OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2007] CSOH 176
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OPINION OF LADY
PATON
in the cause
DALE McFARLANE
Pursuer;
against
(FIRST) BARRY THAIN
and
(SECOND) JAMES
CAMPBELL
Defenders;
and
THE MOTOR INSURERS
BUREAU
Minuters:
ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________
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Pursuer:
Clancy, Q.C.; Gardiner,
Advocate; Drummond Miller, LLP
First Defender: No appearance
Second Defender: Hanretty, Q.C.; HBM Sayers
Minuters: R.W. Dunlop, Advocate; Simpson & Marwick
Collision between motorcycle and car
[1] Late
one afternoon on Saturday 17 July 1999,
James Campbell (the second defender, aged 67) left his home in Dunfermline. He drove his Ford Orion car in an easterly
direction along Blair Drive
towards a T-junction with the main road, Townhill Road. His intention was to turn right onto the main
road, and to drive in a southerly direction.
When he drove out into the main road, his car was in collision with a Kawasaki
motorcycle being ridden in a northerly direction along the main road by the
first defender, Barry Thain (then aged 22). The first defender was thrown onto the road. His pillion passenger Dale McFarlane
(the pursuer, then aged 23) was thrown some distance in a northerly
direction. The pursuer's crash helmet
came off. He suffered a head injury and
a broken leg.
[2] In
this action, the pursuer sues the first and second defenders. As the first defender was uninsured, the
Motor Insurers Bureau (MIB) entered the process as Minuters. The MIB dispute liability on the ground that
the pursuer had known that the motorcyclist was uninsured. Further, both the second defender and the MIB
plead contributory negligence on the part of the pursuer. The second defender maintains that the
pursuer failed in his duty to wear a properly fastened crash helmet. The MIB contends that the pursuer knew that
the motorcyclist was unlicensed and had been drinking heavily before the
accident; also that the pursuer had failed to fasten the straps of his helmet
securely.
[3] A
proof before answer took place in 2007, restricted to the issue of liability as
directed by the court (2005 S.L.T. 221; 2006 S.L.T. 107). A video of the scene of the accident was
played in court, and photographs and plans were referred to. A description of the physical characteristics
and lay-out of the scene of the accident can be found in paragraphs [51] and
[52] below. The crash helmet worn by the
pursuer was not produced, and parties relied on verbal descriptions. The pursuer gave evidence, as did an
eye-witness Mark Wear; a police officer called to the scene (Constable Muir);
and an accident investigator John Alexander. Mr Alexander had in fact been instructed
by the MIB, but by arrangement between the pursuer and the MIB, was called as
an expert witness for the pursuer.
Evidence was then led on behalf of the second defender from Dr N.J.
Mills, an expert in crash helmets. An
accident investigator instructed by the second defender (Dr R.F. Lambourn) sat
in court during the evidence of Mr Wear and Constable Muir, but did
not personally give evidence. Finally,
evidence was about to be led on behalf of the MIB from the first defender, his
father Kenny Thain, and his brother Scott Thain. However at that stage, senior counsel for the
pursuer advised the court that the pursuer no longer insisted upon his case
against the MIB. The MIB were duly
assoilzied, with a reservation relating to expenses. Counsel for the MIB withdrew. The remaining counsel made submissions, and I
took the case to avizandum without
having heard evidence from either the first or the second defender.
An outline of evidence relating to the accident
[4]
Evidence relating to the accident included the following:
The
pursuer (aged 30) stated that at the
time of the accident he had been an apprentice roof tiler, but was temporarily
unemployed. On the night before the
accident, he had been in his friend Kenny Thain's house at Johnston
Crescent, having a drink. He could not remember leaving the house the
next day. Kenny's son, the first
defender, must have been present at some stage in order to give him a lift on
the motorcycle. The pursuer could
remember stopping off at the Broomhead flats to get money from a friend
Robert Hamilton, in order to buy more drink. He could not remember much about travelling
on the motorcycle, any events prior to the accident, the time of the accident,
the weather, or the place. He remembered
being in hospital, asking his mother why he was there. He also remembered putting on a crash helmet
at Kenny's house. It was a full face
visor helmet with a bar in front of the chin.
The pursuer had not been sure how to fasten the clip of the chin straps. The first defender helped him. The pursuer thought that he had probably
taken the helmet off when visiting the Broomhead flats. When cross-examined by counsel for the second
defender, the pursuer agreed that he did not own a crash helmet, and that the
first defender had supplied the helmet and helped him with the chin
straps. However the pursuer could not
remember whether the first defender helped him again with the chin straps after
the visit to the Broomhead flats. He
agreed that the fact that the helmet came off in the accident suggested that he
had not fastened the chin straps properly, although he later said that he did
not know why the helmet had come off.
The pursuer showed a clear appreciation of the need for a securely fastened
crash helmet for his own safety when travelling pillion on a motorcycle. During cross-examination by counsel for the
MIB, the pursuer clarified that he had been drinking vodka and lager with Kenny
Thain. In cross and re-examination, the
pursuer confirmed that he had known that the first defender had only a
provisional driving licence. He had
simply never thought about whether the first defender had passed a test for
riding a motorcycle. Similarly the
pursuer had never thought about the question whether the first defender was
insured to ride a motorcycle.
[5] Mark Wear
(aged 39) was a customer service adviser who happened to be driving his car
southwards down Townhill Road
towards the junction with Blair Drive
just before the accident. He saw a car
in Blair Drive intending to
make a right turn across the north-bound carriageway and then to travel south
in front of him. Mr Wear said that
he did not see a motorcycle in the moments leading up to the collision. However he could hear the noise of a
motorcycle, which sounded as if it was coming from behind him. He acknowledged that his impression was
mistaken, as he subsequently saw that the motorcycle had in fact been
travelling towards him. Mr Wear
remembered three stationary parked cars on the west side of Townhill
Road to the north of the junction between Blair
Drive and Townhill Road,
but no parked cars to the south of that junction. In his opinion, therefore, there was nothing
to obstruct the driver's view as he emerged from the side road and turned
right. Mr Wear saw the car approach
the junction, and stop there for about five seconds. The car then moved off in a continuous
motion. Mr Wear, having heard the
sound of a motorcycle, was checking his mirrors when the collision
occurred. He did not actually see the
collision. When he looked again, the car
was covering the north-bound carriageway, with the front of the car a short
distance from the central line. The
motorcycle had hit the car in the area between the offside wing and the
driver's door. Mr Wear then saw a
person lying on the south-bound carriageway, and a crash helmet bouncing
towards his car. According to Mr Wear,
the helmet was not a full face visor helmet.
When Mr Wear went to help, he discovered that two people had been
riding the motorcycle: one was lying
injured; the other left the scene, and jogged up Lauder
Street (a street almost opposite Blair
Drive). The
police arrived within about five minutes.
