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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Phee v Gordon & Anor [2013] ScotCS CSIH_18 (14 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2013/2013CSIH18.html Cite as: 2013 Rep LR 79, 2013 SLT 439, 2013 SC 379, [2013] ScotCS CSIH_18, [2013] CSIH 18, 2013 GWD 11-235 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord ClarkeLord HodgeLord Philip
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First defender and reclaimer: Murphy, QC; HBM Sayers
Second defender and reclaimer: Primrose, QC; Cowan, solicitor advocate; Simpson & Marwick WS
14 March 2013
[1] The
pursuer ("Mr Phee") was seriously injured on 10 August 2007 when he was struck
on the left side of his head by a golf ball which the first defender ("Mr Gordon")
had driven from the 18th tee of Niddry Castle golf course ("the golf
course"). As a result Mr Phee lost his left eye. This significantly affected
the work which he was able to undertake and his ability to earn a living.
Parties agreed the quantification of his claim in a Joint Minute.
[2] Mr Phee
raised an action of damages against Mr Gordon for common law negligence and
against Niddry Castle Golf Club ("the Club") under section 2(1) of the
Occupiers' Liability (Scotland) Act 1960 ("the 1960 Act"). After proof the
Lord Ordinary found Mr Gordon and the Club liable to Mr Phee and apportioned
liability for the agreed damages of £397,034.82 as to 70% on Mr Gordon and 30%
on the Club. Both defenders reclaimed. Each submitted that (i) there had been
no breach of duty on his or its part and (ii) in any event the accident had
been caused by Mr Phee's sole fault or contributory negligence. Mr Gordon's
counsel submitted that, if each defender were liable, the club should bear a
greater proportion of the liability; counsel for the Club submitted that the
court should not interfere with the Lord Ordinary's apportionment.
The factual background
(i) Mr Phee's inexperience
[3] Mr Phee
was a very inexperienced golfer when he was injured. He had played golf on
only four previous occasions. He had not obtained a golf handicap. He was not
familiar with the rules and etiquette of golf. He had watched golf tournaments
on television and was aware that the shout of "fore" was a golfer's warning to
alert other golfers to protect themselves from a potentially dangerous shot.
He did not know the precautions that golfers conventionally adopted in response
to that warning. He had never played on the golf course and did not know its layout.
(ii) The layout of the golf club and the locus of the accident
[4] The golf
course was an eighteen-hole course which had been developed on a rather
constrained site. The course was correctly described as "tight" at various
locations where holes were located in close proximity to each other. It was
particularly tight at and near the locus of the accident. There was a
potential conflict between players on the 7th, 17th and 18th holes as the first
two holes crossed over the third. The 7th and 17th holes
were parallel to and beside each other. Each crossed the 18th hole
almost at a right angle and at points well within the range of a normal drive
from the 18th tee. Players had to observe informal rules of
priority to reduce the danger of hitting other players with their golf balls at
those crossing points. But that was not the only danger which the locus posed.
[5] The 18th
tee was situated beside Niddry Castle on high ground above the 7th tee
and 17th green, which were in close proximity on the left side of
the 18th hole and were linked by a bridge over a burn. The 18th
tee was approximately 6 metres above the 7th tee. That tee was
located about 150 yards from the 18th tee and approximately 15° to
the left of the normal target line towards the centre of the 18th fairway.
When players had completed the 6th hole, they walked from the 6th green
past a tree onto an informal path which ran along the edge of the 18th
hole towards the 7th tee. The path ran parallel to the adjacent
part of the 18th hole and was about 12 yards from the left edge
of the 18th fairway. The Club had placed a sign on that tree
directing players along the path to the 7th tee. The path was
within a 15° angle of normal line of aim from 18th tee to 18th
fairway.
[6] There were
no problems of visibility. People walking on the path from the 6th green
to the 7th tee could see golfers on the 18th tee in front
of them if they looked up in that direction. Golfers on the 18th
tee who looked towards the 18th fairway could see people walking on
the path towards the 7th tee.
