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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Dobson v Public Services [2003] JRC 150 (03 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2003/2003_150.html Cite as: [2003] JRC 150 |
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[2003]JRC150
royal court
(Samedi Division)
3rd September 2003
Before: |
M C St J Birt, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, sitting alone |
Between |
Stephen Alan Dobson |
Plaintiff |
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And |
Public Services Committee of the States of Jersey |
Defendant |
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Appeal by the defendant Committee against refusal by the Master on 17th February 2003 to strike out the order of justice on the grounds that it disclosed no reasonable cause of action - liability of the Committee for the non-repair of a main road.
Advocate D J Benest for the Defendant
The Plaintiff did not appear and was not represented
judgment
bailiff:
1. This is an appeal by the defendant ("the Committee") against a decision of the Master on 17th February 2003 refusing to strike out the order of justice on the grounds that it disclosed no reasonable cause of action. It raises an interesting point of law as to the liability of the Committee for the non-repair of a main road. Unfortunately, although the plaintiff was represented before the Master by Advocate R J Michel acting under a legal aid certificate, he has not appeared or been represented in this appeal. I understand that, although Advocate Michel would of course represent him under the legal aid certificate, the plaintiff was concerned that, in the event of a successful appeal, he would be ordered to pay the costs of the appeal and of the hearing before the Master. He sought to reduce the prospect of that occurring by not appearing in the appeal. It is unfortunate that this is so but I have had the benefit of reading the detailed skeleton argument submitted by Advocate Michel to the Master and the authorities upon which he relied.
2. According to the plaintiff's order of justice he was walking along the pavement in Stopford Road, St Helier on 2nd September 2001 when he tripped over a protruding paving slab and injured himself. He asserts that the Committee was under a duty to maintain Stopford Road, as a main road, and that the accident was caused by the Committee's negligence in failing to maintain the highway and allowing the paving slab to be loose, uneven etc. For the purposes of a striking out application on the grounds that there is no reasonable cause of action, the factual allegations must be taken to be well founded. The order of justice does not distinguish between a breach of statutory duty and a breach of a common law duty of care but I shall assume in the plaintiff's favour for the purposes of this application that both are alleged.
3. In its pleadings the Committee does not admit to being under a duty to repair the highway but, for the purposes of this application, the Committee accepts that the Court should proceed on the basis that it is under such a duty. The basis of the Committee's application to strike out is that a breach of the Committee's statutory duty to repair the highway does not give rise to a private law cause of action on the part of someone who suffers damage as a result of the breach. It also contends that there is no common law duty of care on the part of the Committee in respect of repair of the highway. .
4. The Master, having recited the parties' contentions referred to the dictum of Lord Browne-Wilkinson in connection with striking out applications in X (Minors) -v- Bedfordshire County Council (1995) 3 WLR 152 at 174:-
5. The Master concluded that it was not appropriate to strike out the order of justice without ascertaining the relevant facts by letting the matter go to trial. With respect to the Master, I do not agree. It seems to me that the question of whether there is a private cause of action (whether for breach of statutory duty simpliciter or for breach of a common law duty of care) for a failure by the Committee to repair the highway is a point of law. It is to be assumed against the Committee that it breached its duty to repair the highway in the manner alleged by the plaintiff and was negligent in so doing. The exact manner in which it was negligent or breached its duty is not relevant to the decision on the point of law. It is therefore in the interests of justice to determine this issue at this early stage rather than letting the parties incur what may be unnecessary cost in bringing (or defending) an action to trial.
6. Although it may seem unusual, I think it is convenient to start by referring to the position in England. At common law there was a duty upon the inhabitants at large to repair the highway. That duty could be enforced by way of indictment but there was no liability upon the inhabitants to pay damages to any individual who suffered damage as a result of a failure to repair the highway. Such an individual had no cause of action. That position was maintained when the duty to repair the highway was transferred by statute to highway authorities. There was always a liability for acts (i.e. misfeasance). Thus if a highway authority decided to repair the highway but did so negligently (e.g. by creating a hole and then leaving it unguarded) a cause of action on the part of an individual who suffered damage as a result would lie. The law drew a distinction between acts (misfeasance) and omissions (non-feasance). It was only in the latter case that there was no private cause of action against a highway authority. It was not until 1961 that the position was changed by statute. The Highway (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1961 abrogated the rule exempting highway authorities for non-feasance but introduced a statutory defence if the authority could show that it had taken such care as in all the circumstances was reasonably required to secure that the part of the highway to which the action related was not dangerous for traffic.
