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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Hughes v Lord Advocate [1963] UKHL 1 (21 February 1963) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1963/1.html Cite as: [1963] UKHL 1 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1107
HOUSE OF LORDS
HUGHES
(A.P.)
v.
LORD ADVOCATE
(as representing the Postmaster General)
21st February 1963
Lord
Reid
Lord Jenkins
Lord
Morris of Borth-y-Gest
Lord Guest
LordPearce
Lord Reid
MY LORDS,
I have had an opportunity of
reading the speech which my noble and
learned friend, Lord Guest,
is about to deliver. I agree with him that this
appeal should be
allowed and I shall only add some general observations.
I am
satisfied that the Post Office workmen were in fault in leaving this
open
manhole unattended and it is clear that if they had done as
they ought to
have done this accident would not have happened. It
cannot be said that
they owed no duty to the Appellant. But it has
been held that the Appellant
cannot recover damages.
It was argued that the Appellant
cannot recover because the damage which
he suffered was of a kind
which was not foreseeable. That was not the
ground of judgment of
the First Division or of the Lord Ordinary, and the
facts proved
do not, in my judgment, support that argument. The
Appellant's
injuries were mainly caused by burns, and it cannot be
said that injuries
from burns were unforeseeable. As a warning to
traffic the workmen
had set lighted red lamps round the tent which
covered the manhole,
and if boys did enter the dark tent it was
very likely that they
would take one of these lamps with them. If
the lamp fell and
broke it was not at all unlikely that the boy
would be burned and the burns
might well be serious. No doubt it
was not to be expected
that the injuries would be as serious as
those which the Appellant in fact
sustained. But a defender is
liable, although the damage may be a good
deal greater in extent
than was foreseeable. He can only escape liability
if the damage
can be regarded as differing in kind from what was foreseeable.
So we have (first) a duty owed by
the workmen, (secondly) the fact that if
they had done as they
ought to have done there would have been no accident,
and
(thirdly) the fact that the injuries suffered by the Appellant,
though
perhaps different in degree, did not differ in kind from
injuries which might
have resulted from an accident of a
foreseeable nature. The ground on
which this case has been decided
against the Appellant is that the accident
was of an unforeseeable
type. Of course, the pursuer has to prove that the
defender's
fault caused the accident, and there could be a case where
the
intrusion of a new and unexpected factor could be regarded as the
cause
of the accident rather than the fault of the defender. But
that is not this
case. The cause of this accident was a known
source of danger, the lamp,
but it behaved in an unpredictable
way.
The explanation of the accident
which has been accepted, and which I
would not seek to question,
is that, when the lamp fell down the manhole
and was broken, some
paraffin escaped, and enough was vaporised to create
in explosive
mixture which was detonated by the naked light of the lamp
the
experts agree that no one would have expected that to happen: it
was
so unlikely as to be unforeseeable. The explosion caused the
boy to fall
into the manhole: whether his injuries were directly
caused by the explosion
or aggravated by fire which started in the
manhole is not at all clear. The
essential step in the
Respondent's argument is that the explosion was the
real cause of
the injuries and that the explosion was unforeseeable.
The only authority cited to us
from which the Respondent can derive any
assistance is Muir v.
Glasgow Corporation, 1943 S C. (h.l.) 3, and I shall
examine
that case. The accident occurred in premises occupied by
the
Corporation. The manageress had given permission for a tea urn
to be
brought in by visitors and had not cleared some children out
of the way.
For some unknown reason one of the men carrying the
urn let it slip and
2
hot tea
poured out and scalded the children. On 'the question whether
the
manageress had been negligent Lords Macmillan, Wright and
Gauson held
that she had no reason to anticipate danger and
therefore was not in breach
of duty. And that was also the first
ground of judgment of Lord Thankerton.
So far the case is of no
assistance to the present Respondent because in this
case there
was a breach of duty.