[7] Mr Phee
was walking on the path and had reached a point about 15 metres from the 7th
tee when he was hit by a golf ball that Mr Gordon had struck from the 18th
tee. That point was approximately 12.5° to the left of the line from the 18th
tee to the centre of the normal target area on the 18th fairway.
(iii) The circumstances of the accident
[8] On 10
August 2007 Mr Phee was playing golf with three friends, Mr Steven Foster, Mr
Steven Gilmour and Mr William Jamieson. None was a member of the Club. His
friends had played some of the holes of the golf course on either one or two
previous occasions. The four friends, having played the 6th hole,
walked along the path in single file towards the 7th tee. Three of
them, including Mr Phee, were pulling golf trolleys. Mr Foster led the way,
followed by Mr Gilmour, then Mr Phee, and lastly Mr Jamieson.
[9] Mr Gordon
was a moderately experienced golfer. He was a member of the Club and played
about twice a week between spring and autumn each year. He had a handicap of
18. When driving he could often strike the ball about 200 yards. He gave
evidence that his drives tended to "fade" to the right. On the day of the
accident his playing partner was Mr Simon Flynn. Before he drove off from the
18th tee, Mr Gordon saw Mr Phee and his friends walking towards
the 7th tee. He considered that it was safe to drive. He gave
evidence that, as was his norm, he aimed his shot slightly to the right of the
normal target line. He intended his ball to land on the 18th
fairway about 200 yards from the tee. Unfortunately, he played a bad shot
which is called a "duck hook". The ball initially travelled straight then
swerved sharply to the left.
[10] The Lord
Ordinary recorded in his opinion a conflict of evidence about the shout or
shouts of warning that followed Mr Gordon's drive. Mr Gordon said that he
shouted "fore" and "get down" and that Mr Flynn also shouted "fore". Mr Flynn
recalled the same shouts. Mr Phee heard only one shout of "fore" and no other
warning shout. His three companions also heard one shout of "fore" and did not
remember hearing a second shout of "fore" or other warning. The Lord Ordinary
preferred the evidence of Mr Phee and his companions but did not think that it
was material whether there were one or three warnings. In my view the Lord
Ordinary was correct to conclude that it was not material; but I am satisfied
that Mr Gordon and Mr Flynn were correct in their recollection that there was
more than one warning shout. Mr Phee's clear evidence was that he saw Mr
Foster duck before he heard the shout of "fore". That would seem to be
consistent only with there having been more than one warning.
[11] Sadly, Mr
Phee's response to the warning contributed to the seriousness of his injury.
His companions crouched down low. Mr Flynn described them as "hitting the
deck". They bent their upper bodies forward so that their heads were at about the
height of their knees and two of them covered their heads with their hands. Mr Phee
did not. He leant forwards, placed his left hand in front of his face and
looked to see from where the ball was coming. Mr Gordon's golf ball came at
him from the left and struck the left side of his head, breaking his spectacles.
Glass went into his left eye.
[12] The Lord
Ordinary was incorrect in his finding that Mr Phee's three companions supported
his evidence that he ducked. First, Mr Phee agreed that he had bent forward
with his spine at about 45º and had placed his hand above his head about one
foot in front of his face. While Mr Phee used the expression "ducked", he also
physically demonstrated his response to the court as I have described.
Secondly, Mr Foster and Mr Gilmour did not see what Mr Phee did as they were in
front of him. Only Mr Jamieson saw him. He said that Mr Phee's head "went
down". Mr Gordon and Mr Flynn may have overstated the position when they
described Mr Phee as "looking up". But it is clear that Mr Phee did not
protect himself from the approaching ball in the same way as his companions.
This is not of great consequence as I consider that the Lord Ordinary was
entitled to conclude that it was not material whether Mr Phee ducked or looked
up.
(iv) The Club's safety practices
[13] The Club invited
visitors to play on the course and did not stipulate any minimum standard of
proficiency. It did not give visitors who played on the course a diagram of
the course layout on their score card or any warnings about how to protect
oneself from serious injury from a mis-hit golf ball.
