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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board v D&R Taylor [1955] ScotCS CSIH_5 (24 June 1955) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1955/1956_SC_1.html Cite as: 1955 SLT 373, [1955] ScotCS CSIH_5, 1956 SC 1 |
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24 June 1955
North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board |
v. |
D. & R. Taylor |
"The contractor shall indemnify the Board against all claims from third parties …"
These words are governed by the concluding words of the clause:—
"Arising from his operations under the contract …"
Counsel for the pursuers maintained that the purpose of the clause was to protect the Board against claims by third parties. They argued that the only, claims which could be preferred against the Board by third parties arising, from operations under the contract must' be for loss, injury and damage caused by the negligence of the Board or its servants, otherwise no liability to third parties would arise. Moreover, the claim by the third party arose from the defenders' operations under the contract, to wit, the removal of the iron but from the pursuers' premises. If the pursuers' construction of the clause is correct, it would seem to place an extremely burdensome obligation on the defenders. No matter what negligence the Board or its servants were guilty of, or how grave the injury caused thereby, the whole of the damage must be paid for by the defenders.
The principles applicable to clauses which purport to exempt one party to a contract from liability have been stated by Lord Greene, M.R., in Alderslade v. Hendon Laundry, [1945] K. B. 189, at p. 192:
"Where the head of damage in respect of which limitation of liability is sought to be imposed by such a clause is one which rests on negligence and nothing else, the clause must be construed as extending to that head of damage, because it would otherwise lack subject-matter. Where, on the other hand, the head of damage may be based on some other ground than that of negligence, the general principle is that the clause must be confined in its application to loss occurring through that other cause, to the exclusion of loss arising through negligence. The reason is that if a contracting party wishes in such a case to limit his liability in respect of negligence, he must do so in clear terms in the absence of which the clause is construed as relating to a liability not based on negligence."
I do not think that the law of Scotland differs from the law of England in this respect.
In my opinion, the limitation sought to be imposed by the clause under consideration in this case is one which rests on negligence and nothing else. I think that counsel for the pursuers were well-founded in saying that the only acts which could involve claims against the pursuers by third parties must be negligent acts done by the pursuers or their servants, otherwise they would give rise to no liability to third parties. Reverting again to the opening words of the clause, they seem to me to give the key to the relations which the contracting parties intended should exist in respect of this obligation to indemnify:—
"The contractor shall indemnify the Board against all claims by third parties …"
The further question arises whether the claim is one which arises from "operations under the contract." It was argued by counsel for the defenders that, while the defenders' operations might be a causa sine qua non, the causa causans of the accident to the defenders' employee was the negligence of the pursuers. It was essential that, before the obligation to indemnify arose, the cause of accident, and therefore the origin of the claim by third parties, should be a cause which arose directly from operations under the contract. Here the accident had been caused by a flash over from copper flexibles to the hut which was solely due to the negligence of the pursuers and had nothing at all to do with the defenders' operations. The obligation to indemnify did not, therefore, arise.
The removal of the hut was an operation under the contract. There was a risk that in its removal the defenders' workman might be injured by an electrical flash over. There was the further risk that the flash over might be caused by the negligence of the pursuers' servants. It seems to me that it was just to provide against such a contingency that the pursuers sought to be indemnified when they stipulated that "the contractor shall indemnify the Board against all claims by third parties." And it further seems to me that, by accepting the condition in their contract with the pursuers, the defenders assumed upon themselves the obligation to make good all damages to third parties arising from their operations under the contract.