[6] When
cross-examined by counsel for the second defender, Mr Wear estimated the
car's speed at 3 to 4 miles per hour, possibly faster. There had been nothing unusual about the
car's manoeuvre. In Mr Wear's view
as a driver, it had been safe for the car-driver to pull out of the side
road. There was no sound of braking, and
no indication of any rapid movement on the part of the motorcycle to the right
or the left, no evasive movement. When cross-examined
by counsel for the MIB and re-examined, Mr Wear agreed that he had given Constable Muir
a signed statement estimating the speed of the motorcycle as "faster than 30
miles per hour, probably about 40 miles per hour" (although his personal memory
was of giving the constable an estimate of 30 to 40 miles per hour). Having been reminded of that statement, Mr Wear
thought that he might have had a fleeting glimpse of the motorcycle just before
the collision.
[7] Constable
Gordon Muir, aged 40, was on duty nearby, and was called to the scene of the
accident. He arrived at about 17.50 p.m.
He noted the time of the accident as 17.45
p.m. The collision appeared
to have occurred on the north-bound lane, two feet from the centre line, just
in line with Blair Drive. The pursuer was lying on the south-bound
carriageway, to the north of the bell-mouth of Lauder
Street. The
pursuer's helmet was lying on the ground, further north of the pursuer. When Constable Muir examined the helmet,
he noticed that it was a full face visor helmet, with some scraping damage, and
that there was nothing unusual about the chin straps.
[8] Constable Muir
stated that the second defender readily admitted to being the driver of the
car, and gave a breath test (which was negative) and a statement in the
following terms:
"... When I got to
the junction I stopped and looked both ways.
I saw that the road was clear from both directions and pulled out slowly
heading to my right. I was almost at the
centre line when I saw and heard the bike travelling from my right. It was travelling very fast; I think about 60
miles per hour. I stopped immediately
and I saw the bike rider try to swerve past the front of the car. He failed to avoid me and struck the front
[right hand side] of my car. At this
time I saw that there were two persons on the bike. They appeared to fly over the front of the
car. The two of them landed on the
roadway to the left of my car. The boy
in the white helmet landed up the road a bit further. One of the bikers, a young fellow with a dark
helmet, seemed to tumble in the road. He
got to his feet and ran up Lauder Street. I reversed my car back into Blair
Drive and went over to see the injured boy ... when
I drove it was fair, the roads were dry, and I had a good view. In my opinion the rider of the bike is to
blame for the accident due to his sheer speed."
[9] When
cross-examined by counsel for the second defender, Constable Muir
confirmed that the second defender had not mentioned anything about parked cars
obstructing his vision. However Constable Muir
had personally seen at least two vehicles parked on the west side of Townhill
Road, just south of the junction with Blair
Drive.
Those cars would have obscured the second defender's vision as he tried
to emerge from Blair Drive.
The constable confirmed that the cars did not belong to people who had stopped
to help at the accident. Constable Muir
then described the long hazard warning lines in the centre of the road,
intended to alert drivers to dangers in the area, including traffic emerging
from junctions, and a blind summit just south of Blair
Drive. The
speed limit was a maximum of 30 miles per hour, although a reasonably careful
driver would proceed having regard to all the conditions - in other words, he might
proceed more slowly. The crash helmet
which the pursuer had been wearing was a full face helmet, an entire sphere
covering the whole of the head except the eyes.
There were straps and a clip beneath the chin. Constable Muir (a motorcyclist himself)
examined the helmet, and saw no reason why the straps could not be
fastened.
[10] When cross-examined by counsel for the MIB, Constable Muir
confirmed that the pursuer had shown a reluctance to name the motorcyclist (see
paragraph [20] below). Constable Muir
further commented that, based upon an oil deposit which indicated the point of
impact, the driver appeared to have cut the corner of Blair
Drive. He
agreed that it was basic training for any motorcyclist to wear a helmet with
properly fastened straps which would prevent the helmet from coming off. The constable advised the court that the
first defender had been convicted on summary complaint of failing to report the
accident, and being uninsured.
[11] In re-examination, Constable Muir confirmed (reading from
page 28 of his police notebook, a page which had not been lodged as a
production) that the pursuer had said, in the course of giving a statement:
" ... When we got
near to the Spar [a shop situated at the junction of Blair
Drive, Townhill Road,
and Lauder Street], I
remember seeing a car on the left between cars.
It looked to me as if it was reversing."
Constable Muir explained that
his impression was that the pursuer was referring to seeing a car reversing
slowly out into Townhill Road.
[12] John Alexander (aged
63), formerly a police inspector in charge of traffic management and now an
accident investigator, examined the locus, took photographs and a video, and
studied statements, plans, and reports.
He prepared a report for the MIB.
He used an estimated distance given by the second defender in his
insurance claim form, namely an estimate that the pillion passenger had been
thrown about 45 feet from the point of impact, landing to the north of the
bellmouth of Lauder Street. (Constable Muir's evidence during the
proof tended to support the second defender's estimate.) On the basis of that "throw distance" rounded
up to 15 metres, Mr. Alexander concluded that the motorcycle's speed at impact
was 31 miles per hour . However bearing
in mind the fact that the pursuer's trajectory would be obstructed to some
extent by the first defender's body, and also by the pursuer's grip of the
pillion handles, Mr. Alexander ultimately concluded that the motorcycle had
been travelling at about 45 miles per hour.
[13] From measurements at the locus and calculations, Mr. Alexander
concluded that a driver whose view was unobstructed by any cars parked to the
south of Blair Drive would
have seen the upper body of the biker at about 72 metres. However if parked cars obstructed the
driver's sight-line, visibility would be more likely to be 50 metres. If the driver had begun his manoeuvre of
crossing the main road before he saw the motorcycle travelling at 45 miles per
hour, he would have had to accelerate briskly in order to reach the south-bound
lane safely. If the driver had seen the
motorcycle at any distance between 45 to 72 metres, it was not clear whether he
would manage to avoid being in the path of the bike. The driver would have to brake and stop, but
much would depend upon his initial acceleration, his reaction time, and his
braking time. Much too would depend upon
the position of the motorcycle at the point when the car-driver decided to
stop, and whether there was sufficient time for the motorcyclist to react and
take evasive action. A car or cars
parked to the south of Blair Drive
would undoubtedly cause observational difficulties for the car-driver; but if his view was so restricted, that meant
that additional care was required as he emerged into the potential flow of
traffic. Mr. Alexander considered that
it would be foolish of the driver to commit himself to the manoeuvre while not
appreciating the nature of the traffic from the south. The driver should manoeuvre out until he
gained an appropriate view southwards.
[14] Mr. Alexander's report contained inter alia the following conclusions:
"8.1 There is
little doubt that southerly visibility for drivers emerging from Blair
Drive is affected by the distinct dip in the road
to the south of locus. In ideal traffic
conditions, this would provide about 75.00 metres for emerging drivers to
detect and assess the approach and speed of any northbound traffic. The presence of a parked motor car at the
western kerb of Townhill Road,
to the south of Blair Drive
junction, was obviously creating a further visibility restriction or difficulty
for the driver of the Ford Orion motor car ...
