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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Nisbet v. Orr & Anor [2003] ScotCS 80 (20 March 2003 URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2003/80.html Cite as: [2003] ScotCS 80 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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Lord Osborne Lord Dawson Lord Weir
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A2667/00 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD OSBORNE in RECLAIMING MOTION in the cause ROBERT NISBET Pursuer and Reclaimer; against (FIRST) SIR JOHN ORR AND (SECOND) NORTH LANARKSHIRE COUNCIL Defenders and Respondents; _______ |
Act: Clancy, Q.C; Balfour & Manson (for Hughes Dowdall, Glasgow)
(for the Pursuer and Reclaimer)
Alt: Dunlop; Campbell Smith (for 2nd Defenders and Respondent)
20 March 2003
"It was Mr Campbell's duty to take reasonable care for the safety of persons working in the Detective Constables' room at Coatbridge Police Station. It was his duty to take reasonable care to see that floors were not made slippery. Having been alerted to the presence of water on the carpet in the Detective Constables' room it was Mr Campbell's duty not to spray or otherwise apply odour-neutralising agent onto the wet carpet. Separatim in circumstances where he was mopping up water from that carpet and was spraying or otherwise applying odour-neutralising agent it was Mr Campbell's duty to place cones around the affected area. Separatim it was his duty to place warning signs at or near that area to warn persons working in the Detective Constables' room of the presence of a potential hazard. In each and all of these duties Mr Campbell failed and by his failures he caused the pursuer's accident. He knew or ought to have known that if he failed to fulfil the duties incumbent upon him an accident of the type hereinbefore condescended upon could occur. But for those failures in duty the accident would not have occurred."
The relevance of this case was challenged before the Lord Ordinary with success. In his interlocutor of 10 April 2002 he sustained the first plea-in-law for both the first and second named defenders and dismissed the action.
"He knew or ought to have known that if he failed to fulfil the duties incumbent upon him, an accident of the type hereinbefore condescended upon could occur".
However, that averment was inadequate as a basis for the averments of duty. What was missing was an averment relating to the allegedly reasonably foreseeable hazard said to have been created in the factual circumstances averred. Only such an averment as that could found the averments of duty relied upon. In connection with his criticisms of the pursuer's case reference was again made to Robb v. Dundee District Council. The point was made that the averments in that case went beyond what had been averred here, yet they were held to be insufficient. The pursuer's submission to the effect that it was "self-evident" that the factual circumstances averred gave rise to a foreseeable risk of injury was unsound. The matters focussed in the pursuer's ground of appeal 1(2)(a) - (d) could not be a substitute for averments that Mr Campbell should reasonably have foreseen the existence of a hazard in the circumstances averred. In particular, no significance lay in the averment that cones and warning signs were available in the police station. The purpose of those cones and warning signs was not explained. There could be a variety of explanations for them. As regards the averment of the apology, that cast no light on reasonable foresight. Turning to the issue of whether Mr Campbell should have touched the carpet, there was no averment to suggest why he should have done such a thing. No proper inference could be drawn from the other averments in the pursuer's case to the effect that Mr Campbell should have reasonably foreseen the existence of a hazard. In all the circumstances, the reclaiming motion should be refused.
"In claims of damages for alleged negligence it can only be in rare and exceptional cases that an action can be disposed of on relevancy"