendant may have. It is only when these matters
are balanced out that the tribunal of fact can
confidently assert what is the standard of
response to be ascribed to the reasonable man
placed in the defendants position. - Applied in Roads and Traffic Authority of NSW v
Refrigerated Roadways Pty Limited 2009 NSWCA
263 (22 September 2009)
115- RTA v Dederer, Gummow J at 69
- What Shirt requires is a contextual and balanced
assessment of the reasonable response to a
foreseeable risk.
116Comparing DUTY to BREACH
- Mason J in Wyong v Shirt at 47-48
- Wagon Mound (No. 2) per Lord Reid
- A reasonable man would only neglect such a risk
if he had some valid reason for doing so, eg,
that it would involve considerable expense to
eliminate the risk. He would weigh the risk
against the difficulty of eliminating it ...
117Test for breach
- Was the risk of injury to P reasonably
foreseeable? DUTY - RTA v Dederer (2007) 238 ALR 761
- It is only through the correct identification of
the risk that one can assess what a reasonable
response to that risk would be (Gummow J at
59) - If so, was the response of the defendant to this
risk reasonable? BREACH - What would the reasonable person, in the
defendants position (with the knowledge that
they either had or ought to have had) have done
in the circumstances out of which the harm arose? - Did the D meet the requisite standard of care?
- IF NOT, there has been a breach of duty
118Calculus of Negligence under 5B(2)
- Probability of harm occurring if care not taken
- Likely seriousness of harm
- Burden of taking precautions
- Social Utility
119Breach of Duty Likelihood of Injury
- Section 5B(2)(a) the probability that the harm
would occur if care were not taken - Bolton v Stone 1951 AC 850
- RTA v Dederer (2007) 238 ALR 761
120Breach of Duty Seriousness of Harm
- Section 5B(2)(b) the likely seriousness of the
harm - Adelaide Chemical Fertilizer Co. v Carlyle
(1940) 64 CLR 514 - Paris v Stepney Borough Council 1951 AC 367
121Breach of Duty Cost of Avoiding Harm
- Section 5B(2)(c) the burden of taking precautions
to avoid the risk of harm - Caledonian Collieries Ltd v Speirs (1957) 97 CLR
202
122Breach of Duty Social Utility of the Act of the
Defendant
- Section 5B(2)(d) the social utility of the
activity that creates the risk of harm. - Watt v Hertfordshire County Council
- It is one thing to take risks when driving for
some commercial purpose with no emergency, but
quite another to take risks for life and limb.
(Lord Denning
123How Duty and Breach work together s.5B(1) (2)
- Waverley Council v Ferreira 2005 NSWCA 418
- Facts
124Issue 1 The Fence and the undergrowth
- S5B(1)
- Risk of harm foreseeable?
- Risk of harm significant?
- In circumstances, would reasonable person have
taken precautions?
125s.5B(1)(a) - Waverley Council v Ferreira
- Foreseeability of harm
- 34 The initial element to be determined under
s5B(1) is whether the risk was foreseeable. As
s5B(1)(a) makes plain, that involves inquiring
whether the risk in question is one of which the
defendant knew or ought to have known. The
relevant risk in relation to the removal of the
fence and undergrowth was the risk that children
might use the fence and undergrowth to facilitate
their access to the roof and, when on the roof,
might fall to the ground. - Doubleday v Kelly 2005 NSWCA 151
- The actual events as they happened are not the
circumstances to which consideration of
foreseeability of risk of injury is applied what
is to be considered is foresight in more general
terms of risk of injury. per