BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Moon v Garrett & Ors [2006] EWCA Civ 1121 (28 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1121.html Cite as: [2007] PIQR P3, [2006] BLR 402, [2006] CP Rep 46, [2007] ICR 95, [2007] 1 Costs LR 41, [2006] EWCA Civ 1121 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2007] ICR 95] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Bristol County Court
His Honour Judge Lambert
BS204043
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
SIR PETER GIBSON
____________________
Michael Moon |
Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
Paul James Garrett and Ors |
Appellant |
____________________
Glyn Edwards (instructed by Lyons Davidson, Solicitors) for the Appellant
Hearing dates : 11th July 2006
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
Introduction
The facts in more detail
The judge's findings
"Due to a combination of his moving back, due to fear of falling blocks and a slightly undulating surface, I find that he lost his footing, fell, rolled and went into the pit. A safety rail would have left him substantially uninjured."
"The unevenness of the ground was a slightly contributory factor to the fall, but the ground was not so uneven so as to found any liability in negligence and/or breach of statutory duty by virtue of its unevenness. A polished surface cannot be expected on a building site. Some degree of unevenness of ground must be present on building sites, and indeed the unevenness to be observed in the photographs can hardly be such as to give rise to liability for any tripping or slipping, based on a reasonable condition test for a building site."
"The danger of an unguarded pit in excess of two metres deep and with a solid base is self evident. The pit was, I find, close to an area where building supplies were going to be unloaded and where people were working. The traffic around it was regular and significant. This was not an isolated, private place where only a few might resort. The fact that it was only going to be left open and a hazard for a week and a half is of note, but the hazard was potentially an extreme one. The first defendant (Mr Garrett) was aware that the pit posed some danger. He had purchased and erected a warning fence and it was just that. It was quite inadequate, as I find it to be, to prevent people from falling in.
The first defendant (Mr Garrett) had instructed men to work in close proximity to the pit. He knew supplies were being delivered. He knew they were being unloaded in the vicinity by lorries. I reject the contention that this fall was an event so peculiar that it could be excluded from reasonable consideration, and I find that a fall into the pit is a reasonably foreseeable matter. (Mr Garrett) should have been aware of the proper requirements for safety, to the extent that a reasonable man would have been. He pleads ignorance before me. I accept his evidence of his ignorance but I find that he should not have been so. Reasonable care on looking to this pit requires a reasonable man in his position to see that visitors could have fallen into the pit. It may only be a risk of short duration, but it was reasonably foreseeable that the consequences could be catastrophic and in those circumstances anyone looking at this situation would reasonably have seen that it should have been guarded against. . . . The risk of stumbling, tripping, slipping, rolling, falling, or any combination of those, was plain and should have been self evident. The risk of very serious injury was blindingly obvious with a drop of this height onto a solid surface. It seems to me that it is plain that (Mr Garrett) was under a duty to erect a strong fence or guard around the pit, in such a way as to prevent a person stumbling, tripping, slipping, rolling, falling, or any combination of those, into the pit. That he failed to do. "
The submissions for Mr Garrett
"Where damage is caused to a visitor by a danger of which he had been warned by the occupier, the warning is not to be treated without more as absolving the occupier from liability, unless in all the circumstances it was enough to enable the visitor to be reasonably safe."
"In general, it is not a breach of duty for the occupier himself to undertake minor repairs such as fixing a handle to a door. Moreover, if he does so he will only be held to the standard of the reasonably competent amateur. However, he may be in breach of duty if he undertakes to do himself work involving such highly specialised skill and knowledge that an ordinary occupier would employ experts to do it for him, such as electrical wiring, the maintenance of lifts, the installation of boilers and the like."
"Each case of this kind depends on its own particular facts, to which the broad principle of reasonable care must be applied with common sense. The task of finding the facts and applying the principle to them is eminently a matter for the court of first instance."
(1) the building works were significant [paragraphs 39 and 16]
(2) that Mr Garrett was employing an architect.
She also relied on the fact that the 1996 Regulations, whatever their applicability as between Mr Moon and Mr Garrett, applied in relation to the work and as between Mr Garrett and his employees/sub-contractors on the site. This latter submission, as it seems to me, has dangers in that it comes close to circumventing the requirement that so far as breach of statutory duty is concerned the duty must be confined to those actually protected by the Regulations.
