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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ayres v Odedra [2013] EWHC 40 (QB) (18 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/40.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 40 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
SITTING AT BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
B e f o r e :
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ROBERT IAN AYRES (A protected Person by his Mother and Litigation Friend SUE AYRES) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MAHESH ODEDRA |
Defendant |
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Mr Simeon Maskrey QC (instructed by Berryman Lace Mawer LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 – 28 November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mrs Justice Swift:
THE CLAIM
THE SITE OF THE ACCIDENT
THE CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING UP TO THE ACCIDENT
THE PARTIES' CASES
THE CCTV FOOTAGE
THE LAY EVIDENCE
The lay evidence called on behalf of the claimant
The evidence of Brendan Cox
"… he saw the car stop at the traffic lights and a group of males and females in the road, one of the males had his trousers down pulling Moonies at the occupants of the car, this male then leant over the bonnet of the car and was looked as if he was trying to climb on the bonnet. He then saw the car drive off hitting the male that had been pulling Moonies and then running over him. The car stopped but then drove off."
"… I remember seeing the same young man again now standing in the middle of Horsefair Street, right in the path of a silver car. He appeared to be blocking the path of the car and was banging on its bonnet, not in an aggressive way; just sort of jack the lad sort of thing. Other members of his group were standing near the car. I can remember the lad in the black shirt standing 2ft from it, but he was not touching it at all. I can't say where the others were exactly.
The young man appeared to be starting to move towards the driver's corner of the bonnet when the car driver suddenly gunned it. The car shot forward as if to mount a kerb or something. The young man fell backwards hit the ground and lay flat out. The silver car drove straight over him with ease. I saw the front offside driver's wheel run directly over the young man's legs and upper body. I assume the rear wheel would have done so."
In that statement, Brendan Cox did not say that the defendant's car had struck the claimant. When he was asked about this omission at the trial, he replied that, although he had not actually seen the car strike the claimant, the claimant's position was such that it must have done so. He did not accept that the claimant had merely stumbled and fallen just before the car moved off.
"As he did so I heard the sound of the car's engine 'being gunned' and the car suddenly accelerated straight ahead as though its driver was trying to mount a kerb edge or something. This did not appear to have been done by accident but instead appeared to me to be a deliberate act.
This took me by surprise because [the claimant] was still in front of the car and standing so close to it that his hands were still close to its bonnet. As the car shot forward there was no way that [the claimant] could get out of its way.
I saw [the claimant] fall down onto the road surface. I believe that he did so because he was struck by the front bumper area of the car which impacted onto the front of his knees.
I then saw the car run straight over [the claimant]. Its driver made no attempt to steer either left or right and the car just went straight ahead. As the car moved from my right to left I lost sight of [the claimant] as he was masked by the car. I was aware that at least one of the nearside wheels of the car ran over [the claimant] as I saw the car 'rise' on its suspension as though it had gone over a 'road ramp'. [The claimant] reappeared at the back of the car, from a position behind the rear offside wheel."
The evidence of Liam Neale
"[The claimant], either through loss of balance or deliberate act bent forward and placed his outstretched hands on the bonnet of the car. … The car engine quietened and it drove forward at speed colliding with [the claimant]; that caused him to be thrown, one arm and one leg into the air, he disappeared out of my view down the driver's side of it. The car drove out of my view and I saw [the claimant] laying in almost a recovery position his head towards Gallowtree Gate and his legs all over the place towards the Bank."
The evidence of Ruth Atterbury
The evidence of Luke Neale
The evidence called on behalf of the defendant
The defendant
"Someone was messing about in front of my car; I tried to [s?]kip it past them and they went under my car… so practically I've run 'em over."
He went on to say:
"… he just … jumped [up?] in front of my car and took his trousers down, but I [started goingtried to go?] past him and then he[just hitskicks?], like kicks it. As he went to kick it, he just drops and then my wheel went over him. So I span off him and then all his mates started opening my car so I just drove off …" [the words in brackets are amendments to the original transcript and represent what is believed to be a more accurate version.]
"…[the defendant] said that he was at the traffic lights on HORSEFAIR STREET as they were on red. Whilst at the traffic lights [the claimant] went in front of the vehicle and pulled his trousers down doing a mooney. The lights then changed to green so the [defendant] moved around [the claimant] so to go round him. [The defendant] continued to say that he then hit [the claimant]. At that point people started to hit his vehicle so he drives off down the road.
People then followed the vehicle and started to hit it again. Due to this [the defendant] drove off. He parked his vehicle on CHARLES STREET and then contacted police."
"…well ... he no longer had my attention because … the attention was to everyone else. So he might still have been in my view. I can't remember seeing him in my view because my attention wasn't at that stage … I was panicked and obviously I was everywhere, I was just looking at everyone… ".
