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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Grant v. Glasgow Dairy Co. [1881] ScotLR 19_155 (1 December 1881) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1881/19SLR0155.html Cite as: [1881] ScotLR 19_155, [1881] SLR 19_155 |
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Page: 155↓
[Sheriff of Lanarkshire.
A boy four years old was crossing a thoroughfare in charge of a girl about nine years old, who was close beside him. Just after he came out from behind a lorry which was standing at the side of the street, and which prevented him from seeing up the street, he was knocked down and had his thigh broken by a milk van which was coming down the street on its own side. The evidence was contradictory as to whether the van was being driven at an excessive pace or not; the driver was not sitting on his own seat, but low down beside the shaft of the van. The accident happened in broad daylight. Held that the accident having occurred in daylight, there was a presumption of fault against the driver, and that on the evidence he had not overcome that presumption, and damages assessed at £50.
This was an action raised in the Sheriff Court of Lanarkshire by Adam Grant, boilermaker, as administrator-in-law for his pupil son, to recover £100 as damages for an injury inflicted on the pupil through his being run over in Garscube Road, Glasgow, on 2d November 1880, by a van belonging to the defenders. The proof led showed that at two o'clock on the afternoon of that day the pursuer's son, who was then between three and four years of age, and who had been sent in charge of his sister, a girl ten years of age, to a shop in Garscube Road, was in the act of crossing the street, which is of considerable width, on his return home. About two doors above the shop to which the children had been sent a lorry laden with bottles had been newly drawn up, which obscured to some extent from the child the view of the street in the direction from which the defender's van was at the time approaching. Just after the child had come out from behind this lorry he was struck by the horse in the defender's milk cart, which was being driven down the street on its proper side, and had passed within a few feet of the lorry. The boy was thus knocked down and a wheel passed over him, causing a comminuted fracture of the right thigh, from which he suffered great pain, was for some time in a hospital, and was lame for a considerable period, but from which no constitutional injury appeared at the time of this action to have been sustained. The little girl, according to her own evidence, was at that time close to the boy, and ran back when she saw that the accident was inevitable, and it was admitted by one of the boys in the defenders' cart at the time that he saw the children, and saw the girl run back, but that it was then too late to avoid the accident. The child appeared to have been coming pretty quickly out from behind the lorry when the accident happened. The evidence was contradictory as to the speed at which the van was being driven at the time when the accident occurred. Two persons who were with the lorry, on the one hand, deponed that the van was being driven furiously and recklessly by a boy who had been sent along with the driver for the purpose of assisting him in the delivery of the milk. This evidence was corroborated by that of the mother of the boy, who had seen the accident from her window at the other side of the street. On the other hand, the driver of the van (a lad of seventeen) deponed that he was himself driving at the time at an ordinary trot, and this evidence was corroborated both by the boy who was with him and by several bystanders who had observed the van immediately before the accident, and had witnessed the accident. It was proved that the driver was not at the time sitting in his own high seat, which ran across the cart above the barrels of milk, but was sitting low down at the corner of the cart with his feet outside. It was also proved that immediately before the accident the driver and the boy were laughing and talking together, though this was denied by the driver. The evidence for the defence was to the effect that the driver had no time to draw up after the child came in sight from behind the lorry.
The Sheriff-Substitute ( Guthrie) found that it was not proved that the defenders' driver was driving recklessly, or that the accident occurred through his fault, and assoilzied the defenders.
The Sheriff ( Clark) on appeal adhered. He added this note to his interlocutor:—(After examining the evidence and holding the preponderance to be with the defenders)—“In addition to this it seems very clear that a certain amount of contributory negligence attaches to the pursuer's case. His son—a boy between three and four years of age—seems not to have been properly looked after, and it is very obvious on the proof that he rushed out of the shop and put himself in such a position that it might have been difficult, if the defenders' driver had exercised the utmost amount of circumspection, to have prevented
Page: 156↓
The pursuer appealed to the Second Division, and argued — The Sheriffs have given no weight to the fact that this child was run down in broad daylight. That fact of itself throws an onus on a driver. He has to discharge himself of fault— Clerk v. Petrie, June 19, 1879, 6 R. 1076. Nor did it matter that the injured person was a child— Auld v. M'Bey, February 17, 1881, 8 R. 495. Besides, the Sheriff had found that the driver was to blame in not occupying his proper seat, whence he could have more easily seen the child crossing the street, and more easily checked the horse, and this, added to the time of day when the accident occurred, was sufficient to convict him of negligence. The evidence showed that the van was driven recklessly, and that it was not the proper driver who was driving. But even if it were, it showed that he ought to have seen the child in time to pull up with safety. Assuming that he was himself driving, and at an ordinary speed, that was not in the circumstances sufficient care. He at least saw the loaded lorry which obstructed his view of the pavement, and a man who passed a hoarding or other obstruction was not entitled to go close past it at what would be an ordinary speed in a place where he could see the persons who were about to cross quite well. He must then be using special care, and be able to pull up at a moment's notice. There was no contributory negligence. Besides, a child is not in the question of contributory negligence to be dealt with as a grown person— Campbell v. Ord & Madison, November 5, 1873, 1 R. 149; Auld, supra. Even assuming that there was negligence imputable to the father in allowing the child to be there, which negligence was not proved on the evidence, the defenders' driver could in the result have avoided the effects of that negligence, and the defenders could not therefore avoid liability— Davies v. Mann, 10 M. & W. 574; Radley v. London and North-Western Railway Company, 1 L. R. App. Cas. H. of L. 754.
Answered for the respondents—The evidence showed that this was a pure accident which the driver could not have prevented. It was not disputed that he was on his own side of the street, and the evidence proved he was not driving furiously or even carelessly. It might be that he was not on his own seat, but even if that was a fault it had nothing to do with this accident, which was caused by the child coming suddenly out from behind the lorry and running right before the horse. Any blame which existed was for negligence imputable to the child's father in allowing so young a child to be out on a busy street without sufficient precaution for its safety. Shearman and Redfield on Damages, p. 56, sec. 48.
At advising—
The Lords sustained the appeal, recalled the interlocutors of the Sheriffs, found that the injury had been inflicted through the fault of the defenders, and assessed the damages at £50.
Counsel for Pursuer and Appellant— Sym. Agent— D. Cuthbert, S.S.C.
Counsel for Defenders and Respondents— Guthrie Smith— Brand. Agent— Adam Shiell, S.S.C.