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Richardson v Mt Druitt Workers Club [2011] NSWSC 31 (10 February 2011)
Last Updated: 12 April 2011
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Case Title:
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Richardson v Mt Druitt Workers Club
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Decision:
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Statement of claim dismissed with costs.
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Catchwords:
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NEGLIGENCE - Civil Liability Act 2002 ss 5G &
5S - plaintiff member of defendant club - plaintiff climbed locked gate on
defendant's premises rather than return to the clubhouse
for a key and fell
sustaining injury - no duty of care - plaintiff's actions not reasonably
foreseeable - no duty to protect against
plaintiff's actions - contributory
negligence - no reasonable cause of action - proceedings dismissed.
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Parties:
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John Richardson (Plaintiff) Mt Druitt Workers Club
(Defendant)
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Representation
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Counsel: M Cranitch SC and A D Campbell
(Plaintiff) J E Sexton SC (Defendant)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: Carro & Associates
(Plaintiff) Lee & Lyons (Defendant)
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
Introduction
- The
plaintiff was seriously injured when he slipped and fell whilst climbing over a
closed and locked gate otherwise giving access
to the rear of the defendant's
premises. The defendant is a club of which the plaintiff was a member. He
frequently attended the
club for social activities and, for that purpose, used
the gate for access to the club and when going home. The gate, which had been
installed perhaps a year or so before the accident, was only about 200 metres
from his house and about 150 metres from the clubhouse.
The plaintiff entered
the premises through the gate but it was locked when he attempted to use it to
go home. He had never found
it locked before. It was raining. Rather than go
back to the clubhouse to get a member of the club staff to unlock the gate to
let
him out, he decided to climb over it and unfortunately slipped and fell.
- The
plaintiff has commenced an action against the club in negligence and breach of
contract. The defendant applies for an order under
r 14.28 of the Uniform Civil
Procedure Rules striking out the statement of claim as disclosing no reasonable
cause of action.
The circumstances alleged
- It
is not necessary to set out all the allegations of fact. In substance, the
negligence is said to arise from the following matters
-
(i) this
was the first time the plaintiff had found the gate closed and locked;
(ii)
the main entrance to the club premises was closed and the only open entrance was
on the other side of the building, which was
signed "No pedestrian access" [but
it is not alleged that there was any physical impediment to its use];
(iii)
it was raining on the night in question;
(iv) the defendant knew that
patrons would expect to use the rear entrance;
(v) steel bollards were in
place close to the gate that allowed the plaintiff to climb onto the gate when
otherwise it might not have
been possible and the gate was slippery because it
was constructed of metal and was wet;
(vi) it was foreseeable that someone
in the position of the plaintiff would attempt to climb over the gate;
(vii)
the defendant failed to ensure that the gate was not locked before closing time
and to provide an open pedestrian rear access
for the use of club patrons, when
it encouraged the plaintiff and other patrons to walk to and from their homes at
the rear of the
premises;
(viii) the defendant placed "the plaintiff in a
position where the only means of egress available to him was to climb the
fence";
(ix) there was no intercom at the gate to enable persons such as the
plaintiff to call for assistance to unlock the gate when the
defendant knew that
it was remote from the club and was, at the time, the only authorised pedestrian
access from the club;
(x) the defendant failed to warn the plaintiff, by
announcement of the club's public address system that the gate had been locked;
and
(xi) res ipsa loquitur .
- So
far as the claim in contract is concerned, it is alleged that there was an
agreement between the parties that, in consideration
of his membership fees, the
club would provide access to and from its premises through the rear entrance
and, for this purpose, the
gate would be kept unlocked whilst the club was open.
It is alleged that the club breached this agreement by locking the gate before
the club had closed so that the plaintiff was unable to leave the premises
except by climbing the gate.
- The
amended statement of claim, in effect, merely alleges that there was no other
means of "authorised" egress than the locked gate.
