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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 >> Ogden & Chadwick v Barber & Higgs [2008] EWCA Civ 1113 (23 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1113.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 1113 |
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B3/2007/2563 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE TETLOW)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE AULD
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OGDEN & CHADWICK |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BARBER & HIGGS |
Respondent |
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Mr M Willems (instructed by Messrs Halliwells) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix:
"A. No, I'm telling you how it is. There was two overtakes. My second overtake could have been prevented, yeah, by me, but I thought it was safe to do so, because I was on the outside of him. I tried to get back in then, because we were doing, you know, high speed, and I couldn't get back in.
Q. The only reason, if it is right that you tried to get back in, the only reason that you could not get back in was because you had put yourself into a position that was untenable. Nobody in a split second can get back in of course. That is why you do not go there in the first place, is it not? You would know that. That is why you should never ever be across the white lines?
A. It was before the white lines I did overtake.
Q. Are you saying then that you were held out on the wrong side of the road against your will, all the time from the beginning of the white line, double white lines, all the way to the point of collision?
A. Up to the bend, yeah.
Q. So the region of three seconds just with the car here, you on the wrong side of the road desperately trying to get in, unable to out accelerate him, unable to out break it, and still travelling at 70 miles an hour?
A. Three seconds. Do you think that's a long time?"
"Q. Okay. So Stephen thought that he could overtake again, and what happened then?
A. Again the Subaru matched his speed, pulled out towards the centre line and avoided Stephen getting past, and then from what I could see, Stephen, I can't ….He was certainly next to him, struggling to get back in, either to get past him or behind him.
Q. You could not really tell which he was doing?
A. He couldn't get back. He was on the wrong side of the road, ….the Subaru.
Q. And when they went around the bend, because they had gone out of your sight when they went round that bend, would they not?
A. Yeah, momentarily, yeah, yeah."
"…Mr Barber must be the author of his own misfortune, because how could the Subaru with the bike behind him ever foresee that would happen?"
"In his evidence Mr Ogden suggested that just before Mr Higgs and Mr Barber went out of his sight Mr Barber was just across the centre line and alongside the Subaru. That was inconsistent with anything said previously."
"14. As to the first attempt to overtake by Mr Barber, I ask myself: why should they make that up, in particular, Mr Ogden, who spoke to the police and made a witness statement within a week of the accident? Similarly, as regards the second attempt to overtake. It could of course be that those two got their heads together very soon after the accident but unlikely given that both were injured. It seems to me that the basic truth of their testimony is demonstrated by Mr Ogden's reaction on seeing the Subaru return, the memorising the Subaru's number and passing the information on."
"In short, I am wholly persuaded that Mr Higgs accelerated to prevent the first overtaking and then slowed down and did likewise on the second occasion and blocked Mr Barber off by varying his speed when Mr Barber wanted to get back in. Had he not done so Mr Barber would, in all probability, have got back in before the bend and hence avoided danger."
"Mr Barber, in my judgment, does not escape all blame. Once he realised that Mr Higgs was not going to let him pass he really should not have made the second attempt, especially given that an overtaking manoeuvre would be longer to achieve given the likelihood of the Subaru driver acting in the same way again. His share of the blame, in my judgment, is much less than Mr Higgs. I apportion blame between them as 80 per cent to Mr Higgs and 20 per cent to Mr Barber."
"So what you say is this: that all the time that you saw him going into, tilting the bike and starting into the bend, he had not even started to overtake the car, and at that time was behind the car. That is clear, is it not?"
"…but I do repeat that it would require a very strong case to justify any such review of, or interference with, this matter of apportionment where the same view is taken of the law and the facts. It is a question of the degree of fault, depending on a trained and expert judgment considering all the circumstances, and it is different in essence from a mere finding of fact in the ordinary sense. It is a question, not of principle or of positive findings of fact or law, but of proportion, of balance or relative emphasis, and of weighing different considerations. It involves an individual choice or discretion, as to which there may well be differences of opinion by different minds. It is for that reason, I think, that an appellate court has been warned against interfering, save in very exceptional circumstances, with the judge's apportionment."
Lord Justice Auld:
Sir Anthony Clarke MR:
Order: Appeal dismissed