Negligence
Negligence
Negligence
Law of Negligence
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❖ What you are expected to know.
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Definition of Tort
• The law of tort is primarily concerned with providing
a remedy to persons who have been harmed by the
conduct of others.
• The word ‘tort’ originates from the Latin word,
‘tortus’ which means ‘twisted’ or ‘crooked’ and this
signifies ‘wrong’. It denotes civil wrongs as distinct
from criminal wrongs.
• It may consist of either a wrongful act or omission
which is not authorised by law.
• According to Prof. Winfield, ‘tortious liability arises
from the breach of a duty primarily fixed by law; such
duty is towards persons generally, and its breach is
redressible by an action for unliquidated damages’.
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Features of Tort
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Different types of Torts
• Tort of negligence
• Defamation
• Nuisance
• Trespass
• Economic torts
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Tort distinguished from Contracts
1. Creation of duties
• Tort - duties are fixed by law
• Contracts – obligations are created by the parties
to the contract. They impose terms and conditions
themselves by their agreement.
2. Purpose of an award of damages
• Tort protects the status quo. It aims to restore the
plaintiff to the position he would have been in had
the tort not been committed i.e. to his original
position.
• In contract, damages aim at placing the plaintiff in
the position he would have been in had the
contract been performed. The defendant is liable
for not fulfilling the plaintiff’s expectation of
benefit from the contract. 6
Tort of Negligence
• 3 elements:-
1. that the defendant owes the plaintiff a duty of
care.
2. that the defendant had breached the duty of
care i.e. he had been negligent.
3. that the defendant’s action had caused the
plaintiff harm and the harm is not too remote a
consequence of the defendant’s action.
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➢ DUTY OF CARE
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DUTY OF CARE
• There is a duty to exercise care while performing a
particular activity.
• This duty is imposed by law – a legal duty.
• Example: Bill is driving his car in a busy town. He
knows that there are other road users e.g. motorists,
motorcyclists, pedestrians and there are even shops
and houses situated adjacent to the road. Bill knows
that if he does not drive carefully and if he fails to
keep a proper lookout while driving, he may cause
injury, harm and loss to the other road users and
even cause damage to property belonging to others
abutting the highway. Bill owes all of them a duty
to take reasonable care not to cause them personal
injury or damage to their property. 9
How to determine when a duty of care will arise?
• The ‘neighbour’ principle as stated in the case of
Donoghue v. Stevenson is used.
10
Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932]
Kay Donoghue and her friend went to the Wellmeadow
Café in Paisley, Glasgow which was owned by Francis
Minghella. The friend ordered and paid for a pear and a
bottle of ginger beer. The café owner brought their order
and poured part of a bottle of ginger beer into a tumbler
containing ice cream. The ginger beer bottle was opague.
Kay drank some of the contents and when she
replenished the tumbler, along with the ginger beer
plopped out of the bottle into the tumbler decomposed
remains of a snail. Kay suffered emotional distress and
gastroenteritis and was ill as a result.
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Kay sued the manufacturer, the defendant. She claimed
that D had a duty in the course of his business to ensure
that all empty bottles were carefully inspected and
cleaned before they were filled with ginger beer. Kay
alleged that David Stevenson, the manufacturer owed
her a duty to take reasonable care that the ginger beer he
manufactured, bottled, labelled and sealed, and invited
her to buy, did not contain substances likely to cause her
injury. Kay Donoghue claimed damages of £500.
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Examples of established categories of
negligence
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BREACH OF DUTY
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STANDARD OF CARE
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CAUSATION
• The Plaintiff must then go on to prove that it was the
defendant’s breach of duty that caused his loss
(causation).
• In proving causation, the ‘but for’ test laid down in
Barnett v. Chelsea & Kensington Hospital
Management Committee [1969] 1 QB 428 is used.
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Barnett v. Chelsea & Kensington Hospital
Management Committee.
Three security guards went to the defendant’s
hospital when they started vomiting after drinking
some tea in the early morning. One of the security
guards was P’s husband. The nurse on duty
telephoned the doctor who instructed the nurse to tell
the three men to go home and call their own doctors.
Later that afternoon, P’s husband died of arsenic
poisoning, and P sued D’s hospital for negligence for
its failure to treat her husband. The court held that the
doctor had breached his duty of care for not treating
the patient. It was however found that the doctor’s
breach did not cause P’s husband’s death as evidence
showed that the patient would still have died even if
the doctor had treated him. The hospital was
accordingly held not liable. 24
REMOTENESS
• Reasonable foreseeability test: The Wagon Mound
(No. 1)
• Whether the damage suffered by the plaintiff is
reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances?