However, since, the gate was
locked, it is difficult to see how it could possibly be regarded as an
"authorised" or, indeed, any
mode of egress. Reading the pleading as a whole it
is not alleged (despite the language of paragraph 21(i) of the amended statement
of claim, quoted in sub-paragraph (viii) above) that there was no mode of
physical egress from the premises, so that the plaintiff
had to climb a fence,
or the gate in order to get out. Nor is it suggested that a member of the club
staff would not have unlocked
the gate upon request.
Additional
facts
- Mr
Cranitch SC for the plaintiff referred to several additional matters of fact
upon which the plaintiff relied. He said there were
two side entrances which
were signed "not for pedestrian access". He submitted that the path back to the
clubhouse was dark and potentially
dangerous and thus it was reasonable for the
plaintiff to attempt to climb the gate.
- A
photograph tendered by Mr Cranitch shows that the gate forms part of a fence
which takes the form of vertical parallel bars with
a horizontal bar near the
top and the bottom. Each of the vertical parallel bars has a "spear" top,
obviously to prevent or hinder
persons from climbing over the fence. He
submitted that the bollards, which served no apparent purpose, invited someone
to use them
to climb the fence; the photograph shows this submission to be
without merit.
Discussion
- In
Romeo v Conservation Commission of the Northern Territory [1998] HCA 5;
(1998) 192 CLR 431; (1998) 151 ALR 263 Kirby J stated at [115]:
[u]nless particular issues are conceded, it is highly desirable
that trial courts should approach such disputes [disputed claims in
negligence]
by considering, in turn, the standard questions [omitting 5]:
1 Is a duty of
care established? (The duty of care issue.)
2 If so, what is the measure or
scope of that duty in the circumstances? (The scope of duty issue.)
3 Has it
been proved that the defendant is in breach of the duty so defined? (The breach
issue.)
4 If so, was the breach the cause of the plaintiff's damage? (The
causation issue.)
6 (Where relevant) has contributory negligence on the part
of the plaintiff been proved and, if so, with what consequences? (The
contributory
negligence issue.)
- This
incremental approach was impliedly approved by Gummow J in Roads and Traffic
Authority of NSW v Dederer [2007] HCA 42; (2007) 234 CLR 330; (2007) 238 ALR
761and it is convenient to follow the steps set out by Kirby J.
The duty of care issue
- The
authorities clearly establish that an occupier owes a duty to all entrants who
are lawfully present on the occupier's land: Australian Safeway Stores Pty
Ltd v Zaluzna [1987] HCA 7; (1987) 69 ALR 615 per Mason, Wilson, Deane and
Dawson JJ at 621; cf Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty Ltd v ANZIL
[2000] HCA 61; (2000) 176 ALR 411 per Gleeson CJ at [17]. The real question
is the scope of the duty.
- In
Australian Safeway Stores , the majority described the duty of care owed
by the occupier of land to a lawful entrant as being to "take reasonable care to
avoid
a foreseeable risk of injury to the respondent" (at 621). This view was
cited with approval by Hayne J in Modbury at [112]. There is nothing in
the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant to suggest that any
"special relationship"
existed between the two so as to give rise to a more
onerous duty. It may be fairly said that the mere existence of a fence (for
such
the locked gate became) shows that the attempted climbing of it was foreseeable,
it being constructed in such a way as to indicate
not only the boundary of the
defendant's property but also to make it difficult and, indeed, dangerous to
climb. Its height and the
sharpened post tops comprised an unmistakeable sign
that an attempt to climb it was fraught with danger of serious injury. Since
it
was not designed to absolutely prevent the possibility that it could be climbed,
that someone might do so was plainly foreseen
and, given its construction,
likely to be hazardous. It may therefore be arguable, but only just, someone
might try to climb the
gate and, in this sense, it might be that the risk of
injury sustained by the plaintiff was not far-fetched or fanciful and therefore
was reasonably foreseeable ( The Council of the Shire of Wyong v Shirt
[1980] HCA 12; (1980) 146 CLR 40 at [48] (Mason J)). However, as Toohey and Gummow JJ
commented in Romeo (at [53]), "the risk existed only in the case of
someone ignoring the obvious".