Reference was made to two cases decided in the House of Lords where clauses undertaking to indemnify against all claims were considered. The defenders founded on Great Western Railway Co. v. Durnford & Son, (1928) 44 T.L.R. 415. In that case Durnford & Son took a lease of premises from the defendant railway company, and, by an agreement supplemental to the lease, the defendant company gave the plaintiffs permission, on certain terms, to use for the transport of materials a portable gangway which could be moved over certain of the defendants' railway lines. One of the terms was that the plaintiffs "agree and undertake to indemnify the said [railway] company against all claims and demands or liability whatsoever whether in respect of damage to person or property arising out of or in connexion with the existence or user of the said gangway." When the plaintiffs were using the gangway, some trucks were shunted down the line, and a lorry standing on the gangway was damaged. In an action for damages for negligence and/or breach of duty, the railway company, while denying negligence, counter-claimed for a declaration that they were entitled to be indemnified by the plaintiffs against all liability on the plaintiffs' claim. On the preliminary point as to the construction of the agreement it was held by the House of Lords that the undertaking was only one to hold the railway company harmless against third parties, and the preliminary point was decided in favour of the plaintiffs. I do not derive assistance from that case. The circumstances were entirely different. The House was not considering a case in which a third party claim had been made against the party to the contract entitled to be indemnified against such a claim, but with a claim between the parties to the contract inter se, based on the negligence of the party who claimed indemnity. Moreover, the clause was not one which placed all the risks on one party, but left a large range of liability to be determined by common law. Much nearer to the present case is Furness Shipbuilding Co. v. London and North Eastern Railway Co., (1934) 50 T.L.R. 257, which the pursuers relied on. In that case the railway company had settled claims against them in respect of death and injuries and claimed against the shipbuilding company on an indemnity contained in a clause of a contract for the reconstruction of a bridge which provided:—
"The contractor shall be responsible for and provide against all risks and contingencies whatever that may arise in respect of the works, and shall be liable to make good and pay for … any … loss or injury of, or to any person … and any loss of life caused in connexion with the works, and shall indemnify the [railway] company … in respect of any such accident … as aforesaid … (even though the [railway] company may be primarily or jointly with the contractor liable therefor) …"
It was held that the shipbuilding company were under obligation to indemnify the railway company. Lord Atkin said (at p. 258):
"The point which is made is that the loss of life in question was not, it is said, caused in ‘connexion with the works’ at all, but was caused by the negligence of the respondent company's servants at Fenchurch Street, miles away from the actual place where the accident happened, and therefore, it is said, there is no obligation to indemnify. I am quite unable to accept that view of the contract, and I agree with the view which has been taken in the Courts below. To put it quite shortly, I arrive at that conclusion because I am of opinion that the first words used in the clause give the key to the whole of the relations that were intended to exist in respect of this obligation: ‘The contractor shall be responsible for and provide against all risks and contingencies whatever that may arise in respect of the works,’ and it is in order to carry out that obligation, which is expressed in the widest terms, that the subsequent words are used imposing upon the contractor liability to make good and pay for all damage and so on, and further to ‘indemnify the company against all actions, claims, losses, costs, and expenses in respect of any … accident,’ and so on. It seems to me that it is a mistake to try to imply in the language of the clause a causal relation limited to causes which arise directly out of the works … The words ‘injury and loss of life caused in connexion with the works’ seem to have no narrower meaning than the first and guiding words: ‘All risks and contingencies whatever that may arise in respect of the works’ … If that is so, it appears to me that the clause provides in express terms that the contractor is to indemnify the company in respect of such a risk as that. The fact is that the whole contractual scheme appears to be that the London and North Eastern Railway Company stripped themselves of any liability in respect of any risk, and the contractors assumed upon themselves the obligation to make good, if any obligation did exist, all damages that would arise in respect of the works."
In the present case it can be said with equal force that the pursuers stripped themselves of liability for all claims by third parties arising from the defenders' operations under the contract, and that the defenders assumed upon themselves the obligation to make good all damages that arose from their operations. The pursuers are therefore entitled, in my opinion, to be indemnified by the defenders in terms of the aforesaid condition. It follows that the pursuers' third plea in law must be sustained, although at this stage only to the extent of repelling the defences.
Included in the sum sued for is the pursuers' business account. Before decree can be pronounced that account must be taxed, and, since it will now have to be paid by the defenders, it will have to be taxed as between party and party. I shall remit the pursuers' account to the Auditor for taxation and report, and meantime continue the cause.
The defenders reclaimed, and the case was heard before the Second Division (without Lord Birnam) on 1st June 1955.
At advising on 24th June 1955,—
"The contractor shall indemnify the Board against all claims from third parties arising from his operations under the contract …"
The first matter is what is meant by "arising from." The issue is whether the claim made must have been "caused by" the operations of the contractor under the contract or whether it is enough that the claim should be merely consequential on his operations. When the words "caused by" were used in the argument, the underlying idea was the legal conception of the "causa causans" as contrasted with the "causa sine qua non." That conception is one which the law has evolved for practical convenience and for the avoidance of metaphysical speculation. It is a conception which is applied in various practical ways, as the doctrines of remoteness, novus actus interveniens and effective cause testify. But it does not follow that, where laymen use words which are causative in connotation, they are necessarily adopting these legal rules or that the law must impose them on the contracting parties. Accordingly, the argument that "arising from" North of means "caused by" assumes too much. Even if the words "arising from" are truly causative, I see nothing in them to show that they are restricted to what is due directly to the contractor's own operations. But I prefer to read "arising from" in the wider sense of something which is consequential on or flows from the operations of the contractor. Qua contractor he shoulders the responsibility of what happens to third parties as a result of the operations which he is carrying out.
