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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Vaughan v Ministry of Defence [2015] EWHC 1404 (QB) (20 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/1404.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1404 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Spencer Vaughan |
Claimant |
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- v - |
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Ministry of Defence |
Defendant |
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Mr Malcolm Sheehan QC and Mr James Williams (instructed by GLS) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 6-8 May 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice William Davis:
Introduction
• How it was that Marine Vaughan sustained his injury.
• The duty owed to Marine Vaughan in the particular circumstances of the accident.
• Whether there was a breach of such duty as was owed by the Defendant to Marine Vaughan.
• In the event of a breach of duty by the Defendant being causative of the accident, the extent to which (if at all) Marine Vaughan was contributorily negligent.
The accident
"On arriving at the beach I entered the water with 3 other colleagues and after walking out until the water was level with my thighs I then dived into the sea. I made sure that the dive I executed was a shallow one because the water was only about 3 feet deep. I went under the water and struck something with my head and immediately lost consciousness."
In the course of his evidence Marine Vaughan said that there were three Marines who had entered the water before him. They had run into the sea and, in doing so, had run through the middle of a family group – mother, father and young child. He had not run because of the presence of this group. Mr Vaughan also explained that, whilst he could be sure that he had not struck his head on a rock or some other hard object because he had not suffered any kind of cut or laceration, he could not say what it was that he had struck. When in earlier accounts he had referred striking a sand bar or sand bank, this was an assumption he had made. His evidence to me was that he simply did not know whether he had hit a raised area of sand or whether he had struck sand at the same level as the surrounding sea bed due to a misjudgement on his part as he executed his dive.
The duty owed to Marine Vaughan by the Defendant
"Physical fitness is a fundamental requirement for every member of the Royal Marines in order to ensure combat effectiveness, job performance, and general health are maintained. Furthermore, physical fitness is an indispensable aspect of leadership that is essential to the day to day effectiveness and combat readiness of the Royal Marines. The degree of self-discipline required to gain and retain high levels of physical fitness is inherent in the Royal Marines way of life and must be part of the character of every member of the Royal Marines. Royal Marines who are unfit reduce the effectiveness of their Units and detract from the overall performance and public image of the Royal Marines." (The emphasis is as it appears in the policy statement.)
The key to the legal analysis is to be found in the answer to the question whether Captain Jones owed Mr Radclyffe and the soldiers a duty of care when they were at the lake on 8th August. In my judgment, he did. He was the officer in charge of them in Germany and, in the context of the swimming party, it was fair, just and reasonable to ascribe to him a duty to take reasonable care to guard his subordinates against the foreseeable risk of injury, if they jumped from the bridge into the lake. By his own presence there in the circumstances that pertained and by reason of his rank, he assumed responsibility to prevent them from taking undue risks of which he was or ought to have been aware. They asked him if they might jump. The very fact that they asked predicates reliance sufficient for a duty of care and their assumption that he had authority to order them not to jump. That authority derived from his rank and the fact of his and their military employment. His authority was no doubt more circumscribed than if they had all been on duty. The fact that they were off duty did not mean that the military relationship became irrelevant.
Was there any breach of the duty owed to Marine Vaughan?
I find it difficult to express with appropriate moderation my disagreement with the proposition of Sedley LJ (at para. 45) that it is "only where the risk is so obvious that the occupier can safely assume that nobody will take it that there will be no liability". A duty to protect against obvious risks or self-inflicted harm exists only in cases in which there is no genuine and informed choice, or in the case of employees, or some lack of capacity, such as the inability of children to recognise danger (British Railways Board v Herrington [1972] AC 877) or the despair of prisoners which may lead them to inflict injury on themselves (Reeves v Commissioner of Police http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1999/35.html[2000] 1 AC 360).
Applying that principle to the facts of this case leads inevitably to the result that there was no breach of duty on the part of Corporal Sanders. Marine Vaughan had a genuine and informed choice as to how he entered the sea. He was not acting in the course of his "employment". He was not subject to any lack of capacity. He assessed whether it was safe to do what he did before he went headfirst into the sea. He misjudged the position with catastrophic results. It is a tragedy that a young man of such promise has suffered such a serious injury. Unfortunately I cannot ameliorate the position in which he now finds himself with a finding of liability on the part of the Defendant unless there is a proper legal basis for doing so. I am satisfied that there is none.
Contributory negligence
Conclusion