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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Adair and Others v. David Colville & Sons, Ltd [1924] ScotLR 623 (17 July 1924) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1924/61SLR0623.html Cite as: [1924] ScotLR 623, [1924] SLR 623 |
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Page: 623↓
(Before Seven Judges.)
[
(Reported ante, 59 S.L.R. 482.)
The widow and children of a tractor engineman who was killed by an explosion
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while delivering molten metal in an outside pit, brought an action of damages against his employers in the Sheriff Court, which was laid alternatively at common law and under the Employers' Liability Act. The case was tried before the Sheriff and a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence the Sheriff proponed three questions to the jury, of which the second and third embodied the case under the Employers' Liability Act and the first was as follows—“Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased, which resulted in his death, were caused by reason of the defective condition of the outside pit in the defenders' works, and if so, in what respect?“ To this question the jury returned the following answer—“We are of opinion that the accident was caused by the pit being unsuitable owing to dampness, through the works having been closed and the pit not in use.” The damages were assessed £800 at common law and at £568, 3s. 11d. under the Employers' Liability Act. The Sheriff found that the answers did not support the case on record either at common law or under the Employers' Liability Act, and applied the verdict as one in favour of the defenders. No shorthand notes of the proceedings were taken, and an appeal to the Court of Session against the interlocutor of the Sheriff applying the verdict was held incompetent on that ground. In a subsequent action of reduction on the ground that the Sheriff had failed in his questions to put the pursuers' common law case to the jury, and that a miscarriage of justice had in consequence resulted, held (by a majority of Seven Judges, the Lord Justice-Clerk dissenting) that no sufficient ground had been shown for impugning the questions put to the jury.
Mrs Jeanie M'Gliie or Adair, Glengarnock, and others, the widow and children of the deceased Robert Adair, pursuers, brought an action against David Colville & Sons, Limited, Motherwell, defenders, for reduction of a verdict returned by a jury on 7th March 1922 in a trial before the Sheriff of Ayrshire ( Lyon Mackenzie) and the jury in question in an action at the instance of the pursuer against the defenders in the Sheriff Court of Ayrshire at Kilmarnock, and of a decree dated 16th March 1922 pronounced by the Sheriff applying the verdict, and for a new trial.
The averments of the pursuers in the original action sufficiently appear from the previous report of the case (59 S.L.R. 482).
The pursuers pleaded, inter alia—“1. The verdict as recorded not being the verdict returned by the jury is null and void, and decree of reduction thereof should be granted as concluded for. 4. In the circumstances condescended upon a miscarriage of justice having arisen to the great hurt and prejudice of the pursuers, a new trial should be ordered, or the pursuers should have such other redress as may be competent.” The defenders pleaded, inter alia—“2. The pursuers' averments being irrelevant and insufficient in law to support the conclusions of the summons the action should be dismissed.”
The grounds of reduction sufficiently appear from the judgment of the Lord Ordinary ( Constable), who on 8th January 1924 sustained the second plea-in-law for the defenders and dismissed the action.
Opinion—“The pursuers are the widow and children of the late Robert Adair, who was employed by the defenders in their iron works at Glengarnock. On 22nd November 1920 Adair was in charge of a tractor engine at these works, which was conveying and delivering molten metal into a pit, when an explosion took place and Adair received injuries from which he died a few days later. The pursuers thereafter raised an action in the Sheriff Court against the defenders concluding for damages at common law or alternatively under the Employers' Liability Act. On 6th and 7th March 1922 the action was tried by the Sheriff and a jury under section 31 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1907. In accordance with the provisions of section 32 of the Act the Sheriff proponed special questions to the jury, to which they returned answers, and by interlocutor dated 16th March 1922 he applied the verdict as one in favour of the defenders. In accordance with rule 137 of the rules appended to the Act the agents of the parties dispensed with a record of the proceedings, in which case rule 147 provides that the verdict shall not be subject to review. The pursuers then appealed on various grounds to the Second Division of the Court of Session, but the appeal was dismissed as incompetent under rule 147 (1922 S.C. 672), and the pursuers have now raised the present action for reduction of the verdict and decree applying the same.
