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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Watt v Hertfordshire County Council [1954] EWCA Civ 6 (07 May 1954)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1954/6.html
Cite as: [1954] 2 All ER 368, [1954] 1 WLR 835, [1954] WLR 835, [1954] EWCA Civ 6

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JISCBAILII_CASE_TORT

BAILII Citation Number: [1954] EWCA Civ 6
Case No.:

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL.

Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, W.C.2
May 7 1954

B e f o r e :

LORD JUSTICE SINGLETON
LORD JUSTICE DENNING
and
LORD JUSTICE MORRIS

____________________

Between:
WATT

V

HERTFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL

____________________

(Transcript of the Shorthand Notes of The Association of Official Shorthandwriters, Limited,
Room 392 Royal Courts of Justice, and 2 New Square, Lincoln's Inn, London W.0.2).

____________________

Counsel for the Appellant: MR BAKER QC and MR H B GRANT, instructed by Mr Denis Hayes LL M., Agent for F S Ellis & Co Watford, Herts.
Counsel for the Respondents: LORD HAILSHAM QC and MR ROLAND BROWN, instructed by Messrs Berrymans.

____________________

HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
____________________

Crown Copyright ©

    LORD JUSTICE SINGLETON: Mr William Frederick Watt was, and is, employed in the Fire Service under the control of the Hertfordshire County Council and he was stationed at Watford. He had a serious accident on 27th July, 1951, as a result of which he brought this action, claiming damages against the Hertfordshire County Council.

    He claims damages for negligence. His case is that his employers, Hertfordshire County Council, undertook to exercise the care which they owed to him and to other men employed in the Fire Services, and he gives Particulars of Negligence to which I shall refer in a moment. It is better that I should state first how the accident took occurred. There are always firemen on duty at the Fire Station at Watford, and on 27th July, 1951, there was received at the Fire Station an emergency call, and that call was to the effect that there had been an accident and that a woman was trapped under a heavy vehicle at a point not very far away from Watford Fire Station; it was about 200 or 300 yards away. In view of the nature of the emergency the officer in charge, Sub-officer Richards, gave directions that two teams of men should go, and he himself went with the first team. It was clear that there might be need for lifting apparatus of some kind, and at the Fire Station there was a jack capable of raising heavy weights. The jack did not belong to the Fire Service; it was the property of London Transport Executive, whose practice it is to lend out jacks of this kind to various Fire Stations, and, perhaps, to other bodies, so that they can be on call in case of need. Thus, the jack was on loan to the Hertfordshire County Council at this Fire Station. It is only on, very, very rare occasions that there is an emergency call requiring the services of a jack of this kind. The Plaintiff. Mr Watt, had been in the Fire Service in Hertfordshire since the year 1939, and he had only known of one emergency call on which a jack was required.

    The County Council had an Austin car, or an Austin vehicle, fitted to carry this particular jack. Watford is not a large fire station, and it had not a great many vehicles. The Austin vehicle was the only one fitted to carry the jack, but the Austin vehicle was not kept purely for carrying the jack which was on loan; it had other services to perform during part of the week, and on this day the Austin vehicle was properly out on other service. The jack stands on four small wheels, two of which are castored, which means that they may turn all the way round the circle. There was at the Fire Station only one vehicle, and one only, on which the jack could be carried; that is, in the absence of the Austin vehicle. The vehicle was a Fordson, and before Sub-officer Richards left with his team he told the leading fireman in charge of the second team, of which the Plaintiff was a member, to take the jack on the lorry. Consequently, the five men in the second team lifted up the jack, which weighed between 2 and 3 hundredweight, and put it on to the flat Fordson tractor, which had boards at the sides and a tailboard; they got on the Fordson themselves, two in the front seat, and three sat in the body of the lorry. The Plaintiff was in the forward part of the body on the right-hand side, and the other two men perhaps a little further back and on the other side of the lorry, the other two held the jack somehow. It is obvious that if the jack was not secured in some way there might be movement of the jack in the body of the Fordson lorry. There were no means on the Fordson of securing the jack, there was no place on which you could tie anything; there was no built-in system which would prevent movement of the jack it it was put upon the Fordson; so there was a risk. The men knew what they were doing. They put the jack upon the Fordson and started their journey, which was only 200 or 300 or so yards, and I do not suppose anyone thought there would be an accident on that short journey; but as they went along something happened to cause the driver to apply his brakes suddenly, the jack moved inside the Fordson, the Plaintiff's leg was caught, and he was very badly injured.