8.6 Visibility
at the locus was reduced by the parked motor car at the western side of Townhill
Road. This
has been estimated at 50.00 metres or thereby, which at 45 miles per hour,
equates to a travel time factor of 2.49 seconds over that distance. Motorcyclists are more aware of their travel
environment and react quicker to situations with which they are confronted,
compared for instance, to the average car driver ...
8.7 [An
allowance for a reaction time on the part of the motorcyclist in the range 1.10
to 1.30 seconds] provides a time factor of 1.19 to 1.39 seconds for evasive
action by the rider of the Kawasaki motorcycle.
Given that restricted time factor, it is extremely unlikely that this
would be sufficient to allow any effective evasive action to be undertaken by
the Kawasaki motorcyclist ...
8.10 The driver
of the Ford Orion motor car is emerging from a relatively difficult junction on
the western side of Townhill Road. The difficulty is magnified by the presence
of a parked motor car to the south of the junction, which demands that extra
care and attention should be exhibited by that driver, particularly for traffic
approaching from the south. That his
vehicle was broadside and completely blocking the northbound lane, when
impacted by the Kawasaki motorcycle,
identifies that such care and consideration for approaching traffic was
lacking.
8.11 The rider
of the Kawasaki motorcycle is
travelling northwards on Townhill Road
towards the locus. Travelling on the
primary road, there should be no particular difficulties experienced by the
rider, apart from any presented by parked motor vehicles and potential for
emerging vehicles from the many junctions along the length of Townhill
Road. However the dominant aggravating
factors on the part of the rider ... undoubtedly [include] an element of
inappropriate speed.
8.12 Given all
the pre-impact factors involved in this accident, there is a clear contribution
to the accident circumstances by the driver of the Ford Orion car, when he
encroached into the course or route of the approaching Kawasaki
motorcycle. That is not to downplay the
contribution made by the rider of the Kawasaki
motorcycle, where ... inappropriate speed would contribute to his inability to
respond timeously to the emerging manoeuvre."
[15] When cross-examined by counsel for the second defender, Mr.
Alexander confirmed that, when travelling north, the distance from the crest of
the blind summit to Blair Drive
(shown in photograph E of number 7/8/B of process) was about 50 metres. The maximum legal speed limit in the area was
30 miles per hour. It was the driver's
responsibility to drive at that speed or at a lesser speed, anticipating, for
example, pedestrians, or a vehicle emerging at a junction. The driver should drive at a speed which
permitted him to bring his vehicle to a stand-still if necessary. If a motorcyclist travelling north along Townhill
Road at 30 miles per hour crested the blind summit
and saw a car emerging from Blair Drive,
and if it was assumed that the rider had a normal reaction time, and that his
tyres and brakes were in good condition, the motorcycle could come to a halt
within 26 to 28 metres. That would
permit the motorcyclist to stop well within the 50 metre distance available,
without colliding with the car.
Nevertheless any cars parked on the west side of Townhill
Road, to the south of Blair
Drive, would have added to the difficulty of the
situation, and much would depend upon when the motorcyclist first saw the
vehicle emerging and presenting a danger.
[16] The pursuer closed his case with a Joint Minute in which
parties agreed that on 22 September 1999 the first defender was
cautioned and charged with a breach of section 3 of the Road Traffic Act
1988 (careless driving), and replied "I probably was going a bit faster than I
should have."
[17] Dr. N.J. Mills, aged 63, Reader in Polymer Engineering at Birmingham
University, was led in evidence by
Mr Hanretty on behalf of the second defender. He was inter
alia a long-serving member of the British Standards Committee on Motor
Cycle Helmets. He confirmed that crash
helmets had been shown to be effective in preventing head injuries in motorcycle
accidents. It was now mandatory for
motorcycle riders and their passengers to wear helmets. The purpose of the chin strap was to keep the
helmet in place if the wearer was involved in a crash and ended up flying
through the air. Obviously if the helmet
came off before the wearer hit the ground, the head would be unprotected. Thus failure to fasten the chin strap
resulted in the same exposure to injury as if the wearer had not been wearing a
helmet. Having studied the circumstances
of the pursuer's accident, Dr Mills' opinion was that a helmet would have
prevented injury to the pursuer's head had the helmet been securely positioned
on his head. The likely outcome in such
circumstances would have been minor short-term concussion.
[18] When cross-examined by counsel for the pursuer, Dr Mills
acknowledged that he had no medical qualifications. He had not seen the helmet in question, nor
did he know its make, size, and condition.
Dr Mills thought however that it was overwhelmingly likely that the
helmet complied with the relevant British Standard (BS6658), as it would be an
offence for a supplier to sell a crash helmet which did not conform to the
British Standard. Further, for a
helmet's safety features to be compromised, it would have had to be damaged
previously in a serious accident. It
would not have been advisable to wear a helmet that was too big, but
nevertheless such a helmet, if strapped on tightly, should stay on the wearer's
head. It was possible, but not very
common, for the helmet to come off after the
wearer had hit the ground. Finally,
Dr Mills accepted that a motorcyclist could still suffer bad head injuries
even although wearing a helmet, where in some circumstances the forces were too
great for the design of the helmet.
The witnesses in the case
The
pursuer
[19] The pursuer's memory of events was limited, in my view for
three reasons: post-traumatic amnesia
possibly followed by a degree of more permanent brain damage; the passage of
time since the accident; and a desire to
"cover up" for his friend the first defender and for himself. The pursuer's memory may have been better in
the days immediately following the accident.
For example, the pursuer managed to give Constable Muir some
information on 18 July 1999,
one day after the accident, and one day before being transferred to the
Southern General Hospital for specialist head injury treatment for his skull
fracture and subdural haematoma. On that
occasion the pursuer told Constable Muir that he had been drinking with
the first defender and the first defender's father before the accident. He also told the constable that "when we got
near to the Spar [a shop situated at the junction of Blair
Drive, Townhill Road
and Lauder Street] I
remember seeing a car on the left between cars. It looked to me as if it was reversing." By contrast at the proof in 2007, the pursuer
stated that he could not remember the place of the accident, or the events
prior to the accident.
[20] Both in 1999 and during the proof in 2007, the pursuer appeared
to wish to protect the first defender to some extent. For example, in July 1999 Constable Muir
had difficulty obtaining the name of the motorcyclist from the pursuer. The constable acknowledged that the
difficulty may have been attributable to the fact that the pursuer had head
injuries and was extremely ill.
Nevertheless the pursuer appeared unwilling to disclose the name of the
motorcyclist until the pursuer's uncle, who was present in hospital and who was
encouraging the pursuer to give information, leaned (no doubt inadvertently) on
the pursuer's broken leg. The pursuer
then told the police officer that the motorcyclist had been "Barry from
Brucefield", then "Barry Vane", and ultimately on being questioned further,
clarified the name as "Barry Thain".