In support of their action the pursuers have stated a great many grounds, which may be roughly divided into two groups, viz., (1) failure of the Judge properly to ascertain and apply the verdict of the jury, and (2) breach of statutory rules and other informalities of procedure.
Before discussing these in detail it will be convenient to refer to various authorities which were quoted as to the grounds which will warrant reduction of the decree of an inferior court which is statutorily declared to be final. The pursuers found upon what Lord Lyndhurst termed the superintending authority exercised by the Court of Session over inferior jurisdictions where they have been guilty of an excess of their jurisdiction or have acted inconsistently with the authority with which they were invested— Campbell v. Brown, 3 W. & S. 448. Excess of jurisdiction is a clear case for the exercise of the jus eminens, though it may arise from the mistaken construction of a statute which the subordinate court must interpret in the first instance—‘A clause of finality cannot protect a sheriff's judgment when taking an erroneous view of a statute he either refuses to sanction a lawful act or sanctions an unlawful one— per Lord Justice-Clerk Moncreiff in Lord Advocate v.
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Police Commissioners of Perth, 8 Macph. 244. Similarly informality or irregularity in procedure may competently found an action of reduction if it involves either a breach of express statutory rules or a violation of those implied rules of procedure which are necessary for the due administration of justice. In the latter case I think there is good authority for the proposition that the irregularity must be such as to render the proceedings fundamentally null— Munro v. Rose, 18 D. 292. The defenders in the present case sought to apply the same criterion to the breach of statutory rules of procedure. But the authorities are somewhat difficult to harmonise. The general rule undoubtedly is that breach of an express or clearly implied statutory direction will be fatal— Maitland v. Douglas, 24 D. 193; Anderson v. Widnell, 7 Macph. 81; Stirling v. Hutcheon, 1 R. 935; United Collieries, Limited v. Gavin, 2 F. 60. But in the case of breach of statutory rules with regard to the lodging of reclaiming notes the Court has drawn a distinction between the actual lodging and boxing of the note and ancillary matters such as the lodging and delivering of prints— Allan's Trustees v. Allan, 19 R. 15; Henderson v. D. & W. Henderson, 1912 S.C. 171; and in other cases it has refused to grant the remedy of reduction for what may be termed minor statutory irregularities— Brown v. Lindsay, 7 Macph. 595; Tough's Trustee v. Edinburgh Parish Council, 1918 S.C. 107. In order to appreciate the pursuer's case with regard to the ascertainment and application of the verdict it is necessary to consider their averments in the original action, the record in which was produced in the present action and referred to by both parties. The averments were that the accident which resulted in Adair's death was caused by molten metal coming in contact with dampness in the pit into which it was poured. The pit in question was the only pit at the works which was not under cover, with the result that rain water collected therein. Water also collected therein from the surface owing to faulty drainage and from a broken pipe in an adjoining laboratory. In consequence of this dampness the pit was defective, and the defenders, who made no sufficient inspection of it before allowing it to be used, were responsible for its defective condition. The pursuers also averred that Adair was instructed by David Graham, the foreman in charge, to convey the molten metal to the pit, that Adair was bound to obey Graham's instructions, and that Graham was negligent (1) in utilising the outside pit for molten metal, and (2) in not taking precautions to ascertain that the pit was free from water or dampness. The material pleas were (1) that the pursuers having suffered damage through the negligence of the defenders in utilising a defective pit or in failing to see that a safe and proper pit was provided, were entitled to reparation, and (2) separatim, that they were entitled to reparation under the statute because the deceased had died in consequence of injuries sustained through conforming to an order given by a servant of the defenders whom he was bound to obey. On these pleadings the action was appointed to be tried before a jury.