[14] Mr George
MacLeod, who had been a member of the managing committee of the Club since it
opened the golf course in 1983, gave evidence that the holes that are now the 6th,
7th and 18th holes had been part of the original
nine-hole course. Their configuration had not changed when the course was
extended into an eighteen-hole course in 2003. He explained that the club
maintained an accident book and that there was no record of an accident in the
area between the 6th green and 7th tee since 1983. He
accepted that visitors were not told to report accidents and acknowledged that
he had not seen the accident book for approximately one year before he gave
evidence. The committee discussed safety issues but had not carried out any
formal risk assessment on the course.
(v) The Rules of Golf
[15] There was
some discussion in the evidence about the rules of golf. Both Mr Trevor
Homer, the pursuer's expert, and Mr Paul Thomas, the Club's expert, expressed
views on the meaning and effect of the rules.
[16] The
relevant entries in "The Rules of Golf" were under the heading, "Etiquette
behaviour on the course" and the sub-heading, "Guidelines on the manner in
which golf should be played". The four guidelines on the topic of safety were:
"Players should ensure that no one is standing close by or in a position to be hit by the club, the ball or any stones, pebbles, twigs or the like when they make a stroke or a practice swing.
Players should not play until the players in front are out of range.
Players should always alert greenstaff nearby or ahead when they are about to take a stroke that might endanger them.
If a player plays a ball in a direction where there is a danger of hitting someone, he should immediately shout a warning. The traditional word of warning is 'fore'."
Mr Homer expressed the view that Mr Gordon did not comply with the rules of golf because he construed the first guideline as a general statement that a player should not make a stroke if anyone might be hit by the ball. Mr Thomas disagreed. He interpreted the guideline as a more limited injunction to have regard to the safety of people in the immediate vicinity of the player.
The Lord Ordinary's findings of liability
[17] The Lord
Ordinary held that Mr Gordon had been negligent in driving off the 18th
tee when he had seen Mr Phee and his friends on the path between the 6th
green and the 7th tee. He considered that Mr Gordon, who had said
that he was having a good round that day, had been over-confident in his
assessment of his ability to strike the ball towards the desired target area.
He found that Mr Gordon should have appreciated the foreseeable risk that he
might play a bad shot, as any golfer does on occasion. As he was at best a
golfer of moderate skill he was more likely to play a bad shot than a very
skilled golfer. The Lord Ordinary referred to expert evidence that suggested
that a high proportion of shots landed in a cone extending 15° on either side
of the golfer's intended target line. He also referred to Mr Flynn's use of an
imaginary cone of 20° on either side of his intended target line when he
assessed whether it was safe to play. The Lord Ordinary concluded that Mr
Gordon had owed Mr Phee a duty to take reasonable care and he had failed in
that duty. He stated that for those reasons the primary liability for the
accident rested with him.
[18] He then
considered the liability of the Club. He criticised the Club for not
considering whether precautions were needed unless a danger had been disclosed
by a reported accident. He held that the Club had failed in its duty to
persons coming on to the course by taking such a restrictive approach to
safety. There was evidence that golfers, including Mr Gordon, Mr Phee and his
companions, would have had regard to warning signs or signs regulating
priority. He concluded that such signs either on the 18th tee or
between the 6th green and the 7th tee would have been
effective in controlling conflicts between persons in this area. It would be
for the Club to determine what signs were appropriate. But in failing to have
any such signs the Club failed in its duty to persons, such as Mr Phee, who
used the path.
[19] Finally,
the Lord Ordinary rejected the defenders' pleas of sole fault or contributory
negligence. He stated that Mr Phee was a novice golfer with only a sketchy
idea of how to respond to a warning shout. He had had only seconds to respond
to the warning. He held that Mr Phee's response should not be judged too
finely even if he did not duck.
The reclaimers' challenges
[20] Mr Murphy
submitted that because the Lord Ordinary had erred in his opinion, this court
could examine the circumstances of new. In summary, he contended that the Lord
Ordinary had failed to give sufficient reasons why the pursuer's injury was
reasonably foreseeable. He had misdirected himself on the evidence and had
failed to take account of unchallenged evidence. He had erred in his treatment
of the cases of sole fault and contributory negligence. He had given no
reasons for preferring one expert witness over the other and had failed to
determine the disputed interpretation of the Rules of Golf. Mr Murphy
submitted that the injury to Mr Phee was not reasonably foreseeable and that in
any event Mr Gordon had done all that was required of a reasonable person in
the circumstances. He submitted that, if both defenders were at fault, the
attribution of only 30% of the blame to the Club was insufficient in the light
of the practice of the membership which he said was to play off the 18th
tee when golfers approached the 7th tee.
