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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Ogwo v Taylor [1987] UKHL 7 (19 November 1987)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1987/7.html
Cite as: [1988] AC 431, [1987] UKHL 7, [1987] 3 WLR 1145

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JISCBAILII_CASE_TORT

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/247

    Ogwo (Respondent) v. Taylor (Appellant)

    JUDGMENT

    Die Jovis 19° Novembris 1987

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom was
    referred the Cause Ogwo against Taylor, That the Committee
    had heard Counsel on Thursday the 22nd day of October last
    upon the Petition and Appeal of Robert Arnold Taylor, of 91
    Laburnam Avenue, Hornchurch, Essex, praying that the matter
    of the Order set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely an
    Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal of 16th December 1986,
    might be reviewed before Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
    Parliament and that the said Order might be reversed, varied
    or altered or that the Petitioner might have such other relief
    in the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
    Parliament might seem meet; as upon the case of Michael
    Chiagoro Ogwo lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and due
    consideration had this day of what was offered on either side
    in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and
    Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty the Queen
    assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's Court of
    Appeal (Civil Division) of 16th December 1986 complained of in
    the said Appeal be, and the same is hereby, Affirmed and that
    the said Petition and Appeal be, and the same is hereby,
    dismissed this House: And it is further Ordered, That the
    Appellant do pay or cause to be paid to the said Respondent
    the Costs incurred by him in respect of the said Appeal, the
    amount thereof to be certified by the Clerk of the Parliaments
    if not agreed between the parties.

    Cler: Parliamentor:

    Judgment: 19.11.87

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    OGWO
    (RESPONDENT)

    v.

    TAYLOR
    (APPELLENT)

    Lord Chancellor
    Lord Bridge of Harwich
    Lord Elwyn-Jones
    Lord Templeman
    Lord Ackner


    LORD MACKAY OF CLASHFERN

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    prepared by my noble and learned friend Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    I agree that this appeal should be dismissed for the reasons which
    he gives. I am glad to note that my noble and learned friend's
    reasoning accords with the opinion of Lord Guthrie in Flannigan v.
    British Dyewood Co. Ltd.
    [1969] S.L.T. 223

    LORD BRIDGE OF HARWICH

    My Lords,

    I shall refer to the parties to the appeal before your
    Lordships as the plaintiff and the defendant. The defendant was
    the occupier of a small terrace house on two floors in Hornchurch.
    He attempted to burn off paint from the fascia boards beneath the
    eaves of his house with a blow lamp and in so doing set fire to
    the premises. The fire brigade were called and the plaintiff, an
    acting leading fireman, arrived with the first fire appliance.
    Smoke was coming from the house, but it was impossible to locate
    the seat of the fire from outside. The plaintiff and a colleague
    entered the house wearing breathing apparatus and the usual
    fireman's protective clothing and armed with a hose. In due
    course they located the seat of the fire in the roof space. The
    rafters to the rear of the house were well alight from the eaves
    to the ridge. The two firemen were able, with the aid of a step-
    ladder, to squeeze through a small hatch to get into the roof
    space and in due course to bring the fire under control by playing

    their hose on it. The heat within the roof space was intense until
    they were able to relieve it by kicking out some of the roof tiles,
    as they had been trained to do in such a situation. The plaintiff,
    although he did not realise it until after he came down from the
    roof, suffered serious burn injuries to his upper body and face
    from scalding steam which must have penetrated his protective
    clothing.

    The plaintiff's claim for damages was tried by Nolan J. who
    had no difficulty in finding that the defendant had negligently
    started the fire, but nevertheless dismissed the plaintiff's claim on
    the ground that the injuries he sustained were not a reasonably
    foreseeable consequence of the defendant's negligence. The Court
    of Appeal [1987] 2 W.L.R. 988 (Dillon, Stephen Brown and Neill
    L.JJ) reversed the judge and gave judgment for the plaintiff in the
    agreed sum, inclusive of interest to the date of judgment, of
    £14,402. The defendant appeals by leave of your Lordships' House.

    The finding of negligence is not challenged. Mr. Crowther
    Q.C., for the defendant, expressly disclaimed any intention to rely
    on the defence of volenti and accepted that the appeal turned
    solely on the issues of foreseeability, proximity and causation. He
    relied on the judge's conclusion as a finding of fact which an
    appellate court should not disturb.

    I find it convenient to examine the issues first in the light
    of basic and well established principles of general application and
    only later to consider the authorities concerned specifically with
    injuries sustained by professional firemen performing their duties in
    fighting fires occasioned by negligence. It is important, however,
    to emphasise at the outset that no suggestion of any kind is made
    of fault on the part of the plaintiff and the chain of events
    leading to his injuries must accordingly be considered on the
    footing that he himself acted throughout precisely as was to be
    expected of a properly trained and properly equipped fireman in
    the circumstances which confronted him.

