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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Uren v Corporate Leisure (UK) Ltd & Anor [2013] EWHC 353 (QB) (26 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/353.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 353 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Robert Lee Uren |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Corporate Leisure (UK) Limited |
1st Defendant |
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- and - |
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Ministry of Defence |
2nd Defendant |
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Richard Lynagh QC and Shaun Ferris (instructed by John A Neil) for the First Defendant
Derek Sweeting QC and Keith Morton QC (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 10-14, 17-19 and 21 December 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foskett:
Introduction
Procedural background
(a) What was the degree of risk of serious injury entailed in the game as played on the day of the Claimant's accident?
(b) Was that degree of risk acceptable in the light of the social value of the game?
"My conclusion … is that I cannot be satisfied that the judge reached a sound and tenable conclusion when he held that the game as played carried only a very small risk of serious injury. I say that for three reasons. First, I am not satisfied that the judge carried out a sufficient analysis of the conflicting opinions of the experts. In particular, he failed to deal with the obvious point that this game was to be played competitively by a group of people, most of whom were fit young servicemen, who might be expected to display a considerable degree of enthusiasm. Second, I think that the judge was wrong to disregard the impressions of eye-witnesses …. Third, I am concerned about the use to which the judge put the statistics which he quoted. Considered together, those three reasons give rise to very serious concerns that the conclusion was not sound. I do not say that the judge was wrong, let alone clearly wrong, to hold as he did on this crucial issue. However, I cannot say that his decision is sound. It follows that my view is that this judgment cannot stand."
1. The Claimant's accident occurred in the course of a Health & Fun Day held at RAF High Wycombe on 28 July 2005.
2. The event consisted of 16 health stands and 4 fitness classes in the sports hall and 6 "It's a Knockout" style games in the open air (save it is not admitted that the particular games that formed part of the package were identical to any game seen in the television programme "It's a Knockout").
3. These games were played by teams representing the different "flights" present on the Station. The games were part of the Commanding Officer's Cup, a tournament between the flights that is run throughout the year.
4. The Health & Fun Day had been arranged by the Physical Education Flight under the leadership of Flight Lieutenant Taylor. The RAF contracted with Corporate Leisure ("CL") for CL to provide the above games.
5. It is common ground that the Claimant was taking part voluntarily, albeit that he was on duty.
6. During the course of the Health & Fun Day (and during the course of the various games run by CL) members of the RAF Physical Education Flight were present and were able to observe the games being played (no admission is made as to who was present at any particular time and what might have been observed by whom).
7. The last of the 6 games ("the pool game") was in the nature of a relay race. Members of the teams had to run up to an inflatable rectangular pool ("the pool"), get in over the side, grab a piece of plastic fruit floating in or under a shallow depth of water, carry it out of the pool and deposit it in a bucket, at which point the next team member was free to repeat the routine.
8. The pool belonged to Corporate Leisure (UK) Limited, a company that specialised in managing and providing equipment for "corporate entertainment" events and of a type popularised in the television series "It's a Knockout".
9. The pool had been installed on a grass playing field (rugby pitch). Inflated, the sides of the pool were cylindrical and were approximately 1.04 metres high and 0.98 metres wide. The pool's internal dimensions were approximately 4.94 metres x 3 metres. The depth of the water was about 460mm (18 inches). The run up was around 14-15 feet. Alongside part of the side of the pool over which the competitors were to make their entry and exit were 4 plastic-covered mats placed on the grass. The purpose of these mats was to provide a relatively clean surface for the competitors to land on when exiting the pool.
10. The pool was manufactured by Supa-Bounce Ltd but as an inflatable to be filled with balls, not water.
11. The Claimant was a member of one of the two teams representing IT Ops Flight and took part in the second heat of the pool games. The other IT Ops Flight team took part in the first heat. 4 teams of 4 members took part in each heat.
12. By reason of the dimensions of the pool it was not possible to enter the pool without coming into contact with the side wall of the pool.
13. Mr Berry was in charge of the First Defendant's team attending the event and before the pool game took place he told the contestants how the game was played and for this purpose he used Mr Brill or Mr Brent to walk from the start line to the pool and back again. These instructions included an outline of the object and rules of the game. Mr Berry told the contestants to be careful, use their common-sense and avoid other people when entering the pool, he did not give them any specific instructions as to how they should enter the pool.
14. The Second Defendant's individual primarily responsible for Health & Safety at RAF High Wycombe was a civilian employee called Mr Richard Cassford. He did not carry out a risk assessment for the overall Health and Fun Day or for its constituent parts such as the pool game. Field J held that Flight Lieutenant Taylor is an officer with an unblemished reputation. He prepared the risk assessments on behalf of the Second Defendant for the pool game and he did so without knowing the dimensions of the pool and without knowing in any real detail how the pool game was played or taking any steps to find out. Such assessments as were prepared by Flight Lieutenant Taylor were fatally flawed.
15. The risks assessments of the game relied upon by CL were defective.
16. During the course of the relay game, CL supervised the game.
17. Mr Berry of CL was at the side of the pool observing the game and commentating (save that for the avoidance of any doubt the Claimant's recollection is that Mr Berry was not stood at one spot but was wandering around to the side of the pool observing the game and commentating). CL's other staff Brent and Brill were at the start point of the game.
18. Before participating in the relay game the Claimant had:
a) Already been into the pool during an earlier period of horseplay.
b) Watched contestants in the first heat
c) Watched other contestants in the second heat.
d) Was aware of the depth of the water
19. The Claimant had watched the first heat during which about half of the contestants had entered the pool by sliding over the side headfirst with their arms outstretched in front of them.
20. The other contestants had vaulted or scrambled over the side landing in the pool feet first.
21. Such were the dimensions of the side of the pool and the shortness of the run up that it was impossible to dive over the side of the pool without one's body making contact in a sliding fashion with the side.
22. The "drop" on entering the pool was about 1 metre.
23. The Claimant entered the pool headfirst with his arms outstretched in front of him. The Claimant came into contact with side of the pool.
24. The Claimant's legs flipped upwards so that he entered the pool at a steep angle.
25. None of the RAF Physical Education Flight staff who saw the games being played intervened in any way with the way in which the various games were run.
1. CL had provided the same package of games to the RAF the previous year.
The Claimant notes the ambiguity identified at Paragraph 20 of the judgment of Field J.[1]
2. The members of the RAF Physical Education Flight have received training in safe practices and the assessment of risks for physical activities and are capable of assessing the risks presented by such activities.
No relevant finding was made by Field J. The findings of Field J in relation to the Second Defendant's risk assessments would suggest otherwise.