After evidence had been led before the jury and the Sheriff had summed up he prepared and submitted to the jury the following questions as recorded in the interlocutor sheet—‘ 1. Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased Robert Adair while employed as a tractor engineman at the furnaces of Glengarnock belonging to the defenders on the 22nd day of November 1920, which resulted in his death, were caused by reason of the defective condition of the outside pit in the defenders' works, and if so, in what respect? 2. Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased Robert Adair, resulting in his death, were caused by the negligence of Gavid Graham, Glengarnock, in the exercise of superintendence entrusted to him by the defenders, and if so, in what respect?3. Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased Robert Adair resulted from the deceased having conformed to an order negligently given by the said David Graham, to whose orders or directions at the time of the injury he was bound to conform, and what was that order?’
The verdict of the jury in answer to these questions, as recorded in the interlocutor sheet in terms of rule 145 appended to the Sheriff Courts Act, was as follows:—‘ 1. We are of opinion that the accident was caused by the pit being unsuitable owing to dampness, through the works having been closed and the pit not in use. 2. We answer this question in the negative. In our opinion there was no negligence on the part of David Graham, who we consider did all that was possible in the circumstances. 3. We answer this question in the negative, not being satisfied that David Graham gave any order, but that the deceased Robert Adair returned to his position from a sense of duty.’
On the same day, 7th March, the Sheriff having heard parties’ agents on the motion of the pursuers’ agent to have the foregoing verdict applied made avizandum, and on 16th March he pronounced an interlocutor in the following terms:—‘Finds in law that in respect the answers returned by the jury to the questions proponed to them do not support the case laid on record either at common law or under the Employers’ Liability Act 1880, the verdict is for the defenders: Applies the verdict accordingly.…’
Apart from pure points of procedure which I shall discuss separately, the pursuers table three objections to the regularity of the verdict and the application thereof. In the first place they say that the verdict recorded was not the actual verdict of the jury, because the foreman stated that for the reasons stated in the verdict as recorded they answered the first question in the affirmative and assessed the damages at £800 on a common law basis. In my opinion this objection is bad for various reasons. I think that the verdict as recorded shows that they did answer
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the question in the affirmative because the verdict affirms the unsuitableness of the pit owing to dampness, and dampness was the one and only defect which was condescended on. Further, it is admitted that the jury agreed to the answer as framed by the Sheriff. But even if the verdict as recorded did not properly interpret the verdict as announced, that would not in my opinion found an action of reduction, because the Sheriff in interpreting it was not acting beyond his powers. It is well settled by the jury practice of the Court of Session that if a jury returns a verdict which the presiding judge considers ambiguous he may either send them back to consider it— Morgan v. Morris (20 D. (H.L.) 18)—or he may construe it, and if he thinks that the meaning is clear he may in entering it up alter its wording or effect accordingly— King v. N.B. Railway Company, 12 S.L.R. 53; Robinson v. Wm, Hamilton (Motors) Limited, 1923 S. C. 838. In the latter case parties are not without a remedy, because they may take an exception as was done in Robinson's case, but a party failing to take such an exception cannot have recourse to reduction. It appeared to me that the pursuers' objection to the terms in which the answers were recorded was really based on a failure to appreciate the distinction between a general and special verdict which I shall discuss later. They seemed to imagine that an affirmative answer to the first question, together with an assessment of damages, necessarily meant a finding in their favour, but in this, as I shall explain later, I think that they were mistaken. The pursuers' next objection is that the application of the verdict failed to give proper effect to the verdict as recorded. In my opinion this objection is equally bad and for a similar reason. In applying the verdict the Sheriff was again acting within his powers. If the presiding judge makes a mistake in doing so, section 31 of the Sheriff Courts Act provides a remedy where the evidence has been recorded, but the pursuers here voluntarily debarred themselves from such a remedy. And they cannot have recourse to a reduction simply because a decision of the presiding judge acting within his powers was erroneous.