The
difficulty is caused by further observations of Lord Thankerton
and
by the judgment of Lord Romer. Lord Thankerton said that even
if he had
held that the manageress was in breach of duty " I
would hold that the
" Respondents must fail here as they have
not proved what the event was
" that caused the accident"
(p. 9). It may be that that should be linked
to an earlier
passage: " In my opinion it has long been held in Scotland
"
that all that a person can be held bound to foresee are the
reasonable and
" probable consequences of the failure to take
care, judged by the standard
" of the ordinary reasonable
man. I am unable to agree with Lord Carmont
" (1942 S.C. at
p. 140) that the Appellants could be made liable 'even if it
"
' were proved that the actual damage to the invitees happened through
the
" ' tea-urn being spilt in a way that could not
reasonably have been antici-
" ' pated '." (p. 8). If
that means that the mere fact that the way in which
the accident
happened could not be anticipated is enough to exclude
liability
although there was a breach of duty and that breach of
duty in fact caused
damage of a kind that could have been
anticipated, 'then I am afraid that
I cannot agree with Lord
Thankerton. No authority for this was cited in
Muir's case
and no authority for it other than Muir's case has been cited
in
the present case. I find Lord Romer's judgment a little
difficult to follow.
I think that it is to the same effect, but
towards the end of his judgment he
points out, I think rightly,
that if the ceiling had fallen and upset the urn the
Corporation
could not have been liable merely because they had failed in
a
duty to clear the children away. The fall of the ceiling would have
been
the cause of the damage and not the breach of duty.
It may be
that what Lord Romer, and possibly also Lord Thankerton,
had in
mind was that if the cause of an accident cannot be proved then
the
accident may have been due to the intrusion of some new and
unforeseeable
cause like the falling of a ceiling so that the
damage cannot be said to have
resulted from the defenders' breach
of duty. If they meant no more than
that, then their observations
would be in line with the well-established
principle that a
pursuer must prove, in the sense of making it more probable
than
not, that the defender's breach of duty caused the accident; but
then
those observations would not help the Respondent because we
know the
cause of this accident. This accident was caused by a
known source of
danger, but caused in a way which could not have
been foreseen, and in my
judgment that affords no defence. I would
therefore allow the appeal.
Lord Jenkins
MY LORDS,
The facts
of this case have been so fully and clearly stated in the Opinions
of
the Lord Ordinary (Lord Wheatley) and the Lord President (Lord
Clyde)
that I need not repeat them at length.
It appears
that on the 8th November, 1958, workmen employed by the
Post
Office were working on certain cables under the roadway of a
public
street known as Russell Road. Two manholes, by descending
which access
could be had to the cables, were provided in the
surface of the street.
One only of these manholes was in use. The
other was closed and for
present purposes can be ignored. The
effective manhole was some nine feet
deep and provided with a
ladder. There was a weather tent covering the
area of roadway in
which the manholes were placed. This tent was pro-
vided with a
tarpaulin to improve the shelter afforded, and as positioned
at
the material time it left at one end a gap between its edge and the
3
ground of
some two feet, six inches. It was dark after 5 p.m. on the
8th
November, 1958, and about 3.30 p.m. red warning lamps were put
in
position on the site.
The
workmen had a tea break just after 5 p.m. and went for their tea
to
a neighbouring telephone exchange. They were absent for about
a
quarter of an hour. Before going they had taken the ladder out
of the
manhole and laid it on the ground outside the tent.
While the
workmen were away the pursuer and his 10-year old uncle
David
Leishman arrived on the scene and set about meddling with the gear
on
the site. They pulled up the ladder, brought one of the lamps
into
the hole and amused themselves by swinging it from the end of
a rope.
Soon after this the pursuer (according to his own account)
stumbled over
the lamp and knocked it into the hole, when a
violent explosion took
place, and the pursuer himself fell into
it, sustaining terrible injuries from
burns. A passer-by named
Bruce who was 100 yards or so along the
street at the time
described the explosion as having made a roar of sound
like a "
woof". and said that a flame shot up some 30 feet.
That being
the nature of the accident, the next question is, who was to
blame.
It was originally suggested that the children were trespassers,
but
this was given up on a consideration of the statutory position
of the Post
Office, which did not include a sufficiently exclusive
interest in any part
of the roadway to support a claim in
trespass.
