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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 >> Blake v Galloway [2004] EWCA Civ 814 (24 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/814.html Cite as: [2004] WLR 2844, [2004] EWCA Civ 814, [2004] 1 WLR 2844, [2004] 3 All ER 315 |
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JISCBAILII_CASE_TORT
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PLYMOUTH COUNTY COURT
District Judge Walker
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
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BLAKE |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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GALLOWAY |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
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Mr Nathan Tavares (instructed by Messrs Wolferstans of Plymouth) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
Negligence
"The maxim in English law presupposes a tortious act by the defendant. The consent that is relevant is not consent to the risk of injury but consent to the lack of reasonable care that may produce that risk… and requires on the part of the plaintiff at the time at which he gives his consent full knowledge of the nature and extent of the risk that he ran" (per Diplock LJ).
"In my view, taking into account all the circumstances in this case, I find that the claimant may well have consented to some risk in participating in this game which perhaps might have been – I am sure nobody when they started off expected anybody (sic) to be caused any injury, but there was some risk of that in some similar way to the analogy of throwing snowballs but I do not think that in this particular case the defendant took sufficient care to make sure that injury to the claimant's head would not take place. It may be that in the minds of participants other than the claimant nobody particularly cared where items went. I am satisfied, as I say, in the particular circumstances of this case, there was, although consent to participate in a game which might have caused injury, no consent to the injury to the claimant's face. I do not think he had the adequate opportunity of defending himself as he was not facing the defendant when the piece of bark was thrown."
"The practical result of this analysis of the application of the common law of negligence to participant and spectator would, I think, be expressed by the common man in some such terms as these: "A person attending a game or competition takes the risk of any damage caused to him by any act of a participant done in the course of and for the purposes of the game or competition notwithstanding that such act may involve an error of judgment or lapse of skill, unless the participant's conduct is such as to evince a reckless disregard of the spectator's safety."
"Barwick CJ said, at p.34:
"By engaging in a sport or pastime the participants may be held to have accepted risks which are inherent in that sport or pastime: the tribunal of fact can make its own assessment of what the accepted risks are: but this does not eliminate all duty of care of the one participant to the other. Whether or not such a duty arises, and, if it does, its extent, must necessarily depend in each case upon its own circumstances. In this connection, the rules of the sport or game may constitute one of those circumstances: but, in my opinion, they are neither definitive of the existence nor of the extent of the duty; nor does their breach or non-observance necessarily constitute a breach of any duty found to exist."
Kitto J said, at p.37:
"in a case such as the present, it must always be a question of fact, what exoneration from a duty of care otherwise incumbent upon the defendant was implied by the act of the plaintiff in joining in the activity. Unless the activity partakes of the nature of a war or of something else in which all is notoriously fair, the conclusion to be reached must necessarily depend, according to the concepts of common law, upon the reasonableness, in relation to the special circumstances, of the conduct which caused the plaintiff's injury. That does not necessarily mean the compliance of that conduct with the rules, conventions or customs (if there are any) by which the correctness of conduct for the purpose of the carrying on of the activity as an organised affair is judged; for the tribunal of fact may think that in the situation in which the plaintiff's injury was caused a participant might do what the defendant did and still not be acting unreasonably, even though he infringed the 'rules of the game'. Non-compliance with such rules, conventions or customs (where they exist) is necessarily one consideration to be attended to upon the question of reasonableness; but it is only one, and it may be of much or little or even no weight in the circumstances."
I have cited from those two judgments because they show two different approaches which, as I see it, produce precisely the same result. One is to take a more generalised duty of care and to modify it on the basis that the participants in the sport or pastime impliedly consent to taking risks which otherwise would be a breach of the duty of care. That seems to be the approach of Barwick CJ. The other is exemplified by the judgment of Kitto J, where he is saying, in effect, that there is a general standard of care, namely the Lord Atkin approach in Donoghue v Stevenson [1932] AC 562 that you are under a duty to take all reasonable care taking account of the circumstances in which you are placed, which, in a game of football, are quite different from those which affect you when you are going for a walk in the countryside.
For my part I would prefer the approach of Kitto J., but I do not think it makes the slightest difference in the end if it is found by the tribunal of fact that the defendant failed to exercise that degree of care which was appropriate in all the circumstances, or that he acted in a way to which the plaintiff cannot be expected to have consented. In either event, there is liability."
"[1] Each contestant in a lawful sporting contest (and in particular a race) owes a duty of care to each and all other contestants.
[2] That duty is to exercise in the course of the contest all care that is objectively reasonable in the prevailing circumstances for the avoidance of infliction of injury to such fellow contestants.
[3] The prevailing circumstances are all such properly attendant upon the contest and include its object, the demands inevitably made upon its contestants, its inherent dangers (if any), its rules, conventions and customs, and the standards, skills and judgment reasonably to be expected of a contestant. Thus in the particular case of a horse race the prevailing circumstances will include the contestant's obligation to ride a horse over a given course competing with the remaining contestants for the best possible placing, if not for a win. Such must further include the Rules of Racing and the standards, skills and judgment of a professional jockey, all as expected by fellow contestants.
[4] Given the nature of such prevailing circumstances the threshold for liability is in practice inevitably high; the proof of a breach of duty will not flow from proof of no more than an error of judgment or from mere proof of a momentary lapse in skill (and thus care) respectively when subject to the stresses of a race. Such are no more than incidents inherent in the nature of sport.
[5] In practice it may therefore be difficult to prove any such breach of duty absent proof of conduct that in point of fact amounts to reckless disregard for the fellow contestant's safety. I emphasise the distinction between the expression of legal principle and the practicalities of the evidential burden."
"…there will be no liability for errors of judgment, oversights or lapses of which any participant might be guilty in the context of a fast-moving contest. Something more serious is required. I do not think it is helpful to say any more than this in setting the standard of care to be expected in cases of this kind."
Battery
"The claimant cannot claim compensation for the consequences of an act which he has freely invited, or in respect of which he has assumed the risk. The footballer cannot allege that a legitimate tackle is a battery. Thus, when the defendant maintains that the claimant consented to the force used against him, the key question becomes whether that consent extended to the degree or type of force employed against him. The claimant's consent need not be specific to the alleged act of battery. He may be volenti to the general harm envisaged in a fight or in a sport."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Clarke:
The Vice-Chancellor