When giving evidence in court in 2007, the pursuer gave a similar
impression of attempting to protect the first defender. For example, when describing the drinking
session before the accident, the pursuer freely admitted that he had been
drinking with Kenny Thain, the first defender's father, but was vague
about the first defender's involvement in any drinking session. He conceded that the first defender must have
been present at some stage on Saturday
17 July 1999, as the first defender had given him a lift
on the motorcycle. Otherwise he did not
acknowledge that the first defender might have been drinking. Of note also was the fact that the pursuer
was not entirely truthful about the criminal offence for which he was serving a
sentence of imprisonment at the time of the proof. He initially stated that the offence was
possession of cannabis. Only when
cross-examined by counsel for the MIB did he acknowledge that the offence was
in fact being concerned in the supplying of cannabis. I ultimately concluded that the pursuer was
credible and reliable in parts of his evidence, but incredible and unreliable
in other significant parts.
Mark
Wear
[21] Mr Wear was an honest independent eye-witness, trying to
recollect events as best he could after the passage of a considerable number of
years. He was wholly credible, but in
relation to some parts of his evidence (for example, the type of helmet worn by
the pursuer, the position in which the pursuer was ultimately found, and the
location of cars parked near the T-junction) I concluded that his memory of
events was not always accurate, and should not necessarily be relied upon.
Constable Muir
[22] Constable Muir arrived at the scene of the accident a few
minutes after the collision. He too was
a motorcyclist, and accordingly his observations were particularly acute and
well-informed. He noted the physical
characteristics of the scene and the vehicles involved. He drew a rough sketch at the time, and later
prepared a more careful sketch. He
seemed confident and accurate in his evidence about the location of any parked
cars, the type of helmet which the pursuer had been wearing, the position in
which the pursuer was found, and other details.
I regarded him as wholly credible and reliable. Wherever discrepancies in evidence emerged, I
preferred and relied upon the evidence of Constable Muir.
The
expert witnesses
[23] Similarly the two experts, Mr. Alexander and Dr. Mills, were in
my view wholly credible and reliable.
Submissions
(1)
Submissions for the pursuer
[24] Senior counsel submitted, as a general principle applicable to
this particular case, that as neither the second defender nor his accident
expert Dr Lambourn had given evidence, the court should wherever possible
draw inferences favourable to the pursuer.
Reference was made to Ross v
Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers [1964] 1 W.L.R. 768, at pages 775,
784-5, and 788; and O'Donnell v Murdoch McKenzie & Co, 1967 S.C. (H.L.) 63, at
pages 71-2.
The
speed of the motorcycle
[25] Counsel contended that
the second defender's estimates of the speed of the motorcycle (namely 60 miles
per hour in his police statement; and 80 to 100 miles per hour in his insurance
claim form) were inconsistent, unreliable, and untested in evidence. Mr Wear's evidence of a speed of 30 to
40 miles per hour was to be preferred.
In relation to the estimate of 45 miles per hour given by the accident
investigator Mr. Alexander, two assumptions had been factored in, namely the
obstruction by the motorcyclist's body, and the gripping of pillion
handles. Neither assumption was
evidence-based. Accordingly counsel
invited the court to accept Mr Wear's evidence together with a modified
version of Mr. Alexander's evidence, and to conclude that the motorcycle was
travelling at a speed of about 40 miles per hour.
Whether
the driver's sight-line was obstructed
[26] Counsel invited the
court to find that there were no parked cars interfering with the car-driver's
view to the right. Mr Wear's
evidence on that matter was clear and unchallenged, and was to some extent
supported by the fact that the second defender had not mentioned any parked
cars obstructing his vision when speaking to Constable Muir. As for the constable's evidence that there
had been two cars parked to the south of Blair Drive on the west side of
Townhill Road, counsel submitted that esto
that evidence was accepted, the constable had arrived at the scene some
minutes after the accident: the cars to
which he was referring must have appeared after the accident had occurred.
The
noise of the motorcycle
[27] It was submitted that
the pursuer was entitled to rely upon the motorcycle noise and its possible
warning effect. The second defender's
objection to the line of evidence, made in the course of the proof, should be repelled
for three reasons:
(i) The question
of noise had been raised spontaneously by the eye-witness Mr Wear in his
evidence-in-chief. Counsel for the
second defender and the MIB had then thoroughly explored the issue in
cross-examination. Further in re-examination,
a clear line had been adopted on behalf of the pursuer in order to demonstrate
that if Mr Wear could hear the noise from a distance of 117 metres from
the collision point, then the second defender could surely hear it. No objection had been taken to any of that
evidence. It was only during Mr.
Alexander's evidence that an objection had been taken to the line.
(ii) The
evidence about motorcycle noise was significant. In the absence of an explanation from the
second defender, one was left with several possible options. For example, the driver may have heard the
noise, but chosen to drive out not knowing where the sound was coming from, and
ignoring the real possibility that a motorcycle might be travelling towards
him. Another possibility was that the
driver was not paying sufficient attention, and did not notice the noise until
it was too late. Any option which could
be envisaged indicated fault.
(iii) The
pursuer was entitled in law to build a case in part based on motorcycle noise as
(a) the averments in Article IV of Condescendence at page 15 of the Record were
sufficiently wide to include a case about the effect of such noise on the
driver's duty of care: cf. Adamson v Roberts, 1951 S.L.T. 355, Lord
President Cooper at page 356. (b) The
objection came too late: cf. McGlone v British Railways Board, 1966
S.C. (H.L.) 1, at pages 12 to 14. (c) In
any event, the question of noise was merely a variation or development of the
existing case: cf. Burns v Dixon's Ironworks, 1961 S.C. 102. Counsel moved to amend the Record at page 8C
by inserting after the words "The first defender would have been visible to the
second defender before he drove to the point of the collision" the words "The
sound of the motorcycle engine was or ought to have been audible to the second
defender before he drove into Townhill Road from Blair Drive". Counsel also moved to amend at page 15A-B, by
inserting after the words "In particular it was his duty not to move into Townhill
Road until it was safe to do so" the words "It was his duty to listen out for
and to notice the sound of the first defender's motorcycle while he was
stationary at the junction of Townhill Road and Blair Drive". There was no prejudice to the second defender
in allowing the amendment, as he could have dealt with the question of noise by
giving evidence about it.
Fault
[28] Counsel submitted that
the all-pervasive consideration was that priority had to be given to traffic on
Townhill Road. The Highway Code was relevant, as provided by
section 38(7) of the Road Traffic Act 1988, and in particular paragraphs 146,
156, and 187 of the Code. The Code gave
explicit warnings about looking out for motorcycles.
Fault,
if no cars obstructed the driver's sight-line
[29] If no cars obstructed the second defender's view, he had 75
metres of clear visibility down the north-bound carriageway. He would have over 4 seconds of visibility if
a motorcycle was travelling north at 41 miles per hour, and 3.75 seconds if the
motorcycle's speed was 45 miles per hour.
Either provided ample time within which to complete the crossing of the
north-bound carriageway if no motorcycle had been in view at the start of the
manoeuvre. The collision therefore meant
either that the second defender did not notice the motorcycle in his view, or
alternatively that he started his manoeuvre before the motorcycle was in his
view but took an inordinate amount of time to cross the road. Also the second defender should not have cut
the corner, as that prolonged his time in the north-bound carriageway. In all the circumstances, the second defender
had been negligent, and had failed to keep a proper lookout and to avoid a
collision.
