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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dillon v Inverclyde Leisure [2007] ScotCS CSOH_82 (11 May 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_82.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSOH_82, [2007] CSOH 82

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 82

 

PD1422/05

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MACPHAIL

 

in the cause

 

JOHN DILLON

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

INVERCLYDE LEISURE

 

Defenders:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ

 

 

 

Pursuer: Ivey, Q.C.; Thompsons

Defenders: Olsen; Simpson & Marwick, W.S.

 

 

11 May 2007

 

Introduction

 

[1] This action of damages for personal injuries arises from an accident the pursuer sustained when he was playing five-a-side football on an indoors pitch in a sports centre which was managed and staffed by the defenders. Damages are agreed by joint minute. The defenders do not raise any issue of fault or contributory negligence on the part of the pursuer. The only issue for determination is whether the pursuer has established that the defenders are liable to make reparation to him.

 

The undisputed facts

[2] It is common ground that the accident occurred on the evening of 5 September 2002 when the pursuer was playing five-a-side football on a pitch within Greenock Sports Centre, which is managed and staffed by the defenders. The Sports Centre consists of a main building and an ancillary building which was referred to in evidence as "the extension". There were three halls, or pitches, on which five-a-side football could be played. Two were within the main building, and these two had wooden floors. The third was in the ground floor of the extension. It is described in the pursuer's pleadings as being hard and smooth and having a floor made of stone, but at the proof the defenders led unchallenged evidence that it was constructed of wood composite tiles, referred to in the evidence as Granwood tiles, which were directly bonded on to the surface of a concrete slab. At the time of the accident the pursuer was playing on the pitch in the extension. Before the match, the hall had been used by a line-dancing class, certain members of which had been wearing outdoor footwear.

 

The pleadings

[3] The pursuer avers that during the game he slipped on the surface of the floor and his right knee struck the wall. Before the game began, the hall had been used by a line-dancing class who had worn outdoor footwear. He avers that during the match he chased the ball and was running towards the wall near one of the corners. He slipped on the floor surface. His right knee struck the wall.

[4] The pursuer's claim is based on the defenders' fault at common law and on their breach of the duty of reasonable care incumbent upon them by virtue of section 2(1) of the Occupiers' Liability (Scotland) Act 1960. He states that the floor of the hall was not suitable for five-a-side football, and he describes the floor as in a poor state of repair, slippery, dusty and dirty. He says that users of the hall knew that it had a slippery surface: some tried to avoid it when booking a hall for five-a-side football, while others refused to make a booking at all if that was the only hall available. The defenders purported to operate, but did not enforce, a policy of prohibiting users of the hall from wearing outdoor footwear. They had no system for the regular cleaning of the hall, and in particular no system for cleaning it after they had permitted persons to use it while wearing outdoor footwear. The pursuer also makes averments about three matters which were not founded on by his counsel at the hearing on evidence. First, he refers to various British Standards. Secondly, he points to the fact that after the accident the surface of the hall was replaced. Thirdly, he avers that there were no barriers to prevent players in a five-a-side match from coming into direct contact with the walls.

[5] The defenders deny liability. As to the accident, they say that the floor of the hall was not wet, dirty or dusty at the time. The only activity in the hall before the five-a-side had been the line-dancing class, which had run from 6.30 to 8 p.m. The participants in that class had had to check in at the reception area in the main building and go to the extension down a covered ramp. Inside the door of the extension was a mat which removed excess dirt and moisture from footwear. The person taking the class did not notice any problem with moisture on the surface of the floor and none of the class reported any such problem to her. When the defenders' leisure attendant came to the hall to remove the line dancers' audio equipment he noted no problem with the surface of the hall. The pursuer's accident happened about 50 minutes into the game of football and none of the players, including the pursuer, had reported to the defenders any problem with the surface of the hall.

[6] The defenders further aver that the surface of the hall was suitable for sports including football, and had been provided by the manufacturers on the basis that it was so suitable before the dates of the British Standards referred to by the pursuer. The defenders had a system of cleaning the floor with a "kex" mop and brush each morning, and with a scrubber and dryer machine once or twice a week. They had never had a policy of prohibiting users of the hall from wearing outdoor footwear. Some users of the hall preferred the other halls for football because they had sprung floors with more give than the floor of the extension hall, while others preferred the extension hall because it was completely surrounded by walls and rebound boards and facilitated a more continuous game. The defenders had never received any complaints about the slipperiness of the floor in the extension hall, and they had no record of any previous accident having occurred due to slipperiness of that floor. They replaced it with artificial turf in November 2005 because they wanted to improve their facilities and attract more custom. As to the absence of barriers, they say that the long sides of the pitch were bounded by the walls of the hall itself, while the goal ends were bounded by rebound boards; and it is common practice for five-a-side football pitches to be surrounded by hard walls or boards.