There is a third objection based upon the, insufficiency of the questions framed by the Sheriff which is distinctly averred in Cond. 5. Ex facie the questions appear to be defective because they do not ask for an assessment of damages. But the pursuers cannot found on this point, because it is part of their case that the Sheriff did make such a request and that the jury did assess damages. In argument the pursuers' complaint was that the Sheriff had not exhausted the possibility of liability under the statute because he had confined his questions to negligent superintendence or the giving of a negligent order by David Graham, and had not put the question whether the defective condition of the pit had not been remedied owing to the negligence of some other servant entrusted with the duty of seeing that the plant was in proper condition. Now in the note to his interlocutor applying the verdict the Sheriff explains that no such case was averred in the original record, and considering the original record I should be disposed to agree with him. But even if he were wrong that again would not be a good ground for reduction.
But there is another aspect of the third objection which strikes me as raising much the most serious question in the case, and while it was not developed in argument I feel bound as it is covered by the pleadings to deal with it. The argument may be stated thus—The record in the original action set forth a case based alternatively on common law liability or liability under the statute in respect of the defective condition of the pit in which the explosion took place, and that case was sent to trial. The trial of it necessarily involved the consideration of two things, viz. (1) whether the pit was defective, and (2) whether the defenders, or otherwise a servant for whose fault the statute makes them responsible, were to blame. Now the questions framed by the Sheriff as recorded put to the jury an issue as to the condition of the pit; they also put to the jury two issues as to whether there was culpa on the part of the foreman, but they did not put any issue as to whether there was culpa on the part of the defenders, and they only put one very general question of fact bearing upon the common law liability of the defenders. In these circumstances the question arises whether the omission of a direct issue of negligence, or that omission coupled with the absence of questions sufficiently detailed to elucidate the facts necessary to determine the defenders' liability, do not constitute an ex facie fundamental defect in the procedure.
The action is based on negligence, and under the well-settled form of general issue appropriate to the trial of such an action negligence on the part of the defenders must be affirmed or negatived by the jury, the damages being alternatively scheduled to meet the contingency of the jury affirming common law or merely statutory liability ( Magee v. Dalgliesh, Falconer, & Company, Limited, 11 R. 857; Goudie v. Paul & Sons, 22 R. 1). An early illustration will be found in Anderson v. Pyper, quoted in Macfarlane's Practice in Jury Cases, p. 324. A passenger who had been injured by the overturning of a public coach sued the owners for damages, and the approved form of issues was (1) whether the coach had been faulty in certain specified respects; and (2) whether these defects were due to the negligence of the defenders. Negligence no doubt involves or may involve questions of law as well as questions of fact, and questions of law are for the judge. But under this form of issue the judge can only give the necessary directions in law to the jury in his charge. The jury remain masters of the verdict, affirming or negativing the general issue of negligence as the case may be.
The present case is, however, rather different. Section 32 of the Sheriff Courts Act made it competent in any case, and imperative if either party required it, for
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the presiding judge to propone to the jury particular questions of fact, thus reviving a practice which existed generally when jury trial was first introduced in Scotland, but which was abandoned very shortly afterwards—Macfarlane, p. 68. The result is, I think, to convert the verdict of the jury into a special verdict—a form of procedure with which Scots lawyers are not familiar, though it is still competent and is occasionally resorted to in the Court of Session ( cf. Wilson v. Boyle, 17 R. 62). A special verdict as I understand it finds for neither party but simply makes special findings on the facts, leaving the Court to apply the law and enter up the verdict accordingly (Macfarlane, per Lord Benholme in Murray and Others v. Arbuthnott, 9 Macph. 