[30] If the court did not accept those submissions, the pursuer was
entitled to rely on the motorcycle noise.
It was obvious that if the second defender could hear the motorcycle,
but could not see it, he should have waited to see if it was travelling north
towards him.
Fault,
if one or more cars obstructed the driver's sight-line
[31] If, on the other hand,
the court held that two cars had been parked south of Blair
Drive as Constable Muir stated in evidence,
counsel accepted that the second defender's line of sight would be considerably
less, probably about 50 metres. That
presented a very considerable hazard, and it was all the more important for the
second defender to take great care when emerging. In such circumstances, Mr Alexander
suggested that the driver should have turned left, or should have edged out in
a "stop-start" manner. The driver should
therefore have gone a certain distance for a better view before completely
obstructing the north-bound carriageway.
The second defender had not done so, and was therefore negligent.
[32] If necessary, counsel would again rely upon the motorcycle
noise, which was all the more significant if the driver's vision was restricted
by parked cars.
Contributory
negligence
[33] Counsel accepted that
the court should hold that it was likely that the pursuer's injuries would have
been less severe if the helmet had remained on his head. However it was going too far to say that the
pursuer had demonstrated a reckless disregard for his own safety. The pursuer had borrowed the helmet. It was not known whether it fitted him
properly. He had been keen to fasten the
borrowed helmet, and had got the assistance of the first defender to do
so. A badly-fitting helmet could come
off, even if the chin straps were fastened.
It was not known whether at the time of the accident the straps were
fastened or unfastened. One could not
rule out the possibility that a helmet might be too big, and might come off
even if the straps were fastened.
[34] When quantifying the reduction in damages to reflect
contributory negligence, the approach adopted in Hitchens v Berkshire County Council, Bingham's Motor Claims (11th
ed.) page 236, cited on behalf of the second defender, should not be
followed. Hitchens was wrong in principle, and contrary to authority. The judge had ignored the important
consideration that the pursuer was not to blame for the accident. The pursuer would not have suffered any
injury had the defenders not been negligent.
Accordingly the defenders should take the lion's share of the responsibility
for injury to the pursuer. That approach
had been adopted in O'Connell v Jackson [1972] 1 QB 270, Edmund Davies L.J. at pages 274E to 275F, 277B to 278A; Froom v
Butcher [1976] 1 Q.B. 286, at pages 286G, 295G to 296D; Capps v
Millar [1989] 1 WLR 839; and in
cases in the Outer House in the Court of Session.
[35] Wearing an unfastened helmet was not as bad as wearing no
helmet. The present case should be
treated as similar to a seat-belt case (cf. Froom
and O'Connell) but the court
should distinguish between the situation where a pursuer wore a helmet with
chin straps not securely fastened and the situation where a pursuer wore no
helmet. If the court were to make a
finding of contributory negligence, the percentage reduction should be 10 per
cent.
(2)
Submissions for the second defender
[36] Senior counsel for the second
defender contended that any observations from Ross and O'Donnell cit. sup. were
made prior to the Civil Evidence (Scotland)
Act 1988. The court should therefore be
slow to draw the inferences suggested by counsel for the pursuer. The second defender's position had been
clearly put in his statement to Constable Muir, and in his insurance claim
form.
Objection
relating to motorcycle noise
[37] Timeous objection had
been taken as soon as a case based on motorcycle noise appeared to be about to
be made. Standing that timeous
objection, and the lack of averments on record, the pursuer was not entitled to
make a case of fault based on motorcycle noise.
Obviously such evidence about noise as had been elicited could be taken
into account as purely background material.
Fault
[38] Counsel submitted that
an absence of challenge to evidence, such as Mr Wear's evidence about
parked cars, did not make that evidence credible or reliable. Constable Muir's evidence about the
parked cars was to be preferred. His evidence
was to some extent supported by what the pursuer was noted as having said about
seeing a car on the left (apparently reversing) as they neared the Spar
shop. If the court held that there were
two cars parked south of Blair Drive
as described by Constable Muir, then the second defender's line of vision
was undoubtedly obscured, and the situation facing him was a very difficult
one. However the suggestion that the
second defender should have turned left should be rejected: that manoeuvre would have placed the second
defender's car, a slow-moving vehicle, in the path of the motorcycle, producing
even greater risk.
[39] On the evidence, the motorcycle had not braked, but had driven
straight into the car. Furthermore there
had been an available escape route, namely the two-foot gap between the second
defender's car and the centre line, but the first defender had not taken that
route. The real cause of the accident
was the motorcyclist. Accordingly counsel
invited the court to assoilzie the second defender. If, contrary to that submission, liability
was to be apportioned between the first and second defenders, the level of
contribution attributable to the second defender should be very modest.
Contributory
negligence
[40] There was no evidence to
suggest that the helmet was faulty, or did not fit. The pursuer had clearly acknowledged that the
chin straps should be properly fastened, and that a failure to secure the
helmet was dangerous. The evidence
established that the pursuer's serious head injury would have been avoided had
he been wearing a securely fastened crash helmet. There was a great difference between
short-term concussion and permanent brain damage. Damages should therefore be reduced to
reflect the pursuer's failure to take care for his own safety.
[41] When assessing the percentage reduction, guidance could be
found in authorities such as Froom v
Butcher [1976] 1 Q.B. 286, where Lord Denning had apparently set a tariff
in seat-belt cases . But it was
important that each case should be assessed on its own facts, and it was
inappropriate to be restricted by a tariff.
Capps v Millar [1989] 1 WLR 839 was of assistance, but the level of blameworthiness in the present case was
higher, as the pursuer himself clearly acknowledged that a failure to fasten
the straps was dangerous. In the present
case there had been an exploration of blameworthiness: contrast with the case of O'Connell v Jackson [1972] 1 QB 270. The facts in the present case were tantamount
to not wearing a helmet at all. Adopting
the logical approach taken in Hitchens v Berkshire County Council, Bingham's Motor Claims (11th ed.) page 236,
and applying that approach to the facts in the present case, the court should
make a finding of 75 per cent contributory negligence.
Discussion
The
pleadings, the objection, and the proposed amendment
[42] The pursuer's averments focus on the visibility of the
motorcyclist, and the driver's duty to keep a good look out and to see the
approaching motorcyclist when at the junction of Blair
Drive and Townhill Road. The relevant averments are in the following
terms:
"COND. II ... The first defender would have been visible
to the second defender before he drove to the point of the collision ...
COND. IV The accident was caused or materially
contributed to by the fault and negligence of the second defender. It was his duty to take reasonable care for
the safety of other road users. It was
his duty to keep a proper look out for other road users. It was his duty to take reasonable care to
avoid colliding with other vehicles. In
particular it was his duty not to move into Townhill
Road until it was safe to do so. It was his duty not to block the carriageway
for traffic travelling in the opposite direction. He failed to comply with these duties and as
a result the accident occurred. He knew,
or ought to have known, that if he failed to fulfil these duties an accident of
this type would occur. But for his
failure to fulfil these duties the accident would not have occurred."