 

The evidence

[7] The pursuer's counsel led the evidence of the pursuer himself; three of his fellow players who witnessed the accident, Paul Gillan, Stuart Hearl and Ross Campbell; David Allen, who regularly played football in the hall; and an architect, Mr Ken Williamson. The defenders led the evidence of Mrs Morag Logue, who worked at the Sports Centre both as a receptionist and as the instructor of the line-dancing class; Mrs Rona Boag, the manageress of the Sports Centre; three of the leisure attendants at the Sports Centre, James Whiteford, James Lyon and Mark Few; and Craig Dunsmore, who regularly played football in the hall. There was no criticism by either counsel of the credibility of any of the witnesses, and I have no doubt that each of them was trying to tell the truth as he or she remembered it. The defenders' counsel made a criticism of the reliability of the pursuer and the three eye-witnesses as to the state of the floor, which I shall consider below. That matter apart, there was no criticism from either side of the reliability of any of the other witnesses, and I am satisfied that these witnesses' evidence was reliable.

The circumstances of the accident

[8] At the end of the day it was not disputed that the pursuer had slipped on the floor. The pursuer and the three eye-witnesses all gave evidence to the effect that some 45 minutes after the match had started, the pursuer had been in the farther half of the pitch on the right hand side as seen from the door from which the hall is entered. The ball was rolling towards the right-hand wall and the pursuer was chasing it. Exactly what the pursuer was doing immediately before he slipped is not altogether clear. The pursuer himself said he was trying to slow down. Paul Gillan said it looked as if he was trying to backheel the ball. Stuart Hearl said he slipped as he was bringing the ball under control. Ross Campbell said his legs gave way under him, his legs went forward and his upper body seemed to go back the way. In any event he slipped and his right knee hit the wall.

[9] As to what caused the pursuer to slip, the pursuer's case is that he slipped because the floor was slippery: it was dusty and slippery. He said in evidence that he slipped because the floor was dirty; and by "dirty" he meant that there were grains of dirt and dust on the floor. I have studied the evidence of the other eye-witnesses and I have been unable to find that any of them is able to support the pursuer with direct evidence on this point. None of them says that there was any dirt or dust on the floor at the place where the pursuer slipped.

[10] The pursuer's witnesses gave general evidence about the condition of the floor. They said that holes and cracks in the floor had been patched or filled with "cement", and the floor was dirty and dusty. It is also clear, however, that the pursuer and the eye-witnesses preferred the halls in the main building to the hall in the extension. The pursuer said that they tried to book one of the other halls, but they played about half of their matches in the extension. During the 10 years he had been playing there, the floor had been in much the same state as it had been at the time of the accident. They never liked playing on it because it was slippery. However, he had not had any previous accident because of the floor. Paul Gillan preferred the other halls because they had "a bit of give in the wood, you can turn much quicker," while the hall in the extension was almost like a concrete floor and "a lot slidie-er" and generally harder to play football in. Its slipperiness was a regular feature. Stuart Hearl said that the surface of the floor in the extension didn't give a good grip for training shoes, whereas you could get a good grip on the wooden floors, which had more give. Ross Campbell said that the floor of the extension did not give the best of grip compared to the wooden floors, which were better. David Allen also tried to avoid booking the extension: you could not achieve a good grip there, it was always quite slippy. He agreed that wooden and concrete floors had different degrees of slipperiness.

[11] On the other hand Craig Dunsmore said he had been playing five-a-side regularly, and almost exclusively in the extension hall, since about the year 2000. He and his friends preferred the extension hall to the two main halls, because the latter had concrete pillars protruding from the walls: the ball could bounce off these and go in any direction. He had had no problems with the floor of the extension hall in September 2002. He was aware that it was a hard surface to play on, different from the other two halls. John Lyon, one of the leisure attendants, said that from 10 years ago he had been playing football in the extension hall once or twice a week. Playing there was fine, and slightly faster than playing in a hall with a wooden floor: he did not agree that the surface of the floor in the extension hall was slippery or dusty.

[12] There is no evidence that after he fell, the pursuer's hands or clothes were seen to be dusty or dirty. James Whiteford, the leisure attendant who came on the scene shortly after the accident while the pursuer was still present, gave acceptable evidence that he did not see anything wrong with the floor. From the information given to him at the time, he recorded on an incident report form (no. 7/1 of process) that the pursuer "was playing five-a-side football. While making a run for the ball he slipped and fell injuring his right knee cap against the wall." James Whiteford also gave evidence, which I accept, that he had brushed the floor of the extension hall on the day of the accident.

[13] The pursuer's counsel relied on the evidence of the skilled witness, Mr Williamson. Mr Williamson's evidence was criticised by the defenders' counsel on a number of grounds which I shall notice briefly below, but at best for the pursuer Mr Williamson could not throw any light on the question whether there was any dirt or dust on the floor at the spot where the pursuer slipped on 5 September 2002. He gave interesting general evidence as to how dust is generated, and in particular as to how it could be generated from cracks or imperfectly repaired cracks in a floor such as that in the extension hall as a result of vibration from the use of the floor. Mr Williamson had not, however, inspected the floor. His conclusion in his report (no. 6/23 of process) that at the time of the accident the floor was "inevitably dusty across its entire area, and consequently presented a potentially dangerous and slippery playing surface" is based upon an examination of photographs (no 6/11 of process), manufacturers' brochures (appended to his report), and certain reports and witness statements or precognitions which have not been disclosed. His conclusion cannot, in my opinion, contradict what has been said, or what significantly has not been said, by acceptable witnesses who were present at the time, or inferences that may properly be drawn from facts proved in evidence.