Then it
was said that the children were guilty of contributory
negligence,
but this was not pressed, the view ultimately accepted
on both sides being
that having regard to the children's tender
years they were not to be blamed
for meddling with "
allurements" such as the lamps, the tent, the hole
and the
ladder, disposed as they were in the public street without a
watchman
to guard them or a fence to keep children away.
As to the
liability of the Post Office, it was not, I think, ever
seriously
doubted that the standard of care required of them was
the well known
standard thus described by Lord Atkin in Donoghue
v. Stevenson, 1932 S.C.
(H.L.) at p. 44: " You
must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions
" which
you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your
neighbour."
He then went on to say that " it is not
enough that the event should be such
" as can reasonably be
foreseen ; the further result that injury is likely to
"
follow must also be such as a reasonable man would contemplate,
before
" he can be convicted of actionable negligence. Nor is
the remote possibility
" of injury occurring enough ; there
must be sufficient probability to lead a
" reasonable man to
anticipate it."
In a word,
the Post Office had brought upon the public highway apparatus
capable
of constituting a source of danger to passers-by and in particular
to
small and almost certainly inquisitive children. It was therefore
their
duty to see that such passers-by, " neighbours ",
in the language of Donoghue
v. Stevenson, were so
far as reasonably practicable protected from the various
obstacles,
or (to children) allurements, which the workmen had brought
to the
site. It is clear that the safety precautions taken by the Post
Office
did not in this instance measure up to Lord Atkin's test.
The only
remaining question appears to be whether the occurrence of
an
explosion such as did in fact take place in the manhole was a
happening
which should reasonably have been foreseen by the Post
Office employees.
This is the critical point in the case, and I
think I should next refer to
some of the observations upon it by
the Lord Ordinary, the Lord President,
and Lords Sorn and Guthrie.
In the
report of the present case 1961 S.C. p. 320 the Lord
Ordinary
recognises the allurements to children provided by the
Post Office gear, and
suggests various attractions from their
point of view, but goes on: " What
" I have to consider,
in this case, however, is whether a reasonable man
" would
have anticipated that a child doing these things was likely to be
"
thrown into the hole in consequence of an explosion initiated
by the
" lamp breaking and causing the flame to come in
contact with inflammable
" vapour ... or whether the risk of
such occurrences was so small that
" a reasonable man would
have been entitled to disregard them ... In
4
" the
light of the evidence, I cannot find that this danger ought
reasonably
" to have been foreseen. The greater the degree of
improbability of the
" explosion being caused in the manner
in which I have held that it was
" caused (in the absence of
any other reasonable explanation), the more
" a reasonable
man must be excused for not anticipating it. The pursuer's
"
case must, accordingly, fail. Even if the ordinary dangers of a
child
" playing with a lamp and falling into an open manhole
should have been
" reasonably foreseen, I do not consider
that injuries resulting from an
" explosion such as occurred
could have been reasonably foreseen—cf.
" Overseas
Tankship (U.K.) Ltd. v. Mort's Dock and Engineering Co. Ltd.
"
(The Wagon Mound) [1961] AC 388."
The Lord
President (Lord Clyde) said this: " In these circumstances,
and
" in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the
Lord Ordinary was well
" entitled to conclude that the
combination of circumstances necessary to
" create this
paraffin explosion was so unforeseeable that a reasonable man
"
would be excused if he disregarded them and took no precautions
against
" them. It appears to me undeniable that the cause of
the present accident
" was the explosion. If there had been
none, the pursuer would not have
" fallen into the hole and
so sustained his injuries. For his case, both
" on record and
in his evidence, is that, prior to it, he was on the roadway,
"
and it was the explosion which caused him to fall into the manhole
"
and get burned. If that explosion was not a foreseeable eventuality,
the
" pursuer's whole case fails."