3. It was inevitable that, by contact with the side wall of the pool, the participant's entry speed would be reduced to some extent.
No relevant finding was made by Field J. This will be the subject of expert evidence.
4. It is impossible to make sports or games of this nature risk-free.
This is not a fact but a statement of opinion and relates to issues that are for determination by the trial judge.
5. There is an element of acceptable risk associated with the relay game.
This is not a fact but a statement of opinion and relates to issues that are for determination by the trial judge.
1. When it came to his turn, the Claimant ran up to the side of the pool, launched himself over it in a continuous movement headfirst with his arms outstretched ahead of him. He hit his head on the bottom of the pool and broke his neck, fracturing his mid-cervical spine at C4, C5 and C6. The Claimant is now tetraplegic and confined to a wheelchair.
2. The Claimant ran up to the side of the pool with the intention of sliding in headfirst with his arms outstretched. He saw three people in the pool, which caused him to adopt a diagonal entry to avoid landing on them. The next thing he remembers is waking up face down in the pool unable to move.
3. The person on behalf of the First Defendant who produced the risk assessment for the pool game did not appreciate that contestants might enter the pool headfirst. Mr Berry who reviewed the risk assessment for the Second Defendant in 2003 did not amend the risk assessment in any way to indicate that any thought had been given to the method of entry.
The Claimant went over the side of the pool headfirst with his arms outstretched and with his body sliding over the side. He went into the pool in the same way as approximately 50% of the other contestants but as his legs were sliding over the side something caused them to be lifted from the thigh forcing him down at a steep angle.
Further [to] paragraph 12 of the judgment of the Honourable Mr Justice Field, it is agreed that the Claimant was not attempting a manoeuvre which he must or ought to have appreciated was dangerous.
"In my judgement, [the Claimant's] legs were lifted up as a result of the flatness of his trajectory as he went over the side headfirst with his arms outstretched in front of him. He was trying to enter the pool by sliding in over the side as quickly as possible. In my judgement, he was not attempting a manoeuvre which he must or ought to have appreciated was dangerous."
Some preliminary observations
"Diving" and the way the game was played
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Could I just go back to the photograph … because I just want to be absolutely clear [that] I understand ….
As I understood your answer to Sir Geoffrey … this shows someone who's been part of a continuous running movement from wherever … he or she had started?
A: Yes, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Comes straight down towards the side of the pool and goes straight over.
A: Goes over, yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: That is what this depicts is it, as far as you are concerned?
A: This is what this depicts, just because of what seems to be the motion of the person travelling. Obviously looking at the photograph without having the technical details for it I would say it is roughly around 250 of a second shutter speed on it - purely just from my experience as a photographer. So the fact that there is movement on them shows that they are moving at speed, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Right. Speaking for myself I can envisage that conduct, a run and over the side, whether you call it a dive or a slide, perhaps doesn't matter for present purposes. The other possibility is that someone runs up to the side and effectively stops and then … does a fairly gentle clamber over the top, hands first and hands down on to the base of the pool. Do you understand the difference between the two?
A: Yes, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: It doesn't appear that that is depicted on your photograph?
A: No, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: What I would just like to know is whether to your recollection you saw that kind of conduct as well as this kind of conduct or whether this kind of conduct was the norm? [I should say that by "this kind of conduct" I was referring to the action of the lady "diving" in photograph 1.]
A: There [were] lots of different types of people entering. The majority were diving in. Some controlled, some uncontrolled, as well, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: When you say "diving" you are talking about … the motion shown on the photograph?
A: Both types of what you yourself described, I would call "diving" as well, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: There were some who were going forward with continuous motion from the start of the run-up, if I can describe it as that.
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: There were others who perhaps ran up and paused a bit before they actually went in …
A: Yes, sir.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: … but did go over with their hands ….
A: Did go over headfirst into it.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: And others presumably took a different, perhaps vaulted over …
A: Yes, some people would go over and sort of slide with their behind over.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: I think we have seen that from the photograph. Does anybody want to ask any questions?
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Yes, I'd just like to try and chase this down if I can. Can you have a look at … your testimony to the inquiry? I'm going to assume this is your best recollection of what happened. It's the nearest in point of time …
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: … if you could just help me what you probably meant by what you said here … "I was watching the event concerned and I watched all of the individuals dive into the pool." And then you said: "After this had happened I thought that one of the personnel had not surfaced after diving into the water." So if I can just stop there, this conveys to me, but you must tell me whether this is right or wrong, that you … you saw a number of individuals engaged in what you described as a dive at the time, and then one individual … did the same and didn't come up. Now, first of all, is that a fair description of what you [were] conveying there?
A: Yes. But we've already established that there are the dive and the headfirst, but what I was trying to come across there I would think was just using one word to sort of sum up gaining entry into the pool. I didn't actually mean that every individual ran up, stopped and dived into the pool or took a running dive. It was just my wording for getting into the pool … [because] as you can see on some of the pictures it's plainly obvious [there are] people that are small that can't dive so they're crawling over. But I didn't say's "dive", "crawl", "jump", it was just one word I used.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: But … what you were trying to convey was that however they were getting in, arms were going out ahead of them … and they were going over the side.
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: And presumably all of them … were … touching the sides as they went over …
A: It's impossible.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Quite. So we are not talking about a straight [or] a loopy dive?
A. I think I mentioned this last time, if you did you'd have to dive up, over and …
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Down.
A: This is physically impossible.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: There's no way of doing that?
A: No.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Look at … [photograph 1]. You haven't been taken to it but it's the only one I have of something that was happening at the time … this is an instantaneous picture of course and one doesn't have the bit before or the bit afterwards, but … is this what you were describing in …
A: I think that encapsulates it all. You've got some person diving, and you can see their hands in front of them, and then this girl on the far side[2] who's not probably physically able to do that, she's had to crawl out. So it's a variety of people. But yes, the majority were aiming for this type of dive to … speed it up.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Yes, and presumably running up to the side of the pool and trying to do it all as a continuous motion.
A: That was the ultimate objective, but like I mentioned before, people got tired so some ended up walking. But initially the competitors were running and then sliding over with the hands first.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Right. I can take it, can I, from what you say that what is depicted on … photograph 1, was, so far as you can recollect, fairly typical of the way in which people were entering …
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: … this is what most people who were diving or using headfirst entry were doing?
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: I can take that picture away with me and say to myself that's more or less what everybody was doing?
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: It was using that method getting in.
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: If we go then from the general to the particular you then do describe Mr Uren going into the pool [as summarised in paragraph 36 above]. So that's a clear picture you had at that time?