[43] A defender is entitled to fair notice of the case being made
against him. In my view the second
defender's preparation for, and conduct of, the proof, would have been very
different had the question of aural warning of an approaching motorcycle been
put in issue. For example, (a) the
leading of expert evidence on the matter might have been thought advisable, for
many reasons. One reason was
well-illustrated by the witness Mr Wear, namely the difficulty a person
might have in pin-pointing the source, proximity, or direction of any
noise. Other reasons can be
envisaged. Accordingly an additional
expert witness might have been instructed.
(b) The remit given to any existing expert witness (in the second
defender's case, Dr. Lambourn) might have been significantly wider, covering
the issue of vehicle noise in a city or town.
(c) The question of vehicle noise would no doubt be considered when
making the decision whether or not to lead the evidence of the second defender.
[44] Accordingly in my view the pursuer's averments are not
sufficient to entitle the pursuer to extend the case of fault to include the
noise made by a motorcycle engine and a duty (said to rest on a driver in a
residential area) to listen for sounds which might alert him to an approaching
motorcycle, even if he could not see one.
Nor do I accept that a case based on noise is merely a variation or
development of the existing case.
[45] Two questions then arise:
(i) whether the
second defender's objection to the line of evidence was raised timeously; and
(ii) whether the
pursuer should be permitted to amend his pleadings.
[46] The issue of the noise of the motorcycle was raised
spontaneously by the eye-witness Mr Wear, as part of his description of
events. Such noise featured in
subsequent evidence, both in the cross-examination of Mr Wear and the
subsequent evidence of Constable Muir, but in the context of clarification
of the sequence of events, during which other possible noises were being
explored (for example, whether there was any sound of braking). In my view, only when the pursuer's expert
Mr. Alexander was giving evidence did the pursuer's counsel's line of
questioning begin to suggest that the second defender, as a car-driver, should
have heard the noise of the motorcycle when waiting at the T-junction and
should have treated that noise as a warning, making him pause before pulling
out of the side road. At that stage,
counsel for the second defender made his objection. I consider that the objection was timeously
made, as in my opinion only at that stage were there clear indications that the
pursuer might be endeavouring to construct a case of fault based on motorcycle
noise.
[47] In relation to the question of late amendment, this action has
been in court since 2002. Witnesses such
as Mr Wear and Constable Muir have been available for
precognition. Against that background,
no good reason was advanced to explain and justify the introduction of a new
line relating to liability at such a late stage. Furthermore, I consider that the second
defender would be seriously prejudiced if the amendment proposed were to be
allowed at this late stage, for the reasons outlined in paragraph [43]
above. Accordingly I refuse to exercise
my discretion to allow the late amendment sought.
[48] At the time the objection to the line of evidence was made, I
heard submissions and allowed the line of evidence to continue, reserving all
questions of competency and relevancy.
Having heard the further submissions at the hearing on evidence, and
having formed the views noted above, I now sustain the objection. As a consequence, I shall not entertain any
submission relating to a case of fault dependent upon an alleged duty resting
upon the second defender to have heard the noise of a motorcycle, and as a
result to have been put on the alert such that he should have paused before
pulling out of the side road.
Findings in fact
[49] Having heard the evidence and the submissions, and taking into
account where necessary the guidance in Ross
v Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers and O'Donnell v Murdoch McKenzie & Co., cit. sup., qualified to
some extent by the enactment of the Civil Evidence (Scotland) Act 1988, I found
the following facts proved:
[50] On Friday 16 July 1999,
the pursuer went out with Kenny Thain, the father of his friend the first
defender. They were initially drinking
in a pub. It is not clear whether the
first defender joined them at that stage.
The pursuer and Mr. Thain then returned to the latter's house. They continued drinking. They consumed vodka and lager. The first defender joined them at some stage,
but on the evidence led before me in the proof, I am not prepared to find it
established that he drank alcohol, or was affected by alcohol. The pursuer stayed overnight. The next day, Saturday 17 July 1999, the group decided that they needed
more drink. The intention was to borrow
money from a man named Robert Hamilton, who lived at the Broomhead flats. The first defender decided to use a Kawasaki
305 cc motorcycle to travel to the Broomhead flats in order to obtain the
money, and thereafter to buy more drink.
The pursuer was to ride pillion passenger. The pursuer knew that the first defender had
only a provisional licence. He did not
think about whether the first defender had a motorcycle licence or whether he
was insured. The pursuer did not have a
crash helmet. However the first defender
provided the pursuer with a full face helmet, and helped the pursuer when he
had difficulty securing the straps under his chin. The two then mounted the Kawasaki
motorcycle, and travelled to the Broomhead flats. It was late afternoon, and the weather was
dry and sunny. There were no visibility
problems caused by either weather or lighting conditions. The two went in to meet Mr. Hamilton. The pursuer removed his helmet for that
visit. When he put it on again to resume
the journey on the motorcycle, I am satisfied on a balance of probabilities
that he did not succeed in securely re-fastening the chin straps. The pursuer and the first defender then
departed on the motorcycle.
[51] In the course of their journey, the Kawasaki
motorcycle travelled in a northerly direction along Townhill
Road. Townhill
Road ran through a residential area consisting of
houses and shops. It was a fairly narrow
main road, with a single carriageway in each direction. The narrowness of the road was on 17 July 1999 compounded by parked
cars on either side. Many small side
roads adjoined the main road at regular intervals. The speed limit in the area was a maximum of
30 miles per hour. There were long white
lines running along the centre of the road, defining the centre of the road,
but also warning drivers of hazards as set out in the Highway Code, paragraph
106 ("A broken white line. This marks the centre of the road. When this line lengthens and the gaps
shorten, it means that there is a hazard ahead.
Do not cross it unless you can see the road is clear well ahead and wish
to overtake or turn off"). One hazard to
which drivers should be alerted by the long white lines was the possibility of
vehicles emerging from side roads.
[52] At one section of Townhill Road,
vehicles travelling northwards had to proceed up a hill with a blind
summit. About 50 metres beyond the crest
of the summit lay the T-junction where the side road Blair Drive adjoined the
west side of Townhill Road. A driver
travelling up the incline could not see the T-junction until reaching the crest
of the hill. Similarly a driver emerging
from Blair Drive could only see a vehicle approaching from the right (south)
when that vehicle became visible at or approaching the crest. A little beyond the T-junction, and on the
east side of Townhill Road, was another side road, namely Lauder Street. Thus Blair Drive,
Townhill Road, and Lauder
Street formed a staggered junction.