Lord Sorn
at p. 333 says: " Looked at in that way, it seems to me, upon
"
the evidence, that the explosion in the present case was a thing
that
" differed in kind from the kind of things which could
be said to have
" been reasonably foreseeable. It was not
merely an unpredictable incident
" in the kind of chain of
events which might have been foreseen; it was
" an essential
event outside the kinds of events which might have been
"
foreseen."
Lord
Guthrie, after mentioning precautions which it would have
been
reasonable to take but were not taken, observed : "
Therefore, the defender's
" liability to the pursuer in
damages depends on the answer to the question
" whether the
fact that the explosion was not reasonably foreseeable is fatal
"
to the pursuer's claim."
Lord
Carmont, who dissented, said this at p. 331: " Having provided
an
" allurement to a child which brought about the injury, I
do not think the
" defender can escape liability by saying
that he did not foresee the exact
" way in which the
allurement would affect the mind of a child. Even if
" the
exact way in which injury was caused to the child is not
conclusively
" proved, it is certainly proved that an
explosion was caused in the open
" manhole because the light
from the lantern fired an explosive mixture of
" vapour in
the manhole."
I find it
impossible to accept the view taken by the Lord Ordinary
and the
majority of the Court of Session.
It is true
that the duty of care expected in cases of this sort is confined
to
reasonably foreseeable dangers, but it does not necessarily follow
that
liability is escaped because the danger actually
materialising is not identical
with the danger reasonably foreseen
and guarded against. Each case
must depend on its own particular
facts. For example (as pointed out in
the Opinions), in the
present case the paraffin did the mischief by exploding,
not
burning, and it is said that while a paraffin fire (caused, for
example, by
the upsetting of the lighted lamp or otherwise
allowing its contents to leak
out) was a reasonably foreseeable
risk so soon as the pursuer got access
to the lamp, an explosion
was not.
To my mind
the distinction drawn between burning and explosion is
too fine to
warrant acceptance. Supposing the pursuer had on the day
in
question gone to the site and taken one of the lamps, and upset it
over
himself, thus setting his clothes alight, the person to be
considered responsible
for protecting children from the dangers to
be found there would presumably
have been liable. On the other
hand, if the lamp, when the boy upset it,
5
exploded
in his face, he would have had no remedy because the explosion
was
an event which could not reasonably be foreseen. This does not
seem
to me to be right.
I think
that in these imaginary circumstances the danger would be a
danger
of fire of some kind, for example, setting alight to his clothes
or
causing him bodily hurt. If there is a risk of such a fire as
that I do not
think the duty of care prescribed in Donoghue v.
Stevenson is prevented from
coming into operation by the
presence of the remote possibility of the more
serious event of an
explosion.
I would allow this appeal.
Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest
MY LORDS,
It is
within common experience and knowledge that children may be
allured
by and tempted to play and meddle with objects which for others
would
have no special attraction. In such playing or meddling children
may
be heedless of danger and may bring neither method nor reason
nor caution
to bear. If by the exercise of reasonable foresight
there can be avoidance
of the risk that as a result of being so
allured children may get themselves
hurt it is not over-exacting
to require such foresight, and where a duty is owed
such
reasonable and practicable measures as foresight would prompt.
When
shortly after 5 p.m. on Saturday, the 8th November, 1958,
the
Appellant (then aged 8) and his companion (then aged 10) were
in Russell
Road, Edinburgh, they could not resist the opportunity
of exploring the
unattended canvas shelter. In and around it they
found aids to exploration
readily at hand. Within the canvas
shelter or tent was the uncovered man-
hole. Nearby was a section
of a ladder. Nearby also there were lighted
lamps. Pursuing their
boyish whims, they must have thought that as a
place for play it
was bounteously equipped. Furthermore, somewhere out-
side the
tent they found a rope and a tin can (which apparently were no
part
of the Post Office material). The ladder and the rope and a lamp
proved
helpful in exploring the hole and the chamber below the
road. In all this,
however, as anyone might have surmised, was the
risk that in some way
one of the boys might fall down the hole or
might suffer some burn from a
lamp. The lamps were doubtless good
and safe lamps when ordinarily
handled, but in the hands of
playful, inquisitive or mischievous boys there
could be no
assumption that they would be used in a normal way.