Discussion and Conclusion on the Occupiers' Liability Act
The Cross Appeal and the 1996 Regulations
"3 Application
(1) Subject to the following paragraphs of this regulation, these Regulations apply to in relation to construction work carried out by a person at work.(2) These Regulations shall not apply to any workplace on a construction site which is set aside for purposes other than construction work.(3) . . .4 Persons upon whom duties are imposed by these Regulations
(1) Subject to paragraph (5) it shall be the duty of every employer whose employees are carrying out construction work and every self-employed person carrying out construction work to comply with the provisions of these Regulations insofar as they affect him or any person at work under his control or relate to matters which are within his control.6 Falls
(1) Suitable and sufficient steps should be taken to prevent, so far as reasonably practicable, any person falling.(2) In any case where the steps referred to in paragraph (1) include the provision of -(a) any guard rail, toe-board, barrier or any other similar means of protection; or(b) any working platform,it shall comply with the provisions of Schedule 1 and Schedule 2 respectively.(3) Without prejudice to the generality of paragraph 9(1) and subject to paragraph (6), where any person is to carry out work at a place from which he is liable to fall a distance of 2 metres of more or where any person is to use a means of access to or egress from a place of work from which access or egress he is liable to fall a distance of 2 metres or more –a) there shall, subject to sub-paragraphs (c) and (d) below and paragraph (9), be provided and used suitable and sufficient guard-rails and toe-boards, barriers or other similar means of protection to prevent, so far as is reasonably practicable, the fall of any person from that place. . ."
"There is an application, which is contested, that the second and third defendants' costs should be paid by the first defendant. Obviously there should be a detailed assessment, if I find that they should be so paid. The first defendant denied liability in respect of this matter, and I find that the claimant then reasonably looked elsewhere and looked to his employer to bear some part of the responsibility for an accident which was certainly not the claimant's fault. He would not have looked to his employer had the first defendant admitted liability, as he should have done, as I have now found.
Mr Garrett blamed the employers in correspondence. See page 37 of the trial bundle. He denied he had insurance. He said that he is a man of straw, and then threatened to leave the country after refusing to identify subcontractors who, at best, he hinted, might be responsible and might give him a defence under the Occupiers' Liability Act. At page 118 of the amended defence we see the employer being blamed, and we see in the circumstances the first defendant trying to benefit from an allegation made against the employer.
In all those circumstances, it is fair, just and reasonable that the first defendant should pay the costs of the second and third defendants. In those circumstances I so order, it to be subject to a detailed assessment if not agreed. There is no contest but that the claimant's costs should be paid by the first defendant, there to be a detailed assessment of those costs if not agreed."
"17. Mr Featherby was not the pleader of the original or the amended particulars of claim, and only came into the case shortly before trial. Before us he argues that the judge should have made a Sanderson order requiring the first defendant to pay the second and third defendant's costs. He submits that under CPR 44.3: (1) the court has a discretion as to whether costs are payable by one party to another; (2) the court must have regard to all the circumstances; (3) the circumstances include the conduct of the parties, and whether a party has succeeded on part of his case even if he has not been wholly successful; and (4) the conduct of the parties includes whether it was reasonable for a party to raise, pursue or contest a particular allegation or issue.
18. These submissions are not controversial. They are taken from the relevant rule. But they omit the statement of the general rule in Rule 44.3 that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party (Rule 44.3(2)(a)), and the provision that the conduct of the parties to which the court must have regard includes the manner in which a party has pursued his case (Rule 44.3(5)(c)).
19. Mr Featherby drew our attention to the remarks of Keene LJ in King v Zurich Insurance Company [2002] EWCA Civ 598, at paragraph 33, as to the approach which the courts had adopted prior to the CPR but which this court was continuing to adopt, that is to say:
"... where a plaintiff had behaved reasonably in suing both defendants he should not normally end up paying costs to either party even though he succeeded only against one of the defendants."
. . . .
22. There is no doubt that the jurisdiction to make a Bullock or Sanderson order has survived the introduction of the CPR, though the exercise of discretion to make such an order must be guided by the overriding objective and the specific provisions of Rule 44.3. The jurisdiction is a useful one. It is designed to avoid the injustice that when a claimant does not know which of two or more defendants should be sued for a wrong done to the claimant, he can join those whom it is reasonable to join and avoid having what he recovers in damages from the unsuccessful defendant eroded or eliminated by the order for costs against the claimant in respect of his action against the successful defendant or defendants. However, it must also be recognised that it is a strong order, capable of working injustice to the defendant against whom the claim has succeeded, to be made liable not only for the claimant's costs of the action against that defendant, but also the costs of the other defendants whom the claimant has chosen to join but against whom the claimant has failed.
23. The court has a wide discretion over costs, and even where a claimant reasonably brings proceedings against two separate defendants and succeeds against one and fails against the other, there is no rule of law compelling the court to make a Bullock or Sanderson order (see Hong v A&R Brown Ltd[1948] 1 KB 515). That case demonstrates that the court must also consider whether it would work injustice on an unsuccessful defendant to make him liable for the costs of another defendant against whom the claimant has failed..
