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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Doyle v. Magill [1999] IEHC 127; [1999] 2 ILRM 66 (11th March, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1999/127.html Cite as: [1999] IEHC 127, [1999] 2 ILRM 66 |
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1. This
is an action for damages for personal injuries suffered by the Plaintiff when
he fell into a basement area forming part of the Defendant's premises. The
circumstances surrounding the accident are reasonably simple. The Plaintiff is
a substantial farmer and lives about a mile from the house where the accident
took place. The Defendant's premises, which are known as Churchtown House,
Beaufort, County Kerry, were not at the time actually occupied by the
Defendant, but were occupied by a farm manager employed by him, namely a Mr
Timothy Thompson.
2. To
understand what occurred, it is necessary to describe the Defendant's premises.
It is an old Georgian house standing three storeys over basement with a
farmyard at the rear of the house. There is a driveway from the road which
leads on to a large gravelled area stretching across the entire front of the
house. The house itself is double fronted with a hall door in the middle.
Between the gravelled area and the house itself there is a flower bed with
roses in it on each side of the hall door, which at the relevant point was
about three feet two inches in width. The flower bed on the gravelled side is
edged with stones up to three inches in height, and on the far side of the
flowerbed there is a row of bricks laid flat. Beyond this there is a sunken
area, described by some witnesses as a moat, approximately three feet in width
with a drop of five feet seven inches. This area is clearly there to allow
light to penetrate through the windows of the basement. The entrance to the
house consists of two steps up from the gravelled area onto what is in effect a
bridge over the basement area leading to the front door. There are two large
windows on the ground floor on each side of the entrance.
3. On
the evening of 2nd January, 1992 Mr Thompson gave a New Year's party for some
of the neighbours, and the Plaintiff and his wife were invited. They arrived
at the Defendant's house at about 8.00 pm and parked the car on the gravel
facing in towards the house in front of one of the ground floor windows. The
front of the car was up against the rose-bed. It was, of course, dark when
they arrived, and there were no lights on in the basement, although there were
lights in the ground floor rooms. There was also a light immediately above the
front door. The Plaintiff and his wife left the party at about 11.00 pm. The
Plaintiff walked over to his car, leaving his wife talking to a neighbour at
the front door. He opened the passenger door of the car, which was on the side
nearest to the front door, and then started to walk across the front of the car
to get to the driver's door. This, of course, entailed him walking on to the
rose-bed and, while what happened then is not altogether clear, he either
tripped or slipped on a loose stone and fell into the area in front of the
basement. He suffered a painful injury to his right ankle, which fortunately
has cleared up, and he also suffered injuries to his back which it is claimed
have seriously restricted his farming activities since. It should be noted
that this accident took place prior to the coming into force of the occupiers'
liability Act, 1995, which Act does not apply to a cause of action which
accrued before its commencement. Accordingly, the liability of the Defendant
falls to be determined under the pre-existing common law rules.
4. It
is agreed that the common law position in relation to an invitee is that set
out in the judgment of Willes J. in
Indermaur
-v- Dames
LR 1 CP 274 at page 288 where he said:-
5. Thus,
the test as to whether the danger was unusual is not a subjective test, but is
an objective test taking into account the class of persons to whom the
Plaintiff belongs. In the present case the Plaintiff is a substantial farmer
living in the locality. What is alleged to be the unusual danger is that there
was an open and unfenced area in front of the basement windows which was not
specifically lighted. This is a very old large house of the type which is not
uncommon in rural Ireland, and a feature of which is a basement and basement
area of this nature. In my view the class of persons to whom the Plaintiff
belongs ought to have known this, and in my view the existence of an area of
this nature is not an unusual danger to such a class of persons.
6. If
I am wrong in this, I would still consider that the Plaintiff is not entitled
to succeed in these proceedings. The passage from
Indermaur
-v- Dames
which I have quoted above, and which has been accepted by the Supreme Court as
a correct statement of the law, is prefaced by the words
"that he, using reasonable care on his part for his own safety"
.
This seems to me to imply that if an injured party does not take reasonable
care for his own safety, then he is not entitled to expect that the occupier
will take reasonable care to prevent damage from unusual dangers. If the
basement was inherently an unusual danger, nevertheless it was bordered by a
three foot wide flower-bed, which clearly was a place where persons invited
onto the premises were not expected or invited to walk. By walking on to the
flower-bed in circumstances in which, according to his own evidence, he could
not see where he was going, the Plaintiff was not using reasonable care for his
own safety, and having chosen to take the risk of walking on the flower-bed, I
do not think he can complain that there was something that was an unusual
danger beyond the flower-bed.
7. Indeed,
it might well be argued that the invitation to the Plaintiff which allowed him
to be on the premises was not an invitation to walk on the flower-beds, and
that in doing so he had in fact gone beyond the limits of the invitation and
had become a trespasser on that part of the property, on the same basis that
the Plaintiff in
O'Keeffe
-v- Irish Motor Inns
[1978] IR 85 was considered to have become a trespasser even though he had
originally been on the premises as an invitee. However, in my view it is not
necessary to go that far, as I consider that this was not an unusual danger,
and that even if it was, the Plaintiff did not take reasonable steps for his
own safety. Accordingly, I would dismiss this action.