• The type of damage or loss caused must be
reasonably foreseeable.
• Once it is established that the type of harm suffered
by the plaintiff is reasonably foreseeable, the
defendant will be liable even if the extent of the
harm or loss suffered is greater than what is
reasonably foreseeable:
Hughes v. Lord Advocate [1963] AC 837
• Example: negligent driving which causes injury to a
superstar.
• See also: Jaswant Singh v. Central Electricity
Board & Anor. [1967] 1 MLJ 272 25
Pure Economic Loss
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❖ Here, P manufactured steel alloys 24 hours a day.
This required continuous power. D’s employees
damaged a power cable, which resulted in a lack of
power for 14 hours. There was a danger of damage to
the furnace, so this had to be shut down and the
products in the process of manufacture removed,
thereby reducing their value. P also suffered loss of
profits. It was held that D were liable for physical
damage to the products and the loss of profit arising
out of this. There was, however, no liability for
economic loss which was unconnected with the
physical damage.
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Pure Economic Loss caused by acts or
omissions
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PROFESSIONAL
NEGLIGENCE
➢ DUTY OF CARE
➢ - Is there a special relationship
➢ that requires a duty of care
➢ from the professional
➢ to the plaintiff?
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The relationship between the parties was
"sufficiently proximate" as to create a duty of
care. It was reasonable for them to have known
that the information that they had given would
likely have been relied upon for entering into a
contract of some sort.
30
Negligent Misstatements
• Hedley Byrne & Co. v. Heller & Partners Ltd.
[1964] AC 465
a. The plaintiff/inquirer relied upon the defendant’s
information or advice;
b. The defendant knew or ought reasonably to have
known, that the plaintiff was relying on that
information or advice; and
c. It is reasonable for the plaintiff to rely upon the
defendant’s information or advice under those
circumstances.
32
The bankers for Hedley Byrne then telephoned the
defendant bank, Heller, inquiring about the financial
state and credit record of one of Heller's client
companies, Easipower Ltd. P was about to undertake
some significant advertising contracts for them that
involved a sum of £100,000 p.a. and wanted to be
sure of their financial security. Heller gave a
favourable reply about their client’s financial position
but qualified it by waiving responsibility, stating that
the information was: "for your private use and
without responsibility on the part of the bank and its
officials." P relied on this information and entered
into a contract with Easipower which went into
liquidation soon afterwards. P suffered losses up to £
17,000 which they were unable to obtain from
Easipower. P sued D for negligence, claiming that D
owed a duty of care to them and that the information
was given negligently and was misleading.
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The court found that the relationship between the parties was
"sufficiently proximate" as to create a duty of care. It was
reasonable for them to have known that the information that
they had given would likely have been relied upon for entering
into a contract of some sort.
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The case concerned an auditor (Dickman) who had
negligently approved an overstated account of a
company's profitability. A takeover bidder (Caparo)
relied on these statements and pursued its takeover on
the basis that the company's finances were sound.
Once it had spent its money acquiring the company's
shares, and company control, it found that the
finances were in poorer shape than it had been led to
believe. Caparo sued the auditor for negligence. The
House of Lords, however, held that there was no duty
of care between an auditor and a third party pursuing
a takeover bid. The auditor had done the audit for the
company, not the bidder. The bidder could have paid
for and done its own audit. Consequently there was
neither a relationship of "proximity" nor was it "fair,
just and reasonable" to make the little auditor liable
for the massive lost sums of money that the big
takeover had spent.
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• Caparo Industries have held that in general auditors
only owe a ‘duty of care’ to the company (as a legal
entity) rather than to any individual current/potential
shareholder or creditor.
The Law Lords said ‘that the purpose of annual
accounts, so far as members [shareholders] are
concerned is to enable them to question the past
management of the company, to exercise their voting
rights, if so advised, and to influence future policy
and management. Advice to individual shareholders
in relation to present or future investment in the
company is no part of the statutory purpose of the
preparation and distribution of the accounts’.
“As a purchaser of additional shares in reliance on
the auditor’s report, he [the shareholder] stands no
different from any other investing member of the
public to who the auditor owes no duty”.
37
James McNaughton Papers Group Ltd v. Hicks
Anderson & Co. [1991] 1 All ER 134, CA.
38
❖ Smith v Eric S Bush [1990] 1 AC 831.