198). This was the form of verdict prescribed by rule 144 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1907, though it was repealed when under the amending Act of 1913 it became no longer compulsory to take a special verdict in all cases. In a sense a special verdict enlarges the power of the presiding judge, because it enables him to apply the law directly instead of doing so by way of direction to the jury which they may disregard. On the other hand it does not extend his jurisdiction to any question of fact, and it requires that the facts to which the law is to be applied by the judge shall be fully and clearly determined by the jury. Now in the present case the jury, as already pointed out, were not asked to make and did not make any finding with regard to the defenders’ negligence. In my opinion the omission was not in itself fatal, because the material facts necessary to determine common law liability might be ascertained by special questions. The point is whether the only question of fact put by the presiding judge was sufficient to enable the case to be fairly tried without a direct issue of negligence. The point is illustrated by the note to the Sheriff's interlocutor applying the verdict. The ground of his judgment as therein expressed is that the answer of the jury to the first question ‘does not establish any proposition which imputes legal liability to the defenders.’ In result the pursuers’ case was thus left to depend on the terms which an unskilled jury employed in answering a very general question. An answer to a general question may of course be conclusive, because it may indicate a defect which either plainly excludes or plainly implies common law liability. But it is more likely to be indeterminate, as it appears to have been in this case. The facts may of course warrant no more than an indeterminate finding, but the theory of a special verdict as I understand it is that the opinion of the jury shall be elicited on all points of the evidence material to the determination of liability, and the question is whether the answer in this case exhausted the jury's opinion upon the relevant facts of the case. Having regard to the averments in the original record with respect to the sources of dampness, the covering of pits, inspection, and so forth, I should have expected the evidence to have included other facts, and appropriate questions to have been put to the jury thereon, but I cannot say what the evidence was and the pursuers have made no averment on the subject. The grounds of an action like the present must be clearly established, and the doubts which I entertain as to the sufficiency of the questions put to the jury, while they illustrate the inherent risks of miscarriage which attach to the system of particular questions and special verdicts, appear to me to fall short of what would be sufficient to reduce the proceedings. …”
The pursuers appealed to the Second Division, and on 10th July their Lordships appointed the case to be heard before the Judges of the Second Division with the addition of three Judges of the First Division, the argument to be restricted to matters having reference only to the questions put by the Sheriff to the jury.
Argued for the pursuers and appellants—The proceedings in the appeal Adair v. David Colville & Sons, Limited, 1922 S.C. 672, 59 S.L.R. 482, did not affect the competency of the present action, because the pursuers founded on a fundamental nullity which affected the essential justice of the case, while in the appeal they founded and could only found on the statutory grounds of appeal. In any event reduction and not appeal was the proper way to raise a question of the present kind. The pursuers’ case was that they had never really had their case tried at all. They had come into Court alleging a certain ground of fault, but this had not been put to the jury in the questions framed by the Sheriff, and following on an inconclusive verdict the Sheriff had applied the answer as a verdict for the defenders. The Sheriff should have put a further question to the jury from which fault on the part of the defenders could have been inferred. The answer to the question put was uncertain, and where that was so the Court would not enter up the verdict but would order a new trial. If the Sheriff decided to propone questions of fact to a jury these questions must be complete, otherwise he would be unable to apply the law—Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1907 (7 Edw. VII, cap. 51), section 31 and rules 133 and 187; Taylor v. Sutherland, 1910 S.C. 644, per Lord President Dunedin at pp. 650 and 651, 47 S.L.R. 541. The Sheriff had failed in his duty in proponing the proper questions. The Court of Session had a supereminent power to reduce the decisions of inferior judges when they went wrong— Campbell v. Brown, 1829, 3 W. & S. 441, per Lyndhurst, L.C., at p. 448; Caledonian and Dumbartonshire Railway Junction v. Lockhart, 1854, 17 D. 25, per Lord President M'Neill at p. 32; Morgan v. Morris, 1853, 16 D. 82, 1855, 18 D. (H.L.) 46, 1856, 18 D. 797, 1858, 18 D. (H.L.) 18, reported more fully 3 Macq. 323; Florence v. Mann, 1890, 18 R. 247, 28 S.L.R. 215; Taylor v. Sutherland, cit. sup.; Campbell v. United Collieries Limited, 1912 S.C. 182, per Lord President Dunedin at p. 185, 49 S.L.R. 140; Macfarlane on Jury Practice, p. 252.