"4.2 The Defendant approached and stopped at the lights situated just past the taxi rank which was on his offside, Market Place Approach being on his nearside. He stopped because the lights were at red;
4.3 The Claimant approached the road in front of the Defendant's vehicle from the Defendant's nearside. He then stopped in the road in front of the Defendant's vehicle and dropped his trousers exposing his genitals to the Defendant and his passenger;
4.4 There were other persons in the vicinity who appeared to be with the Claimant, particularly to the Defendant's nearside, who began to shout and gesticulate. The Claimant moved towards the offside of the Defendant's vehicle, and some of the other persons moved towards or came closer to the vicinity of the nearside of the Defendant's vehicle;
4.5 The Defendant and his passenger felt threatened and frightened and were extremely concerned as to what would happen next;
4.6 The Defendant then noticed that there was a clear path ahead in front of his vehicle. He could see no other person in his path, and so began to move off slowly and very carefully, pulling slightly to the left to be sure he was clear of any pedestrians on his right, and maintaining observation on the group which were by now in very close proximity on his right;
4.7 As the Defendant drove forwards he was aware of contact between his vehicle and some object, which he subsequently realised to have been the Claimant. He immediately stopped his vehicle, at this point his vehicle had moved forwards no more than a few feet and stopped shortly before or at the traffic lights on Horsefair Street."
Thus, in August 2011, the defendant's case was still that the accident had happened when he was seeking to escape the attentions of a hostile crowd which had gathered around his car. There was, however, no mention of anyone "smacking" his car, banging on it or making contact with it in any other way before the accident. The crowd's actions were confined to shouting and gesticulating.
"20. I saw that the claimant had moved to the right, towards the driver's side headlight. I looked away for a split second at the crowd on my left as the car was still stationary, when I looked back he was no longer in sight. There was a clear gap in front of my car and so I moved forwards slowly, steering to the left as further in front of my car there were some other people. I believe that the car was in first gear when I moved away.
21. When I pulled away there was definitely a clear gap in front of my [car] and the claimant was not in my line of sight at all. I would not have moved the car if I believed that the claimant or anyone else were in my path. I did not run the claimant over deliberately.
22. As I moved away I felt a bump, as though my wheel had gone over something; initially thought that I had gone over the kerb."
The evidence of Sital Odedra
"I do not know how or why but the male in front of our car disappeared out of sight to my right. [The defendant] turned the car to the left to avoid what was on his right, I assumed to get away from the male.
We moved off really slowly and I felt something either had hit the car or we had hit something although I did not see anything. The male that had been in front of the car was nowhere to be seen.
As soon as I felt this thing hit the car [the defendant] immediately stopped."
THE EXPERT EVIDENCE
The head injuries
The knee injury
The marks on the bonnet of the defendant's car
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
Was the claimant knocked to the ground by the defendant's car or did he just lose his balance and fall?
Findings of fact as to the circumstances of the accident
Did the defendant's car strike the claimant as a result of an intentional act by the defendant?
Is primary liability established?
"15. It is interesting that in this case, when discussing contributory negligence, the judge remarked that it was extraordinary that the claimant did not get off the lorry the moment it started to move, when it was going very slowly indeed, and as indeed one of his own witnesses had also wondered. The judge also commented that the driver, although in breach of duty, was put in a difficult situation and his was an error of judgment.
16. It seems to me that the judge in this case applied too rigorous a standard of care when asking himself whether what the driver had done was reasonable in all the circumstances. He referred, as I have indicated, to the fact that there was "not such a pressing need." Later on he referred to the fact that "the exigencies of the situation did not … require" the driver to drive the lorry down the road. That is putting it too high. It seems to me that had the driver indeed done what the claimant said he had done, that is driven in such a violent and erratic way as to indicate that he was trying to dislodge the claimant from the front of the lorry, there could indeed have been a breach of the duty of care because he would have been going well beyond what could be considered a reasonable reaction to the difficult situation in which he was placed. But one has to take all the circumstances of that situation into account when deciding whether what he did do was such a reasonable reaction. These include the fact that he was put into the dilemma by the claimant himself who was behaving in an offensive and thoroughly irresponsible fashion, displaying a complete lack of regard for his own safety, let alone for the difficult position in which he had put the driver and his mate. One also has to take into account the surrounding circumstances. It is was late at night (just after the closing time for this particular establishment), there was a reasonably large group of people on the pavement, some of whom at least were friends of the claimant, some of whom had obviously been drinking, and even if the others were not actually aggressive, the claimant was. The claimant's intention may only have been to hold up the lorry for five minutes but the driver and his mate had no means of knowing that and were put in a very difficult situation. In those circumstances I would not consider it unreasonable to drive off very slowly with a view to stopping at some quieter spot away from the group to persuade the claimant to get off.