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: You saw that happen and that's the description you gave.
A: Yes.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: And the way he was doing it was similar to what we have seen in … photograph 1?
A: From what I've described, yes.
MR SWEETING: By headfirst entry it might be possible to be describing a sort of human torpedo where the head was the very first part of the body … that was entering the pool. Did you see that?
A: No.
Q: So the only form of headfirst entry that you described is one that has the hands forward. Is that …
A: Yes, they precede the head, so …
Q: Yes. So it's hands forward?
A: Yes.
Q: I think a moment ago you described people coming up in -- adopting that mode of entry and sliding into the pool.
A: Yes.
Q: And so that would be a summary, or a picture, of how that form of headfirst entry was being effected?
A: Yes.
Q: Going up, sliding into the pool off the side?
A: With hands in front.
Q: Right. You were reminded by his Lordship of your description much closer to the events of what happened with Mr Uren and his legs flipping up in the air. Had you seen that happen before?
A: No ….
Q: That particular feature of entry, his legs flipping up in the air, was that something that you had mentioned because it was unusual? Or was it something you had seen on other entries?
A: No, not seen on other entries at all.
"The first time that I entered the pool, I dived in over its side and banged my head on its hard bottom. I hit the top, front part of my head, the part of your head that you would hit if you did a forward roll that went wrong. It hurt when I did it so when I dived in the second time I altered my entry. I managed to control my entry a little better by going in a little shallower and sliding in with my hands out to break my fall. The water was too shallow to dive in the way I had done the first time. It was very difficult to get into the pool and the easiest and quickest way of entry was to run up and dive in headfirst over its side."
The risk assessments carried out
"There was no evidence that the individual who produced the original risk assessment for the game appreciated that contestants might enter the pool headfirst. I am also not satisfied that when Mr Berry reviewed the assessment that he had in mind contestants might enter the pool headfirst. For these reasons I am bound to find that the risk assessments of the game relied on by CL were defective."
"Both assessments were completed without Flight Lieutenant Taylor knowing in any real detail how the pool game was played or the dimensions of the pool. He understood that it had featured in the previous year's Health & Fun Day and he saw a photograph of what might have been this event, but he did not know how the game was played and took no steps to find this out. His attitude was that if there were particular risks arising from the pool game, CL would advise him of them.
The obligation to prepare an adequate risk assessment was part of the non-delegable duty of reasonable care owed by the MOD to Mr Uren. Flight Lieutenant Taylor was not entitled to leave it to CL to assess the risks of the game. Further, no risk assessment of the pool game could be adequate unless the person undertaking it was aware of how the game was played and the ways the entrants, after being told to exercise care, might enter the pool. It follows that the two risk assessments prepared by Flight Lieutenant Taylor, particularly the second, were fatally flawed."
"It is obvious that the failure to carry out a proper risk assessment can never be the direct cause of an injury. There will, however, be some cases in which it can be shown that, on the facts, the failure to carry out a proper risk assessment has been indirectly causative of the injury. Where that is shown, liability will follow. Such a failure can only give rise to liability if a suitable and sufficient assessment would probably have resulted in a precaution being taken which would probably have avoided the injury. A decision of that kind will necessitate hypothetical consideration of what would have happened if there had been a proper assessment."
The first issue
"The likelihood of harm is gauged with reference to the state of knowledge which could be attributed to the defendant at the time of the occurrence. In Roe v Minister of Health… disinfectant, in which ampoules of anaesthetic were stored, had seeped into the ampoules through invisible cracks. The possibility that this might occur was not generally known at the time of the incident, which occurred in 1947. The claimants, who received spinal injections of the anaesthetic, became paralysed. The hospital authorities were held not liable because the risk to the claimants was not reasonably foreseeable at that date. "We must not look at the 1947 accident with 1954 spectacles" said Denning L.J. In Roe the conduct in question was that of doctors and it was judged according to what reasonable doctors would have foreseen in 1947. In other cases the technical evidence may be less clear as is evident from the conflicting outcomes of The Wagon Mound in which the fire damage was held to be unforeseeable, and The Wagon Mound (No. 2) … in which in relation to the same occurrence, it was held that a small but significant risk of the same fire damage was foreseeable …. Further difficulty may arise where the views of the layman and expert as to likelihood differ. Suppose that the defendant is a layman and that a reasonable layman would foresee a particular kind of harm as likely to result, will special scientific knowledge to the contrary be relied on to hold him not liable, even though this is disproved by the event? If he is held not liable, it would be contrary to the principle that a criterion of foreseeability is the defendant's standard of knowledge. Conversely, will specialised knowledge be relied on to hold a layman liable for damage which a reasonable layman would not have foreseen? Graham v Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd … suggests that it will not. The test seems to be the actual or constructive knowledge which a reasonable and prudent defendant would have had if he consulted such literature or made such inquiries as were reasonably expected of him."
" … The question of whether a person has acted negligently is not answered simply by analysing what he did or did not do in the circumstances that prevailed at the time in question and then testing it against an objective standard of "reasonable behaviour". Before holding that a person's standard of care has fallen below the objective standard expected and so finding that he acted negligently, the court must be satisfied that a reasonable person in the position of the defendant (ie. the person who caused the incident) would contemplate that injury is likely to follow from his acts or omissions …."
The "quantum" or measure of relevant risk
"Nor is the remote possibility of injury enough; there must be a sufficient probability of injury to lead a reasonable person (in the position of the Defendant) to anticipate it."
"This is clear from classic statements of the law on the standard of care that is expected of people in circumstances where they owe a duty of care to others. In Donoghue v Stevenson, Lord Atkin stated the standard of care that a person must adopt is: "… [to] take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour". I would emphasise the word "likely". In Bolton v Stone (the case of the cricket ball that was hit out of the ground and injured a passer by), Lord Porter elaborated Lord Atkin's statement by saying: "… it is not enough that the event should be such as can reasonably be foreseen; the further result that injury is likely to follow must be also such as a reasonable man would contemplate, before he can be convicted of actionable negligence. Nor is the remote possibility of injury occurring enough; there must be sufficient probability to lead a reasonable man to anticipate it". In the same case, Lord Normand referred to statements of various of their Lordships in Glasgow Corporation v Muir concerning the proper test to define the standard of care that must be adopted by the reasonable man. Lord Normand agreed with a statement of Lord Clauson in the Glasgow Corporation case that the test is whether the person owing the duty of care "had in contemplation that, unless some further precautions were taken, such an unfortunate occurrence as that which in fact took place might well be expected"."