Exercising
an ordinary and certainly not an over-exacting degree of pre-
vision
the workmen should, I consider, have decided, when the tea
break
came, that someone had better be left in charge who could
repel the intrusion
of inquisitive children. If, of course, there
was no likelihood that children
might appear different
considerations would apply. But children did appear,
and I find no
reason to differ from the conclusion of the Lord Ordinary that
the
presence of children in 'the immediate vicinity of the shelter was
reason-
ably to be anticipated. No question as to trespassing has
been raised before
your Lordships.
When the
children did appear they found good scope for moments of
adventure.
Then came disaster for the pursuer. A risk that he might in
some
way burn himself by playing with a lamp was translated into
reality.
In fact he was very severely burned. Though his severe
burns came about
in a way that seems surprising, this only serves
to illustrate that boys can
bring about a consequence which could
be expected but yet can bring it
about in a most unusual manner
and with unexpectedly severe results. After
the pursuer tripped
against the lamp and so caused it to fall into the manhole
and
after he contrived to be drawn into or to be blown into or to fall
into
the manhole he was burned. His burns were, however, none the
less burns
although there was such an immediate combustion of
paraffin vapour that
there was an explosion. The circumstance that
an explosion as such would
not have been contemplated does not
alter the fact that it could reasonably
6
have been
foreseen that a boy who played in and about the canvas shelter
and
played with the things that were thereabouts might get hurt and
might
in some way burn himself. That is just what happened. The
pursuer did
burn himself, though his burns were more grave than
would have been
expected. The fact that the features or
developments of an accident may
not reasonably have been foreseen
does not mean that the accident itself was
not foreseeable. The
pursuer was in my view injured as a result of the
type or kind of
accident or occurrence that could reasonably have been
foreseen.
In agreement with Lord Carmont, I consider that the defenders
do
not avoid liability because they could not have foretold the exact
way in
which the pursuer would play with the alluring objects that
had been left to
attract him or the exact way in which in so doing
he might get hurt.
In the
circumstances of Haynes v. Harwood [1935] 1 K.B. 146,
Greer, L.J.
at p. 156 said:—"There can be no doubt in
this case that the damage was
" the result of the wrongful
act in the sense of being one of the natural and
" probable
consequences of the wrongful act. It is not necessary to show
"
that this particular accident and this particular damage were
probable: it
" is sufficient if the accident is of a class
that might well be anticipated as
" one of the reasonable and
probable results of the wrongful act". So in
Carmarthenshire
County Council v. Lewis [1955] A.C.549 it was held that
it
was foreseeable that a four-year-old boy who was left
unattended in a nursery
school might wander on to the highway
through an open gate and that as a
result some driver of a vehicle
might suffer injury through taking action to
avoid the child. But
as Lord Tucker said (at p. 571): " It is not necessary
"
that the precise result should be foreseen.
To the
same effect were the observations of Lord Keith of Avonholm in
Miller
v. South of Scotland Electricity Board, 1958 S.C.20, when
(at p. 34)
he said:" It has been pointed out in other cases
that it is not necessary to
" foresee the precise accident
that happened and similarly it is not necessary,
" in my
opinion, to postulate foreseeability of the precise chain of
circum-
" stances leading up to an accident. There does not
seem to me to be any-
" thing fantastic or highly improbable
in the series of happenings that are
" alleged to have led to
the accident here. If it is reasonably probable that
" an
accident may happen from some act of neglect or commission that may
"
be enough to discharge the initial onus on the pursuer, though it
would
" remain, of course, to show that the pursuer was
within the class of persons
" to whom a duty was owed. The
question is:—Was what happened so
" remote that it
could not be reasonably foreseeable? " See also the
judgments
in Harvey v. Singer Manufacturing Co., 1960 S.C.155.
My Lords,
in my view there was a duty owed by the defenders to safeguard
the
pursuer against the type or kind of occurrence which in fact
happened
and which resulted in his injuries, and the defenders are
not absolved from
liability because they did not envisage "
the precise concatenation of circum-
" stances which led up
to the accident". For these reasons I differ, with
respect,
from the majority of the First Division, and I would allow
the
appeal.
