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High Court of Australia |
BURNS v. LIPMAN [1975] HCA 2; (1975) 132 CLR 157
Negligence
High Court of Australia
Barwick C.J.(1), Stephen(1), Mason(1) and Jacobs(1) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Negligence - Motor accident - Collision between two motor cars travelling in same direction - Leading car turns right without giving indication or seeing car following - Other car overtakes without warning - Whether driver of leading car negligent.
HEARING
Hobart, 1975, February 12, 13. 13:2:1975DECISION
Feb. 13.
2. On 18th October 1970 a collision occurred on the West Tamar Highway twenty
miles from Launceston between a Morris Oxford car
driven by the appellant
defendant and a Toyota Crown Station Wagon driven by the respondent plaintiff.
The respondent claimed damages
for personal injuries suffered by him, alleging
that the appellant was negligent. The appellant denied negligence and
counterclaimed
for damages for personal injuries suffered by her in the
accident. (at p159)
3. The action came on for hearing at Launceston before Crawford J. who, on
3rd May 1973, found that the appellant was not negligent
but that the
respondent was. He dismissed the action, and on the counterclaim awarded the
appellant $200 damages. (at p159)
4. The respondent appealed to the Full Court of the Supreme Court, which
allowed the appeal, set aside the verdict of Crawford J.
in favour of the
appellant, and ordered that the respondent recover against the appellant
twenty-five per cent of his damages to
be assessed and further ordered that
the assessment of the respondent's damages be remitted to Crawford J. (at
p159)
5. From this judgment the appellant appeals to this Court. The question
arises whether any appeal lay as of right. Damages have
not been finally
assessed, nor was final judgment entered. The Full Court's order is thus
interlocutory. (at p159)
6. It is stated in the affidavit accompanying the notice of appeal that the
judgment of the Full Court was in respect of a sum to
or for the value of
$3,000 or upwards; that is to say that the damages to be awarded to the
respondent if successful would be in
that sum or upwards - and this is not
disputed. In the circumstances, since after an award of damages and an award
of twenty-five
per cent thereof an appeal could be brought to this Court as of
right, and having regard to the matters raised in the arguments,
leave to
appeal is granted. (at p159)
7. The respondent suffered his injuries when the front nearside of the Morris
Oxford driven by the appellant collided with the offside
of the Toyota Station
Wagon driven by the respondent. Both vehicles were travelling south towards
Launceston. The road at the point
of collision was almost level. It had a
bitumen surface approximately eighteen ft wide with a broken single white line
down the centre.
The day was clear and the road was dry. There was good
visibility even though there was a gradual curve to the road for one hundred
yards back from the point of collision. On the western side of the road at or
very near the point of collision there was a house
on its block of land. From
the road to the land there were two entrances about eighty ft apart which gave
access through cuttings
in a two foot high bank which ran along the gravelled
side of the road. (at p159)
8. The respondent intended to turn into the driveway entrance nearer to
Launceston, that is to say the second of the two entrances
in the direction in
which he was travelling. By reason of his injuries, he could give no evidence
of what happened over the two hundred
ft of his travel along the road before
the collision or into which driveway he had commenced to turn. Crawford J.
concluded it was
the second driveway into which the respondent commenced to
turn. The respondent had been driving along the highway at an average
speed of
forty to forty-five miles per hour. He commenced to slow down, and changed
from third to second gear. He slowed down to
fifteen to twenty miles per hour
when he was still some distance away from the entrance to the house on the
right-hand side of the
road and he continued at that speed for some time. He
did not observe the appellant's car behind him. (at p160)
9. The appellant became aware of the respondent's car in front of her and
that it gradually slowed down from forty miles per hour;
she had been
travelling at about forty-five miles per hour. She drew close to the Toyota
car and continued at a slower speed behind
it for some time. She saw no signal
indicating that the Toyota was intending to turn right. She commenced to
overtake the respondent's
vehicle and when the front of her car was about
level with the back of the respondent's Toyota the Toyota moved over in front
of
her and commenced to make a right-hand turn. She veered to the right but
the collision occurred. She did not sound a horn to give
a warning that she
was overtaking - and indeed could not, because the horn of the Morris was
broken. (at p160)
10. The learned judge had a view of the scene of the collision, the parties
having agreed he could take into consideration as evidence
in the case what he
observed at and around the place of collision. Photographs were put in in
evidence of the scene, from which it
appears that there were several houses on
the right-hand side of the road as the cars proceeded south and some also on
the left-hand
side of the road, although those on the right-hand side were
closer to the approaching cars than those on the left-hand side. (at
p160)
11. Crawford J. accepted the evidence that no signal was given of the
proposed turn to the right. He also accepted the relative
positions of the
cars which we have already described as at the time the respondent made his
turn, and he held that when the Toyota
was turning to the right across the
path of the Morris there was nothing the appellant could have done to avoid a
collision. (at
p160)
12. The substantial question which the judge had to decide was whether the
appellant was guilty of some negligence in attempting
to pass the Toyota
without having given warning by sounding the horn that she was intending to
pass. He said that in his experience
it was not the usual thing on Tasmanian