- Here,
the plaintiff contends, in substance, that the defendant should have foreseen
that, if it did not warn him before he left to
go home that the gate was locked
or provide an intercom at the gate, he would try to climb it and thus risk
injury. So understood
such a possibility would in my view be rightly dismissed
as far-fetched or fanciful.
Scope of Duty
- If
there were a duty here, its scope needs to be identified, in the context of the
duties owed by an occupier to lawful entrants.
- In
Romeo , the plaintiff entered a reserve controlled and managed by the
respondent Conservation Commission and fell off the edge of a cliff.
The High
Court, in dismissing her claim, considered the nature of the duty owed by the
defendant. Toohey and Gummow JJ at [50] considered
that, whilst the Defendant
owed the plaintiff a duty of care by virtue of the relationship of occupier and
entrant, its scope depended
on "the action that a reasonable person in the
respondent's situation would have taken to guard against the foreseeable risk of
injury
which existed" on the footing that the occupier had to take into account
"the possibility that one or more of the persons to whom
the duty is owed might
fail to take proper care for his or her own safety" (quoting Nagle v Rottnest
Island Authority [1993] HCA 76; (1993) 177 CLR 423 at 431). But this does not mean that the
occupier "was obliged to ensure, by whatever means, that those coming onto the
Reserve would
not suffer injury by ignoring an obvious danger". This view was
adopted by Gummow J (with whom Heydon J agreed) in Dederer [2007] HCA 42,
where his Honour stated at [18]:
Secondly, whatever its scope, a
duty of care imposes an obligation to exercise reasonable care; it does not
impose a duty to prevent
potentially harmful conduct.
- In
Romeo Toohey and Gummow JJ went on to conclude at [54] that there was:
a duty of care on the respondent [the Commission] to take any steps
that were reasonable to prevent the foreseeable risk becoming
an actuality. But
reasonable steps did not extend to fencing off or illuminating the edge of the
cliff which was about two kilometres
in length.
McHugh J at [82], pointed to
the catastrophic consequences of a fall from the cliff and the likelihood that,
considering the proximity
of a car park, many persons might come close to the
cliff edge by virtue of its scenic attractions, and concluded that, unlike other
parts of the cliff where the possibility of a fall "might fairly be regarded as
so unlikely that a reasonable person would disregard
it", the defendant was
negligent for failing to fence that part where the plaintiff fell.
- It
is, in effect, the case of the plaintiff that the scope of the duty of the
defendant was either not to lock the gate or to provide
a more convenient mode
of getting a staff member to unlock it than requiring the plaintiff to walk back
to the clubhouse to obtain
assistance, especially at night in the rain.
Breach of Duty
- The
test for determining whether a defendant has breached his duty to a plaintiff
was stated by Mason J (as he then was) in Shirt [1980] HCA 12; (1980) 146 CLR 40 at 47 -
48:
In deciding whether there has been a breach of the duty of care
the tribunal of fact must first ask itself whether a reasonable man
in the
defendant's position would have foreseen that his conduct involved a risk of
injury to the plaintiff or to a class of persons
including the plaintiff. If the
answer be in the affirmative, it is then for the tribunal of fact to determine
what a reasonable
man would do by way of response to the risk. The perception of
the reasonable man's response calls for a consideration of the magnitude
of the
risk and the degree of the probability of its occurrence, along with the
expense, difficulty and inconvenience of taking alleviating
action and any other
conflicting responsibilities which the defendant may have. It is only when these
matters are balanced out that
the tribunal of fact can confidently assert what
is the standard of response to be ascribed to the reasonable man placed in the
defendant's
position.
- In
the instant case, the breach is said in substance to arise from locking the gate
and, because there was no warning to patrons in
the clubhouse or an intercom at
the gate, failing to take reasonable steps to obviate the risk that the
plaintiff would injure himself
by attempting to climb the gate.