[21] Mr Primrose
submitted that the risk of injury to the pursuer at the locus of the accident
was not reasonably foreseeable by the Club. Even if injury were foreseeable,
the risk of such injury was so small that the Club was entitled to disregard
it. There had been no history of accidents at the locus. Members of the Club
had used the path without any problems. The Club was entitled to rely on
golfers to play safely. The Lord Ordinary had given no reasons for rejecting
Mr Thomas's view that there was no need to place warning signs. Signs
establishing priorities between holes were not reasonably practicable as they
would create other dangers for players elsewhere on the golf course or slow up
the game unacceptably. The Lord Ordinary had also erred in failing to address
whether the measures that he supported would have prevented the accident. The
evidence suggested that signs that warned players on the path to keep a good
lookout would not. If both defenders were liable, an appeal court should be
slow to interfere with the Lord Ordinary's apportionment of liability.
[22] Mr Ellis
supported the Lord Ordinary's reasoning and also submitted that, if this court
were to consider the evidence de novo, there was ample evidence on which
to hold that each of the defenders had been negligent towards Mr Phee. He made
no submission on the appropriate apportionment of liability between the
defenders.
Discussion
[23] There are
several reported cases in which golfers or golf clubs have been sued when a
player has been injured by a ball struck by another golfer. Counsel referred
to Potter v Carlisle and the Cliftonville Golf Club Ltd 1939 NILR 114,
Lamond v Glasgow Corporation 1968 SLT 291, Brewer v Delo
[1967] 1 Lloyds LR 488 (HC), Feeney v Lyall 1991 SLT 156, Lewis v Buckpool Golf Club 1993 SLT (Sh Ct) 43, and Pearson v
Lightning 1998 WL 1044059 (CA). Each case differed on its
facts. In our view decisions on liability for common law negligence in
relation to golfing accidents are very fact specific. It is dangerous to lift
dicta from one case and apply them in another.
[24] This
case concerns a straightforward question of liability in negligence for alleged
failures to exercise reasonable care to avoid causing personal injury. As the
playing of golf on many courses involves potential conflicts between players on
different holes, it is not surprising that the courts have held that golfers
may owe a duty of reasonable care in their play to avoid injuring other people
on the course. Nor is it unexpected that a golf club should owe a duty to
exercise reasonable care to minimise the risk of such injuries in locations of
conflict by providing warnings or fences or taking other protective measures. But
the existence and practical content of such duties depend on the particular
circumstances of the case.
(a) The case against Mr Gordon
[25] We turn
first to the case against Mr Gordon. In support of his contention that Mr
Gordon was entitled in the exercise of reasonable care towards Mr Phee to play
his shot because the risk to Mr Phee was a small risk that he could reasonably
ignore, Mr Murphy referred to the well-known case of Bolton v Stone
[1951] AC 850. His proposition was that for liability to arise it had to be
shown that injury to Mr Phee was a likely or probable consequence of Mr
Gordon's driving off the 18th tee. A mere possibility of injury did
not suffice.
[26] Mr Murphy also referred to the leading case of Overseas Tankship (UK) Ltd v The Miller Steamship Co Pty [1967] AC 617 ("The Wagon Mound (No 2)"), in which Lord Reid explained the decision in Bolton v Stone. But that case does not support a simple dichotomy between a probable consequence and a mere possibility. As Mr Murphy recognised, it supports a calculus of risk in which the likelihood of injury is only one of several factors which the court considers.