roads for the horn to be sounded on overtaking in circumstances such as were
before him and
that a reasonably prudent driver in the appellant's position
was entitled to overtake when no signal was given by the overtaken vehicle
of
any intention to turn. He found that the appellant could reasonably expect,
though not with absolute certainty, that a driver
who was considering turning
to the right would signal his intention to do so and would look into his rear
vision mirror or to the
rear to ascertain whether it was safe for him to turn
to the right, particularly towards a private drive. He found that, in doing
what she did, the appellant did not fall short of the standards of care of a
reasonably prudent driver. (at p161)
13. In explaining his reasons for judgment, his Honour said that he could
take judicial notice of the habits of motorists in relation
to the sounding of
the horn when passing or commencing to pass another vehicle. We would point
out that, whilst a juryman or a judge
may bring to the resolution of a case
his knowledge of what usually occurs on a highway, that knowledge is not
properly to be regarded
as judicial notice. Its use in this case was not
appropriate to the determination of whether or not the appellant was
negligent,
but rather to the question of what the respondent was entitled in
circumstances to expect of an overtaking motorist. The respondent
could not
use the absence of a warning as a justification for not having looked to his
rear and for not signalling before making
his turn to the right. (at p161)
14. In the Full Court a contrary view as to the negligence was taken. It was
found that in all the circumstances the sounding of
a horn was a precaution
which a reasonable and prudent driver would have taken before attempting to
pass the respondent's vehicle.
The particular circumstance was the gradual
slowing down of the Toyota from thirty-five or forty miles per hour to twenty
miles per
hour, over a distance of some two hundred yards for no apparent
reason. It was held that this circumstance should have alerted the
appellant
to the possibility that her presence was unknown to the respondent, and that
it was sufficient to give rise to a query
in the mind of a reasonable motorist
as to the reason for it. (at p161)
15. The Full Court took the view that there being no roads or driveways
running along the highway to the left at the place where
the collision
occurred, and houses only on the right-hand side of the road, the appellant
when she observed the gradual slowing down
of the Toyota for no apparent
reason, was bound to have considered the possibility that the respondent did
not observe the approach
of the Morris Oxford, and the further possibility
that the respondent might turn to the right in order to enter a driveway of
one
of the houses on the right-hand side of the road. Accordingly, in the view
of the Full Court, it was negligent on the part of the
appellant to have
attempted to pass the Toyota when she had no means of warning the respondent
of the approach of her car. The Full
Court thought the appellant was not
entitled to assume that the respondent had seen her or become aware of the
presence of the Morris
Oxford car. (at p161)
16. As counsel for the respondent agreed it is essential, in order to sustain
the conclusion of the Full Court, to accept the view
that the appellant was
bound to observe the existence of the houses on the right-hand side of the
road with entry to driveways and
to have connected the deceleration of the
Toyota with the possible intention of entering one of those driveways. (at
p162)
17. In our opinion the question whether or not there was negligence in this
respect was a question of fact not involving any principle
of law, other of
course than that of the onus of proof. That question was not one upon which
such a certain conclusion could be reached
that a contrary conclusion could
confidently be described as a wrong conclusion. Failure to give warning in
circumstances before
attempting to pass might or might not have been held by
the trial judge to be negligence. The conclusion of the trial judge that
there
was no negligence was clearly not unreasonable. He applied his mind to the
evidence in a proper way and reached his own conclusion
in what he himself
described as a difficult case. We have already referred to his description of
the knowledge he had of what usually
occurs on the road but though that
description was not accurate his use of that knowledge was not improper in the
circumstances.
In our opinion no contrary conclusion could be reached with
such a degree of certainty that the conclusion of the trial judge could
be
described as wrong. That being so his conclusion should have been allowed to
stand. (at p162)
18. The question of fact could not be determined by the application of some
general rule that a warning must be given by an overtaking
vehicle. Whether a
warning is called for depends on the particular circumstances of the case.
Further it may well be thought that
it is expecting too much of the motorist
engaged in controlling a car to analyse the possible reasons for the slowing
down of the
vehicle being approached or to expect the motorist to observe
houses and entrances leading off the highway. In this case it may be
doubtful
whether the appellant could be expected to conclude, as the Full Court
apparently did, that in the vicinity there were houses
only on the right-hand
side of the road. What could fairly be expected of the appellant and what she
could fairly expect of the respondent
in all the circumstances of this case
were matters of fact upon which differing opinions could be held without
either opinion being
wrong. (at p162)
19. The various circumstances mentioned by the Full Court do not in our
opinion justify the conclusion that the refusal of the trial
judge to find
negligence in the appellant was wrong. (at p162)
20. The appeal must therefore be allowed with costs, the order of the Full
Court set aside and the verdict and judgment of the trial
court restored. (at
p162)
ORDER
Appeal allowed with costs. Order of the Full Court set aside, and in lieu thereof order that the appeal to that Court be dismissed with costs.
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