24. The circumstances in which the court makes such an order are stated in the White Book 2004, paragraph 44.3.8, as follows:
"Where a claimant sues two defendants in the alternative and succeeds against only one, the court has a discretion to order the unsuccessful defendant to pay the successful defendant's costs."
25. I stress the words "in the alternative". That accords with the way the jurisdiction is expressed in both the Bullock and the Sanderson cases, and by Lord Brandon, giving the only reasoned judgment in the House of Lords, in Bankamerica Finance Ltd v Nock [1988] AC 1002, at page 1011, where the fact that the claims against the two defendants in that case were in substance alternative claims, on which the claimant was bound to succeed on one and could not have succeeded on both, was relied on as showing that the court had power to make a Bullock or Sanderson order.
26. Such is the width of the language of Rule 44.3(1) that I do not suggest that the court has no power to order one defendant to pay the costs of another defendant, even when the claims are not in the alternative. But that is not the ordinary circumstances for a Bullock or Sanderson order. The judge had this in mind when she said that this was not a classic case for making the order.
27. A further factor in determining whether a Bullock or Sanderson order is appropriate is whether the causes of action relied on against the defendants are connected with each other. In Mulready v JH & W Bell Ltd [1953] 2 All ER 215, the first defendant had contracted with the second defendant to construct a factory for the second defendant. The first defendant employed a sub-contractor to do part of the work. The plaintiff, an employee of the sub-contractor, fell from the factory roof, sustaining serious injury. He successfully sued the first defendant for breach of duty under the Building Regulations for failing to take suitable precautions to prevent him falling. He unsuccessfully sued the second defendant for breach of duty under the Factories Act in failing to provide means to ensure his safety while working on the roof. The trial judge, Pearson J, made a Bullock order. This court set that order aside because the causes of action against the defendants were different and depended on different facts. Lord Goddard, giving the judgment of this court (himself, Birkett and Hodson LJJ), said this at page 219:
"A Bullock order is appropriate where a plaintiff is in doubt as to which of two persons is responsible for the act or acts of negligence which caused his injury, the most common instance being, of course, where a third person is injured in a collision between two vehicles and where the accident is, therefore, caused by the negligence of one or the other, or both. It does not appear to us that it is an appropriate order to make where a plaintiff is alleging perfectly independent causes of action against two defendants where the breaches of duty alleged are in no way connected the one with the other."
28. Mr Featherby sought to distinguish this case on the basis that the first defendant had not sought to put the blame on the second defendant; but, as is apparent from the passage which I have cited, that is only a difference in fact and the reasoning of this court did not depend on that.
29. I do not say that this factor is necessarily determinative, but it is a relevant consideration. The judge was of course fully aware in the present case of what was the cause of action on which the claimant had succeeded and on what causes of action the claimant had failed.
30. An important consideration which the court should have in mind when exercising the discretion whether to make a Bullock or Sanderson order is the reasonableness of the claimant's conduct in joining and pursuing a claim against the defendant against whom the claimant did not succeed. The case of Besterman v British Motor Cab Company Ltd [1914] 3 KB 181 provides the classic example of when it is appropriate to make the order. The plaintiff was injured in a collision between a taxi and a bus and did not know which was at fault, and sued the owner of the taxi as well as the owner of the bus.
31. A significant factor is likely to be whether one defendant puts the blame on another defendant. But as Mr Featherby rightly conceded, the fact that one defendant blames another does not in itself make the joinder of the other reasonable. It must depend on the facts available to the claimant, and in particular whether the claimant can sustain a claim against the other defendant. Defendants frequently blame others when things go wrong, but it does not follow that the claimant is thereby given liberty to sue the others at the expense of the defendant against whom the claimant succeeds."
"This letter is being copied to CHL Kendall because it is relevant to them. As an observer, there are criticisms to be made of both parties, and no doubt if this matter proceeds to Court, negligence will be directed to both Mr Moon and CHL Kendall. As in all such cases, accidents are not as per definition "by chance" but are usually caused by avoidable human errors of judgment, with usually no single cause, but rather a combination of reasons resulting in the ultimate event.
I trust that this statement will be of help, and I can confirm that for your purposes I do not hold any property insurance, and therefore please do not expect there to be a pot of gold at this end of Horsecombe Vale. I will promise you that I will vigorously defend my position, and although I have a Lawyer brother, I will not resort to using his services or any of the other Lawyers I use for my business affairs. Just accept that I am a man of straw, and there is no money within your reach."
Lord Justice Jacob : I agree
Sir Peter Gibson : I also agree