[27] In The
Wagon Mound (No 2) the Privy Council was dealing with findings of fact that
included the finding that the defendants, who allowed the discharge of furnace
oil into Sydney Harbour, would have regarded the ignition of such oil on water
as a possibility but one which could become an actuality only in very
exceptional circumstances. The Privy Council found the defendants liable in
negligence. Lord Reid, who gave the judgment, stated (642F-643A):
"In their Lordships' judgment Bolton v Stone did not alter the general principle that a person must be regarded as negligent if he does not take steps to eliminate a risk which he knows or ought to know is a real risk and not a mere possibility which would never influence the mind of a reasonable man. What that decision did was to recognise and give effect to the qualification that it is justifiable not to take steps to eliminate a real risk if it is small and if the circumstances are such that a reasonable man, careful of the safety of his neighbour, would think it right to neglect it."
In our view it is important to note that Lord Reid spoke of the justification requiring not only that the risk was small but also that the reasonable man would judge that it could be neglected. He continued (643G-644A):
"If a real risk is one which would occur to the mind of a reasonable man in the position of the defendant's servant and which he would not brush aside as far-fetched, and if the criterion is to be what that reasonable man would have done in the circumstances, then surely he would not neglect such a risk if action to eliminate it presented no difficulty, involved no disadvantage, and required no expense."
[28] In that
case the ship's engineers could have prevented the discharge of oil from their
ship without difficulty, disadvantage or expense. There was no question of
balancing advantages and disadvantages. In other cases the preventive measures
may involve cost and inconvenience. The court in assessing what reasonable man would do uses a calculus of risk. It weighs up (i) the likelihood of causing injury, (ii) the seriousness of that injury, (iii) the difficulty, inconvenience and cost of preventive measures and (iv) the value of the activity that gives rise to the risk. For an example of the court attaching weight to the social value of the activity that gives rise to the risk and the adverse effect which the preventive measures would have on that activity, see Tomlinson v Congleton Borough Council [2004] 1 AC 46, Lord Hoffmann at paras 34-37.
[29] The
decision on the calculus of risk has been described as a jury question. An
appellate court should interfere with the assessment of the Lord Ordinary only
if he has allowed a material error to vitiate his assessment. In our opinion
the criticisms of the Lord Ordinary's decision do not undermine his conclusion
that Mr Gordon was at fault to some degree in striking the ball on the 18th
tee.
[30] First, we
think that there is substance in the criticism of the Lord Ordinary's
assessment of the relative reliability of Mr Gordon and Mr Flynn on the one
hand and that of Mr Phee and his friends on the other. As we have said, the
evidence pointed clearly towards there having been more than one warning shout
and two of Mr Phee's friends were not in a position to say how he reacted to
the shout of "fore". But those criticisms have no bearing on whether Mr Gordon
was negligent in striking the ball. They may be relevant to a question of
contributory negligence which we consider below. We do not accept the
criticism of the Lord Ordinary for not dealing with Mr Flynn's evidence. His
account of the accident appeared to suggest that Mr Phee and his friends
came into view only as Mr Gordon was striking the ball. It is not clear that
his evidence supports Mr Gordon's decision to drive after he had become aware
of their presence.
[31] Secondly,
Mr Murphy criticised the Lord Ordinary from failing to resolve contested
evidence on the meaning of the first guideline from the Rules of Golf
(paragraph [16] above). Able judges have shared Mr Homer's view (Simon Brown
LJ in Pearson v Lightning and Sheriff Principal Ireland in Lewis
v Buckpool Golf Club at 44L). We prefer the view expressed
by Mr Thomas that the particular guideline is addressing the safety of those
close to the player. But that is not significant. Even if we are
correct in our construction of the particular guideline, the four guidelines
taken together warn the golfer to have care for the safety of those in danger
from his ball, whether they are close up, players in front or greenstaff
nearby. They are general safety guidelines which should be construed
liberally. In any event, they are merely part of the background and context in
the court's assessment of the duty of care and do not govern that
assessment.
[32] Thirdly, we
are not persuaded that there is substance in the criticism that the Lord
Ordinary erred in relying on non-scientific evidence based on golfers'
experience that suggested that most drives fell within a cone of 15˚ of
the target line and up to 20% landed outside that cone. He appears to have
treated the evidence with caution and to have fortified it by recounting Mr
Flynn's practice of allowing a 20˚ safety cone. We see no error in his
handling of this evidence.