" … Another word frequently used is "probable." It is used with various shades of meaning. Sometimes it appears to mean more probable than not, sometimes it appears to include events likely but not very likely to occur, sometimes it has a still wider meaning and refers to events the chance of which is anything more than a bare possibility, and sometimes, when used in conjunction with other adjectives, it appears to serve no purpose beyond rounding off a phrase."
"Before Bolton v Stone the cases had fallen into two classes: (1) those where, before the event, the risk of its happening would have been regarded as unreal either because the event would have been thought to be physically impossible or because the possibility of its happening would have been regarded as so fantastic or farfetched that no reasonable man would have paid any attention to it - "a mere possibility which would never occur to the mind of a reasonable man" ( per Lord Dunedin in Fardon v. Harcourt-Rivington - or (2) those where there was a real and substantial risk or chance that something like the event which happens might occur, and then the reasonable man would have taken the steps necessary to eliminate the risk.
Bolton v Stone posed a new problem. There a member of a visiting team drove a cricket ball out of the ground onto an unfrequented adjacent public road and it struck and severely injured a lady who happened to be standing in the road. That it might happen that a ball would be driven onto this road could not have been said to be a fantastic or far-fetched possibility: according to the evidence it had happened about six times in 28 years and it could not have been said to be a far-fetched or fantastic possibility that such a ball would strike someone in the road: people did pass along the road from time to time. So it could not have been said that, on any ordinary meaning of the words, the fact that a ball might strike a person in the road was not foreseeable or reasonably foreseeable - it was plainly foreseeable. But the chance of its happening in the foreseeable future was infinitesimal. A mathematician given the data could have worked out that it was only likely to happen once in so many thousand years. The House of Lords held that the risk was so small that in the circumstances a reasonable man would have been justified in disregarding it and taking no steps to eliminate it.
But it does not follow that, no matter what the circumstances may be, it is justifiable to neglect a risk of such a small magnitude. A reasonable man would only neglect such a risk if he had some valid reason for doing so, e.g., that it would involve considerable expense to eliminate the risk. He would weigh the risk against the difficulty of eliminating it. If the activity which caused the injury to Miss Stone had been an unlawful activity, there can be little doubt but that Bolton v Stone would have been decided differently. In their Lordships' judgment Bolton v Stone did not alter the general principle that a person must be regarded as negligent if he does not take steps to eliminate a risk which he knows or ought to know is a real risk and not a mere possibility which would never influence the mind of a reasonable man. What that decision did was to recognise and give effect to the qualification that it is justifiable not to take steps to eliminate a real risk if it is small and if the circumstances are such that a reasonable man, careful of the safety of his neighbour, would think it right to neglect it.
In the present case there was no justification whatever for discharging the oil into Sydney Harbour. Not only was it an offence to do so, but it involved considerable loss financially. If the ship's engineer had thought about the matter, there could have been no question of balancing the advantages and disadvantages. From every point of view it was both his duty and his interest to stop the discharge immediately.
It follows that in their Lordships' view the only question is whether a reasonable man having the knowledge and experience to be expected of the chief engineer of the Wagon Mound would have known that there was a real risk of the oil on the water catching fire in some way: if it did, serious damage to ships or other property was not only foreseeable but very likely. Their Lordships do not dissent from the view of the trial judge that the possibilities of damage "must be significant enough in a practical sense to require a reasonable man to guard against them" …."
"If a real risk is one which would occur to the mind of a reasonable man in the position of the defendant's servant and which he would not brush aside as far-fetched, and if the criterion is to be what that reasonable man would have done in the circumstances, then surely he would not neglect such a risk if action to eliminate it presented no difficulty, involved no disadvantage, and required no expense."
"There are at least two points to note about this important passage. First Lord Reid uses the expression "a real risk", which was the expression used by the judge in this case. Secondly one cannot in this context separate the enquiry as to reasonable foreseeability of damage from the related enquiry what is it reasonable to do in the light of the reasonably foreseeable risk. It may be reasonable to take no steps to eliminate a risk which is unlikely to eventuate and which will be of small consequence if it does. The social utility of the activity which gives rise to the risk falls to be considered. Carelessly leaking oil into a harbour is an activity of no value from which it is obvious that anyone should desist if it gives rise to only a very small risk of a disastrous fire. Playing cricket on the other hand is a socially useful activity – players should not be expected to desist unless at the location at which the game takes place it poses a risk the nature and extent of which outweigh the undesirability and/or inconvenience and/or difficulty and/or expense of eliminating the risk by stopping play at that ground and/or finding another more suitable location.
The latter point emerges clearly from Lord Hoffmann's speech in Tomlinson …."
"What is relevant is the degree of likelihood that harm may occur. In Lord Dunedin's words: "People must guard against reasonable probabilities, but they are not bound to guard against fantastic possibilities." The point is well illustrated by contrasting the cricketing cases of Bolton v Stone and Miller v Jackson. In Bolton the claimant was hit by a ball driven from the defendant's cricket ground on to a quiet road. The evidence was that balls had been hit out of the ground on perhaps six occasions in 30 years. The risk of harm was foreseeable but the chances were small. The House of Lords held that the defendants were not liable for continuing to play cricket as it was reasonable to ignore such a small risk. In Miller by contrast, balls were hit out of the ground eight or nine times a season and had damaged the claimant's property on a number of occasions. The Court of Appeal held that the risk of damage was so great that the defendants were negligent each time the ball was hit out of the ground and caused damage. It should be noted that Bolton is not authority for the view that it is always reasonable to disregard a low likelihood. The other factors in the balance, e.g. the severity of the harm and the cost of precautions, must also be taken into account."
"79. The second point is the mistreatment of the concept of risk. To suffer a broken neck and paralysis for life could hardly be a more serious injury; any loss of life is a consequence of the greatest seriousness. There was undoubtedly a risk of drowning for inexperienced, incompetent or drunken swimmers in the deeper parts of the mere or in patches of weed when they were out of their depth although no lives had actually been lost. But there was no evidence of any incident where anyone before the claimant had broken his neck by plunging from a standing position and striking his head on the smooth sandy bottom on which he was standing. Indeed, at the trial it was not his case that this was what had happened; he had alleged that there must have been some obstruction. There had been some evidence of two other incidents where someone suffered a minor injury (a cut or a graze) to their head whilst diving but there was no evidence that these two incidents were in any way comparable with that involving the claimant. It is then necessary to put these few incidents in context. The park had been open to the public since about 1982. Some 160,000 people used to visit the park in a year. Up to 200 would be bathing in the mere on a fine summer's day. Yet the number of incidents involving the mere were so few. It is a fallacy to say that because drowning is a serious matter there is therefore a serious risk of drowning. In truth the risk of a drowning was very low indeed and there had never actually been one and the accident suffered by the claimant was unique. Whilst broken necks can result from incautious or reckless diving, the probability of one being suffered in the circumstances of the claimant were so remote that the risk was minimal. The internal reports before his accident make the common but elementary error of confusing the seriousness of the outcome with the degree of risk that it will occur.