    The trial judge expressed his conclusion on foreseeability in
    the following passage:

    "The question here is whether it could be foreseen that Mr.
    Ogwo, going up into the roof and remaining there, in
    conditions of intense heat, would suffer the burns from
    which he did suffer,
    even though he was a trained fireman
    and had been sent to a fire without extraordinary features.
    Here it seems to me that the plaintiff cannot succeed,
    because it seems that neither the plaintiff himself nor his
    colleague were able to foresee, looking into that apparently
    ordinary loft of an ordinary house, the danger that
    confronted them to the the extent of the injuries caused.
    Of course they saw there was danger, but they did not
    anticipate that Mr. Ogwo would come out badly burned, as
    he was."

    The emphasis added is mine and the words emphasised demonstrate
    where the judge appears to me to have fallen into error. The
    proper question to be asked is not whether the particular injuries
    sustained by the plaintiff were reasonably foreseeable, still less
    whether they were actually foreseen. As Lord Reid put it in

    - 2 -

    Hughes v. Lord Advocate [1963] AC 837, 845, a negligent
    defendant "can only escape liability if the damage can be regarded
    as differing in kind from what was foreseeable." Of course, the
    plaintiff entering the loft did not foresee the nature or severity of
    the injuries he was going to suffer. As the judge said, he could
    see there was danger, but a man with the courage which a
    fireman must constantly be called on to show has no time in such
    a situation to reflect on the precise nature and extent of the risks
    he is running. Looked at, as it should be, from the point of view
    of the negligent defendant who started the fire in the loft, he
    could foresee that the fire brigade would be called, that firemen
    would use their skills to do whatever was both necessary and
    reasonably practicable to extinguish the fire and that, if this
    involved entering the loft and playing a hose on the fire, they
    would be subject to any risks inherent in that operation, of which
    the risk of a scalding injury was certainly one. This was a real
    risk occasioned by setting fire to the rafters of a small terrace
    house, a risk which the defendant could have avoided by
    elementary care and without difficulty or expense to himself and
    certainly not a risk which a reasonable man would brush aside as
    far fetched. It therefore satisfies the criterion of foreseeability
    posed as the test of remoteness by Lord Reid, delivering the
    judgment of the Privy Council in Overseas Tankship (U.K.) Ltd. v.
    Miller Steamship Co. Pty (The Wagon Mound (No. 2)).
    [1967] 1
    A.C. 617, 643-4.

    Mr. Crowther also sought to argue that the defendant owed
    the plaintiff no duty of care. Here again, the case to me seems
    to fall clearly within the principle enunciated in the classic
    passage from the speech of Lord Atkin in Donoghue v. Stevenson
    [1932] AC 562, 580. The plaintiff was a person so closely and
    directly affected by the defendant's act that the defendant ought
    reasonably to have had him in contemplation as being so affected
    when directing his mind to the acts or omissions called in
    question, in this case using the blow lamp without taking care to
    avoid setting the rafters alight.

    So far as causation is concerned, no more need be said than
    that the links in the chain of causation from the negligence which
    started the fire to the injuries which the plaintiff sustained were
    clearly continuous and unbroken.

    On the face of it, therefore, this seems to me a
    straightforward case of a plaintiff to whom the defendant owed a
    duty of care suffering injury as a reasonably foreseeable
    consequence of a breach of that duty by the defendant.

    The principal theme by which Mr. Crowther sought to avoid
    that conclusion was that, in the case of a professional fireman, a
    distinction could be drawn between the "ordinary" risks inherent in
    fire-fighting and "exceptional" risks created by some unusual
    feature of the fire which arises from the nature or condition of
    the premises where the fire occurs or in some other way. The
    submission, as I understand it, is that the party who negligently
    starts the fire is not liable to a professional fireman injured by
    the "ordinary" risks of fire-fighting, but only to one injured by an
    "exceptional" risk which the defendant could have foreseen and
    avoided by warning or otherwise. If the submission is well
    founded, Mr. Crowther has the advantage of a factual foundation

    - 3 -

    for its application here in findings by the judge that there was
    nothing unusual about this fire, that there was no unusually
    combustible material in the loft and that attending fires in terrace
    houses was a regular part of a fireman's duties.

    The first case relied on in support of the submission is
    Merrington v. Ironbridge Metal Works Ltd. [1952] 2 All E.R. 1101,
    a decision at first instance of Hallett J. This was a claim by a
    fireman injured in fighting a fire at a factory where the
    defendants had allowed large quantities of fine dust containing
    aluminium and carbon particles to accumulate. The plaintiff was
    injured by a dust explosion caused, as the judge held, by the
    defendants allowing their premises to be in a condition which
    created "exceptional and serious risks" of fire and explosion.
    Having considered and rejected a defence of volenti, the judge said
    at p.

