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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> McGowan v. W & JR Watson Ltd [2006] ScotCS CSIH_62 (28 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSIH_62.html Cite as: [2006] CSIH 62, [2006] ScotCS CSIH_62, 2007 SC 272 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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Lord OsborneLord Nimmo SmithLord Carloway
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[2006] CSIH 62PD1456/04OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD NIMMO
SMITH in RECLAIMING MOTION in the cause STUART McGOWAN Pursuer and Respondent; against W & J R WATSON LIMITED Defenders and Reclaimers: _______ |
Alt: R Thomson Simpson & Marwick
"(1) Every employer shall ensure that measures
are taken in accordance with paragraph (2) which are effective -
(a) to prevent access to any dangerous part
of machinery ... ".
The Lord Ordinary held that the
blade was such that a danger was reasonably to be anticipated from its use
unguarded by a workman such as the pursuer who through inattention might
inadvertently expose himself to the risk of injury from it. Given the acceptable evidence about the
non-use of clamps, it could reasonably be anticipated that joiners would not
use clamps but would hold in position by hand wood they had to cut with the
circular saw. There was nothing to
prevent such a joiner from having access to the revolving blade. Accordingly the result required by the
regulation was not achieved. The
defenders were therefore in breach of their statutory duty under Regulation 11(1),
but for which breach the accident would not have occurred.
Contributory negligence
The pleadings
[5] Statement and answer 6 of
the pleadings on which the parties went to proof are in these terms:
"STAT. VI. The pursuer's claim against the defenders
is based on their breach of the statutory duties incumbent on them by virtue of
Regulations 5(1) and 11(1) of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment
Regulations 1998. The averments in
answer are denied. The defenders give no
fair notice of the basis of their averments of sole fault or contributory
negligence. They are called upon to
specify the basis of these averments, and to say what they allege the pursuer
did, or failed to do, which caused, or contributed to, the accident. Their failure to answer this call will be
founded upon.
Ans. 6 Denied
that the defenders are in breach of Regulation 11(1) of the Provisions and
Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998.
Explained and averred that the accident was solely caused, or at least
materially contributed to, by the pursuer's own fault. Reference is made to the Law Reform
(Contributory Negligence) Act 1945."
"On either
side of the saw, there are clamps. The
clamps are adjustable. They hold the
material in place whilst it is being cut.
The need for an operator's hands to be in close proximity to the blade
whilst it is unguarded is thereby obviated."
He then continued, in
paragraph 19 in these terms:
"In my opinion this point is well
taken. The only indication of an
averment of fault on the pursuer's part is to be inferred from the defenders'
averments about clamps, which I have already quoted. I have already expressed the view that the
pursuer is not to be faulted for failing to use a clamp. The pursuer has not been given any notice of
any other ground of fault, and I have no note or recollection of any other
ground being put to him in cross-examination.
I would therefore make no reduction of the pursuer's award in respect of
contributory negligence. If I am wrong
about that, and some deduction should be made in respect of what I have found
to be inattention or inadvertence, I would assess contributory negligence at 50
per cent, as in the somewhat similar circumstances of Prentice v Fleming 1978
SLT (Notes) 40. Other comparable cases
are cited in McEwan and Paton on Damages for Personal Injuries in Scotland (2nd
Ed.), page 100."
Submissions for the defenders
"It appears to me to be in accordance
with normal principles of fairness, in an optional procedure case where a
pursuer does not require to aver specific duties of care, that defenders should
not be under any greater duty in relation to a case of contributory
negligence."
Adopting this approach, counsel submitted that the defenders
were entitled to table a general plea of contributory negligence and not to set
out the specific duty or duties which the pursuer was alleged to have
breached. Moreover, having regard to the
evidence given by the pursuer, it was not necessary to put to him in
cross-examination any specific ground upon which it was alleged that he had
been negligent.
Submissions for the pursuer
[9] On behalf of the pursuer,
Mr MacAulay submitted that the Lord Ordinary was correct in concluding
that no finding of contributory negligence should be made in the absence of
averment and in the absence of the matter having been put to the pursuer. In any event, inadvertence or inattention on
the part of the pursuer would not support a finding of contributory negligence
on his part. Counsel emphasised the
point that the defenders had specific averments in their pleadings about the
use of clamps on the saw, and this had been explored in evidence with the
pursuer and other witnesses. Having put
forward one specific line of defence, the defenders were not entitled to put
forward another line of which no specification and accordingly no fair notice
had been given. Reference was made to
the Opinion of Lord Glennie in Weir v
Robertson Group (Construction) Ltd
[2006] CSOH 107, where at paragraph 7 his Lordship gave his reasons for
upholding an objection to a line of cross-examination of the pursuer on the
basis that there was no record for it.