[33] There was
also no need for the Lord Ordinary to rule on every issue about which Mr Homer
and Mr Thomas disagreed. Expert evidence is led to assist the court to understand
the circumstances of the accident and to provide information on relevant
practice. It is not the task of the expert to decide the question which the
court must answer; thus evidence on whether Mr Gordon should have played the
shot that injured Mr Phee was not competent evidence. There do not appear to be
other issues in Mr Thomas's evidence that the Lord Ordinary had to resolve
before concluding that Mr Gordon had not exercised reasonable care.
[34] The Lord
Ordinary did not record Mr Gordon's uncontested evidence that players had a
practice of remaining near the tree close to the 6th green or
walking on the path but keeping a good lookout when players were driving from
the 18th tee. That evidence supports the inference that players
were aware of a risk from using the path and that some golfers drove from the
18th green when people were walking to the 7th tee. It
is relevant to the Club's awareness of risk. There was no local rule that
players could not drive from the 18th tee when people were walking
on the path and no evidence that golfers were specifically discouraged from
doing so. But it does not negate the Lord Ordinary's conclusion that a golfer
of Mr Gordon's experience and skill should not have driven when he did.
[35] In our view
the Lord Ordinary was entitled to hold that Mr Gordon failed in his duty of
care to the pursuer in driving his ball from the 18th tee. Mr Phee
and his friends were well within Mr Gordon's range and not far off his target
line. Had the matter been open to this court to decide of new, we think that
his failure to ensure that, before he played his shot, the pursuer and his
friends were aware of his intention to drive and thus were alert to the risk
and to any warning shout amounted to a failure to exercise reasonable
care.
(b) The case against the Club
[36] Turning to
the case against the Club, we are of the view that the Lord Ordinary was
entitled to take the view that the conflict between players at the locus posed
a foreseeable danger and that the Club failed in its duty of care to players in
not providing warning notices. In a case under the 1960 Act, which uses the
test of reasonable care in the circumstances, it is appropriate to adopt a
similar approach to the calculus of risk as with common law negligence
(paragraphs [26] - [28] above).
[37] In
paragraph [34] above we record Mr Gordon's uncontested evidence of players'
practice at the locus to protect themselves from balls driven from the 18th
tee. That practice shows an awareness of a risk. Some of the Club's committee
members will have been golfers and must have been aware of the practice. It is
implicit in that practice that golfers on the 18th tee would drive
when players were using the path. The Club did not need a record of a reported
accident at the locus to be put on notice of a potential danger created by the
layout of the course. The existence of previous written notice of accidents is
not decisive as to the issue. In any event, it was not apparent that the
Club's accident book was readily available for the reporting of such incidents.
[38] The Club
encouraged visitors to play on the golf course, whether or not they were
experienced golfers. It was not entitled to assume that the people walking on
the course were aware of the rules of golf or how to respond to a warning
shout. It ought to have been aware that some golfers would be beginners or
relatively inexperienced. It was not entitled to assume that all golfers would
play in a safe manner all of the time. While a timely warning shout would
often avoid serious injury when a golf ball was being hit a considerable
distance and there was time to react to the shout, there was a greater danger
if someone did not know how to respond to the shout or from where the danger
was coming.
[39] It is
correct, as Mr Primrose submitted, that the Lord Ordinary did not state what
sort of instructions should have been given. He recorded, correctly, that
there was evidence that Mr Phee and his friends and also Mr Gordon would have
obeyed instructions listed on warning signs. If there had been a priority
notice on the 18th tee requiring members to allow players on the
path to reach the 7th tee, play their shots there and walk away from
a position of danger, the golfers on the 18th tee would have been
delayed as would those playing behind them. But such a warning, if observed,
would have prevented the accident. It was not a costly measure and of itself
it would not have created a major disadvantage in relation to any disruption of
play. It was not incumbent on Mr Phee to prove that similar notices were
practicable at all points of conflict on the course without causing
unacceptable delay.
