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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> English Heritage v Taylor [2016] EWCA Civ 448 (11 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/448.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 448 |
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ON APPEAL FROM NEWPORT (ISLE OF WIGHT) COUNTY COURT
MR RECORDER BLUNT QC
3YQ20400
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
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ENGLISH HERITAGE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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TAYLOR |
Respondent |
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John Foy QC and Shahram Sharghy (instructed by Irwin Mitchell LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25/04/2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Master of the Rolls:
"14. Beyond the bastion path, the ground slopes slightly upwards in a manner which has been described as a "lip" before sloping down quite steeply to the top of the stone work of the bastion wall itself. The stonework, not surprisingly, is vertical, so there is a sheer drop from the top of the stonework to the dry moat below. The drop from the top of the stonework to the bottom of the moat is about 10 feet. But the drop from the level area of the pathway above is, I estimate, about 12 to 15 feet, when standing on the artillery platform looking east, one can see the path below and the bottom of the dry moat beyond, but one cannot see the stonework below the pathway and one cannot see the sheer drop.
15. Someone visiting the castle for the first time, following the route which the Taylor family took, which I shall be describe in a moment, on the day in question can be forgiven if he or she did not, when standing on that platform, appreciate that there was, in fact, a sheer drop between him or her and the bottom of the dry moat."
"As I have already indicated, I think, when you stand on the platform you can see certainly that there is a dry moat down below of some considerable depth, and below the level of the bastion path, but you cannot see the sheer drop and you would have no reason to suppose that there was such a drop, though obviously that would be a possibility. As I have indicated, as one moves across the bastion pathway, sideways across the pathway, there is a slight lip or upward slope, and then there is a steep downward slope, also of grass, before one gets to the top of the stonework. So if one is standing on the artillery platform the presence of that sheer drop is, in fact, masked."
"There is a clear risk to anyone walking along the bastion path, because of the sheer drop and the absence of any safety rails, and I find that that feature was and is a danger to visitors of which they need to be warned. This is recognised by the Defendants who placed warning signs – three in number. There is one at the very start of the Bastion Walk and this is depicted in one of the photographs before me. That sign consisted of two flat pieces of wood on a wooden post. The top part of the sign indicates or bears the words "Bastion Walk" with an arrow pointing the direction to it. Below that on the other piece of wood there is a triangle which is coloured yellow which depicts a matchstick man falling over a vertical edge and it bears the words "Sheer Drop". There are two other warning signs somewhere in that area but they would not be visible to any visitors who went straight from the entrance shop/ticket office directly into the gatehouse."
"30. The fact that the sheer drop beside the bastion path, beside the path along the Bastion Walk was and is a danger to visitors and that they need to be made specifically aware of it is and was recognised by the Defendant. This is evidenced by the sign which was placed at the commencement of the designated Bastion Walk. Objectively it is clear, and I find as a fact, that that sheer drop represents a danger to persons on the bastion path unless visitors are clearly warned of its presence."
"33. It might be argued that because the visitors appeared to be walking down the steep bank of the artillery platform to access the bastion pathway, there should be a warning in the vicinity of that informal path: the Defendant should have recognised the risk which visitors, especially children, travelling down that informal path might encounter – as if they are going at such a speed that they are unable to stop before finding themselves falling into the dry moat beyond. It would, in fact, have been possible and in my view not disproportionate to put a small length of fence at the eastern edge of the bastion pathway where the informal pathway merges onto it. However, there is not evidence that the Defendant's staff ever saw anyone getting into danger as a result of going down the bank on the informal path, and no evidence of any reports of such a danger. And therefore I do not consider that the failure to install some kind of railing or fencing in that place was negligent or a breach of duty.
34. However, as stated, in my judgment, the Defendant failed to comply with its duty under the Occupier's Liability Act, Section 2, and failing to provide additional signage of warning of the sheer drop just beyond the bastion path, in particular in failing to put such a signage on the artillery platform, or on the pathway below but large enough for it to be visible from that platform, so that someone standing on the firing platform and looking east would see the warning. The existence of the informal path was an indication that that was a point at which visitors might be accessing the bastion path, and indeed were actually doing so. The Defendant should have been alive to the possibility that visitors following the same route as the Taylors or a similar route, may not have been aware of the existence of the bastion wall at all, or if they were aware of it might not aware of how close it was to the artillery platform, or of the fact that it incorporated a sheer drop. This however, does not by itself render the Defendant liable, it leads to the question of causation."
The law
"(1) An occupier of premises owes the same duty, the 'common duty of care' to all his visitors…..
(2) The common duty of care is a duty to take such care as in all the circumstances of the case is reasonable to see that the visitor will be reasonably safe in using the premises for the purposes for which he is invited or permitted by the occupier to be there."
"It is, in my judgment, of significance that the duty is a duty owed by the occupier to the individual visitor, so that it can only be said that there was a duty to warn if without warning the visitor in question would been unaware of the nature and extent of the risk. As the statute makes clear, there may be circumstances in which even an explicit warning will not absolve the occupier from liability…; but if the danger is obvious, the visitor is able to appreciate it, he is not under any kind of pressure and he is free to do what is necessary for his own safety, then no warning is required. So, for example, it is unnecessary to warn an adult of sound mind that it is dangerous to go near the edge of an obvious cliff."
The grounds of appeal
Breach of duty
The causation issue
"Being the person that he is, a man who has engaged in responsible, rational and methodical activities all his life, I consider it unlikely that Mr Taylor would have stood up on that slope as he went down the informal path if he had known of the existence of the sheer drop. I conclude, on the balance of probabilities, that he did not, and hence that the defendant's breach of duty in failing to provide adequate warning of the sheer drop was causative of his accident."
Contributory negligence
"As the bank is sufficiently steep for there to be a risk of injury, even if the sheer drop had not been there, had any person attempted to negotiate the informal path, or part of it, whilst standing, I consider that there is a considerable degree of contributory negligence in this case. Mr Taylor, even if he was not aware of the sheer drop (as I have found he was not) must have been aware as he stood on the artillery platform and looked down, just how steep the bank was, and, accordingly, the appropriate assessment of contributory negligence is that he was fifty per cent to blame for his accident."
Conclusion
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Beatson: