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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sandhar & Anor v Department of Transport, Environment & Regions [2004] EWCA Civ 1440 (05 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1440.html Cite as: [2005] 1 WLR 1632, [2005] WLR 1632, [2004] EWCA Civ 1440 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Mr Justice Newman
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
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JANE MARIANNE SANDHAR JOHN STUART MURRAY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT, ENVIRONMENT & THE REGIONS |
Respondent |
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Nigel Wilkinson QC and William Hoskins (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates : 5TH October 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice May:
Facts
The proceedings and the appeal
Previous authority
The judge's judgment
“… the minimum preconditions for basing a duty of care upon the existence of a statutory power, if it can be done at all, are, first, that it would in the circumstances have been irrational not to have exercised the power, so that there was in effect a public law duty to act, and secondly, that there are exceptional grounds for holding that the policy of the statute requires compensation to be paid to persons who suffer loss because the power was not exercised.”
“It has not been argued that had a scheme such as [that in the Trunk Roads Maintenance Manual] not been established the defendant could have been compelled by judicial review to establish it. The policy and substantial revenue issues involved in setting up the scheme would have presented insuperable obstacles to such a claim. In my judgment the claimants have not demonstrated why the legal position is changed by the fact that the relevant power has been exercised. Unlike X v Bedfordshire County Council and other of the cases referred to … above, the deceased was not drawn into a more proximate relationship with the defendant than any other road user or potential road user choosing to drive on the 22nd December 1996, either by the action of the defendant in exercising the power or by Mr Chandler acting on the defendant's behalf in the way he did. There are no circumstances which distinguish the action of the defendant in acting so as to exercise his power and the circumstances which the exercise of power has created. I would lean strongly against the suggestion that by exercising powers which benefit the public at large, a legal path to the acknowledgment of the existence of a duty is to be created. Such a principle would be likely to inhibit the beneficial exercise of the power to improve in the general public interest and come close to denying the distinction between a duty and a power.”
“82. The policy of the Highways Act 1980 provides for the occasions when the exercise of a power give rise to compensation. The power under section 62(2) to improve does not give rise to a right to compensation.
83. There is no discernable policy in the 1980 Act that the transient hazards of nature from fog, ice or wind are to be provided against by highway authorities. They are matters which fall within the discretion of the authorities.
84. There are no exceptional grounds for concluding that the policy of the statute requires compensation to be paid to those who suffer loss because the power to prevent harm from frost was not exercised or, if exercised, not implemented to the full.
85. The mere existence of TRMM does not make it reasonable to impose a duty upon the defendant to pay compensation to those who suffer physical injury because the scheme was not properly implemented. The policy of the Act (as borne out by the cases) is to provided for an exhaustive range of powers giving rise to an entitlement to compensation and statutory duties which are based upon “centuries of highway law”. There is no general obligation to be discerned from the statute that the defendant is under an obligation to render roads safe for users.
86. The mere existence of TRMM did not create a set of circumstances in which there was a sufficient relationship of proximity between the defendant and the deceased to require the defendant to act as he could have done through Mr Chandler on 21st and 22nd December 1996.”
Gorringe v Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council
“In summary, if a highway authority is in breach of its duty under section 41(1) (as amended by the 2003 Act) it can be sued if damage is thereby caused. If it is to escape liability it must bring itself within the section 58 defence. In addition, a highway authority may be liable at common law for damage attributable to dangers that it has introduced, or, in the case of dangers introduced by some third party, that it has unreasonably failed to abate. Members of the public who drive cars on the highways of this country are entitled to expect that the highways will be kept properly in repair. They are entitled to complain if damage is caused by some obstruction or condition of the road or its surroundings that constitutes a public nuisance. And they are, of course, entitled to complain if they suffer damage by the negligence of some other user of the highway. But an overriding imperative is that those who drive on public highways do so in a manner and at a speed that is safe having regard to such matters as the nature of the road, the weather conditions and the traffic conditions. Drivers are first and foremost themselves responsible for their own safety.”
“In the exercise of their public law powers and duties, highway authorities do often, even usually, warn of prospective dangers at junctions or crests in the road, but drivers cannot rely on them always having done so. Drivers must take care for themselves and drive at an appropriate speed, irrespective of whether or not there is a warning sign. By insisting that drivers always look out for dangers themselves and not rely on others, the common law supports the overall policy of promoting road safety.”
The law in the light of Gorringe
Submissions
(a) a general understanding, expressed in, among other places, the county council's Winter Maintenance Programme, that they were under a statutory duty to clear ice and snow;
(b) the arrangements for salting priority roads which the county council had publicly undertaken in their agreement with the respondent;
(c) the fact that the county council had performed its salting operations for a substantial period of time;
(d) evidence from police officers that they would expect trunk roads to be salted in the conditions which prevailed at the time of the accident, but that it was difficult to see whether salting had taken place; and
(e) a pamphlet, entitled “Salting Routes in Bedfordshire”, which was widely distributed at, for example, petrol stations. This stated that salting was carried out when road temperatures were expected to drop below zero. It referred to the Icelert computer system and the information obtainable from it. It stated that all A and B roads were salted with other important local roads. It indicated how to get further information. I shall refer to this pamphlet in somewhat greater detail later in this judgment.
Discussion
“In my judgment there is a clear distinction between the role of the Board and the role of a fire service or the police service. The latter have the role of protecting the public in general against risks, which they play no part in creating. There is a general reliance by the public on the fire service and the police to reduce those risks. In these circumstances there is no close proximity between the services and the general public. There are also reasons of public policy for not imposing a duty of care to individuals in relation to the performance of their functions. These are explored in the authorities to which I have referred earlier.
In contrast the injuries which are sustained by professional boxers are the foreseeable, indeed inevitable, consequence of an activity which the Board sponsors, encourages and controls. The conduct of the activity of professional boxing carries with it, for the small body of men who take part in it, the need for the provision of medical assistance to treat the injuries that they sustain and minimise their adverse consequences. …
The Board, however, arrogates to itself the task of determining what medical facilities will be provided at a contest by (i) requiring a boxer and a promoter to contract on terms under which the Board's rules will apply and (ii) making provision in those rules for the medical facilities and assistance to be provided to care for the boxer in the event of injury. … The Board assumes the responsibility in determining the nature of the medical facilities and assistance to be provided.
These facts bring the Board into close proximity with each individual boxer who contracts with a promoter to fight under the Board's rules. The comparison drawn by Mr Walker between the Board and a rescuer is not apt.”
Conclusion
Lord Justice Thomas:
Lord Justice Brooke:
“…[A]n overriding imperative is that those who drive on public highways do so in a manner and at a speed that is safe having regard to such matters as the nature of the road, the weather conditions and the traffic conditions. Drivers are first and foremost themselves responsible for their own safety.”
"In deciding what order (if any) to make about costs, the court must have regard to all the circumstances, including -
(a) the conduct of all the parties."
"The conduct of the parties includes -
(a) conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings, and in particular..."
"It is quite clear, however, that the combination of Mr Chandler giving a version of events which was not true, the defendants' inability to produce obviously relevant documents until five and a half years after the accident, and the curiosity of our common law system that the House of Lords' decision in Goodes had immediate retrospective effect... has led to a result with which nobody could feel at all happy."
"There was no suggestion that the defendants had been deliberately withholding documents. It is quite clear, however, that the combination of Mr Chandler giving a version of events which was not true, the defendants' inability to produce obviously relevant documents until five and a half years after the accident, and the curiosity of our common law system that the House of Lords' decision in Goodes had immediate retrospective effect (so far as outstanding claims were concerned) has led to a result with which nobody could feel at all happy."