    "This may be a convenient moment to say emphatically that
    I do not accept the submission of leading counsel for the
    plaintiff that, if a fireman sustains injury as the result of
    performing his duty at a fire, he ipso facto becomes
    entitled to recover compensation from any person whose
    carelessness has caused the fire in question."

    This is the cornerstone of Mr. Crowther's argument that negligence
    in starting a fire to which the fire brigade have to be called can
    never, per se, be sufficient to establish liability in damages to a
    fireman injured by a hazard of a kind to which the inherent
    dangers of the fireman's profession necessarily subject him. There
    must always, so it is argued, be some extraneous or exceptional
    feature in the circumstances of the fire which imposes an
    additional hazard for which the tortfeasor can be held responsible.

    Further support for this view is sought in the decision of
    the Court of Appeal in Hartley v. British Railways Board, The
    Times, 2 February 1981. There a railway servant, responsible for
    manning a station building, left it unattended without telling his
    employers that he was doing so and left a coal fire burning inside
    in an open stove. The stove was piled high with coal and a
    burning coal fell from it and set fire to the building. When the
    fire brigade were called by the railway authorities, they inquired
    whether the building was occupied and were told that it was.
    Consequently, on arrival at the scene, the plaintiff fireman was
    sent in to search the building for the servant believed to be still
    inside and in the course of the search he sustained the injuries
    which were the subject of the claim. The Court of Appeal,
    reversing the trial judge, held that the servant's negligence was
    responsible for the fire, but they founded their attribution of
    liability to the employers on the additional element of negligence
    on the part of the servant in failing to inform his employers that
    he was leaving the building unattended at a time when he was
    supposed to be on duty there. It was this failure, as the Court of
    Appeal held, which led foreseeably to the unnecessary search of
    the building by the plaintiff fireman and hence to his injury.

    Of course I accept that not everybody, whether professional
    fireman or layman, who is injured in a fire negligently started will
    necessarily recover damages from the tortfeasor. The chain of
    causation between the negligence and the injury must be

    established by the plaintiff and may be broken in a number of
    ways. The most obvious would be where the plaintiff's injuries
    were sustained by his foolhardy exposure to an unnecessary risk
    either of his own volition or acting under the orders of a senior
    fire officer. But, subject to this, I can see no basis of principle
    which would justify denying a remedy in damages against the
    tortfeasor responsible for starting a fire to a professional fireman
    doing no more and no less than his proper duty and acting with
    skill and efficiency in fighting an ordinary fire who is injured by
    one of the risks to which the particular circumstances of the fire
    give rise. Fire out of control is inherently dangerous. If not
    brought under control, it may, in most urban situations, cause
    untold damage to property and possible danger to life. The duty
    of professional firemen is to use their best endeavours to
    extinguish fires and it is obvious that, even making full use of all
    their skills, training and specialist equipment, they will sometimes
    be exposed to unavoidable risks of injury, whether the fire is
    described as "ordinary" or "exceptional." If they are not to be
    met by the doctrine of volenti, which would be utterly repugnant
    to our contemporary notions of justice, I can see no reason
    whatever why they should be held at a disadvantage as compared
    to the layman entitled to invoke the principle of the so-called

    "rescue" cases.

    Mr. Crowther suggested it would be anomalous that a
    fireman should recover damages for injuries sustained in fighting a
    fire caused by negligence when his colleague who suffers similar
    injuries in fighting another fire of which the cause is unknown has
    no such remedy. If this be an anomaly, it is one which is
    common to most, if not all, injuries sustained by accident and is
    inevitable under a system which requires proof of fault as the
    basis of liability. The existence of the suggested anomaly is the
    strongest argument advanced by those who support the introduction
    of a "no fault" system of compensation. But it has no special
    application to the case of firemen.

    At the end of the day I am happy to find my views in full
    accord with those expressed in the latest authority directly in
    point, which is the decision at first instance of Woolf J. in Salmon
    v. Seafarer Restaurants Ltd.
    [1983] 1 W.L.R. 1264. The facts and
    the grounds of the decision are conveniently summarised in the
    headnote, which I quote:

    "The plaintiff fireman attended a fire at the defendants'
    fish-and-chip shop, which had been caused by the failure of
    the defendants to put out a light under a chip fryer before
    closing the shop for the night. While in attendance at the
    fire, the plaintiff was ordered by a senior officer to use a
    ladder to obtain access to the second floor, via a flat roof.
    As the plaintiff stood footing the ladder on the flat roof an
    explosion occurred, caused by the heat from the fire melting
    seals on gas meters on the premises and allowing gas to
    escape. The explosion caused the plaintiff to be thrown to
    the ground and sustain injury. He brought an action for
    damages for personal injuries alleging that the fire had been
    started by the defendants' negligence and that he had been
    injured as a result of that negligence. The defendants
    denied that they owed a duty of care to the plaintiff.