- During
the course of submissions Mr Cranitch SC referred to Caterson v Commissioner
of Railways [1973] HCA 12; (1973) 128 CLR 99 to support the plaintiff's
claim. In Caterson the High Court found that it was open to a jury to
find that it was reasonably foreseeable that an occupant of a train who was
assisting
a passenger aboard the train might jump off the train in order to
avoid being conveyed a significant distance, approximately 80 miles,
so that it
was negligent not to warn such a person that the train was about to leave the
station and give adequate time to alight.
Gibbs J said [1973] HCA 12; (128 CLR 99 at 111) -
Where a plaintiff has by reason of the negligence of the defendant
been so placed that he can only escape from inconvenience by taking
a risk, the
question whether his action in taking the risk is unreasonable is to be answered
by weighing the degree of inconvenience
to which he will be subjected against
the risk that he takes in order to try to escape from it ...
- It
is rarely useful to cite other factual examples in this area. Caterson is
significantly different to the instant case. The inconvenience faced by the
plaintiff here was not in any sense comparable to that
faced by a person in the
position of the shanghaied passenger in Caterson .
Causation
- In
a sense, the fact that the gate was closed and locked gave rise to the attempt
of the plaintiff to climb it, slip and fall and
suffer injury. However, it could
not be said in any commonsense way that locking the gate caused the plaintiff's
injuries. They were
caused by his attempt to climb the fence or, to put it
slightly differently, by the decision to climb the fence rather than return
to
the clubhouse to get a member of the defendant's staff to go with him to open
the gate. The failure of the defendant to warn him
that the gate was locked
before he left the clubhouse or to provide an intercom at the fence to enable an
employee with a key to
be summoned (or, perhaps, to unlock the gate by
electronic means), was not in any commonsense way the cause of his decision to
climb
the fence or the resulting injury from the subsequent fall. (Cf March v
E and M H Stramare Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 12; (1991) 171 CLR 506 per Mason CJ at 515 - 516,
Deane J at 521 - 523, Toohey J at 524). An instructive discussion is contained
in the judgment of Mason
CJ dealing with novus actus interveniens (
ibid at 517 - 518, omitting most references) -
The facts of,
and the decision in, M'Kew [v Holland & Hannen & Cubitts [1969] UKHL 12; [1970]
SC (HL) 20] illustrate the same deficiency in the ["but for"] test. The
plaintiff would not have sustained his ultimate injury but for the defendant's
negligence causing the earlier injury to his left leg. His subsequent action in
attempting to descend a steep staircase without a
handrail in the normal manner
and without adult assistance resulted in a severe fracture of his ankle. This
action was adjudged to
be unreasonable and to sever the chain of causation. The
decision may be explained by reference to a value judgment that it would
be
unjust to hold the defendant legally responsible for an injury which, though it
could be traced back to the defendant's wrongful
conduct, was the immediate
result of unreasonable action on the part of the plaintiff. But in truth the
decision proceeded from a
conclusion that the plaintiff's injury was the
consequence of his independent and unreasonable action.
The fact that the intervening action is deliberate or voluntary does not
necessarily mean that the plaintiff's injuries are not a
consequence of the
defendant's negligent conduct. In some situations a defendant may come under a
duty of care not to expose the
plaintiff to a risk of injury arising from
deliberate or voluntary conduct or even to guard against that risk: see
Chomentowski v Red Garter Restaurant Ltd (1970) 92 WN (NSW) 1070. To deny
recovery in these situations because the intervening action is deliberate or
voluntary would be to deprive the duty of any
content.
It has been said that the fact that the intervening action was foreseeable
does not mean that the negligent defendant is liable for
damage which results
from the intervening action ... But it is otherwise if the intervening action
was in the ordinary course of
things the very kind of thing likely to happen as
a result of the defendant's negligence. In Dorset Yacht [Co v Home Office
[1970] UKHL 2; [1970] AC 1004], Lord Reid observed [(at p 1030)]:
"But if the intervening action was likely to happen I do not think that it
can matter whether that action was innocent or tortious
or criminal.