Argued for the defenders and respondents—The object of the questions put to the jury was to analyse the evidence led before
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them, and until the evidence was led the questions could not be put. The questions put by the Sheriff did this sufficiently, and the answers returned by the jury negatived the liability of the defenders. But even if the questions were not sufficient, the pursuers must show that they were so outrageously bad that they completely failed to analyse the material placed before the jury. Wherever a decision was contrary to law there would be in a sense a miscarriage of justice. The cases founded on by the reclaimers were cases where the Court, which had jurisdiction was exercising a competent power of review, but they were not cases where review, having been excluded by statute, the jury returned a wrong answer to questions put and reduction was given. The reclaimers could only succeed if they could show that something was withheld from the jury which ought to have been put to them, subject to the proviso that in this particular case no record of the proceedings had been kept. It was impossible to say whether a wrong question had been put unless the Court knew what it had been put upon— Whitton v. Ewing, Aitlcen v. Edgar, 1911 S.C. 781, 48 S.L.R. 672. At advising—
Under section 31 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1907 the application of the verdict of the jury is one of the permitted subjects of appeal, but by rule 148 of the rules appended to the Act that appeal is cut off in any case (such as the present) in which the parties have not had the proceedings taken down in shorthand. It appears clear that if the Sheriff's application of the verdict is not appealable under the Act it cannot be submitted to review by way of reduction, for that would be an evasion of the statute. Moreover, an error in the application of the verdict (assuming that any error occurred) is an incident in the exercise of the Sheriff's undoubted jurisdiction, and involves nothing ultra vires. It cannot therefore form the basis of an action of reduction on the ground that what the Sheriff did was funditus null.
I do not wish to outstep the limitation placed on your Lordships' remit to the seven Judges. But I should like to point out one thing in this connection which has a material bearing on what I am going to say about the specially remitted matters, and it is this. Any cutting off of the general right of appeal is apt to wear an odious aspect. But there is really nothing inequitable or unreasonable in excluding from appeal a point which cannot be brought to the test without full knowledge of the circumstances under which it arose for decision in the Inferior Court, when the absence of such knowledge is due to the course of action pursued by the appellant. The precise nature of the matters requiring to be decided by the jury and the true meaning of the verdict itself cannot be safely determined by simply collating the bold terms of the verdict with the written pleadings in the closed record. Your Lordships are familiar with the change which sometimes takes place in the aspect of a case after the evidence has been completely led and the points in controversy have been drawn to an issue by the arguments of parties, from the aspect which the same case wore when originally presented on the closed record. A point which looked at first of leading importance may sink to comparative insignificance, and another which appeared (like the proverbial cloud) to be no bigger than a man's hand may turn out to overshadow the whole field of controversy. But the points remitted for the consideration of the Court of seven Judges affect the application of the verdict only indirectly in this sense, that they are immediately concerned with the questions of fact put to the jury by the Sheriff in accordance with section 32 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1907 (as amended), on which question the jury's verdict was returned.
The Sheriff put three questions to the jury. All of them were questions of fact. The first related to the condition of a pit used for the reception of molten metal, and the question was as to whether the pit was defective or no, and (if it was defective) in what respects. There were two other questions as to whether one of the servants of the employers had been guilty of negligence in certain duties committed to him with regard to supervision, and so on, in relation to the pit.
Attack is concentrated on the first question, and the attack takes this shape. It is said that the first question, although it put to the jury a perfectly clear issue in fact, was insufficient from the point of view of section 32, because it was not accompanied by other questions which, if answered in a sense favourable to the pursuer, would have logically led to the same result as a verdict in favour of the pursuer on a general issue. It is complained that the question was not—if I may borrow a phrase which my brother Lord Skerrington used in the course of the discussion—self-explanatory and selfinterpretative.
