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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Smith v Kempson [2011] EWHC 2680 (QB) (21 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/2680.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2680 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Christine Smith |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Barry Kempson |
Defendant |
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Mr Edwards (instructed by Spencers Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 October 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
FACTS
THE JUDGMENT
"4. I have no reason to question the integrity of any of the witnesses who have given oral evidence today. This accident occurred two and a half years ago. Memories fade, recollections may differ, they may differ in a material particular, but that does not necessarily mean that one person is telling the truth and the other is not. I have no reason to believe that anybody has given evidence other that in accordance with their genuine belief as to what happened on that occasion.
5. Mr Kempton provided a map or diagram of how he viewed the incident which occurred and he places himself on the motorbike on the right hand side of the road which everybody accepts he had no alternative to do because of parked cars on Oak Hill on that occasion. According to his evidence and his diagrams he was only 8 to 10 feet away from the defendant's vehicle when he saw it and immediately braked. That was not a controlled stop. The back wheels locked, as a consequence of which he was jettisoned off his bike and came to rest underneath the bumper of the Mercedes driven by Mrs Smith. The diagram at page 85 places Mrs Smith's vehicle well into the right hand lane, the lane in which the claimant was travelling on that occasion, and both Mr and Mrs Smith, and indeed Miss Lila Rowe, do not accept that the car was as far over the white middle lane as Mr Kempton indicated. Mrs Smith indicated that part of the passenger side of the front of the car had gone over the white line. Mr Smith gave more than one version of events and indicates that his recollection was not as clear as it could be.
6. Miss Lila Rowe felt that Ms Smiths car was partially over or on that white line. I do not think it really makes a great material differences to the circumstances of the case because this accident occurred because Mrs Smith pulled out in circumstances where she thought it was safe to do so and it was not. Whether that was because she did not look properly or she looked properly but she had a blind spot but could not see, I am not in a position to say.
7. The claimant brings this case. The burden of proof is the balance of probabilities and, as has been pointed out to me, if I conclude that the chances are 51% that the accident occurred as a result of falling below the standard of a reasonable driver by the defendant, that is sufficient to prove the case. Mrs Smith was quite candid in her oral evidence. She accepted that the priority was to the driver on Oak Hill. She accepted that this was a tricky junction. She felt that she did everything possible to make sure it was safe to undertake the manoeuvre and to pull out. She was wrong about that. It was an error of judgment she took in the circumstances and she pulled out in circumstances where, if she had seen the motorcyclist on the road (and there is no suggestion that he was doing anything that he should not have been doing, or his driving fell below the reasonable standard of a motor cyclist,) then the accident would not have occurred. Therefore, I have come to the conclusion that on a balance of probabilities the accident was caused by the negligent driving of the defendant in pulling out from a minor junction on to a major road in circumstances where it was not safe to do so. The defendant's view was clearly obscured by cars which were parked along that road. She indicated on that day that it was a particularly busy and heavily parked junction and therefore she knew more than anybody else because of the period of time that she had lived in that area that she had to take extra special care on that occasion, which she did not do, and so therefore I find for the claimant."
"I do not think I included in my judgment the issue of, well, it wasn't an issue, but there is no suggestion that the claimant was speeding or driving at an excessive speed or in excess of the speed limit".
"I have found that at the time of the accident [the defendant] had advanced only about 5 feet beyond the offside of the refuse wagon [which was obstructing his view]. In moving slowly as he did, it seems to me that the defendant was taking all reasonable precautions against the possibility, however remote, that their might be a vehicle overtaking the refuse wagon. He could not, in my judgment, have foreseen that there would be an overtaking vehicle which would have ignored the hazards which I have previously mentioned and be travelling straight across the junction at a speed which would not allow it to stop when it saw the defendant's car. It seems to me that in all the circumstances of this case, to stop his car just beyond the offside of the refuse wagon would have been to go beyond the duty of reasonable care".
"Now I must say that when I first heard counsel for the plaintiff opening this case I took the view that a person who emerges from a minor into a major road ought not to proceed beyond the line of his vision and if he does so, he does so at his own risk and could not rely on other vehicles seeing him…[but for the case of Clark v Winchurch,] I would have found the parties 50-50 to blame on the basis that the plaintiff had been going too fast and the defendant had gone beyond the line of his vision".
"It seems to me that if one reads that sentence as a whole, and in its context, it is not right to say that the judge was taking the view that there was a strict or absolute liability. It seems to me that he was saying no more than in the circumstances there is a very high duty on a defendant of taking care".
"It seems to me to follow that the right thing for this court to do is to allow the appeal and make the finding which the judge would have made if he had not, wrongly in my view, thought he was bound by Clark's case to come to a different conclusion. I am not saying for a moment that if I had myself been trying this case I should have apportioned the responsibility 50-50 but it is not possible for this court to go into the question of apportionment or alter the Judge's view about that".
"The burden of proof is the balance of probabilities and, … if I conclude that the chances are 51% that the accident occurred as a result of falling below the standard of a reasonable driver by the defendant, that is sufficient to prove the case".