Unfortunately, tortious or criminal action by a third party is often the 'very
kind of thing' which is likely to happen
as a result of the wrongful or careless
act of the defendant."
Much the same approach was adopted by this Court in Caterson [
infra ] where Gibbs J (with whom Barwick CJ, Menzies and Stephen JJ
agreed) pointed out [(at p 110)] that, if the plaintiff's action in
jumping from
the train was, in the ordinary course of things, the very kind of thing likely
to happen as a result of the defendant's
negligence and was not unreasonable,
the jury was entitled to find that the plaintiff's injuries were caused by the
defendant's negligence.
The finding that the plaintiff's action was not
unreasonable was then essential to that conclusion because contributory
negligence
was a defence in New South Wales at the relevant time ...
As a matter of both logic and common sense, it makes no sense to regard the
negligence of the plaintiff or a third party as a superseding
cause or novus
actus interveniens when the defendant's wrongful conduct has generated the
very risk of injury resulting from the negligence of the plaintiff or a third
party and that injury occurs in the ordinary course of things. In such a
situation, the defendant's negligence satisfies the "but
for" test and is
properly to be regarded as a cause of the consequence because there is no reason
in common sense, logic or policy
for refusing to so regard it.
In no sense
here could the decision of the plaintiff to climb the gate be regarded as in
the ordinary course of things the very kind of thing likely to happen as a
result of the defendant's negligence.
Civil Liability Act 2002
- The
above discussion does not materially differ from that which would be engaged by
ss 5B, 5C, 5D and 5G of this Act.
- In
my view, the risk that someone in the position of the plaintiff might attempt to
climb the gate rather than obtain assistance to
open it was not foreseeable in
the relevant sense, the risk that such a person might attempt to climb the fence
was inconsequential
and, whilst a reasonable person in the position of the
defendant might well have warned patrons about the locking of the gate, this
would have been a mere courtesy as a precaution against inconvenience and not as
a precaution against the risk that an attempt might
be made to climb the fence.
The probability that someone in the position of the plaintiff might climb the
gate rather than seek assistance
to open it in the absence of being informed
before he left the clubhouse that the gate was locked was so slight as to be
negligible,
the failure to warn or place an intercom at the gate would have
given rise to the likelihood of an inconvenient walk back to the
clubhouse but
would not have led a reasonable person to apprehend that a patron such as the
plaintiff might attempt to climb the
fence, the cost of warning was trivial and
the expense of provision of an intercom is to be contrasted with inconvenience,
not the
potential injuries from a failure to successfully climb the gate. No
question of social utility arises.
- It
is not necessary further to discuss the application of the principles of
causation as provided in s 5D.
- So
far as s 5G is concerned, it is inevitable that the plaintiff must be presumed
to have been aware of the risk of slipping and falling as he attempted
to climb
the gate. There is nothing alleged in the amended statement of claim that could
give rise to the possibility that he was
unaware of this risk. Warning is
immaterial. At all events, the gate was, by its very construction, a warning
that any attempt to
climb it was dangerous.
- I
should mention the terms of s 5S, providing that a court may determine
contributory negligence at 100% and thus the claim be defeated. In this case,
the plaintiff's
injuries must be regarded as entirely resulting from his own
foolish decision to climb the gate, an action which would have been
obviously
dangerous even in daylight but which must have been even more obvious at night
and in the rain.
Conclusion
- The
plaintiff's action is doomed to fail. It is "so obviously untenable that it
cannot possibly succeed": General Steel Industries Inc v Commissioner for
Railways (NSW) [1964] HCA 69; (1964) 112 CLR 125. In the language of UCPR r 14.28 there is
"no reasonable cause of action" disclosed. Accordingly, the statement of claim
is dismissed
with costs.
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