I could understand that objection if it were legitimate to consider the sufficiency of the question or questions of fact put to a jury under section 32 of the Act upon the assumption that they superseded or displaced all other duties of the presiding judge in summing up the case for the jury's consideration, and in charging and directing the jury in law. If the procedure prescribed by the Act were that the sheriff was required to place before the jury a series of questions analysing the evidence which had been led before them, and to say—“You have nothing to do with the law which governs the case—no duty except to answer the following bare questions of fact,” then I could understand that the
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In my opinion the sheriff is at perfect liberty to put questions of fact for the jury's answer which are not exhaustive of all possible points in the case, but which he thinks crucial to the real merits of the case, having in view the evidence led and the arguments presented. It is no doubt possible that the sheriff, like any other presiding judge, may fail to appreciate at their true value some of the legal pleas which are competently maintainable on the evidence. It is at all events theoretically possible that legal omniscience might detect many unobserved flaws in the charges delivered by presiding judges to juries, just as it might detect many flaws in juries' verdicts notwithstanding the unimpeachable character of the judge's charge. But even if it be assumed that the sheriff erred in law in the directions he gave to the jury and consequently put special questions of fact to the jury which failed to exhaust the true merits of the action, the worst that can be said is that he had misdirected the jury. Such a misdirection might well be reflected in the sheriff's application of the verdict, but appeal on that head is allowed (as has been seen) only if a record of the proceedings has been taken in shorthand, and that was not done in the present case. If review by appeal is excluded, so is review by way of reduction.
In fairness to the Sheriff I think it right to say that I find no ground in the present case on which I would be justified to hold that the Sheriff did anything wrong. If he told the jury—as he may have done (in effect) for all that I can know—that at common law a master is under the threefold obligation to his workmen (1) of employing competent servants, (2) of establishing a safe and proper system in his works, and (3) of putting into his workmen's hands plant that is not defective, and then told them that the only one of these three obligations which arose on the evidence for the consideration of the jury was the third—in relation to the alleged defects of the pit into which the molten metal was poured—I confess I see no criticism which can be justly brought against the first question which the Sheriff put to the jury. The jury did not affirm the defective character of the pit as a part of the employers' works, though they negatived its suitability as a place of deposit of the metal in the circumstances and at the time in which it was so used. It is not suggested that this unsuitability was due to the employment of incompetent servants. It may have been due to a defective system of working. But how can we say that a question raising the latter point ought to have been put when we are left in ignorance of what the evidence was, and know nothing about the state of the controversy when the Sheriff came to charge the jury?
For these reasons it seems to me impossible to affirm that any ground has been made out for impugning the sufficiency of the questions put to the jury.
At the worst the Sheriff may have failed to charge the jury correctly. I am not convinced that he did so fail. But even if he did, the case is not one of fundamental nullity, and accordingly I see no ground to differ from the result arrived at by the Lord Ordinary.
The action is based on various grounds but I find it necessary to consider only one of them which relates to the questions which the Sheriff invited the jury to determine. These questions were three in number and they were couched in the following terms:—“(1) Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased Robert Adair, while employed as a tractor engineman at the furnaces of Glengarnock belonging to the defenders on the 22nd day of November 1920, which resulted in his death, were caused by reason of the defective condition of the outside pit in the defenders' works and if so in what respect? (2) Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased Robert Adair, resulting in his death, were caused by the negligence of David Graham, Glengarnock, in the exercise of superintendence entrusted to him by the defenders and if so in what respect? (3) Whether the personal injuries sustained by the deceased Robert Adair resulted from the
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Let me deal with these propositions in the order stated—1. On this part of the case it is sufficient to say that the initial writ in its conclusions, in its averments, and in its pleas discloses a case at common law against the defenders. No doubt the defenders had a plea to the relevancy of the pursuers' averments at common law, but that plea appears not to have been insisted in, and parties joined issue before the jury on the double question whether the defenders were negligent ( a) at common law, and ( b) under the Act, and whether their negligence resulted in the death of Robert Adair. Something was said in argument regarding the relevancy of the averments of the pursuers at common law. I think on a consideration of these averments that they are perfectly relevant, but in any event I am clearly of opinion that the defenders cannot now be permitted to say that they are not. They had a full opportunity of insisting in that argument at the proper time but they omitted to avail themselves of it, and it seems to me idle to suggest that after issue has been joined, and after the common law case has been considered by the jury without objection on the part of the defenders, they should now be allowed to quarrel its relevancy. In these circumstances it seems to me too plain for argument that the pursuers were entitled to have their common law case adjudicated upon by the jury.
