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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 >> Rehill v Rider Holdings Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 628 (16 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/628.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 628 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BRADFORD COUNTY COURT
Mr Recorder Miller
Claim No. 8BD02996
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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Satnam Rehill |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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Rider Holdings Limited |
Defendant/Appellant |
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Rodney E Ferm (instructed by Petherbridge Bassra) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 2 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The facts
"I saw a single decker bus swinging round the corner from Bridge Street. The front left corner of the bus was hanging more or less over the centre of the crossing and the front wheels were rounding the corner. The man was on the crossing but the corner of the bus had caught one of his legs and it was sited under the bus. His other leg was underneath him and he was losing his balance. As he was beginning to fall he was twisting to his right side and going down. He fell down, ending up on his back. The bus was rounding the corner, so due to the position of the wheel, set back from the front of the bus, they had not yet reached the man. As the bus continued it began to hang the front of its body over the man and covered more of him. The front wheel was turned and thus was in direct line with his hips. As the wheel [that is clearly the front nearside wheel] reached him he was laid flat on his back shouting, 'Stop' and trying to grab at the bus with his hand. The front wheel hit the man on the hips and pushed him slightly forward before riding up on to him. The bus lifted as it went over him. The man was screaming as the wheel went over him. The bus driver didn't seem to know that he had run over someone as its speed did not alter. The bus continued down Hall Ings and the man was trapped beneath the bus, between the bus and the road. The bus made no attempt to stop and I jumped over the railings and started to bang on the side of the bus …. I ran along the bus for about three or four metres and the driver then brought the bus to a standstill."
"19. Going back to that second police interview in May 2006, Mr Shad was asked why did he not do an emergency brake and he said, 'I was confused. I wanted to hard brake.' It was put to him that the accident experts had claimed that he should have stopped within six feet given the speed he was going but the front of the bus had gone 45 feet from the crossing. Could he explain that discrepancy? He said, 'I don't know. I stopped as soon as possible.' I am quite satisfied that a reasonably careful and observant professional bus driver would have noticed the claimant as he left the kerb. This is not a case … where the driver had to concentrate on a vehicle in front of him. Mr Shad was very experienced and familiar with this turn. The front of the bus was established in Hall Ings when the emergency arose and whilst he would have wanted to keep an eye on the nearside rear of the vehicle clearing the corner, he would have known from much past experience that he was on the right line. Indeed, the problem itself arose to his nearside front in any event. He ought reasonably to have been alerted by the claimant leaving the pavement at or slightly beyond the crossing point.
20. On the CCTV the claimant has already established some feet into the road by 1.17.33. It would have taken him half a second or so to have gone from the kerb to that point. The claimant is no athlete and so, allowing 1.5 seconds for thinking time, Mr Shad should have hit the brakes at 1.17.34. In other words, such anticipation and reaction as he should have shown in the circumstances would have enabled him to brake by the point of the collision and to stop to fast [sic] within a second, or six feet of travel.
21. On the balance of probabilities I am satisfied that, had Mr Shad done so, the wheel of the bus, albeit it is set back only a few feet from the front, would not have gone over the claimant causing him the crushing injuries. The speed would have been minimal. The wheel might well have touched the claimant but it would not have gone over him. The failure to react in time was the carelessness which he effectively admitted before the Magistrates. I too find the case proved or to put it another way the defendant has not discharged the reverse burden of proof on the issue.
…
23. If in the present case the claimant had simply been knocked over by the front corner of the bus, and suffered a fracture from the impact, the claim would have failed. The point is though that Mr Shad had the opportunity, which he ought reasonably to have taken, to avoid running over the claimant and he failed for whatever reason to do so."
"25. Here, as I have found, the claimant's action in coming off the kerb when the red man was against him and when the bus was so close, either as a result of his misjudgement or his simple failure to look out, was materially more reckless than the conduct of the claimant in the case of Clifford and I find him one third negligent. I should add the case is clearly distinguishable also from Froom v Butcher. This was not an otherwise innocent driver or passenger failing to take the precaution of putting a seat belt on but a claimant who, by his own negligence, actively contributed to the accident itself. It was reasonably foreseeable when he left the kerb when he did that the bus would not stop in sufficient time to avoid running him over; not all drivers, even professional ones, drive to a good and reasonable standard all the time.
26. Although his injuries very largely flowed from the lack of prompt braking rather than from the initial collision, it seems to me the claimant must bear his fair share of the blame for the accident as a whole and so it will be inappropriate to make the standard 15 per cent discount on the Froom v Butcher principle and on the overall merits one third I think is fair …."
Primary liability
i) To allow thinking time of only 1½ seconds from the moment the claimant stepped off the pavement presupposes that the driver should have begun the process of thinking and reaction at precisely that moment. But the Recorder does not suggest that there was anything which should have alerted the driver to the claimant before he stepped off the pavement; and there were other things that required the driver's attention, including pedestrians on the central island, the line to take around the corner, and looking in his nearside rear mirror. To find that the driver in those circumstances was required to react the instant the claimant left the pavement is a counsel of perfection which does not reflect the reality of driving buses in a busy city centre.ii) It cannot be said in any event that the driver should have applied the brakes at or by the time of impact between the claimant and the bus, since the time of impact cannot be fixed with precision: the Recorder relied on the reaction of the female passenger as strongly indicating that the impact had occurred "by" 13.17.34, whereas he found that the driver should have applied the brakes "at" 13.17.34. If the impact occurred before the time when the brakes should have been applied, then on the Recorder's reasoning the wheel would have gone over the claimant even in the absence of negligence.
iii) There was no evidential basis for the Recorder's finding that if the driver had braked immediately at 13.17.34 he could have brought the bus to a halt within 1 further second, or 6 feet of travel. It was put to the driver in his second police interview that "accident people claim you could have stopped within 6 [feet]" but there was no evidence to that effect at the trial. Moreover the Recorder was not entitled to say with precision that the speed of the bus at the time the brakes should have been applied was 4 mph: neither the driver's statement in interview that his speed was between 3 and 5 mph, nor the witness evidence that the bus was going at a brisk walking pace, justified the Recorder in taking a figure of 4 mph rather than 5 mph. At 5 mph the bus would have travelled a longer distance before coming to a halt and, on the Recorder's reasoning, the wheel would have gone over the claimant even in the absence of negligence.
Contributory negligence
"We also accept that this court is always reluctant to interfere with the trial judge's judgment of what apportionment between the parties is 'just and equitable' under the 1945 Act. But a finding as to which, if either, of the parties was the more responsible for the damage is different from a finding as to the precise extent of a less than 50 per cent contribution. There is a qualitative difference between a finding of 60 per cent contribution and a finding of 40 per cent which is not so apparent in the quantitative difference between 40 per cent and 20 per cent. It is rare indeed for a pedestrian to be found more responsible than a driver unless the pedestrian has suddenly moved into the path of an oncoming vehicle. That is not this case. The court 'has consistently imposed upon the drivers of cars a high burden to reflect the fact that the car is potentially a dangerous weapon': Latham LJ in Lunt v Khelifa [2002] EWCA Civ 801, para [20]" (emphasis added).
Conclusion
Lord Justice Patten :
Lord Justice Ward :