    In these circumstances he claimed that the defendants, his employers, were negligent in that they

    "(a) failed to load or secure the said lifting jack in such a way that it could not become dislodged;
    (b) loaded the said lifting jack in such a way that they knew or ought to have known it was likely that if the said lorry pulled up suddenly the same would become dislodged and cause injuries to any person riding on the back of the said lorry;
    (c) permitted and/or caused the plaintiff to ride on the back of the said lorry on to which the said lifting jack had been loaded as aforesaid;
    (d) caused or permitted the said jack to be transported on the said lorry which as the defendants knew or ought to have known was not provided with clips straps or other suitable means to secure the same;
    (e) failed to provide any or any adequate supervision of the loading of the said jack on to the said Lorry";

    and it was claimed that the Plaintiff's accident was due to negligence, and that he was entitled to recover damages against the Defendants.

    Mr Justice Barry heard the claim, and on 16th December 1953, of last year he gave judgment in favour of the Defendants, holding that it was not shown that they had been guilty of any negligence towards the Plaintiff or towards their other employees.

    I am in complete agreement with the judgment of Mr Justice Barry, but it is right that I should state my reasons for having formed the opinion which I have, and I shall do so quite shortly. Fire Service is a service which must always involve risk for those who are employed in it, and, as Mr Baker on behalf of the Appellant pointed out, they are entitled to expect that their equipment is as good as reasonable care can secure. An emergency arose as often happens. Mr Richards, the Sub-Officer who had given the order, was asked in re-examination:

    "From your point of view you thought it was a piece of luck, with this unfortunate woman under the bus, that the Fordson was available and you could use it?
    A.—Yes. It is recognised in the service that we use our initiative at all times, and in doing so any reasonable step you take is considered satisfactory if it is a question of saving life. You have to make a sudden decision."

    It is not alleged that there was negligence on the part of any particular individual, it is not alleged that the driver was negligent in driving too fast, or it is not alleged that Sub-officer Richards was negligent in giving the order which he did, but case put forward by Mr Baker in this Court is that as the Defendants had a jack it was their duty to have a vehicle fitted in all respects to carry that jack, from which it follows, I suppose, that it is said a vehicle must be kept at the Fire Station at all times, or that, if there is not one, the lifting jack must not be taken out; indeed, Mr Baker claimed that in the case of a happening such as this, if there was no vehicle fitted to carry the jack the Sub-Officer ought to have telephoned to the Fire Station at St Albans and arranged that they should attend to the emergency. St Albans is some seven miles away, and it was said an extra ten minutes or so would have elapsed if that had been done. I cannot think that is the right way to approach the matter. There was a real emergency; the woman was under a heavy vehicle; these men in the Fire Service thought they ought to go promptly, and thought they ought to take a lifting jack, and they did so. Most unfortunately this accident happened.

    What is the duty owed by employers? It has been stated often, and never more clearly that it was by Lord Herschell in the case of Smith v Baker & Sons reported in 1891 Appeal Cases at page 325, at page 362 in his words:

    "It is quite clear that the contract between employer and employed involves on the part of the former the duty of taking reasonable care to provide proper appliances, and to maintain them in a proper condition, and so to carry on his operations as not to subject those employed by him to unnecessary risk."

    The employee in this case was a member of the Fire Service, who always undertake some risk -- but, said Mr Baker, not this risk. Is it to be said that, if an emergency call reaches a Fire Station that the one in charge has to ponder upon the matter in this way: Must I send out my men with the lifting jack in these circumstances, or must I telephone to St Albans, seven miles away, to ask them to undertake the task? I suppose he must think about his duty, but what would a reasonable man do placed as he was? Would the reasonably careful head of the station have done anything other than that which Sub-officer Richards did? I think not. Can it be said, then, that there is a duty on the employers here to have a vehicle built and fitted to carry this jack at all times, or if they have not, not to use the jack for a short journey of 200 or 300 yards? I do not think that will do.

    Lord Justice Asquith in Daborn v Bath Tramways Motor Co Ltd & Another reported in Volume 2 All England Law Reports for 1946 at page 333, at page 336 said this:

    "In determining whether a party is negligent, the standard of reasonable care is that which is reasonably to be demanded in the circumstances. A relevant circumstance to take into account may be the importance of the end to be served by behaving in this way or in that. As has often been pointed out, if all the trains in this country were restricted to a speed of five miles an hour, there would be fewer accidents, but our national life would be intolerably slowed down. The purpose to be served, if sufficiently important, justifies the assumption of abnormal risk."