The law has, however, in certain circumstances set a limit to the scope of such a clause of indemnity. A party is to be indemnified against a claim for which he would be legally responsible in virtue of his own negligence only if it is clear that the other party consented to the situation. Our own doctrine of construction contra proferentemis consistent with the views recently expressed both in the Court of Appeal and in the Privy Council. In Alderslade v. Hendon Laundry Lord Greene, M.R., said (at p. 192):
"Where the head of damage in respect of which limitation of liability is sought to be imposed by such a clause is one which rests on negligence and nothing else, the clause must be construed as extending to that head of damage, because it would otherwise lack subject-matter. Where, on the other hand, the head of damage may be based on some other ground than that of negligence, the general principle is that the clause must be confined in its application to loss occurring through that other cause, to the exclusion of loss arising through negligence. The reason is that if a contracting party wishes in such a case, to limit his liability in respect of negligence, he must do so in clear terms in the absence of which the clause is construed as relating to a liability not based on negligence."
In the subsequent case in the Privy Council, Canada Steamship Lines v. The King [1952] AC 192, the principles stated by Lord Greene are in substance reiterated. The additional contribution to Lord Greene's formulation lies in the amplification of his words "the head of damage may be based on some other ground than that of negligence." Lord Morton of Henryton points out (at p. 208):
"The ‘other ground’ must not be so fanciful or remote that the proferens cannot be supposed to have desired protection against it; but subject to this qualification, which is no doubt to be implied from Lord Greene's words, the existence of a possible head of damage other than that of negligence is fatal to the proferens even if the words used are prima facie wide enough to cover negligence on the part of his servants."
To apply Lord Greene's test, I do not see how it can be said that the clause under consideration rests on negligence and nothing else. While I would have been happier had the record or indeed the argument been more forthcoming in exploring "other grounds," there is enough too be gathered as to the scope of the contract to show that the relationship between the parties might readily give rise to claims by third parties on grounds independent of the Board's negligence. While there is force in the Board's contention that it is hardly conceivable that they would lay themselves open to claims from consumers through loss of supply, I would not be prepared entirely to exclude the possibility of the Board's becoming involved in claims for breach of contract with third parties. Similarly, there are possible claims on the ground of the law of neighbourhood or of nuisance. Interference with fishing rights is a possible case. Moreover, I am prepared to accept that the activities of the defenders might render the Board liable for breach of certain statutory duties. Two answers were made to this suggestion. The first was that breach of statutory duty is merely negligence in another form. That is true in a sense, but it is not the straightforward common law sense in which negligence is understood in this branch of the law. The second answer was that the protection was unnecessary, as the Board would have an action of relief. Again that is true enough, but there is no reason why the Board should not seek to cover themselves directly and avoid the pitfalls of such a form of action.
The Court should not be astute so to construe an exemption clause as to relieve a party of the results of his own negligence. The answer must be found in the contract itself, read, no doubt, against the general background. That general background is not very satisfactorily sketched in, but, as I have already said, there is enough to show that the relationship of the parties was such as to give rise to claims by third parties independently of the Board's negligence. And I think further that the clause, read against the general background, yields possible heads of damage other than that of negligence which cannot be described as either fanciful or remote.
The action will be dismissed.
"(1) If the clause contains language which expressly exempts the person in whose favour it is made (hereafter called ‘the proferens’) from the consequence of the negligence of his own servants, effect must be given to that provision …(2) If there is no express reference to negligence, the Court must consider whether the words used are wide enough, in their ordinary meaning, to cover negligence on the part of the servants of the proferens. If a doubt arises at this point it must be resolved against the proferens …(3) If the words used are wide enough for the above purpose, the Court must then consider whether ‘the head of damage may be based on some ground other than that of negligence,’ to quote again Lord Greene in the Aldersladecase. The ‘other ground’ must not be so fanciful or remote that the proferens cannot be supposed to have desired protection against it; but subject to this qualification, which is no doubt to be implied from Lord Greene's words, the existence of a possible head of damage other than that of negligence is fatal to the proferens even if the words used are prima facie wide enough to cover negligence on the part of his servants."