80. The third point is that this confusion leads to the erroneous conclusion that there was a significant risk of injury presented to the claimant when he went into the shallow water on the day in question. One cannot say that there was no risk of injury because we know now what happened. But, in my view, it was objectively so small a risk as not to trigger section 1(1) of the 1984 Act , otherwise every injury would suffice because it must imply the existence of some risk. However, and probably more importantly, the degree of risk is central to the assessment of what reasonably should be expected of the occupier and what would be a reasonable response to the existence of that degree of risk. The response should be appropriate and proportionate to both the degree of risk and the seriousness of the outcome at risk. If the risk of serious injury is so slight and remote that it is highly unlikely ever to materialise, it may well be that it is not reasonable to expect the occupier to take any steps to protect anyone against it. The law does not require disproportionate or unreasonable responses." (My emphasis.)
The expert evidence
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: … my question is: what does "low" mean? … these words have different meanings to different people.
A: Yes … it refers back to a different European standard …. There is a traffic light system … which is red, amber, green, which corresponds with high, medium, low risk. So what I'm saying here is that low corresponds to green, and I think that's quite a helpful -- I think the reason that it's become a European standard is because everybody can understand the traffic light system, it's common sense that red means stop, amber means caution, green means go. So in my view the risk was low. Meaning green, proceed. Does that help?
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: Well I am afraid the temptation is to say, "… what does green mean", because … some people might say if there's a risk of serious injury of … five per cent, so five times out of 100 dives somebody is going to sustain serious injury. Others may say … it has to be one in 1,000, one in 1 million, I don't know. … at the moment don't have a real feel for what you think "low" means from a statistical point of view.
A: Unfortunately, ergonomics, I think generally, does not have a lot of epidemiological statistical data. It is in that sense, I think, partly subjective. So I am using my experience of likelihood.
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT: But it is essentially subjective, isn't it, based on whatever evidence you have to hand?
A: It is largely subjective ….
"… if you look at the particular mode of entry … you can see that it involves, basically, a horizontal dive from waist height onto a soft and yielding surface and sliding down onto a grassy field. So … instead of looking at … advice which has been given by other people in only vaguely similar situations, I try to get some feel for … what the actual risk is associated with carrying out that activity. So one way of doing that is to look at other activities which are carried out, where people are basically making horizontal dives from about waist height and I don't have to look very far because I know that [in rugby there are] diving tackles and diving for touch. In my opinion, the risk of diving tackles and diving for touch is actually considerably higher than the risk of diving onto that yielding surface and sliding down a distance of certainly less than one metre, onto what is basically a grassy surface. So in addition … I looked at the statistics for paraplegia and quadriplegia … to see where they were coming from, and most of them come from driving accidents, and there's a small number, but significant number, which come from sports activities. I think there are about 35 serious cases per year in this country from sports activities. … I've got data on how many people take part in these activities and roughly how many times per year, so from that I can get a feel for what the risk is of serious spinal injury - in those situations, in those sports. So that, generally, gives me a feel for how risky this activity might be. I cannot do it any other way. I cannot do it in the abstract …."
"Correct, yes. But we are still diving from waist height onto the ground, basically. … the way I look at it is that that metre high obstacle actually provides a platform for you to slide over on, which reduces the risk of injury...."
"In my opinion the likelihood of such uncontrolled entry causing sufficient force to cause a serious injury will be greatest where the hands, shoulder, hip or head come into contact with a very firm surface where the momentum of the body is so great to cause a fracture. It is human nature to try to [break] the impact of a fall or similar uncontrolled movement where the body will come into contact with a firm, unforgiving surface by holding out one or both hands. This is seen in everyday life, be it in the children's playground, in the home, on a sports pitch, or in an industrial setting. Thus I consider that the greatest likelihood from an uncontrolled entry is a sprain or fracture to the upper limb. If the contestant's trajectory is altered in an involuntary manner during entry then the above rationale remains, in my opinion. We will always try and brake our fall using our hands first. If a contestant is unable to do this then they may fall onto their shoulder, hip or head. I do not consider that an uncontrolled entry whereby the young, fit contestant makes contact with the inflated pool side would give rise to sufficient force to cause serious injury. They may be bruised or winded, or suffer a muscle strain, or similar. An uncontrolled entry whereby the contestant makes contact with the base of the pool as a result of a steep angle of entry would, in my opinion, have the potential to give rise to sufficient force to cause a serious injury, such as a fracture. The likelihood of a fracture of the cervical spine, as that suffered by the Claimant, will depend on the trajectory of the entry, how much the hands and arms would have reduced the momentum of the body, and the angle at which the head hit the pool base. In my opinion the likelihood of this occurring is low. I note from Professor Ball's report (paragraph 9.7 of his supplementary report) that in his opinion the degree of risk of serious injury entailed in the game as played on the day of the claimant's accident was tiny."
"At para 27 he states that a prohibition of headfirst entry would have been an easy and cost free precaution that would have reduced the risk of a serious injury to an acceptable level. I agree that it would have been easy and cost free. However, I am of the opinion that other means of entry carry with them risk of injury that could also have potentially significant injury outcomes. Vaulting means that one hand is placed on the side of the pool. This is a very small area of contact between the competitor and the pool side. If the pool side was wet, as it almost certainly would have been, what was the likelihood of the hand slipping and the competitor falling headfirst or feet or bottom first into the pool? What if the foot or leg struck the side of pool during the vault? Again there is significant injury risk from these uncontrolled falls. Straddling over – i.e. where one leg is swung over the pool side followed by the other produces postural imbalance. Which type of entry would the organiser have allowed?"
"2.1.1 Given the height and width of the cylindrical sides, in attempting a headfirst dive into the pool it is unlikely that the Claimant and others would have been able to clear the obstacle without coming into contact with it. Furthermore, participants would need to move with considerable force to gain sufficient momentum to slide over the barrier in one movement. The required momentum could potentially cause participants to enter the pool at a steep angle, resulting in a heavy landing on the pool base. I also believe that contact with the side will be subject to varying degrees of friction depending upon the interaction of clothing and the extent to which it and the side of the inflatable are wet.