17. Furthermore, the judge could have taken more account of the fact that the claimant only fell off when he was engaged in an even more stupid and dangerous act of pulling at the windscreen wiper on to which he was holding. I would agree with Mr Kilcoyne on behalf of the respondent claimant that that does not necessarily rob the driving of all causative effect, but it does indicate something about the reasonableness of the driver's conduct up until that point.
18. For my part I would say that there was in the particular circumstances of this case, in the very difficult situation in which the driver found himself, no breach of the duty to take reasonable care. For that reason I would allow the appeal."]The claimant's action in standing in front of the defendant's car and/or moving across the front of it gave rise to no immediate danger since the car was stationary. It must have been evident to the defendant that the claimant was drunk and that, with his trousers round his ankles, he was not in a position to move quickly or easily. Whilst the claimant had no business to cause an obstruction in the road and was acting in an anti-social manner, it was nevertheless incumbent on the defendant not to drive away until it was safe to do so without risk of injuring the claimant.
Contributory negligence
7.1 walking into the roadway and dropping his trousers in front of traffic
7.5 causing or permitting himself to become so intoxicated that he was unable to take any or any reasonable or proper care for his own safety or to behave in a reasonable and proper manner;
7.6 failing to ensure that he was not in the path or prospective path of any vehicle;
7.8 failing, in the circumstances, to take any or any reasonable or proper basic care for his own safety, in circumstances where he knew full well that such care was required.
"(1) Where any person suffers damage as the result partly of his own fault and partly of the fault of any other person or persons, a claim in respect of that damage shall not be defeated by reason of the fault of the person suffering the damage, but the damages recoverable in respect thereof shall be reduced to such extent as the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant's share in the responsibility for the damage."
"28 It is submitted that the correct place to start is Eagle v Chambers [2003] EWCA Civ 1107, [2004] RTR 9. In that case the driver had struck a young woman walking at night in the carriageway. The trial judge found that she should bear a greater share of the responsibility for her injuries and apportioned her contribution at 60 per cent. The Court of Appeal substituted a figure of 40 per cent. Hale LJ, giving the judgment of the court, stated at para [10] that there are two aspects to apportioning responsibility between the claimant and defendant, namely the respective causative potency of what they have done and their respective blameworthiness. The court rejected an argument, based on the wording of section 1(1) of the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945. that the primary focus should be on the claimant's conduct and her share in the responsibility: Hale LJ said at para [14] that realistically the court has to compare the two parties. At para [16] she said this:
"We also accept that this court is always reluctant to interfere with the trial judge's judgment of what apportionment between the parties is 'just and equitable' under the 1945 Act. But a finding as to which, if either, of the parties was the more responsible for the damage is different from a finding as to the precise extent of a less than 50 per cent contribution. There is a qualitative difference between a finding of 60 per cent contribution and a finding of 40 per cent which is not so apparent in the quantitive difference between 40 per cent and 20 per cent. It is rare indeed for a pedestrian to be found more responsible than a driver unless the pedestrian has suddenly moved into the path of an oncoming vehicle. That is not this case. The court 'has consistently imposed upon the drivers of cars a high burden to reflect the fact that the car is potentially a dangerous weapon': Latham LJ in Lunt v Khelifa [2002] EWCA Civ 801, paragraph [20]" (emphasis added). "
"31 The claimant's action in stepping into the road when the red man was against him and the bus was so close was described by the Recorder as the result of "his misjudgement or his simple failure to look out". I view that as an understatement. This was a controlled pedestrian crossing with the red man showing against pedestrians. That was a strong reason in itself why the claimant should not have attempted to cross at all. If he was minded to attempt to cross despite the red light, it was plainly incumbent on him to check very carefully indeed on the state of the traffic. It is not clear from the CCTV frame at 13.17.31 whether he was looking in the direction of the bus as it approached; but at 13.17.33 he was definitely not doing so. He was seriously blameworthy; and as Mr Jeffreys submitted, his lack of care made a collision with the bus inevitable.
On the other hand, the really serious injuries arose not from the initial impact but from the wheel of the bus going over the claimant, and in terms of causative potency I would ascribe greater weight to the conduct of the driver in failing to brake when he should have done: as the Recorder said, the injuries very largely flowed from the lack of prompt braking. More generally, a heavy responsibility rests on the driver of any bus in a town centre, and it is plain that a substantial degree of blameworthiness must attach to the driver's failures in this case.
Overall, even though the claimant moved into the path of the bus, I do not think that this is one of those cases referred to in para [16] of Eagle v Chambers where the pedestrian should be found more responsible than the driver for the injuries he sustained. I do, however, consider that he should share responsibility for those injuries on an equal basis. There is a qualitative difference between a finding of equal responsibility and a finding of one-third responsibility, and the difference is such as in my view to justify interfering with the apportionment made by the Recorder."