P wanted to buy a house. She approached a building
society for a loan. One of the conditions of the loan
was that the house should be valued. The building
society instructed the defendants, a firm of surveyors
to inspect and value the house. But their fees were
paid by P and D were aware of this. D carried out
their inspection negligently. They said that the house
was worth £16,500. But it was not. Because the
chimneys were not supported and could collapse.
They did. The house was badly damaged. P would
not have purchased the house but for the D’s
valuation report. She had suffered financial loss
because of D’s negligence. She sued the defendants.
The House of Lords found in favour of the plaintiff.
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2 important features in this case. First, D knew that
the survey fee had been paid by the purchaser, P.
Second, D knew that the survey report would be
relied on by the purchaser/P in order to decide
whether or not to purchase the house.
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Park J who tried the action found for the plaintiffs.
He held that the defendants knew that their valuation
of the house would be passed on to the plaintiffs, who,
in the defendants’ reasonable contemplation, would
place reliance on its correctness in making their
decision to buy the house and mortgage it to the
building society. On that basis he held that there was
a sufficient relationship of proximity between the
parties. And, he ruled against the defence of
contributory negligence. This was because the
plaintiffs’ failure to have an independent survey done
was due to their reliance on the defendants’ valuation.
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Breach of Duty of Care
• Professionals will be judged on the standard to be
expected from a reasonably competent professional
practicing and specialising in the same field as the
defendant. ‘A man or woman who practices a
profession is bound to exercise the care and skill of
an ordinary competent practitioner in that profession
– be it the profession of an accountant, a banker, a
doctor, a solicitor or otherwise’ per Barabah LP in
Swamy v. Mathews & Anor [1968] 1 MLJ 138 at pp
139 & 140 (Federal Court).
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CAUSATION
• The plaintiff will not have suffered the loss or injury
but for the defendant’s breach of duty i.e. had it not
been for the negligence of the defendant, the plaintiff
would not have suffered any harm.The “But for” test
in Barnett v. Chelsea & Kensington Hospital
Management Committee.
• Reasonable foreseeability test: The Wagon Mound
(No. 1)
• Whether the damage suffered by the plaintiff is
reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances?
• The type of damage or loss caused must be
reasonably foreseeable.
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➢ DEFENCES IN TORT
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DEFENCES
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➢ VOLENTI NON FIT INJURIA
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VOLENTI NON FIT INJURIA
• It means that the plaintiff has consented or
voluntarily assumed the risk of injury.
• It is the law that no injury is done to one who
consents and no act is actionable as a tort at the suit
of any person who has expressly or impliedly
assented to it – volenti non fit injuria.
• A defendant will escape all liability to an injured
plaintiff if he can prove that the plaintiff freely and
voluntarily, with full knowledge of the nature and
extent of the risk he ran, impliedly agreed to incur it.
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Elements
1. Agreement by plaintiff to accept the risk of injuries caused
by the negligence of the defendant and that he will not bring
an action against the defendant if he suffers any injuries or
loss.
• Slater v. Clay Cross Co. Ltd. [1956] 2 QB 691
2. Plaintiff’s agreement must be voluntary.
Bowater v. Rowley Regis Corporation [1944] KB 476
3. Full knowledge
• Mere knowledge of the existence of the risk is insufficient.
The plaintiff must be fully aware of the nature and extent of
the risk of injury.
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“Volenti non fit injuria simply means that to which a
man consents cannot be considered an injury. No
act is actionable as a tort at the suit of any person
who has expressly or impliedly assented to it. No
one can enforce a right which he has voluntarily
waived or abandoned. Consent must be real and
given without force, fear or fraud. Mere knowledge
of a risk does not amount to consent. A motorcyclist
is not entitled to claim the defence of volenti merely
on the ground that his pillion knew of the risk of
injury or was willing to take that risk - it must be
shown that the pillion accepted for himself the risk
of injury arising from the rider's lack of skill and
experience or the rider's wanton display of
foolhardiness and showmanship”.
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REQUIREMENTS TO BE SATISFIED:
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• The plaintiff must have agreed, in addition to
knowledge of the risk, to have waived any injury that
might incur.
“Knowledge of the risk of injury is not enough. …
Nothing will suffice short of an agreement to waive
any claim for negligence. The plaintiff must agree,
expressly or impliedly, to waive any claim for any
injury that may befall him due to the lack of
reasonable care by the defendant: or, more
accurately, due to the failure by the defendant to
measure up to the standard of care which the law
requires of him”. Per Lord Denning M.R. in
Nettleship v Weston [1971] 2 QB 691, 701.