    The purpose to be served in this case was the saving of life. The men were prepared to take that risk. They were not, in my view, called on to take any risk other than that which normally might be encountered in this Service. I agree with Mr Justice Barry that upon the whole of the evidence which was given it would not be right to find that the defendants as employers were guilty of any failure of the duty which they owed to their workmen. Those are my reasons for saying in my opinion, the appeal should be dismissed.

    LORD JUSTICE DENNING: It is well settled that in measuring due care one must balance the risk against the measures necessary to eliminate the risk. To that proposition there ought to be added this. One must balance the risk against the end to be achieved. If this accident had occurred in a commercial enterprise without any emergency there could be no doubt that the servant would succeed. But the commercial end to make profit is very different from the human end to save life or limb. The saving of life or limb justifies taking considerable risk, and I am glad to say there have never been wanting in this country men of courage ready to take those risks, notably in the Fire Service.

    In this case the risk involved in sending out the lorry was not so great as to prohibit the attempt to save life. I quite agree that fire engines, ambulances and doctors' cars should not shoot past the traffic lights when they show a red light. That is because the risk is too great to warrant the incurring of the danger. It is always a question of balancing the risk against the end.

    I agree with my Lord that this appeal should be dismissed.

    LORD JUSTICE MORRIS: I also agree.

    The accident in this case came about as a result of a somewhat unusual concatenation of circumstances. There had for a long time been no call for the use of the jack. Any such call, according to the evidence, was extremely rare. It so happened that a call came at a time when the Austin vehicle which would normally have carried the jack was otherwise engaged. I do not think it can be said to have been unreasonable to have had the Austin vehicle for use in the way that was arranged. Had the Fire Station been larger, had there been unlimited resources, unlimited space, and an unlimited number of vehicles, then it may be that another fitted vehicle would have been available; but that was not reasonably practicable or possible. What happened was that when the call for the jack came Mr Richards had to decide what to do, and I do not think that it would have been in accordance with the traditions of the wonderful Service with which we are concerned in this case if Mr Richards had said that he could do nothing other than call on St Albans. What he decided to do was in accordance with the practice of the Fire Service.

    I would just refer also to what Mr Bottin, who is the Assistant Chief Officer in the London Fire Brigade, said in regard to this matter. He spoke about the provision of jacks and pointed out that in London there are 29 sets of lifting gear, one being provided for every two stations, and then this passage occurs on page 25 of the transcript:

    "Q.—Can you always undertake that that one vehicle will be available for the transport of a jack?
    A.—No.
    Q.—In your view is it reasonably practicable for a Fire Service to adapt all of its vehicles for the transport of jacks?
    A.—No. I would not think it was reasonable.
    Q.—You have been a station officer, have you not?
    A.—I have.
    Q.—Supposing you found yourself in charge of a station, and supposing the equipment available was not that most suitable for the purpose but you found that human life was in danger and you might save it by adopting a method not entirely suitable, what in your view would be your duty as a station officer?
    A.—I have had that experience, and I did not hesitate to get the equipment there as quickly as possible."

    As I have said, I think Mr Richards acted in accordance with the traditions of the Service, and I cannot for one moment think that the employers could be held responsible as having failed in the performance of their duties.

    I agree that the appeal fails.

    MR GRANT: The Appellant in this case is legally assisted, and I ask your Lordships for the normal order for taxation of his costs.

    LORD JUSTICE SINGLETON: No application is made against your for costs?

    MR GRANT: I gather not, my Lord; otherwise I would not have made this Application.

    LORD JUSTICE SINGLETON: I gather from what I read that the Appellant is still employed by the County Council.

    MR GRANT: He is, my Lord.

    LORD JUSTICE SINGLETON: And he has quite a considerable disposable income, I am glad to say, but no application is made against him for the costs of the appeal. There will be the normal Order for the taxation of the Plaintiff's costs of this appeal under the Act.

    MR GRANT: I am instructed to ask your Lordships for leave to appeal to the House of Lords.

    LORD JUSTICE SINGLETON: No, we do not give you leave.

    MR GRANT: If your Lordship pleases.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1954/6.html