…
2.1.3 The fact that the sides of the pool prevented participants from being able to see into the pool, with the possibility of other participants scrambling around the base of the pool searching for a piece of fruit, until the point of take-off could potentially lead to a requirement to re-adjust one's flight path at the last moment to avoid a collision, thus again potentially leading to a false flight path taking place from a headfirst dive entry.
2.1.4 There is the potential for some bounce effect from the inflatable sides to the pool, when a participant makes contact with it. More than one participant making contact with the side at the same time could increase the bounce effect. This bounce effect would make it more difficult for participants to regulate their method of entry and could lead to a steep entry.
2.1.5 The PVC base lining to the pool, which was covered with water to a varying degree, due to the slope of the field, is likely to have been slippery and therefore when hands were placed onto its surface as part of the forward dive motion there was a reasonably high risk that the participant's hands would slide away from them, which in turn would cause a loss of control and a sudden readjustment in body positioning and a greater likelihood of their head coming into contact with the base lining of the pool."
"It is of course understandable that organisations like the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents should favour policies which require people to be prevented from taking risks. Their function is to prevent accidents and that is one way of doing so. But they do not have to consider the cost, not only in money but also in deprivation of liberty, which such restrictions entail. The courts will naturally respect the technical expertise of such organisations in drawing attention to what can be done to prevent accidents. But the balance between risk on the one hand and individual autonomy on the other is not a matter of expert opinion. It is a judgment which the courts must make and which in England reflects the individualist values of the common law."
"25. Moving across the 0.98 [metre] width of the pool wall would also have presented a challenge, needing forceful effort and momentum from the run up for competitors to propel themselves across the wall. This would have interacted with possible movement, deformation and bouncing of the pool side wall itself, this not being a rigid structure. The trajectory of each competitor's body across the pool side would have depended on the trajectory of the competitor's launch and the distance into the width of the pool side where their body first made contact. This will have varied from one competitor to another, affected by the speed of their run up and the distance from the pool at which they launched. Another possible factor affecting a competitor's trajectory was the pool side flooring being wet and slippery.
26. An energetic run up, with a vigorous launch, with the body first making contact with the pool side at a distance from its outer edge, would have had clear potential to present competitors with difficulty controlling their entry into the water. A steep angle of entry could occur from this, also with the possibility of axial rotation. The trajectory of the competitor's entry into the pool carried a high degree of uncertainty.
[He then referred also to the variations in friction arising from the varying amounts of water on the pool side and to the fact that the depth of the water would have had no attenuating characteristics.]
30. The unpredictable trajectory of competitors across the pool side, together with the forward motion and momentum of their bodies, would have presented difficulties for some competitors controlling their speed and direction of entry into the pool. In my opinion, this posed a clear possibility of a headfirst impact with the bottom of the pool. It is well known that the cervical spine (neck) is vulnerable to serious injury from head impact and axial loading."
"In my opinion there was a 'very high' or 'substantial' risk of serious injury entailed in the game as played. This takes into account that there was the potential for 'extreme harm' i.e. major fracture and injury that would cause substantial disability. I assess the likelihood of harm occurring as 'likely'. The terminology I have used here is taken from risk assessment guidance by HSE and IOSH, using their approach to categorising the potential severity of harm and classifying the likelihood of harm occurring.
After the event, it is beyond doubt that headfirst entry into the pool had the potential for serious harm. This occurred with [the Claimant] ….
Considering the risk of serious harm ex-ante, it is well known that headfirst impact with the ground at a steep angle carries a high risk of cervical fracture. With the game as played, I believe there was a significant foreseeable possibility of forceful steep angled headfirst impact for the reasons given in my previous reports …. I have said that in my opinion there was a "very high" or "substantial" risk of serious injury entailed in the game as played. In plain language, I believe this was a serious accident waiting to happen."
Q. …. So his conclusion, no different from yours, that the method of entry which would have accounted for the injury and fits with the witness evidence that you regarded as cogent on this point, points to a near or vertical entry?
A. I hesitate to say "my conclusion". I've taken account of Mr Gardner's advice and I can conceive of movements into the pool that would result in a near-vertical impact with the pool bottom.
Q. Professor Haslam, you are retreating, aren't you, from what you say in your report? On the basis of this evidence, and the evidence of the witnesses that his legs flipped up, you say it's reasonable to assume that his movement towards the pool bottom was near vertical. And then you give a calculation which is based upon a near-vertical impact. So that was your conclusion, wasn't it?
A. I've said it's reasonable to assume.
Q. Now, a vertical entry to this ball pond is the least likely thing that you would have expected any competitor to have ended up doing, isn't it?
A. I think it's the least likely thing that any competitor would have intended to do, but I think it's quite conceivable that that could be the outcome. The outcome from entering over the pool headfirst, over the poolside headfirst.
Q. Because we're not talking, are we, about the method of entry which was used by those half of the competitors who were sliding in? We are talking about an entry that went wrong, because the legs were flipped up in the air?
A. I also have concerns about the other method of entry, which I think I've explained in a previous answer. I think my evidence is that I could conceive and see the possibility for participants to … end up descending towards the pool floor near vertically.
Q. If you were considering this game in advance, you wouldn't consider, would you, that anyone would dive over? You've agreed that that's the case?
A. Not without making contact with the side of the pool.
Q. You've agreed that an entry by which you go in headfirst with your arms out in front of you, is something which would be something you could envisage as occurring?
A. Yes.
Q. And that that would be an entry which resulted, if it was performed intentionally, in the shallow entry that we can see in photograph number 1?
A. I think if competitors were in control of their movements then they would try to enter with a shallow approach. So I think if that was the question, then my answer would be yes.
Q. There's no evidence that anyone else had their legs flipped up so as to put them in a near-vertical position, that you're aware of, is there?
A. I haven't heard that description given to any other of the entries in the evidence that's available.
Q. And this accident didn't, therefore, happen as a consequence of performing the sort of entry that is being shown on photograph number 1?
A. I think it could arise from … the participant intending to make this type of entrance but losing control of their direction and trajectory in the process of propelling themselves into the pool.
Q. But it required, didn't it, the unique circumstances of Mr Uren making a headfirst entry, in the course of which, whilst he was on the side of the ball pond, he'd got into a completely vertical position and then dropped through a reasonably substantial distance onto his head? That was what was required.
A. … I think it's worth saying I'm not a health and safety zealot; I'm not saying that we shouldn't try to have games like this. And I think in games like this there is potential for bruising, I think there is potential for people falling on the ground. But I think I am concerned about people propelling themselves towards the ground headfirst.