[53] One contentious issue at the proof was whether cars were parked
on the west side of Townhill Road,
just south of Blair Drive. If so, the sight-line to the right for a
driver emerging from Blair Drive would be restricted. Ultimately, having heard all the evidence and
the submissions, I prefer and accept the evidence of Constable Muir. Bearing in mind that he arrived at the scene
within a few minutes of the accident, I find it proved on a balance of
probabilities that he saw the pattern of parked vehicles at the scene of the
accident as it existed at the time of the accident. Accordingly I find as a fact that there were
two cars parked on the west side of Townhill Road, just south of Blair Drive,
which significantly restricted the sight-line of the second defender at the
T-junction when he intended to turn right out of Blair Drive, and reduced his
sight-line to, at best, 50 metres.
[54] A further contentious issue was the speed of the vehicles
involved in the collision. In relation
to the Ford Orion car driven by the second defender, I accept the evidence of Mr Wear
on this matter. Mr Wear had good
reason to watch the progress of the car, as it was pulling out of a side road
to drive in front of him. Accordingly I
find as a fact that the Ford Orion was travelling at 3 or 4 miles per hour just
before the collision. In relation to the
Kawasaki motorcycle, I have carefully considered the submissions presented by
senior counsel for the pursuer.
Nevertheless I saw no reason to take issue with the meticulous
measurements, calculations, and analysis carried out by the experienced road
traffic expert led on behalf of the pursuer, namely Mr. Alexander. The eye-witness Mr Wear had, at best, a
fleeting glimpse of the motorcycle before the collision. Similarly the second defender had only a very
short time within which to assess the motorcycle's speed. Accordingly I prefer the unmodified evidence
of Mr. Alexander, and find as a fact that the Kawasaki
motorcycle was travelling at about 45 miles per hour just before the collision.
[55] In terms of section 2 of the Civil Evidence (Scotland)
Act 1988, I am entitled to take hearsay evidence into account. The second defender's police statement, noted
in paragraph [8] above, represents his account given almost immediately after
the accident, at a time when his memory of events must have been fresh. His account was in many respects corroborated
by the evidence of the eye-witness, Mr Wear. With the exception of the second defender's
estimate of the speed of the motorcycle (which I have commented on in paragraph
[54] above) I see no reason to reject any of the second defender's account as
given to Constable Muir.
Accordingly I further find in fact that at about 17.45 p.m. on Saturday
17 July 1999, the second defender drove his Ford Orion car in an easterly
direction along Blair Drive. He stopped
at the Give Way lines at the T-junction with Townhill Road for about five
seconds, during which he checked whether the road was clear to the left and to
the right. Because of all the
circumstances, including the blind summit, the obstructed sight-line caused by
the parked cars, and the speed at which the motorcycle was travelling, the
second defender did not see any motorcycle to his right before beginning his
manoeuvre of driving out from the side road.
He accordingly committed himself to the manoeuvre, and moved out into
the main road at a continuous speed of about 3 or 4 miles per hour, cutting the
corner of Blair Drive to some extent as he did so. Very shortly thereafter, when the front of
his car was about two feet short of the centre-line of the carriageway, he
caught sight of a motorcycle speeding towards him from his right on Townhill
Road. He
braked. However the second defender, who
was riding the Kawasaki motorcycle at a speed of about 45 miles per hour, had
very little space (only 50 metres or less) and very little time (at most, 2.49
seconds, of which 1.10 to 1.30 seconds would be required for reaction time)
within which to react and take evasive action.
In the result, the first defender was unable to avoid the car. The motorcycle collided with the car. The first defender was thrown onto the
road. His pillion passenger, the
pursuer, was thrown about 15 metres in a northerly direction. The pursuer's crash helmet came off because
he had not fastened the chin straps securely.
The pursuer landed on the southbound carriageway, to the north of the
bellmouth of Lauder Street. He suffered a broken leg and a serious head
injury when his unprotected head came into contact with the hard surface. Had the pursuer's crash helmet remained on
his head, his injuries would have been significantly less severe, and would
have amounted on a balance of probabilities to a broken leg and concussion.
[56] Mr Wear and others stopped to help. The pursuer was lying bleeding and in pain on
the roadway. The first defender picked
himself up and jogged away from the scene, still wearing his crash helmet. Mr Wear watched him go, bemused by his
departure.
[57] The police arrived within minutes. Constable Muir took witnesses' details
and some statements, although other statements (such as those from the pursuer
and Mr Wear) had to be taken during the following days and weeks. The second defender was interviewed at the scene
of the accident, under caution. His
statement, as taken by Constable Muir, is noted in paragraph [8]
above.
[58] The pursuer was taken to hospital. He was diagnosed as suffering a broken leg
and head injuries, ultimately found to be a skull fracture and subdural
bleeding. As indicated in paragraph [20]
above, he eventually disclosed the first defender's name as the
motorcyclist. On 22 September 1999, when the first
defender was cautioned and charged with a breach of section 3 of the Road
Traffic Act 1988 (careless driving), he replied: "I probably was going a bit faster than I
should have".
Liability
[59] In my opinion, the primary cause of the accident was the
excessive speed at which the first defender was riding the Kawasaki
motorcycle. The first defender was
travelling at about 45 miles per hour in a residential area with shops, houses,
pedestrians and vehicles, where the maximum legal speed was 30 miles per
hour. Furthermore, he was travelling at
45 miles per hour, despite the particular circumstances and inherent hazards at
the locus, all as described in paragraphs [51] and [52] above. Those circumstances and hazards included a
fairly narrow main road, with a single carriageway in each direction; parked
cars on either side, reducing the width of the road even further; many small
side roads from which traffic might emerge;
and a blind summit just south of the point in Townhill
Road where the collision occurred. The speed at which the first defender was
travelling was, in all the circumstances, dangerous. It gave neither him, nor other road users,
sufficient time to react. It was
entirely foreseeable in the circumstances that an accident of some sort might
occur because of the speed at which he was travelling. In the particular circumstances which
occurred, the speed at which he was travelling when he crested the blind summit
meant that he had very little space (50 metres or less) and very little time
(2.49 seconds) within which to react and take evasive action when he noticed
the obstacle in his way. The evidence
established that an average time for reaction would be within the range 1.10 to
1.30 seconds, leaving the first defender just over a second within which to try
to avoid the car. Thus with reference to
Article 3 of Condescendence, I find that the first defender failed in his duty
to take reasonable care for the safety of other road users. He failed in his duty to drive at a
reasonable speed. He failed in his duty
not to drive at a speed which meant that he was unable to stop within his
maximum visibility distance. He is
liable to make reparation to the pursuer for the latter's loss, injury and
damage.
[60] I now turn to the question of liability in relation to the
second defender. I accept that the
second defender had a duty to give way to traffic on Townhill
Road. With
reference to Article 4 of Condescendence, I accept that the second defender had
a duty to take reasonable care for the safety of other road users; to keep a proper look out for other road
users; to take reasonable care to avoid
colliding with other vehicles; not to
move into Townhill Road until it was safe to do so; and not to block the carriageway for traffic
travelling in the opposite direction.