Lord Guest
MY LORDS,
In
November, 1958, some Post Office employees had opened a manhole
in
Russell Road, Edinburgh, for the purpose of obtaining access to
a
telephone cable. The manhole from which the cover had been
removed
was near the edge of the roadway. A shelter tent had been
erected over
the open manhole. The manhole was some nine feet
deep, and a ladder had
been placed inside the manhole to give
access to the cable. Around the
area of. the site had been placed
four red warning paraffin lamps. The lamps
were lit at 3.30 p.m.
About 5 p.m. or 5.30 p.m. the Post Office employees
left the site
for a tea break, for which purpose they went to an adjoining
7
Post
Office building. Before leaving (they removed the ladder from
the
manhole and placed it on the ground beside the shelter and
pulled a
tarpaulin cover over the entrance to the shelter, leaving
a space of two feet
to two feet, six inches between the lower edge
of the tarpaulin and the
ground. The lamps were left burning.
After they
left, the Appellant, aged eight, and his uncle, aged ten, came
along
Russell Road and decided to explore the shelter. According to
the
findings of the Lord Ordinary, the boys (picked up one of
the red lamps,
(raised up the tarpaulin sheet and entered the
shelter. They brought the
ladder into the shelter with a view to
descending into the manhole. They
also brought a piece of rope
which was not the Post Office equipment, tied
(the rope to the
lamp and, with the lamp, lowered themselves into the
manhole. They
both came out carrying the lamp. Thereafter, according to
the
evidence, the Appellant tripped over the lamp, which fell into the
hole.
There followed an explosion from the hole with flames
reaching a height
of thirty feet. With the explosion the Appellant
fell into the hole and
sustained very severe burning injuries.
In an
action by the pursuer directed against the Lord Advocate,
as
representing the Postmaster-General, on the ground that the
accident was
due to the fault of the Post Office employees in
failing to close the manhole
before they left or to post a
watchman while they were away, the Lord
Ordinary assoilzied the
Respondent. His judgment was affirmed by a
majority of the First
Division, Lord Carmont dissenting.
Before the
Lord Ordinary and the Division a preliminary point was taken
by
the Respondent that the Appellant was a trespasser in the shelter
and
that the Post Office employees therefore owed no duty to take
precautions
for his safety. This point was not persisted in before
this House, and it
is therefore unnecessary to say anything about
it.
The Lord
Ordinary, after a very careful analysis of the evidence, has
found
that the cause of the explosion was as a resuit of the lamp which
the
Appellant knocked into the hole being so disturbed that
paraffin
escaped from the tank, formed vapour and was ignited by
the flame. The
lamp was recovered from the manhole after the
accident; the tank of the
lamp was half out and the wick-holder
was completely out of the lamp.
This explanation of the accident
was rated by the experts as a low order
of probability. But as
there was no other feasible explanation k was
accepted by the Lord
Ordinary, and this House must take it as the established
cause.
The Lord
Ordinary has held that the presence of children in the shelter
and
in the manhole ought reasonably to have been anticipated by the
Post
Office employees. His ground for so holding was that the
lighted
lamps in the public street adjacent to a tented shelter in
which there was
an open manhole provided an allurement which would
have been an
attraction to children passing along the street.
I .pause
here to observe that the Respondent submitted an argument
before
the Division and repeated in this House that having regard to
the
evidence the presence of children in Russell Road on that day,
which was
a Saturday, could not reasonably have been anticipated.
This argument
received only the support of the Lord President in
the Court below. It was
founded on the fact that Russell Road is a
quiet road and has no dwelling-
house fronting it, the nearest
house being four hundred yards away and
the evidence of the Post
Office employees that they were never bothered
with children. This
contention was rejected by the Lord Ordinary, who
was in a better
position than we are to judge of its validity. Having
regard to
the fact that this was a public street in the heart of the city
there
was no necessity, in my view, for the Appellant to prove the
likelihood
of children being present. If the Respondent had to
establish the unlikeli-
hood of the presence of children, his
evidence fell far short of any such
situation. It was entirely
dependent on the experience of the Post Office
employees during
the preceding five days of the week. They had no previous
experience
of traffic at any other time. The Lord Ordinary, in my view,
was
well entitled to reach the conclusion which he did.
