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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Kearn-Price v Kent County Council [2002] EWCA Civ 1539 (30 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1539.html Cite as: [2003] ELR 17, [2002] EWCA Civ 1539 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM TUNBRIDGE WELLS COUNTY COURT
(Mr Recorder Gerrey)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
DARYL CHRISTOPHER KEARN-PRICE | Claimant/ Respondent | |
- and - | ||
KENT COUNTY COUNCIL | Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
Mr Simon Jonathan Brown (instructed by Messrs Thomson Snell and Passmore) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 10th October 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson:
“The school day begins at 8.45 am and finishes at 3.45 pm. It is punctuated by mid-morning lunch and mid-afternoon breaks. Pupils should aim to be present at least five minutes before the school begins. The school will be open for early arrivals during inclement weather.”
“Please emphasise to all boys the following:
(a) Top playground—years 7 to 8
(b) Bottom playground-years 9/10/11
NO basketballs. Small footballs-preferably tennis balls”
“It seems to me that any visit to the lower playground on almost any day would have made it obvious that there were a number of ball games in progress, and that on a daily basis a number of those ball games involved the use of the prohibited footballs, yet no such thing was done, no flying visits to check what was happening, no attempt as the boys filed into school with their full-sized balls in plastic carrier bags to check the size. There was the occasional confiscation of a ball from the playground during break-times, but nothing further. Therefore on the evidence before me, it really seems that apart from imposing the ban and repeating the ban, there is no evidence whatsoever as to any positive steps taken by any members of the staff to ensure that the ban was complied with.”
“ 53. The school itself had banned the very type of ball which caused the claimant’s injury. I have already indicated that there was in general terms, as I find, a lack of any positive action on the part of the staff at the school to enforce the ban. In my judgment, merely circulating the staff and the occasional reminder at assembly once or twice a year with the newsletters to parents was not in fact reasonable behaviour in enforcing this ban. As I have indicated, a simple visit to the lower playground on any school day would in my judgment have revealed to the defendants the fact that the ban was being regularly and on a daily basis ignored. It would have been a simple matter without supervision every day, which I am not suggesting was necessary, to have found that the ban was not being enforced. It seems clear from the evidence of Mr Crouch that certainly when the reminder was brought home forcefully the boys tended to obey the ban, and it seems to me that if word had got out that spot checks were going to be made and the ban was jolly well going to be enforced come what may, the boys would have heeded it. Therefore, I do not consider on the evidence before me that the defendants on the facts of this case took reasonable steps to discharge their duty of care in enforcing this particular ban, knowing as they did of Mr Barnard’s own admission of the danger that the use of these footballs created.
54. My view is reinforced by the documents to which I have already referred relating to the incident in March 1998. In that month there was an injury recorded as specifically involving the use of a leather football. Apart from issuing the school calendar the following week, there is no evidence before me that the school took any steps to enforce the ban. There was an injury involving a football in June, a few weeks before the claimant’s own accident, again, no steps taken to see that this ban is being complied with so as to ensure by taking reasonable steps the safety of those playing football, as in my judgment the school should. It was a well-known activity, it took place on a daily basis, and in my judgment, on the evidence which I have heard and for the reasons that I hope I have spelled out in sufficient detail, I do not consider that the school discharged the duty of care incumbent upon it to avoid the risk of obvious and foreseeable injury. As I have indicated, the fact that the injury which occurred was, sadly, much more severe than previously experienced is not sufficient, the school being fully aware of the risk of eye injuries from the use of footballs and the particular danger from the use of the banned footballs. In those circumstances, in my judgment, the claimant is entitled to succeed in his claim.”
Duty of care to supervise
“Schools A teacher is expected to show such care towards a child under his charge as would be exercised by a reasonably careful parent, taking into account the conditions of school life as distinct from home life, the number of children in the class and the nature of those children. This seems to be no more than what would be reasonable in the particular circumstances. A teacher cannot be expected to insure children against injury from ordinary play in the playground or, indeed, the classroom. It is the duty of the teacher to supervise children in the playground but supervision before school or as the children leave school may not be required.”
This passage is entirely consistent with the summary of the relevant principles contained at paragraph 18 of the judgment of Auld LJ in Woodbridge School v Simon Chittock [2002] EWCA Civ 915.