I accept this statement as authoritative in the law of Scotland. It is our rule also that such clauses are construed contra proferentem.
In the present case there is no express reference to negligence, and I come at once to consider the second of the above propositions, whether the words used are wide enough, in their ordinary meaning, to cover negligence on the part of the servants of the proferens. The argument to the contrary was that the words "claims from third parties arising from his operations under the contract" necessarily implied that such claims were caused, in the legal sense of that term, by the operations of the contractors. I am unable to accept this construction of the words. The term "arising from an act," in its ordinary meaning, signifies no more than "springing from" or "originating in" an act, and has no necessary connotation that the subsequent casualty was caused, in the legal sense, by that act. The originating act may merely call into being obligations on the part of others to take care, and, if such care is not taken, so that a casualty ensues, the law will hold that it is the failure to take that care which caused the casualty. On the other hand the originating act may itself be a breach of an obligation to take care, upon which breach a casualty ensues, in which case the law will hold that the original act was itself the cause of the casualty. The phrase used in this contract seems to me wide enough, in its ordinary meaning, to cover both the cases I have mentioned above, the case where the original act was itself the cause, in the legal sense, of the casualty, and the case where the original act called into being obligations on the part of others to take care, the neglect of which obligations was the cause, in the legal sense, of the subsequent casualty and claim for damages. The words used are therefore wide enough, in their ordinary meaning, to cover claims caused, in the legal sense, by negligence on the part of the servants of the proferens.
There remains the third question: whether the head of damage contemplated in the indemnity clause may be based on some ground other than the negligence of the employers' servants, in other words whether a reasonable content can be found for the indemnity clause if claims caused by the negligence of the employers' servants are excluded from its scope. It was said for the contractors that such a content could be found in possible claims by customers of the Board for breach of a contract to supply, the breach being traceable to some operations of the contractors. The Board answered this by saying that they could never contract to give a supply without protecting themselves in the contract against any such claims, and that it cannot be supposed that they would protect themselves in this contract with the defenders against claims which they would bar under the express terms of their contracts with customers. This appears to me to be a good answer. The suggested ground of liability is too remote to warrant the view that it may have caused the proferens to put forward the indemnity clause for inclusion in the contract. Another class of claim was suggested in which content could be found for the indemnity clause without construing it as covering claims caused by the negligence of the employers' servants. This was the class of claim against the employers which might arise from breach of an absolute obligation imposed on the employers in the interests of safety under the Factory Acts or the Electricity Acts, the breach being ultimately traceable to the operations of the contractors. I do not think there is anything fanciful or remote about this. Such cases can and do arise. It was said on behalf of the employers that they would have, in the events contemplated in this suggestion, a right of relief against the contractors. I think this would not necessarily be so, since the existence of such a right of relief would depend on whether the operations of the contractors constituted a wrong giving rise to a right of relief. Moreover I do not think it is a good answer for the employers to say that they should not, be assumed to have protected themselves per expressum in this contract against events in which the law would have afforded them relief without expression. Nothing is more common in protective clauses of all kinds than to find protection expressly provided for where the law would have afforded protection without expression. Further, I am not satisfied that there are not other types of claims which would form a reasonable content for the indemnity clause without construing it as covering claims caused by the negligence of the employers' servants. I have in mind the possibility of claims arising out of the Board's obligations under the Electricity Acts or the law of neighbourhood, or the law of nuisance. I have come to the opinion that sensible content can be found for this indemnity clause without construing it as covering claims caused by the negligence of the employers' servants, and that it should not be construed as covering such claims. The pursuers' averments are, in my opinion, irrelevant.
I have, however, formed the opinion that the Lord Ordinary has erred in construing the clause, as he has done, to include within its scope the claim of damages made by Mr Davidson against the pursuers in respect, of the personal injuries received by him in the accident which occurred at Abernethy on 20th November 1950. In my opinion, the Lord Ordinary allowed himself to be unduly influenced by the views expressed in the case of Furness Shipbuilding Co. v. London and North Scotland Eastern Railway Co. —a case where the indemnity clause falling to be construed was expressed in terms very different from and much more explicit than those in which the clause now under construction is couched. I think, contrary to the view of the Lord Ordinary, that the case of Great Western Railway v. Durnford & Son was in certain respects nearer to the present case than the Furness case, but there again the indemnity clause was somewhat differently expressed and I do not disagree with his Lordship's view that the Durnford case does not really assist in the determination of the question now at issue. No case was cited to us where in an indemnity clause the words "claims arising from" as distinct from the words "claims arising in respect of or" claims arising out of or in connexion with" fell to be construed. The words found in the present indemnity clause have therefore to be construed independently of authority and given what is thought to be their fair and natural meaning in the English language.