[40] If the Club
had included a warning near the 6th green that players should take
care when walking to the 7th tee because they were within range of
drives from the 18th tee, it is likely that most visitors would have
adopted the practice of the members either to stay close to the tree or to walk
keeping a good look out. Again this would have involved little cost and would
have entailed fewer disadvantages in terms of delay than a priority sign on the
18th tee. Mr Phee and his friends would have been likely to follow
the lead of Mr Foster. He said that if there had been a notice telling players
to wait close to the 6th tee, he would have looked out for the players
on the 18th tee and waited for them to tee off before walking on the
path. If he had seen the players on the tee when he was on the path, he would
have warned his friends to look out.
[41] We were
initially impressed by the suggestion that a warning at the 6th
green to keep a good lookout for danger from the 18th tee would have
made no difference because Mr Phee had suggested that he would have responded
in the same way as he did if he had had more time to react. But on reflection and
influenced by Mr Foster's evidence, we are satisfied that on a balance of
probabilities Mr Phee would have been more alert to the source of the danger
and would have responded more promptly as Mr Foster and Mr Gilmour did. Mr
Phee himself said that he would not have talked to Mr Jamieson but would have
paid more attention to the danger if he had been warned.
(c) Apportionment
[42] It is
unusual for an appellate court to interfere with the apportionment of damages
by a judge at first instance. If the Inner House is proceeding on the same
grounds of fact and law as the Lord Ordinary, it should interfere only if the
Lord Ordinary has gone wrong "manifestly and to a substantial degree" (McCusker
v Saveheat Cavity Wall Insulation Ltd 1987 SLT 24, Lord Justice
Clerk Ross at 29F-H; Boy Andrew (Owners) v St Rognvald (Owners) 1947
SC (HL) 70, Viscount Simon at 78).
[43] From the
outset of the appeal we have been concerned about the correctness of the
apportionment. We are satisfied that this court can and should interfere in
this case. First, the Lord Ordinary has not explained the basis of his
apportionment. Mr Homer expressed views on the allocation of blame. But
that evidence was not competent and the Lord Ordinary does not state that he
relied on it. Secondly, he has not recorded the practice of some of the
members of the Club to use the path when golfers are driving from the 18th
tee and thus the practice of golfers to drive from that tee while they are
doing so. That evidence provides a significant ground of fact on which the
Lord Ordinary did not proceed. Golfers of varying standards will have driven
from the 18th tee while players, including inexperienced visitors,
used the path. The risk of a wayward shot will vary according to the golfer's
skill. The circumstances which we have stated in paragraphs [37] and [38]
above suggest to us that the Club's failure to warn was a significant failure
which was of a different magnitude from that of Mr Gordon. As we have said, we
are of the view that the Lord Ordinary was entitled to find fault on Mr
Gordon's part. But we consider that some might judge his behaviour as not
amounting to negligence when the players were at a distance at which most could
be expected to respond appropriately and in a timely manner to a warning shout.
[44] In our view
the lion's share of the blame rests on the Club. We consider that the agreed
damages should be apportioned in the proportions of 20% on Mr Gordon and 80% on
the Club.
(d) Contributory negligence
[45] We are not
persuaded that the Lord Ordinary erred in concluding that Mr Phee was not
responsible for the accident in his failure to respond adequately to the
warning shout that he heard.
[46] The test
under the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945 is whether the person
has suffered damage partly as a result of his own fault. This does not mean
that he has failed in a duty to someone else. It requires simply that the
injured party did not take reasonable care of himself in his own interest and
thereby contributed to his own injury (Nance v British Columbia
Electric Railway Co Ltd [1951] AC 601, 611). We accept Mr Ellis's
submission that the Lord Ordinary's use of the word "negligence" was simply
shorthand for this concept and involved no error of law.
[47] We accept
the Lord Ordinary's view that Mr Phee's response to an emergency should not be
judged too finely. It would have taken at most 5 seconds for Mr Gordon's
ball to travel from the 18th tee to strike him. Mr Phee had less
time than that to react to the warning shouts which would have come only after
it was clear that Mr Gordon had mis-hit the ball. He did not know where the
shout of "fore" was coming from; nor, as a beginner, did he know how properly
to respond to the danger.
Conclusion
[48] We
therefore allow the reclaiming motion of the first defender but only to the
extent of altering the apportionment of liability between the defenders.
Otherwise we refuse the reclaiming motions.