“It was urged for the respondent that there was no duty of supervision owed to the children before “school hours”. That expression was taken in the present case to mean the period of time beginning at 9.00 am, at which the “Daily Routine” stated that the playgrounds were to be supervised. Reliance was also placed upon the departmental instruction 5.2.4.1 as set out, supra, which it was said produced the result that the headmaster had no power or authority to require teachers to supervise the playground otherwise than during the hours 9.00 am to 3.30 pm as set out in that instruction. It was said therefore that the headmaster could not be regarded as negligent by failing to take measures to provide supervision of the playground prior to 9.00 am when he had no authority to direct any teacher to be present to perform that function.
So to regard the case is to take an unduly restricted view of the relevant circumstances. There is no case which lays down that there is no duty of supervision prior to “school hours”, however that expression may be understood. The point seems to have been seldom referred to. In Ward v Hertfordshire County Council [1970] 1 All ER 535 at 538; [1970] 1 WLR 356 at 361, Salmon LJ expressly reserved the question whether lack of supervision could give rise to a cause of action in a case where the injury occurs at 8.50 am but “the school does not start until 8.55 am”. There seems no basis for treating it as a rule that there can be no duty of supervision outside “ordinary school hours” or “before school started”. The question must depend upon the nature of the general duty to take reasonable care in all the circumstances. It is not enough to look only at the departmental instructions and to say that the duty of supervision arises only during the periods referred to in those instructions.”
Breach of duty
“Q. And because these boys are not participating they would not be following the game. You would not expect them to –
A. They would be standing around talking.
Q They would be standing around talking, common sense says that. They would not be looking, so they would be at particular risk if going round their feet is a game of football, is that right?
A. Yes
Q That danger is made worse if there are a series of games going round, criss-crossing a particular playground, is it not, because there will be more balls in action?
A. I accept that.
Q And it would be particularly dangerous if some of those balls were full sized balls?
A. I accept that.”
“Q. I know that. The reason why you did it was not because you feared somebody would get a slight knock but you feared that somebody might suffer a serious injury, that is right?
A. The possibility of serious injury; secondly, the school had grown in size since 1988 when I took over, and has done each year. When I took over in 1988 there were 595 pupils on the premises and the playgrounds were adequate. We now have the same sized playgrounds and we have 1000 boys.”
“In my judgment, the very short period in which pupils moved from the exit from the school building to the gate at the other end of the playground is quite different, even allowing for the fact that, as the headmaster accepted and Mr Turton emphasised, departing pupils are likely to be high spirited at that particular moment of the day. Moreover, and to my mind most importantly, there was no evidence that supervision at that juncture, as contrasted with the lunch break, is standard procedure, as it surely would be if it was an equally reasonable requirement. I therefore would also allow the appeal.”
“Q And so if the headmaster communicated a rule about leather footballs in assembly and that was reinforced by teachers once or twice a term on average, and enforced when the teachers would see a basketball being kicked or a leather football on the ground, they were acting perfectly properly weren’t they”
A. Yes.”
It is unclear whether the judge attached any weight to this admission. In my view, he was not obliged to do so. The issue of what was reasonably required of the school in the circumstances of this case was a question for the judge to determine. The opinion of the claimant was of no greater assistance to the resolution of that issue than the opinion of any other layperson.
Causation
“It is in my judgment very important to bear in mind that this is an appeal on issues of fact, albeit that it involves, principally, a challenge to inferences. It is important to note the approach that the law requires of an appellant court. Where there has been no misdirection on fact by the trial judge, the presumption is that his conclusion is correct. The appellate court will only reverse it where it is convinced that it is wrong. In such a case, if the appellate court is merely left in doubt as to the correctness of the conclusion, then it will uphold it.
For my part, I am satisfied that nowhere in the judgment is there to be found any misdirection by the judge. Indeed, I pay tribute to a careful and balanced judgment. Furthermore, it must be borne in mind that even in relation to inferences from established fact, a trial judge is often in a superior position to the Court of Appeal. This is, in my judgment, such a case. I say that because what we are concerned with is a judge’s interpretation of primary facts, and it is that interpretation which has proved to be the decisive matter in the case.”
Conclusion
Lady Justice Arden:
I agree.
Lord Justice Schiemann:
I also agree.