However I do not accept that the second defender breached any of those
duties. In reaching that conclusion, I
have taken into account the following matters:
[61] I have found in fact (a) that the second defender stopped at
the T-junction for about five seconds, during which he checked whether the road
was clear to the left and to the right;
and (b) that because of all the circumstances, including the blind
summit, the obstructed sight-line caused by parked cars, and the speed at which
the motorcycle was travelling, the second defender did not see any motorcycle
to his right before beginning his manoeuvre of driving out from the side
road: see paragraph [55] above. In those circumstances, the second defender
in my opinion fulfilled his duties to take reasonable care and check that it
was safe for him to emerge. In relation
to the manner in which and speed at which the second defender emerged, I do not
accept that either can be held to be negligent.
Ultimately, counsel for the pursuer did not seriously contend that the
second defender should have turned left, and I agree that the second defender
was under no duty to do so. Senior
counsel nevertheless submitted that, in the event that there were cars parked
to the south of Blair Drive, the second defender ought to have edged out in
stages, in order to achieve better visibility en route while leaving passing space in the northbound
carriageway. In my view, however, the
continuous moderate speed of 3 or 4 miles per hour adopted by the second
defender cannot in the circumstances be criticised as a breach of the duties
set out in Article 4 of Condescendence.
As for the cutting of the corner when turning right, I was not
satisfied, on the evidence, that this slight lapse made any significant
contribution to the accident.
[62] In the result, therefore, I absolve the second defender from
any blame for the accident.
Second defender's plea of contributory negligence on the part of the
pursuer
[63] As I intend to grant the second defender absolvitor, the
following observations on his sixth plea-in-law of contributory negligence on
the part of the pursuer are purely obiter.
[64] Section 1(1) of the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act
1945 provides inter alia:
"where any
person suffers damage as the result partly of his own fault and partly the
fault of any other person or persons, a claim in respect of that damage shall
not be defeated by reason of the fault of the person suffering the damage, but
the damages recoverable in respect thereof shall be reduced to such extent as
the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant's share in
the responsibility for the damage."
[65] The court must make such a reduction in damages as would be
just and equitable, having regard to "the claimant's share in the
responsibility for the damage". That
involves not only causation (i.e. whether the injuries could have been avoided
or their severity reduced by the wearing of a seat-belt or a helmet) but also
blameworthiness: cf Edmund Davies L.J.
in O'Connell v Jackson [1972] 1 QB 270, at page 277G to
278C. What is just and equitable is not
therefore purely a question of medical or scientific causation: the element of blameworthiness may be highly
significant. There may be exceptional
cases where the failure to wear a seat-belt or a crash helmet is, in Lord
Denning's phrase "almost forgivable" (Froom
v Butcher [1976] 1 Q.B. 286, at page 296A).
In such exceptional cases, there may be no, or a very minor, reduction
in damages, despite medical evidence that all of the injuries could have been
avoided had the seat-belt or crash helmet been fastened securely.
[66] In Froom v Butcher, cit.
sup., at pages 295G to 296D, Lord Denning clearly acknowledges the two
elements of causation and blameworthiness.
In relation to the latter, he comments:
"If [an inquiry
into whether the failure to wear a seat-belt was entirely inexcusable or almost
forgivable] could easily be undertaken, it might be as well to do it."
Thus while Lord Denning goes on to
suggest that in most cases it may be
inadvisable to prolong matters by an expensive and hotly disputed inquiry into
the degree of blameworthiness, and that in such circumstances, evidence about
causation may point to one of three categories of reduction (nil, 15% or 25%
for the reasons he gives), Lord Denning did not rule that such an approach must
invariably be adopted in every case.
Indeed, in the dicta quoted
above, Lord Denning approves of an exploration of relative blameworthiness
where that can be done, with the clear implication that the percentage
reduction in such cases will not necessarily be nil, 15% or 25%.
[67] In the present case, there has been evidence relevant to the
blameworthiness of the pursuer. As
indicated above, the whole blame for the accident lies, in my view, with the
first defender. However when assessing
what percentage reduction in damages should be made in respect of the pursuer's
failure to take reasonable care for his own safety by wearing a securely
fastened crash helmet, which would on the evidence have made a significant
difference to his injuries (broadly speaking mild concussion and a broken leg,
instead of brain injury and a broken leg), the following factors are relevant:
(i) The wearing
of a crash helmet by motorcyclists was made compulsory in 1973, and was
compulsory on the day of the accident.
(ii) The pursuer
was well aware that it was important for his own safety when riding pillion on
a motorcycle that he should wear a crash helmet which was securely
fastened.
(iii) The
pursuer had made some attempt to wear a crash helmet, putting on one lent to
him by the first defender.
(iv) The chin
straps of that helmet were not defective.
Nevertheless, the pursuer had difficulty securing the straps, and needed
the first defender's assistance in fastening the clip.
(v) The pursuer
later took the helmet off at the Broomhead flats. He did not succeed in re-securing the chin
straps after the visit to the flats, despite knowing how important it was not
to ride pillion without a securely-fastened crash helmet.
(vi) The
pursuer's helmet came off in the accident because the chin straps were not
secured. His unprotected head then
struck the roadway.
(vii) Had the
pursuer's helmet remained securely fastened and on his head, he would have
suffered a broken leg and concussion, instead of a broken leg and a serious
brain injury.
[68] Against that background, the second defender's plea of
contributory negligence criticises the pursuer for his failure to fasten his
crash helmet. The plea does not extend
to knowledge on the part of the pursuer that the first defender had allegedly
been drinking heavily before riding the motorcycle, nor to knowledge that the
first defender was unlicensed to drive a motorcycle (contrast with the plea of
contributory negligence made on behalf of the MIB).
[69] Focusing solely, therefore, on the pursuer's failure properly
to secure the helmet which he was wearing, I found the guidance given by the
Court of Appeal in Capps v Miller, cit.
sup., of particular assistance. That
decision concerns failure to secure a helmet at a time when the wearing of a
helmet had been made compulsory (contrast with the earlier case of O'Connell v Jackson). I find the reasoning in Capps more persuasive in the circumstances of this particular case
than the reasoning in Hitchens, which
was a first instance decision concerning seat-belts in a case settled by
agreement before the Court of Appeal could give any guidance. Taking into account all the evidence in the
present case, I consider that a reduction in damages of 15% would be just and
equitable to reflect the pursuer's contributory negligence. Had the evidence and the second defender's
plea of contributory negligence extended to questions of the pursuer's
knowledge that the first defender had been drinking heavily, and that he had no
licence to ride a motorcycle, the percentage reduction would in all likelihood
have been higher to reflect a greater degree of blameworthiness on the
pursuer's part.
Decision
[70] For the reasons given above, I sustain the second defender's
third plea-in-law, and assoilzie the second defender from the conclusions of
the summons. It is my intention to
sustain the pursuer's third plea-in-law and grant decree in absence against the
first defender. However before I grant
any such decree, I shall put the case out By Order to enable counsel for the
pursuer to address me on the question whether the damages sought should be
modified to reflect any quantification of the pursuer's loss, injury and
damage. I reserve meantime all questions
of expenses, insofar as not already dealt with.