Q. Well, there are a number of factors involved in that statement, aren't there, about propelling oneself towards the ground headfirst? I'm asking you about the risk of striking your head other than going over headfirst, the risk associated with vaulting and the risk associated with losing your balance when you're scrambling. The plain fact is, Professor Haslam, that there a risk in both of those cases that you could fall and strike your head?
A. I think there's a possibility and therefore a risk. But I would judge the risk of a serious injury as a result of that to be much less likely.
Q. So the risk of a serious injury as a result of falling and striking your head, you would regard as unlikely?
A. Yes, I think so.
Q. That goes for vaulting?
A. Yes.
"In my opinion, as an obstacle the sides of the pool could have been reasonably safely negotiated by climbing or by vaulting. However, even outside the leisure industry, it is well known that it is dangerous to dive into the shallow end of a swimming pool. The hazard of a headfirst entry is the same albeit the risk of injury from a relatively fast headfirst dive is likely [to be] greater than the risk associated with a slow headfirst entry (eg slowing sliding in headfirst over the side). Due to the likely difficulty in differentiating between slow headfirst entries and fast headfirst dives during the course of the game, it would probably have been advisable to ban all headfirst entries at the outset of the game."
"In my opinion, while explaining the game rules [CL] should have ensured that the competitors were verbally warned not to enter the pool headfirst, in particular to dive. If competitors were diving headfirst into the pool during the game, this should have been immediately discouraged or penalised by those in charge …"
Relevance of the views of bystanders/participants
"The judge said that he thought that what spectators thought of the risks of the game was of very little relevance. I am afraid that I do not agree with him on that. This was a game which no-one had seen played in this way before. There was no evidence that anyone from CL had seen it played in this way, permitting headfirst entry. No-one from the RAF had seen it played until the day of this accident. None of the experts ever saw it being played; they all had to envisage it. It seems to me that the impressions of those who actually saw it that day were potentially important."
Q. … And as far as you were concerned then, on the basis of the experience you describe, … if you'd seen people going over the side, headfirst with their arms outstretched, that wouldn't have been something that you would have regarded as unusual?
A. I wouldn't have picked, I wouldn't have said, stop that. No.
Q. Or dangerous?
A. No.
The history of the game
"Although it is plain that a game involving the pool had been provided in 2004, it is not clear that the very same relay game was played on that occasion. The view in PEd Flt was that the package of games had been a success in 2004 but no-one was certain what the pool game involved."
"Mr Berry had supervised the pool game once before; Messrs Brent and Brill had no previous experience of the game."
"CL's evidence was that this pool was not often hired out as it required a great deal of water. Indeed, there does not appear to have been any evidence that this game had ever been played before using this pool. The risk assessment, as modified (if it was) by Mr Berry made no reference at all to methods of entry and there was no evidence that the person responsible for the original assessment appreciated that participants might enter the pool headfirst. Mr Berry had not seen this game played and had not applied his mind to the question of how participants would enter and leave the pool."
"… the pool is not featured in the company brochure because of potential difficulty in supplying water and also emptying the pool after an event. In fact, I think the RAF event may have been only the second occasion on which I have attended an event where the pool was supplied. The first was in Yorkshire for Water Aid."
"I had previously assisted in this game and on one occasion, I believe the previous year, at RAF High Wycombe."
The injury suffered
"The medical evidence fits better with [the Claimant] sliding headfirst over the wall and becoming almost vertical before striking the unyielding plastic-covered ground. His trunk was still behind his head when he struck the ground and became limp, resulting in him falling prone. He had sufficient forward momentum at the time of impact to carry his limp body across the pool to the far wall."
"The CT, MRI and plain films … indicate that he sustained a burst fracture of the body of C5 with a minor degree of anterior wedging at this level. The other skeletal injuries were minor in comparison with the C5 vertebral body.
The burst fracture caused his spinal cord injury.
Burst fractures at C5 are caused by axial loading to the top of the head. The minor anterior wedge of C5 indicates that there was a minor element of forward flexion of his head on his neck at the time of impact, but the large majority of the energy vector was axial loading.
To produce a C5 burst fracture the top of the head must strike an object with sufficient energy to cause the body of C5 to burst like a round meringue on which a fist descends."
"The most common injury site of diving accidents is the cervical spine, involving particularly fractures of vertebrae C5 or C6. Injury to these vertebrae usually results in tetraparesis or tetraplegia respectively. The C5 and C6 segments are more prone to injury because they form the functional axis of rotation between the head and the trunk and are capable of a large range of motion. This is further exacerbated by the smallness of the spinal cord, the minimum protection offered by bones and soft parts, and minimal flexibility of the actual spinal canal.
Fractures caused by flexion with or without axial compression, often occur in diving accidents. The most common of these fractures are wedge fractures and compression fractures. A wedge fracture can result from either hyperflexion or from an off-centre impact of the top of the head with the pool bottom. The wedge fracture is the result of pressure exerted on the anterior elements of the vertebral body, causing it to be wedged between adjacent segments. A compression fracture occurs when the vertex of the head directly impacts the pool bottom. The vertebral body is fractured as the compression is increased. In some cases, the anterior inferior angle of the vertebral body may be chipped away. The anterior smaller fragment may displace forward and result in a 'teardrop' fracture. Alternatively, posterior displacement of an intervertebral disc or partial dislocation of the posterior vertebral fragment into the spinal canal may occur causing spinal cord compression. The severity of injury is also dependent upon the amount of neck flexion caused by additional bending of the neck as the diver's body continues in motion. Hypertension spinal injuries can also result from flat, headfirst dives into shallow water, or by trying to slow the dive by suddenly extending the neck just prior to contacting the pool bottom. The neurological lesion may be exacerbated by water rescue methods because of instability of the spine after injury."
Conclusion on the first issue
The social value of the game
Should headfirst entry have been banned?
Conclusion
Expression of thanks
Postscript
Note 1 [20] of Field J’s judgment was as follows: “Flight Lieutenant Taylor gave Corporal Thom the task of identifying a company which could provide a package of suitable competitive events at an acceptable price. Corporal Thom obtained details of a number of events companies from the internet and thereafter obtained from CL its brochure. CL had provided a package of It’s a Knockout games for RAF High Wycombe’s Health & Fun Day the previous year which it was felt had been a success. Corporal Thom spoke to CL’s Events Manager, Katrina Oakley, who quoted a price for the same package that had been provided the previous year. Corporal Thom reported this information to Flight Lieutenant Taylor who instructed him to place an order for the proposed package of games and equipment at the quoted price. On 27 July 2005 Flight Lieutenant Taylor signed a contract issued by CL on 15 July 2005 for the provision of the six games and for “equipment only” for “Gladiator Duel” and “Barfly Stickup”. Although it is plain that a game involving the pool had been provided in 2004, it is not clear that the very same relay game was played on that occasion. The view in PEd Flt was that the package of games had been a success in 2004 but no-one was certain what the pool game involved.”