7. Mr Benest referred me to the Report of the Law Reform Commission of British Columbia on `The tort liability of public bodies` (LRC 34/1977). It would seem from the report that this rule of English law was applied generally in the Commonwealth (e.g. Australia, New Zealand). The one exception appears to be in British Columbia where the Supreme Court of Canada held in the case of the City of Vancouver -v- McPhalen that the statute imposing a duty to repair on the city of Vancouver did allow for a private cause of action for non repair of the highway against the city. The Supreme Court held that there was no evidence that the duty imposed upon the city of Vancouver was one which had been transferred from the inhabitants or the municipal corporation. It was held to be an original duty with the result that the old common law exemption was not applicable. Interestingly the effect of this decision of the Supreme Court was subsequently reversed by statute in 1955.
8. It seems likely that, historically, the duty to repair the roads of the island lay with the parishes in which the roads fell. Certainly the Code of 1771, under the heading "Reglements pour la reparation des chemins" expressed such a duty.
9. The position remained essentially unchanged until the Loi (1914) sur la Voirie ("the 1914 Law"). As originally enacted Article 1 of that Law provided that the States should draw up a list from time to time "des Chemins Publiques qui seront considérés voies de grande communication ....." and contribute an annual sum towards the repair of such roads in each parish. The 1914 Law also set up roads committees in each parish to supervise the repair and upkeep of roads in that parish.
10. Article 1 was repealed and replaced by new Articles 1 and 1A in 1941. They provided as follows:-
Article 1A
11. It is clear from the language of the statutue that this was simply a transfer of the duty to repair main roads from the parish to the States. There was no alteration in the nature or extent of such duty.
12. The first question for decision is whether a failure by the Committee to repair the highway in accordance with its duty under Article 1(1) of the 1914 Law gives rise to a private cause of action on the part of an individual who has suffered damage as a result. Mr Benest argues that, for the same reason as applied in England and elsewhere in the Commonwealth, there is no such cause of action. Mr Michel, before the Master, argued that, although in matters of tort, Jersey law tended to follow English law, there was no reason to do so in this case, particularly as almost all jurisdictions had now reversed the old position by statute and had included a private cause of action for non-repair of the highway.
13. The principles applicable in establishing whether breach of a statutory duty gives rise to a private cause of action were authoritatively stated by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in X (Minors) -v- Bedfordshire CC where he said the following:-
14. The specific position in relation to non-repair of the highway was referred to by Lord Hoffman in Stovin -v- Wise (1996) 3 WLR 388 at 413:-
15. In my judgment there is no private cause of action for breach of the statutory duty by the States (or for that matter the parishes) to repair the highway. I would summarise my reasons as follows:-
(i) I can discern no intention on the part of the legislature that this should be so. The duty to repair would seem to be a typical example of the type of duty envisaged by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in the passage referred to above, namely one which, although in fact providing protection to those individuals particularly affected, is not to be treated as being passed for the benefit of those individuals but for the benefit of society in general. In this case the relevant provision of the Law is intended to deal generally with the provision of main roads for the benefit of the public at large so as to enable them to get from one place to another and aid the general commerce and life of the island community. Its purpose was not to provide to individual members of the public a right to sue for a failure of repair.
(ii) The researches of counsel have failed to find a single case in Jersey where there has been held to be such a cause of action. The States must be assumed to have been aware in 1941 (when amending the 1914 Law to transfer responsibility for main roads from the parishes to the States) of the long established rule of common law (which appears to have been followed generally throughout the Commonwealth) that there was no such cause of action. One would therefore have expected provision for such a cause of action should the States have wished to create one.
(iii) The reasons summarised by Lord Hoffman which underlay the exemption from liability in England would seem to be equally applicable in Jersey. There is nothing distinctive about Jersey in this regard. In particular, it is one thing to provide a service at public expense; it is another to require the public to pay compensation when a failure to provide the service has resulted in loss. To require payment of compensation increases the burden on public funds. Before doing so the Court should be satisfied that this is what the legislature intended.
(iv) Lord Browne-Wilkinson explained that one of the indicators as to whether there was a private cause of action for breach of statutory duty was whether any other remedy was provided by the statute. In the 1771 Code there was provision for the Constable and Centeniers to bring the inspectors of a vingtaine before the Royal Court if the inspectors had failed to carry out their duty. There was therefore a mechanism for enforcing performance of the duty to repair by the parishes. It is true that the 1941 amendment to the 1914 Law provides nothing similar in respect of the obligation of the States to maintain main roads but, as described earlier, it is clear that the amendment merely transferred the existing duty from the parishes to the States; it did not alter the nature or extent of that duty.