    - 5 -

    On the question as to the duty owed by an occupier to a
    fireman attending at his premises to put out a fire:-

    Held, that notwithstanding the special training received by
    firemen to deal with the dangers inherent in fires, the duty
    owed by an occupier causing fire on premises to a fireman
    attending that fire extended to the ordinary risks and
    dangers inherent in a fireman's occupation and was not
    limited to a requirement to protect the fireman only against
    special, exceptional, or additional risks; that the fireman's
    special skills and training were relevant in determining
    liability but, where it was foreseeable that a fireman
    exercising those skills would be injured through the
    negligence of the occupier, the occupier was in breach of
    his duty of care; that as the fire had been caused by the
    defendants' negligence and since it was foreseeable that the
    plaintiff would be required to attend the fire and would be
    at risk of the type of injuries he received from the
    explosion which was caused by the negligence, the
    defendants were liable for the those injuries and damages
    were recoverable by the plaintiff."

    I would particularly wish to adopt and endorse a passage in
    the judgment at p. 1272, where the judge said:

    "Where it can be foreseen that the fire which is negligently
    started is of the type which could, first of all, require
    firemen to attend to extinguish that fire, and where,
    because of the very nature of the fire, when they attend
    they will be at risk even though they exercise all the skill
    of their calling, there seems no reason why a fireman should
    be at any disadvantage when the question of compensation
    for his injuries arises."

    There was some discussion in argument before your
    Lordships as to whether in the phrase "because of the very nature
    of the fire" the definite article which I have emphasised might not
    have been superfluous and unintended. It is perhaps arguable that
    any fire, once out of control, may put firemen at risk and that
    accordingly it is "the very nature of fire" which makes the risk
    foreseeable. But I prefer the view that the judge was using
    language with his usual precision and accuracy and recognising that
    there may be some fires which, although calling for the services
    of the fire brigade, pose no foreseeable risk to firemen acting
    with due skill and care.

    The appellant's written case indicated an intention to rely
    on what is known as the "fireman's rule" as applied in the
    jurisprudence of some of the states of the United States of
    America and cited as the rationale of the rule the following
    passage from the judgment of the Supreme Court of New Jersey
    delivered by Weintraub C.J. in Krauth v. Geller (1960) 157 2d 129,
    130-131:

    "That the misfortune here experienced by a fireman was
    well within the range of foreseeability cannot be disputed.
    But liability is not always co-extensive with foreseeability of
    harm. The question is ultimately one of public policy, and
    the answer must be distilled from the relevant factors

    - 6 -

    involved upon an inquiry into what is fair and just ... it is
    the fireman's business to deal with that very hazard [the
    fire] and hence, perhaps by analogy to the contractor
    engaged as an expert to remedy dangerous situations, he
    cannot complain of negligence in the creation of the very
    occasion for his engagement. In terms of duty, it may be
    said there is none owed the fireman to exercise care so as
    not to require the special services for which he is trained
    and paid. Probably most fires are attributable to
    negligence, and in the final analysis the policy decision is
    that it would be too burdensome to charge all who
    carelessly cause or fail to prevent fires with the injuries
    suffered by the expert retained by public funds to deal with
    those inevitable, although negligently created, occurrences."

    In oral argument, however, Mr. Crowther did not feel able to
    derive any assistance from this source and, as I think prudently,
    did not pursue the matter.

    In the Supreme Court of California in Walters v. Sloan
    (1977) 571 2d 609 the "fireman's rule" was affirmed in the
    majority judgment delivered by Clark J., but was exhaustively
    analysed, criticised and rejected as unsound in the dissenting
    judgment of Tobriner Acting C.J. Having read those two
    judgments, I am left in no doubt whatever that the American
    "fireman's rule" has no place in English law.

    I would accordingly dismiss the appeal.

    LORD ELWYN-JONES

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    prepared by my noble and learned friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    I agree with it and for the reasons given by him I would dismiss
    this appeal.

    LORD TEMPLEMAN

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    prepared by my noble and learned friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    I agree with it and for the reasons given by him I would dismiss
    this appeal.

    - 7 -

    LORD ACKNER

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    prepared by my noble and learned friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    I agree with it, and for the reasons which he gives I would dismiss
    the appeal.

    - 8 -


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