[Back] Note 2 This is, as will be observed in Appendix 2, another person shown in the photograph (obviously female) endeavouring to get out of the pool with her legs astride the pool wall. [Back] Note 3 See Postscript to judgment. [Back] Note 4 See Postscript to judgment. [Back] 1. I am due to preside over the re-trial in this case commencing on 10 December. I held a pre-trial review on 22 October when Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, Leading Counsel for the Claimant, invited me to consider the position at the re-trial of the report of Dr Simon Jones, an expert who prepared a report for the original trial on behalf of the Second Defendant but who, in the event, was not called by the Second Defendant. At that trial Sir Geoffrey sought to rely upon the report (as is permitted by CPR 35.11) and indeed did so. The question is the extent to which he may be entitled to rely upon that report at the re-trial. 2. Because of constraints on my own time in the next week or so and because the parties will be anxious to know how to prepare for the re-trial, I have produced this ruling relatively quickly after having received the helpful written submissions of the parties. 3. As I have indicated, at the original trial before Field J the Claimant was permitted to rely upon the report of Dr Jones although, in the event, Field J did not attach a great deal of significance to it. It is plain from the judgments in the Court of Appeal that it was felt that Dr Jones' evidence was entitled to serious consideration on the issues to which he could contribute expertise even though he was not called to give oral evidence: see, in particular, per Smith LJ at paragraph 60. 4. The present application appears to be based upon the assumption that Dr Jones may give oral evidence. I think it is important to emphasise that the entitlement of the party seeking to rely upon a report by virtue of CPR 35.11 is simply to "use that expert's report as evidence at trial" (my emphasis). It does not give a right to rely upon the oral evidence of the expert. (If oral evidence was to be permitted generally in these circumstances, one could see trials becoming very different from what was contemplated at the outset and at the case management stage and one party becoming entitled to rely upon, perhaps, a whole sequence of expert witnesses no longer relied upon by the parties by whom they were commissioned initially. That cannot have been the intention of the rule and I am sure that is why CPR 35.11 was drafted as it was.) To that expert, if it is being suggested on the Claimant's behalf that the Claimant has a right to rely upon Dr Jones' oral evidence at the forthcoming re-trial because the report was received pursuant to CPR 35.11 at the original trial, then that, in my judgment, is wrong. It is equally wrong for the Defendants to suggest (if I understand their written argument correctly) that, because Dr Jones was "available to be called by the Claimant at the first trial, but no application to do so was made", the Claimant is thus precluded from relying upon his report at the re-trial. 5. As I have said, as I see it, the entitlement under CPR 35.11 of a party to rely upon the evidence of an uncalled expert of another party is limited to reliance upon the report only. This appears to be the way the matter was considered specifically in the case of Gurney Consulting Engineers v Gleeds Health & Safety Limited etc [2006] EWHC 43 (TCC) and in Anderson v Lyotier, etc [2008] EWHC 2790 (QB) (in which I was the trial judge). I do not think that what Aikenhead J said in Shepherd Neame Limited v EDF Energy Networks [2008] EWHC 123 (TCC) derogates from that proposition. In that case the expert reports upon which some of the claimants wished to rely came from the experts of the Second and Third Defendants, the claims against which were compromised. The realisation of the wish of some of the claimants in that case to rely upon those expert reports was opposed by the First Defendant, presumably on the basis of some perceived prejudice to its interests by some of the things those two experts said. In order to ensure that they it was not so prejudiced, Aikenhead J said that the witnesses could be called by the First Defendant, but could be cross-examined on behalf of the First Defendant. He does not appear to have been saying that the Claimants could call the experts to give oral evidence. 6. In this case the Court of Appeal has ordered a re-trial limited to two issues: (a) what was the degree of risk of serious injury entailed in the game as played on the day of the Claimant's accident? (b) Was that degree of risk acceptable in the light of the social value of the game? (I should say that the parties have agreed that I am not being asked to decide the issue of apportionment of liability if liability is established). In a sense, therefore, the trial that was started before Field J is still continuing, but limited to the two issues to which I have referred. Whether that is technically a correct analysis or not, I have no doubt that the Claimant, if he wishes, can rely on the report of Dr Jones at the re-trial if and to the extent that his report goes to the issues that are live issues at the re-trial even if other experts have been instructed on those issues in the meantime. I do not see why the Claimant should lose the advantage he gained at the first trial simply because the matter has gone to appeal and, in effect, come back, albeit to deal with limited issues. 7. As I have said, the Claimant can, in my view, rely upon Dr Jones' report to the extent that it goes to the issues that are left to me to consider at the re-trial. It is said on the Claimant's behalf that aspects of what Dr Jones says can support the Claimant's case on the first of those issues. As I understand it, the Defendants will suggest, or may suggest, that this is not so. I do not need to rule on that at this stage. All I need to say is that, in principle, the Claimant is entitled, without any further ruling from me, to rely upon the report on the issues before me at the re-trial. That, I should add, must also embrace any views he expressed at the joint discussion of experts prior to that trial since that really forms an extension of to the thinking in his report. 8. However, that does mean that only those parts of the report as it exists can be relied upon: I do not see the operation of CPR 35.11 as opening up the updating of the report, further participation in experts' discussion and so on. Other experts have been instructed since the trial and undoubtedly their evidence will be the primary focus of the re-trial. Dr Jones has expressed his views and I will have those views available to consider if I am persuaded that they are relevant to the issues I have to determine. 9. I do not foresee the need for Dr Jones to be available to give evidence in the sense of being available for cross-examination by the First Defendant. As I have indicated, that course was made available by Aikenhead J in Shepherd Neame, but that will have depended on the particular circumstances of that case. Although I do not envisage the need for that course in the present case, I will not shut out the possibility of an application being made to me during the trial by the First Defendant, though I make it plain that it is not something that I will encourage. I understand that Dr Jones is free for the trial period. If the First Defendant wishes to secure the possibility of him being called so that he can be cross-examined, they must make appropriate arrangements. All parties will, of course, be free to make submissions about the relevance, weight and so on to be attached to Dr Jones' report. 10. I trust that this ruling is sufficiently clear for the parties to continue with their preparations for the trial in a little over 4 weeks' time.