By the clause now under construction the contractor undertook to indemnify the Board "against all claims from third parties arising from his (i.e. the contractor's) operations under the contract." In my opinion, the words "arising from" in that context have a causal significance and mean "arising because of" operations carried out by the contractor under the contract. Mr Davidson's claim did not arise because of the contractor's operations in moving the hut, but, as has been found by the Court, because of the Board's negligence in allowing conditions to take place which brought about a "flash over" while the hut was being removed. In this connexion I use the words "because of" in the legal sense, that is, as referring to the proximate cause only, the causa causans as distinct from the causa sine qua non. The words "arising from" occurring in this indemnity clause appear' to me to have a meaning very similar to, if not the same as, that which fell to be given to the words "arising out of" in the phrase "arising but of and in the course of the employment" which so frequently came up for construction by the Courts under the now repealed Workmen's Compensation Acts. While it is impossible to reconcile all of the many judicial opinions which have been pronounced on that once very hackneyed topic, certain of the House of Lords decisions seem to me quite unequivocally to indicate (1) that the words "arising out of" required that there should be a causal relation between the employment and the accident, and (2) that in that connexion it was only the proximate and not the remoter causes which fell to be considered. In Dennis v. White & Co. Lord Finlay, L.C., at p. 481, in holding that a workman who was injured by collision while riding a bicycle through a public street on an errand for his master had sustained an accident arising "out of" his employment, said:
"The risk of collision under such circumstances is incidental to the use of a bicycle; it is a risk inherent in the nature of the employment, and it was the cause of the accident. It follows that the accident arose out ofthe employment."
(The italics are mine.) Again in Simpson v. Sinclair Viscount Haldane, in discussing the kind of causation required by the words "arising out of," says (at p. 39):
"I think that the Court is directed to look at what has happened proximately, and not to search for causes or conditions lying behind."
In my opinion, "arising from" in this indemnity clause should be given much the same meaning as was given to "arising out of" in the above cases. On that reading of the clause—which I think to be the proper one to give to it—the indemnity clause, being restricted in its scope to rendering the Board skaithless against third party claims arising because of something done or not done by the contractors in carrying out the contract work, does not cover the present, claim and the Board's present action against the contractors is irrelevant and should be dismissed.
If, however, I am wrong in thinking, as I do, that the language of this indemnity clause is sufficiently clear to exclude from its scope third party claims not caused in the legal sense by something done or not done by the contractors in carrying out the contract work, then I am of opinion that at the best for the Board the indemnity clause must be regarded as being one of ambiguous import. If that be so, then l am of opinion that, looking to the nature of the clause under construction and the purpose it is intended to serve, the clause is one which will fall to be construed contra proferentem, i.e., in this case, against the Board, at any rate in a question as to whether the scope of the clause is wide enough to cover third party claims arising out of the Board's own negligence. As was pointed out in the Privy Council case of Canada Steamship Lines v. The King, where an indemnity clause fails to limit a party's liability in respect of negligence in clear terms the clause will fall to be construed as relating to a liability not based on negligence unless that would deprive the clause of all content. The Lord Ordinary has accepted the view, stated at the bar by the pursuers, that except as regards negligent acts done by them or their servants this indemnity clause could have no operation, but there is neither averment nor admission to that effect in the case and I am far from satisfied that the position in this matter is as the Lord Ordinary has accepted it to be. On the contrary your Lordships have figured several instances where the clause might operate to indemnify the pursuers from liability not based on their own negligence. I agree that these instances—and there may well be others—would serve to give a content to the clause exclusive of its being a protection to the pursuers against their own or their servants' negligence. In any event I think that on the information at present before the Court this indemnity clause must be read as not extending to cover the negligence of the pursuers or their servants, because its terms do not clearly include such negligence and it has not been established that the clause can have no other content. I think therefore that, even if I am not well founded in my primary view that the language of the present indemnity clause by itself excludes third party claims arising out of the pursuers' own negligence, the clause would in view of its nature fall to be construed, in the circumstances as at present known to the Court, as not being intended to indemnify the pursuers against the consequences of their own negligence.
In result therefore I am of opinion that the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor should be recalled, the first plea in law for the defenders sustained, and the action dismissed.
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