He said:
"Although the new personal damages
rules contained in Rule of Court 43 encourage abbreviated pleadings, they
do not dispense with the requirements of fair notice. Rule of Court 43.2 requires the summons
to contain averments 'relating only to those facts necessary to establish the
claim'. The same approach, in my view,
applies mutatis mutandis to the
defences, though there is no specific rule about defences. The defences should aver the facts which the
defender regards as necessary to support his defence or plea of contributory
negligence. Otherwise how is the pursuer
to know what investigations to make and what evidence to lead?"
Counsel submitted that in the defenders' pleadings the case
of contributory negligence rested on the averments about the use of
clamps. This was why the cross-examiner
did not suggest to the pursuer that he was doing anything else wrong. It was not put to him that he was at fault in
any other way, for example in the way that he operated the saw.
"The degree of want of care which
constitutes negligence must vary with the circumstances. What that degree is, is a question for the
jury or the court in lieu of a jury. It
is not a matter of uniform standard. It
may vary according to the circumstances from man to man, from place to place,
from time to time. It may vary even in
the case of the same man. Thus a surgeon
doing an emergency operation on a cottage table with the light of a candle might
not properly be held guilty of negligence in respect of an act or omission
which would be negligence if he were performing the same operation with all the
advantages of the serene atmosphere of his operating theatre; the same holds good of the workman. It must be a question of degree. The jury have to draw the line where mere
thoughtlessness or inadvertence or forgetfulness ceases and where negligence
begins."
In John Summers &
Sons Ltd v Frost [1955] A.C. 740
Lord Keith of Avonholm said at page 777 that the employers in that case
had failed to prove contributory negligence against the workman. He said:
"The type of accident that happened
here is just the type of the accident against which section 14 [of the
Factories Act 1937] is directed. There is
no question here of disobedience to orders, or of reckless disregard by a
workman of his own safety. At most there
was a mere error of judgment by the plaintiff as to how the work on which he
was engaged could best be carried out, and possibly only a mere momentary
inadvertence."
He agreed that what the plaintiff did fell short of negligent
conduct. These passages were quoted by
Lord McCluskey in McNeill v Roche Products Ltd 1989 S.L.T. 498 at
page 504D-E. His Lordship said:
"[T]he tribunal of fact has to draw
the line between mere thoughtlessness or inadvertence on the one hand and real
negligence on the other and to give due regard to the actual conditions under
which men work, to the fatigue, to the slackening of attention which naturally
comes from constant repetition of the same operation and other such
factors. The authorities illustrate the
point that, particularly in a case where the employers are in breach of their
section 14 [of the Factories Act 1961] duty, the court must be cautious
about making a finding of contributory negligence against a workman based
simply upon his departing marginally from the ordinary routine. The whole purpose of a provision such as
section 14 is to avoid the risk of accident to the inadvertent workman or
passer by."
Discussion
[12] In our opinion the Lord Ordinary
did not err in making no reduction of the pursuer's award in respect of
contributory negligence. Two points
arise: first, whether the Lord Ordinary's
approach to the pleading point was correct;
and, secondly, whether in any event on the evidence accepted by the Lord
Ordinary there was a basis for a finding of contributory negligence.
[13] It is clear
that in an action of damages for personal injuries to which the provisions of
Chapter 43 of the Rules of Court apply, it is not necessary for either
party to engage in elaborate pleading.
There is, nevertheless, as Mr Thomson recognised, a requirement,
which is imposed on defenders as much as on pursuers, to give at least fair notice
of a case which it is proposed to make.
Thus defenders could not secure a finding of contributory negligence if
they had not at the very least made some reference to it in their pleadings. How much beyond that is required depends very
much on the circumstances of each case.
It may be that the pursuer's own pleadings would support a plea of
contributory negligence, in which case very little need be said. But if defenders choose to give notice of a
specific case of contributory negligence, as was done here in relation to the
use of clamps, they may be precluded from seeking to argue for a finding of
contributory negligence on any other ground because they have not given fair
notice of it. We agree with the approach
of Lord Glennie in Weir v Robertson
Group (Construction) Ltd, in the passage quoted above. Accordingly, in circumstances such as arose
in that case, an objection to a line of cross-examination of which no fair
notice had been given in the defenders' pleadings would appropriately be upheld. In the present case, the lack of fair notice
went further. There was no attempt to
put it to the pursuer in cross-examination that he had been negligent in any
respect except that of failing to use clamps.
The pursuer accordingly had no opportunity to contradict any suggestion
that there had been a lack of reasonable care on his part in any other
respect. Indeed, it does not appear from
the Lord Ordinary's opinion that he was invited to make a finding of contributory
negligence on any other ground. In our
opinion, he had no alternative but to dispose of the matter as he did.