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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 >> Nulty & Ors v Milton Keynes Borough Council [2013] EWCA Civ 15 (24 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/15.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 25, [2013] 1 WLR 1183, [2013] Lloyd's Rep IR 243, [2013] BLR 134, [2013] EWCA Civ 15 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Edwards-Stuart J
HT 09 273
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
____________________
(1) MICHAEL NULTY DECEASED (2) WING BAT SECURITY LIMITED (FORMERLY KNOWN AS DBI SUPPORT SERVICES LIMITED) (3) NATIONAL INSURANCE AND GUARANTEE CORPORATION LIMITED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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MILTON KEYNES BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Andrew Rigney QC and Mr Richard Sage (instructed by Fishburns LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 4-6 December 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
The facts in outline
"9. I am adamant that I did not smoke anywhere other than in the designated smoking area on 2 April 2005.
10. I would never have taken the risk of smoking inside the processing area. It was full of paper and machinery. You'd have to be pretty reckless to do that. The risk of fire was obvious. I would never have taken such a risk.
11. I also really needed to maintain good commercial relations with people at the Recycling Centre. It was an important source of work for me back then. I wouldn't have wanted to do anything which would have put them off wanting to hire me again.
…
13. I recall that on the day of the fire the Recycling Centre and the processing area were really untidy. There were paper and cans lying around everywhere, all over the floor. In some places the waste was piled up really high. It was a real mess, which I suppose must have been normal for those types of places."
The judge's approach
"First, a cigarette end carelessly discarded by someone smoking in the area where the fire started. Second, arcing from a live electric cable. Third, arson by an intruder. As I have said, the council alleges that the fire was caused by the first of these, and that it was Mr Nulty who was to blame. NIG contends that if the fire was caused by a carelessly discarded cigarette, then it could equally well have been discarded by someone else. But its primary case is that the fire was caused by electrical arcing or, alternatively, by an intruder."
"For all these reasons I consider it very unlikely that arcing of the small Boa cable caused the first fire. There is a remote possibility that it did, but I regard the likelihood that this happened as no higher than that. "
"Accordingly, of the three suggested causes of the fire, none of which, if taken on its own, is one that is inherently likely, I find that a cigarette end carelessly discarded by Mr Nulty is the most probable. In the light of this conclusion I must now turn to the authorities in order to decide whether or not that finding is sufficient for me to hold as a result that the council has in law discharged the burden of proving that Mr Nulty caused the first fire."
"I do not myself think that it is false logic to reason that where only two possibilities are under consideration both of which seem unlikely, if one seems much less likely than the other, the less likely can be discounted thus making the first likely to have happened on the balance of probabilities."
"In my judgment there are only three possible candidates for the cause of the first fire and they are the ones that I have mentioned. I accept that it might be regarded as unlikely that an experienced electrical engineer, who had in past been a part time fireman, would choose to smoke in a building to which he knew a no-smoking policy applied and then discard the cigarette end – albeit one that he thought he had stubbed out – into flammable waste lying on the floor. But if the only other possible causes of this fire are very much less likely, as I find they are, then in law the discarded cigarette becomes the probable cause of the first fire. As Waller LJ observed in the passage that I have emphasised above, this process of reasoning is not false logic."
"I have found this an anxious and difficult case. To make a finding against a person who has been unable to come to court and defend himself is not something any court would wish to do lightly. It is for that reason that I have explored in detail, and perhaps some may think in excessive detail, the possible alternative causes of this fire and, in particular, the likelihood of arcing from the small Boa baler cable.
Whilst I have found that Mr Nulty's negligence caused the first fire, I doubt very much if he thought that he was doing anything that created a serious risk. But, on my findings, on this one occasion he was mistaken…However, in all other respects Mr Nulty appears to have been a competent and careful engineer who had provided valuable services to the centre."
"Rarely can competing menus have been proffered with such guarded recommendations by each of the chefs responsible."
"In the result, I find myself driven to conclude that the defendants' wear and tear explanation must on the evidence be effectively ruled out. That leaves me with a choice between the owners' submarine hypothesis and the possibility that the casualty occurred as a result of wear and tear but by a mechanism which remains in doubt. Cases must be decided on evidence. My conclusion is that despite its inherent improbability, and despite the disbelief with which I have throughout been inclined to regard it, the owners' submarine hypothesis must be accepted as, on the balance of probabilities, the explanation of this casualty."
"My lords, the late Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in his book The Sign of Four, describes his hero, Mr Sherlock Holmes, as saying to the latter's friend, Dr Watson: "How often have I said to you that, when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable must be the truth?" It is, no doubt, on the basis of this well-known but unjudicial dictum that Bingham J decided to accept the ship owners' submarine theory, even though he regarded it, for seven cogent reasons, as extremely improbable.
In my view there are three reasons why it is inappropriate to apply the dictum of Mr Sherlock Holmes, to which I have just referred, to the process of fact-finding which a judge of first instance has to perform at the conclusion of a case of the kind here concerned.
The first reason is one which I have already sought to emphasise as being of great importance, namely that the judge is not always bound to make a finding one way or the other with regard to the facts averred by the parties. He has open to him the third alternative of saying that the party on whom the burden of proof lies in relation to any averment made by him has failed to discharge that burden. No judge likes to decide cases on the burden of proof if he can legitimately avoid having to do so. There are cases, however, in which, owing to the unsatisfactory state of the evidence or otherwise, deciding on the burden of proof is the only just course for him to take.
The second reason is that the dictum can only apply when all relevant facts are known, so that all possible explanations, except a single extremely improbable one, can properly be eliminated. That state of affairs does not exist in the present case: to take but one example, the ship sank in such deep water that a diver's examination of the nature of the aperture, which might well have thrown light on its cause, could not be carried out.
The third reason is that the legal concept of proof of a case on a balance of probabilities must be applied with common sense. It requires a judge of first instance, before he finds that a particular event occurred, to be satisfied on the evidence that it is more likely to have occurred than not. If a judge concludes, on a whole series of cogent grounds, that the occurrence of an event is extremely improbable, a finding by him that it is nevertheless more likely to have occurred than not, does not accord with common sense. "
Expert evidence
Boa cable theory
"I have been provided with a sample of both types of cable and XLPE is noticeably harder than the PVC insulation. One would have to hit it with a hard, heavy and sharp implement to make any impression on it."
1. a rat gnawing through a section of the XLPE;
2. somebody moving the cable so as to bring that section of the core into contact with the metalwork of the cable tray while power was off;
3. the occurrence of an arcing event on the restoration of power to the cable which initiated a smouldering fire;
4. the cable remaining live for over half an hour, so as to permit the other areas of arcing damage to occur after the smouldering fire had turned into a flaming fire.
Discarded cigarette end theory
"The only thing I can think of what started it – at the back of the baler, there's a roll of cable there and that cable has been there, I didn't know at the time, but that's been there a long time and the ends were exposed. The other end of the cable was connected to the switchboard."
"You've got to realise, I push all that out of the way. So if there's a cigarette end there or cardboard there, I could have touched that anyhow."
"The afternoon following the fire, on inspecting the site with an investigator I noticed a large roll of cable with bare ends at the rear of the boiler. The other end was connected to the board, the breaker of which had tripped. I pointed this out to the investigator, she took a photo of the board."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Beatson:
Lord Justice Longmore: