BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> M'Dermaid v. The Edinburgh Street Tramways Co. (Ltd) [1884] ScotLR 22_13_1 (24 October 1884)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1884/22SLR0013_1.html
Cite as: [1884] ScotLR 22_13_1, [1884] SLR 22_13_1

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 13

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Sheriff of the Lothians and Peebles at Edinburgh.

Friday, October 24. 1884.

22 SLR 13_1

M'Dermaid

v.

The Edinburgh Street Tramways Company (Limited).

Subject_1Street
Subject_2Tramway Oar
Subject_3Duty of Driver to pull up if Necessary till Temporary Obstruction is Removed
Subject_4Reparation.
Facts:

The driver of a cab stopped in a crowded street to take up a passenger, in such a manner that one wheel of the cab was on tramway rails which ran along the street. A driver of a car coming behind saw the obstruction, and whistled, but did not stop, and his car struck the cab and upset it.

Page: 14

Held that it was in the circumstances the duty of the car-driver to stop till the obstruction was removed, and that his employers were liable for the damage caused to the cab.

Headnote:

This was an action by a coach-hirer in Causeway-side, Edinburgh, against the Edinburgh Street Tramways Company (Limited), concluding for the sum of £40 for loss and damage which he alleged he sustained in consequence of one of the defenders' tramway cars striking and overturning, on 1st January 1884, in Leith Street, a cab belonging to him. He averred that the collision had occurred through the fault of the defenders' car-driver, who had failed to give the cabman timeous notice of his approach by whistling, and had failed to draw up his horses in time to stop them and avoid the collision.

The defenders averred that, in accordance with the company's regulations, the car-driver was proceeding down Leith Street at a slow pace. As soon as he saw the cab on the rails he shouted and whistled, and put the brake on, at the same time throwing down sand, as the rails were in a slippery condition owing to the state of the weather; that the cab was stopped in front of the car at a distance which rendered it impossible to stop the car before it reached the cab; and the damage was caused solely by the carelessness and neglect of the driver of the cab, who might have avoided the collision at the last moment by taking his cab straightforward from where it stood.

The facts of the case, as ascertained in the proof, were as follows:—George Innes, who was the driver of the cab in question, was engaged by two gentlemen to drive them from the Tron Church to Powderhall. The day being New Year's Day, the streets were unusually crowded. He was driving the cab down the left side of Leith Street, and when he had proceeded about 50 yards down the street he was hailed by three men, who asked if he was going to Powder-hall. He stopped, drawing up as near to the pavement as he could get owing to the crowd of people who were passing down the street at the time, but the cab was not clear of the tramway rails, the off hind-wheel resting on the edge of them. Leith Street is narrow at that part, but there is more than room for a cab to stand between the left rail and the edge of the foot-pavement. Innes got off his box and went to open the door, and some little delay was occasioned by the party making arrangements about going to Powderhall. One of the party got into the cab, and while the second one was proceeding to enter, Innes, hearing the whistle of the driver of a tram car which was coming down the street, looked up and saw the car 4 or 5 yards from the cab, and too near him (as he stated) to enable him to draw his cab clear of the rails. The car then struck the cab, and Innes took the horse down the street, the car and cab being at the time in contact, the car, according to the pursuer's witnesses, pushing against the cab. The lock of the cab became fixed, and it overturned. Both horse and cab were damaged.

The Sheriff-Substitute ( Hamilton) issued this interlocutor:—“Finds it not proved that the overturn of the pursuer's cab on the occasion libelled was caused by the fault of the defenders' servant, the driver of the tramway car; and finds that in any view the person in charge of the pursuer's cab, who had stopped to take up chance passengers, was guilty of contributory negligence (1) in not drawing up his cab (as he might have done) clear of the tramway rails; and (2) in leaving his seat upon the box, going to the cab door, and there allowing his attention to be distracted by a discussion going on among the persons proposing to enter the cab, so that he did not hear the signals made to him by the car-driver until the car horses were within 4 or 5 yards of the cab, after which he was unable to get to his horse's head in time to draw forward the cab and so prevent the accident occurring: Finds, in these circumstances, that the defenders are not liable to the pursuer in damages: Therefore assoilzies the defenders from the prayer of the petition and decerns.