(v) The duty to repair is expressed in unqualified terms. It is an absolute duty to maintain. The position was summarised by Lord Hoffman in Goodes -v- East Sussex County Council (2000) 1 WLR 1356 at 1361:-
It follows that to impose a liability for breach of statutory duty simpliciter would impose liability even where the Committee had taken all reasonable care to repair the highway or even where it had not been able to do so because of financial constraints. These factors point against the existence of a private cause of action.
(vi) In essence I see no reason to reach a different conclusion in relation to Jersey from that reached in England and most Commonwealth jurisdictions, namely that there is no liability for breach of statutory duty arising from the non-performance of the duty to repair the highway. I appreciate that times have moved on and that it may be argued that an exemption from liability of this nature is unsatisfactory in the present day. I will consider that aspect when turning to consider whether the Court should find a common law duty of care.
16. Having decided that there is no private cause of action for breach of statutory duty simpliciter, the normal consequence would be that the Court should also decline to find a parallel common law duty of care on the part of the Committee. As Lord Hoffman said in Stovin at 414:-
17. Mr Michel argued before the Master that the Court should follow the approach of the Guernsey Court of Appeal in Morton has been followed in Jersey in the case of Knight -v- Thackeray's Limited (1997) JLR 279. in developing the common law notwithstanding that such development had only been achieved in England by means of statutory reform (in that case the Occupier's Liability Act 1957).
18. In my judgment the circumstances in Morton were very different to those in the present case. I do not think that it is open to the Court to develop the law to find a common law duty of care owed by the Committee (and the parishes) to individual road users. My reasons are as follows:-
(i) Morton was concerned with rights between private individuals. It was not concerned with the liability of a public authority for failure to fulfil a statutory duty. The courts have always been active in developing the law of tort in relation to duties owed by one individual to another; they have been slower to become involved in the obligations of public authorities.
(ii) The court in Morton was much comforted by the fact that, in certain parts of Australia, the courts had developed the common law so as to abolish the distinction between the duties owed by occupiers to licensees and invitees (the point at issue in that case) notwithstanding that in England this had only been achieved by statute. Furthermore it drew comfort from the fact that the courts in England had developed the common law in relation to the duty owed by occupiers to trespassers. If the courts could develop the law in relation to the duty owed to trespassers, why not the duty owed to licensees or invitees? The position is very different here. So far as the Court is aware England and all the Commonwealth jurisdictions have achieved reform of the exemption of highway authorities from liability for non-repair by statute rather than by judicial decision.
(iii) The exemption from liability for non-repair was abolished in England as long ago as 1961. Since then the States have amended the 1914 Law on four occasions namely 1971, 1972, 1973 and 1995. Yet they have made no amendment in this respect. As Lord Lowry said in C -v- DDP (1996) 1 AC 1 at 28 (in a passage relied upon by the Guernsey Court of Appeal in Morton):-
(iv) The issue is clearly one which may have significant resource implications for the States (in respect of main roads) and the parishes (in respect of minor roads). In the event of liability for non-repair, they may in future spend money on repairs which they have hitherto spent in other areas. The allocation of financial resources is not a matter suitable for judicial decision. Reform of such matters should be dealt with by the legislature, which can consider all the implications and consult widely. Some of the issues which may arise in considering whether to remove the exemption for non-repair were summarised by the Law Reform Commission of British Colombia (referred to earlier). Relevant passages are to be found at pages 16 and 17:-
...................................................
These passages all go to show that this is a topic more suitable for reform by legislative action than by judicial decision. No doubt, that is why the statutory route has been followed in other jurisdictions.
(v) The solution adopted in England and a number of other Commonwealth jurisdictions does not simply impose a common law duty of care to maintain the highway. It imposes an absolute obligation but then provides for a statutory defence. If the Court were to develop the law as suggested by Mr Michel it could only impose the former solution. That would appear in many respects to be a less satisfactory solution from a plaintiff's point of view than the statutory solution adopted in England and elsewhere. As Lord Clyde said in Goodes (supra) at 1368:-
That is a further argument for leaving reform to the legislature rather than trying to proceed by development of the common law.
19. For these reasons I find that there is no common law duty of care and the Court should not develop the law to impose one. It follows that the plaintiff's order of justice discloses no reasonable cause of action and should be struck out.
20. I should add that, as experience has shown in other jurisdictions, this may not regarded as a satisfactory outcome in current times. Individuals who suffer damage through a failure by the highway authority to repair the highway should be entitled to recompense subject to appropriate safeguards for the public or parochial purse. I would therefore invite the relevant Committee to consider introducing appropriate legislation. It might well find it helpful to refer the matter to the Jersey Law Commission in the first instance. The Commission will no doubt be able to review the solutions adopted by various jurisdictions throughout the Commonwealth with a view to recommending that which is most suitable for Jersey.