[14] I draw from all that evidence that differing views are honestly held about the merits of the extension hall and the other halls as places for playing football. I have concluded that the evidence of the eye-witnesses as to the condition of the floor in the extension hall is coloured by their preference for the other halls. I note that no one apparently attributed the pursuer's accident to dirt or dust on the floor when the accident was reported to James Whiteford. I also note the absence of evidence that there was dirt or dust on the floor at the scene or on the pursuer's hands or clothing. I accept the evidence of James Whiteford that he had brushed the floor that morning and that he did not see anything wrong with the floor after the accident. There is no evidence of any previous complaints to the defenders about dirt or dust on the floor, or of the occurrence of any previous accidents which were attributed to the presence of dirt or dust on the floor. Finally, I take into account the fact that there is no evidence that during the 45 minutes or so of the match which had elapsed before the pursuer slipped, anyone else had slipped because of dirt or dust on the floor. I therefore conclude that it is not proved that the pursuer slipped because there was dirt or dust on the floor.

[15] Since the pursuer has not succeeded on this issue, decree of absolvitor must be pronounced. I shall, however, go on to consider briefly the issue of liability on the assumption that, contrary to my opinion, the pursuer has proved that he slipped on dirt or dust on the floor.

[16] It must be observed that the pursuer's case on liability which was presented at the hearing on evidence was significantly different from that in his pleadings. The pursuer clearly avers that the floor of the hall "was in a poor state of repair. It was slippery. It was dusty and dirty." The case of which he gives the defenders notice is twofold. First, they did not enforce their policy of prohibiting users of the sports hall from wearing outdoor footwear. Secondly, they had no system for the regular cleaning of the hall and in particular no system for cleaning the hall after they had permitted persons to use it whilst wearing outdoor footwear. As to the first, the pursuer failed to prove that the defenders had any policy of prohibiting users of the hall from wearing outdoor footwear. As to the second, the defenders proved that they did have a system for the regular cleaning of the hall. The leisure attendants gave evidence, which I accepted, that the floor was swept daily with a brush, and was cleaned weekly with a machine which scrubbed and dried it. At the hearing on evidence, the pursuer's counsel did not attempt to make a case that the dirt or dust on which the pursuer had allegedly slipped had come from the outdoor footwear of any member of the line-dancing class. That was not remarkable, because the evidence had been to the effect that the line-dancing class had been held in the other half of the hall from which the pursuer's accident occurred.

[17] At the hearing on evidence, the pursuer's case came to be that the defenders had failed in their duty of reasonable care under section 2(1) of the Occupiers' Liability Act 1960 in that they failed to take reasonable care in maintaining the surface in a reasonable state of repair and in operating a cleaning programme which would minimise dust. The pursuer sought to found on passages in the evidence of Mr Williamson which criticised the patching of the floor instead of the replacement of blocks in the floor, the apparent failure to have the floor resealed, and the fact that the defenders' cleaning regime did not comply with the manufacturers' recommendations.

[18] In my opinion it is not open to the pursuer to develop a case of this kind because the defenders have not been given fair notice of it. They could not reasonably have been expected to anticipate attacks of this nature which are not, in my view, a variation, modification or development of what is averred on record. The defenders' counsel took timeous objection to the eliciting of evidence on such matters from Mr Williamson. I repelled the objection under reservation, and having heard counsel on the objection at the hearing on evidence, I now sustain it.

[19] In any event I am not satisfied that there is cogent evidence before the court that the method of maintenance of the floor fell below the requisite standard of reasonable care. There is no evidence from a skilled witness who inspected the floor, although it had been available for inspection until 2005. The photographs (no 6/11 of process) are agreed to be photographs of the hall, but they are barely adequate, and Mr Williamson very fairly drew attention to their shortcomings in the course of his evidence. There is accordingly no precise evidence as to the extent of any defects in the floor and as to the nature, extent and effectiveness of the various repairs to the floor. Mr Williamson's evidence was, in my opinion, properly tentative, and he did not contend that any particular pattern of inspection and maintenance should have been adopted. Nor did he say, as I understood him, that the dust in the hall had not been effectively controlled. He observed, I have no doubt correctly, that the effectiveness of any cleaning system must be judged by its results. The fact that the defenders' system did not follow the manufacturers' recommendations is in my view nothing to the purpose. The manufacturers say that their recommendations "are for guidance only. Any maintenance regime and its frequency will be influenced by the type, intensity and frequency of usage experienced by the floor." Mr Williamson, however, did not have precise information as to the details of the nature and extent of the use made of the hall and thus, in my opinion, was not in a position to express a persuasive view as to the effectiveness of the defenders' system.

[20] I shall accordingly pronounce decree of absolvitor.

 

 

 

 


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