8
The next
step in the Lard Ordinary's reasoning was that it was
reasonable
to anticipate that danger would be likely to result
from the children's
interference with the red lamps and their
entrance to the shelter. He has
further held that in these
circumstances " the normal dangers of such children
"
falling into the manhole or being in some way injured by a lamp,
particu-
" larly if it fell or broke, were such that a
reasonable man would not have
" ignored them ". This
view of the evidence was not, as I read the judgments,
dissented
from in the Inner House. Reference may be particularly made
to
Lord Guthrie's remarks, 1961 S.C. page 337, where he says: " The
Lord
" Ordinary had held that it should have been anticipated
that a boy might
" in the circumstances fall into the manhole
and sustain injuries by burning
" from the paraffin lamp."
It seems to have been accepted by both parties
in the hearing
before the Division that burning injuries might reasonably
have
been foreseen. But whether this be the position, there was
ample
evidence upon which the conclusion could be drawn that there
was a reason-
able probability of burning injuries if the children
were allowed into the
shelter with the lamp.
The
Solicitor-General endeavoured to limit the extent of
foreseeability
in this connection by references to certain
passages in the evidence regarding
the safety of the red paraffin
lamps. It might very well be that paraffin
lamps by themselves if
left in the open are not potentially dangerous even
to children.
But different considerations apply when they are found in
connection
with a shelter tent and a manhole all of which are allurements
to
the inquisitive child. It is the combination of these factors which
renders
the situation one of potential danger.
In
dismissing the Appellant's claim the Lord Ordinary and the
majority
of the Judges of the First Division reached the
conclusion that the accident
which happened was not reasonably
foreseeable. In order to establish a
coherent chain of causation
it is not necessary that the precise details
leading up to the
accident should have been reasonably foreseeable: it is
sufficient
if the accident which occurred is of a type which should have
been
foreseeable by a reasonably careful person (Miller v. South
of Scotland
Electricity Board, 1958 S.C. (H.L.) 20, Lord Keith
of Avonholm, at p. 34;
Harvey v. Singer Manufacturing
Co., 1960 SC 155, Lord Patrick, at p. 168);
or as Lord
Mackintosh, at p. 172, expressed it in Harvey, the precise
con-
catenation of circumstances need not be envisaged.
Concentration has been
placed in the Courts below on the explosion
which it was said could not
have been foreseen because it was
caused in a unique fashion by the
paraffin forming into vapour and
being ignited by the naked flame of the
wick. But this, in my
opinion, is to concentrate on what is really a non-
essential
element in the dangerous situation created by the allurement.
The
test might better be put thus:—Was the igniting of
paraffin outside the
lamp by the flame a foreseeable consequence
of the breach of duty? In
the circumstances there was a
combination of potentially dangerous circum-
stances against which
the Post Office had to protect the Appellant. If these
formed an
allurement to children it might have been foreseen that they
would
play with the lamp, that it might tip over, that it might be
broken,
and 'that when broken the paraffin might spill and be
ignited by the flame.
All these steps in the chain of causation
seem to have been accepted by
all the Judges in the Courts below
as foreseeable. But because the explosion
was the agent which
caused the burning and was unforeseeable, therefore
the accident,
according to them, was not reasonably foreseeable. In my
opinion
this reasoning is fallacious. An explosion is only one way in
which
burning can be caused. Burning can also be caused by the
contact
between liquid paraffin and a naked flame. In the one case
paraffin vapour
and in the other case liquid paraffin is ignited
by fire. I cannot see that
these are two different types of
accident. They are both burning accidents
and in both cases the
injuries would be burning injuries. Upon this view
the explosion
was an immaterial event in the chain of causation. It was
simply
one way in which burning might be caused by the potentially
dangerous
paraffin lamp. I adopt with respect Lord Carmont's observation
in
the present case (1961 S.C. p. 331): " The defender cannot, I
think, escape
" liability by contending that he did not
foresee all the possibilities of the
9
"
manner in which allurements—the manhole and the lantern—would
act
" upon the childish mind."