• The case concerned a claim by a driving instructor
who was injured by the negligent driving of the pupil.
The driving instructor had offered to give driving
lessons to the wife of a friend. Before doing so he had
inquired whether or not there was in force a policy of
insurance and he was given the assurance that there 52
• was and was shown a fully comprehensive policy
which covered a passenger in the event of accident.
The maxim was held to have no application as the
passenger did not consent to accept the risk of injury
or condone in advance the learner’s negligence.
The Master of Rolls added:-
“Applying the doctrine in this case, it is clear that Mr.
Nettleship did not agree to waive any claim for injury
that might befall him. Quite the contrary. He inquired
about the insurance policy so as to make sure that he
was covered”.
53
❖ In Morris v Murray and Another [1991] 2 QB 6. a
passenger suffered injuries in an aircraft crash that
killed the pilot. The facts of the case were as follows.
After drinking alcohol during the whole of the
afternoon, the plaintiff and his friend decided to go on
a flight in the friend’s light aircraft. The plaintiff
drove the car that took them to the airfield and he
helped to start and refuel the aircraft, which was
piloted by the friend. Shortly after take off the aircraft
crashed, killing the pilot and severely injuring the
plaintiff. In an action against the pilot’s personal
representatives for personal injuries, the trial judge, in
giving judgement for the plaintiff, held that the
defendants had succeeded on their plea of
contributory negligence but not their alternative plea
of volenti non fit injuria.
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The Court of Appeal in allowing the defendant’s
appeal, held that the plaintiff willingly embarked
upon the flight, knowing that the pilot was so drunk
as to be incapable of discharging a normal duty of
care; that the danger in embarking upon the flight was
both obvious and great and the plaintiff was not so
drunk as to be incapable of appreciating the nature
and extent of the risk involved, and, therefore, he was
to be taken to have fully accepted the risk of serious
injury and implicitly discharged the pilot from
liability for negligence in relation to the flying of the
aircraft; and that, accordingly, the maxim volenti non
fit injuria applied as a defence to the plaintiff’s claim.
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2. Plaintiff’s agreement must be voluntary.
• The plaintiff must be able to choose freely and
wisely without any feeling of constraint when
giving his consent. He must not be subject to any
restrictions, coercion or duress so as to make his
choice forced and unreasonable.
Bowater v. Rowley Regis Corporation [1944] KB
476
3. Full knowledge
• Mere knowledge of the existence of the risk is
insufficient. The plaintiff must be fully aware of
the nature and extent of the risk of injury.
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➢
➢ CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE
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CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE
• Contributory negligence provides a partial defence
to a claim in tort.
• It is the plaintiff’s failure to use reasonable care for
the safety of himself or his property and so that he
becomes partly blameworthy as an ‘author of his
own wrong’. The test of contributory negligence is
based entirely on the conduct of the plaintiff - Lai
Yew Seong v. Chan Kim Sang [1987] 1 MLJ 403
• Contributory negligence is the failure by the
plaintiff to meet the standard of care to which he is
required to conform for his own protection and
which has contributed, together with the defendant’s
default, in bringing about the plaintiff’s injury.
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CIVIL LAW ACT 1956
• The defence of contributory negligence is found in
the Civil Law Act 1956 (Revised 1972).
Section 12 of the Act provides as follows:-
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(2) Where damages are recoverable by any person by
virtue of the foregoing subsection subject to such
reduction as is therein mentioned, the court shall
find and record the total damages, which would
have been recoverable if the claimant had not been
at fault.
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Elements to be satisfied
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• A motor-cyclist who fails to wear a crash helmet
and is injured in an accident may be held partly
responsible for the injuries which he would not have
received had he been wearing a helmet.
O’Connell v. Jackson [1971] 3 All ER 129
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❖ The High Court in Siti Rohani Mohd Shah & Ors.
v Hj. Zainal Hj. Saifiee & Anor.[2001] 1 CLJ 498
held, inter alia, that the nature of the injuries
sustained by the plaintiff must be of a kind that
would have been reduced had the plaintiff been
wearing a safety helmet at the time of the accident.
Jeffrey Tan J said:-
“….In not wearing a safety helmet, she was not
being prudent, for a reasonably prudent man would
foresee that the wearing of a safety helmet might
result in less harm being caused to him, whether by
someone else or by himself, if he is involved in an
accident or collision while riding a motorcycle. But
she did not sustain any head injuries, and the
wearing of a safety helmet would not have reduced
her injuries..”
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