Note.—The Sheriff-Substitute decides the case upon the point of contributory negligence. But he is further of opinion that the pursuer has failed to establish fault against the defenders. No doubt if the car-driver had stopped the car at the head of Leith Street, and remained there until the cab had moved off, the accident would not have occurred. The Sheriff-Substitute, however, does not think he was bound to do this. It was enough that he went down the street at a cautious pace, using his whistle, and shouting to the cab-man as he approached. He could not anticipate that his signal would be unheard or disregarded.”

The pursuer appealed, and argued—The Sheriff—Substitute was in error in deciding the case upon the point of contributory negligence. The decision of the case really turned on the question whether the car-driver did his duty or not, and that question fell to be answered in the negative. It was his duty, as Soon as he saw the pursuer's cab on the rails, to have pulled up the car until the temporary obstruction was removed. It was not enough to whistle and shout to the cabman as he approached.

Authorities— Clerk v. Petrie, June 19, 1879, 6 R. 1076; Auld v. M'Bey, &c., February 17, 1881, 8 R. 495.

The defenders replied—1. The car-driver did all that could have been reasonably required of him in the circumstances. He shouted and whistled as he approached, put on his brake hard, and placed sand on the rails as the road was in a slippery condition. Besides, the car could not have been entirely stopped at that point. 2. But for the cab-driver's contributory negligence the accident would never have happened. He ought to have drawn up the cab clear of the rails, and he ought not to have left his box and given his attention to the altercation going on between the passengers as to the route.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—This is an important case affecting the interests of the public in Edinburgh, and I cannot say that I agree with the view which the Sheriff-Substitute has taken of it. It appears to me that the driver of the tram-car was bound to obey the rules to which his employers subjected him, and he was also bound independently of those rules to act on the ordinary rules for the use of the street. Of course the Tramway Company have in a sense the monopoly of the use of the tram-rails, and no one may obstruct them in such a use as is reasonable, but this right must be always subject to the consideration

Page: 15

that the rails are laid down on a highway which is public, and that consequently the Company are bound to use their right consistently with the use of the streets for public traffic. Now, the Sheriff-Substitute has found that on the occasion in question the driver of the car was not bound to have stopped his car when he saw the stationary obstruction on the rails in front of him, and that is the whole question. I think that, however great the fault of the cabman might have been, there can be no doubt of the duty of the car-driver. He was not entitled on any pretence whatever to drive the car against the cab, as it stood at the time upon the rails, if he could have avoided it; and it does not matter how the obstruction came to be there if he could with reasonable care have avoided it, he was bound to have done so. Now, it is certain that he could have done so, for he saw the cab with the off hind wheel resting on the edge of the rail, and the incline of the street was a dangerous one. It was his duty then to have stopped till the obstruction had been removed; no doubt he did whistle and call out, but he must have seen that the obstruction was a temporary one, and for the reasonable use of the thorough-fare. On the simple ground therefore that the driver ought to have stopped the car till the cab was removed, I am of opinion that the Sheriff—Substitute is wrong. As to contributory negligence, I am not prepared to say that there was any. There must arise occasions on which vehicles may stop for a temporary purpose, and I do not see that in a crowded thoroughfare such as this, and in the circumstances of the case, there was anything amounting to such negligence. There would have been no accident if the defenders' driver had done his simple duty. It would be a dangerous precedent if the Court were to sanction the notion that because a cabman did not get out of the way as quickly as a car-driver thought he ought to do, the latter was entitled to drive his car against the cab. It is said he could not stop the car, but that does not improve the respondents' case because in a city like Edinburgh, where there are so many steep gradients, the Tramway Company are bound to have vehicles so constructed that they can stop—as the car did not do in this case—in obedience to their own rules.

Lords Young, Craighill, and Rutherfurd Clark concurred.

The Court pronounced the following interlocutor—

“Find that on the occasion in question the driver of the tramway car, on turning it into Leith Street, which at that point slopes rapidly downwards, came in sight of the pursuer's cab standing at a short distance across the rails of the tramway: Find that it was the duty of the driver of the tramway car to have stopped the vehicle until the obstacle was removed, but that he proceeded, and the car therefore came into contact with the cab and upset it, causing the damage libelled: Find that the defenders are liable for the damage thereby occasioned. Therefore sustain the appeal; recal the judgment of the Sheriff-Substitute appealed against; ordain the defenders to make payment to the pursuer of £40 sterling, with interest as libelled,” &c.

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuer (Appellant)— Galloway— Rhind. Agent— George Hutton, L.A.

Counsel for Defenders (Respondents)— Trayner— Guthrie. Agents— Paterson, Cameron, & Co. S.S.C.

1884


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1884/22SLR0013_1.html