The
Respondent relied upon the case of Muir v. Glasgow
Corporation,
1943 SC (HL) 3, and particularly on certain
observations by Lords
Thankerton and Macmillan. There are, in my
view, essential differences
between the two cases. The tea urn
was, in that case, not like the paraffin
lamp in the present
circumstance, a potentially dangerous object. More-
over, the
precise way in which the tea came to be spilled was never
estab-
lished, and, as Lord Romer said at page 18: "It being
thus unknown what
" was the particular risk that
materialised, it is impossible to decide whether
" it was or
was not one that should have been within the reasonable con-
"
temptation of Mrs Alexander or of some other agent or employee of
the
" appellants, and it is, accordingly, also impossible to
fix the appellants
" with liability for the damage that the
children sustained."
I have
therefore reached the conclusion that the accident which occurred
and
which caused burning injuries to the Appellant was one which
ought
reasonably to have been foreseen by the Post Office
employees and that
they were at fault in failing to provide a
protection against the Appellant
entering the shelter and going
down the manhole.
I would allow the appeal.
Lord Pearce
My lords,
I agree with the Opinion of my noble and learned friend, Lord Guest.
The
dangerous allurement was left unguarded in a public highway in
the
heart of Edinburgh. It was for the defenders to show by evidence
that,
although this was a public street, the presence of children
there was so
little to be expected that a reasonable man might
leave the allurement
unguarded. But in my opinion their evidence
fell short of that, and the
Lord Ordinary rightly so decided.
The
defenders are therefore liable for all the foreseeable
consequences
of their neglect. When an accident is of a different
type and kind from
anything that a defender could have foreseen he
is not liable for it (see
The Wagon Mound [1961] A.C.388).
But to demand too great precision
in the test of foreseeability
would be unfair to the pursuer since the facets
of misadventure
are innumerable (see Miller v. South of Scotland
Electricity
Board, 1958 S.C. (H.L.) 20 at p. 34; Harvey v.
Singer Manufacturing
Co., 1960 SC 155). In the case of an
allurement to children it is particularly
hard to foresee with
precision the exact shape of the disaster that will
(arise. The
allurement in this case was the combination of a red paraffin
lamp,
a ladder, a partially closed tent, and a cavernous hole within it,
a
setting well-fitted to inspire some juvenile adventure that
might end in
calamity. The obvious risks were burning and
conflagration and a fall.
All these in fact occurred, but
unexpectedly the mishandled lamp instead
of causing an ordinary
conflagration produced a violent explosion. Did the
explosion
create an accident and damage of a different type from
the
misadventure and damage that could be foreseen? In my judgment
it
did not. The accident was but a variant of the foreseeable. It
was, to
quote the words of Denning, L.J. in Roe v. Minister
of Health and Another
{19541 2 Q.B.66 at p. 85, " within
the risk created by the negligence." No
unforeseeable
extraneous, initial occurrence fired the train. The children's
entry
into the tent with the ladder, the descent into the hole, the
mishandling
of the lamp, were all foreseeable. The greater part of
the path to injury
had thus been trodden, and the mishandled lamp
was quite likely at
that stage to spill and cause a conflagration.
Instead, by some curious
chance of combustion, it exploded and no
conflagration occurred, it would
seem, until after the explosion.
There was thus an unexpected manifestation
of the apprehended
physical dangers. But it would be, I think, too narrow
10
a view to
hold that those who created the risk of fire are excused from
the
liability for the damage by fire because it came by way of
explosive
combustion. The resulting damage, though severe, was not
greater than or
different in kind from that which might have been
produced had the lamp
spilled and produced a more normal
conflagration in the hole.
I would therefore allow the appeal.
(30498) Wt. 8024-149 35 4/63 St.S.