2. The second proposition seems to me to be documented beyond all doubt. But let me in the first place recal that the Sheriff availed himself of his statutory right to adjust and put to the jury specific questions, instead of leaving them to decide the question of fault in the general terms which are usual in jury trials in this Court. The relative merits of these methods of procedure do not seem to me to be hujus loci, and though the matter was discussed in argument before us I do not intend to allow myself to be drawn into a discussion of the topic. It is sufficient to say that the Sheriff determined to follow a course which he was well entitled to select in asking the jury for a special as distinguished from a general verdict.
That the Sheriff intended to submit the pursuers' common law case to the jury appears to me to be beyond all doubt. The written records amply instruct that fact. To the questions which he adjusted, and which I have already quoted, the Sheriff added under his own hand—“If any of the foregoing queries answered affirmatively what damages do you assess (1) at common law, (2) under Employers' Liability Act?” In these circumstances it appears to me vain to suggest that the Sheriff did not intend to submit the pursuers common law case to the jury.
3. That the jury thought they were seised of that case is no less clear. Their verdict purported to assess the damages due to the pursuer (1) under common law at £800, and (2) under the Employers' Liability Act at £560, 3s. 11d.
4. But in my judgment the fatal flaw in the proceedings is that the Sheriff had not in fact and in law done what both he and the jury thought he had done, viz., properly submitted the pursuers' common law case to the jury. That case is manifestly intended to be included in the first question put by the Sheriff and in no other. The other two questions relate to the pursuers' case under the Employers' Liability Act, and it is to be noted that in each of them the jury are invited to affirm or to negative the negligence of the foreman, in consequence of whose conduct liability under the Act was said to attach to the defenders. But the first question contained no such invitation. The jury are merely asked to say whether Robert Adair was injured by reason of the defective condition of the outside pit. That defective condition, even assuming it to have existed, might have been due to many other causes than the negligence of the defenders. It is consistent with their verdict that the jury found no fault proved on the part of the defenders, and, of course, unless they did no liability in law attached to them. It is clear, however, that both the Sheriff and the jury thought that an affirmative answer to the first question inferred common law liability on the part of the defenders. Indeed, as I have said, the Sheriff added in his own handwriting to the questions as adjusted by him—“If any of the foregoing questions answered affirmatively, what damages do you assess at common law or under the Employers' Liability Act?” If that addendum does not demonstrate that the Sheriff thought, and that the jury were invited to hold, that an affirmative answer to the first question involved a verdict for the pursuers at common law, then I am at a loss to expound its meaning. In that view, however, for the reasons which I have stated Judge and jury were in my opinion alike mistaken.
5. That the result is to render the proceedings fundamentally null and to produce a miscarriage of justice I have no
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It was argued that we cannot safely interfere with what the Sheriff did, because we are unaware of the evidence led prior to the adjustment by him of the crucial question. That consideration is to my mind quite immaterial. I am indifferent to the nature or quality of the evidence led so long as I am certiorated as I am that the Sheriff regarded that evidence, whatever it may have been, as warranting him in leaving to the jury the determination of the pursuers' common law case, and that in the event of their desiring to decide in favour of the pursuers he failed to provide the jury with machinery enabling them effectively to do so.
It was further argued for the defenders that there may have been included in the Sheriff's charge to the jury what is excluded from the first question which he put to them. The argument suggests the adjustment of questions such as these by reference, the reference being to the Judge's charge. Now, in the first place, I am not disposed in order to decide the matter submitted to us to have recourse to what is, with all respect to the Sheriff, at best mere surmise. There is no hint in the opinion which the Sheriff delivered in interpreting the verdict returned that his charge in any way supplemented the defect in the first question. Indeed, the opinion suggests—nay, to my mind establishes—the contrary. The Sheriff decided the case against the pursuers at common law on the shortand to my mind inconclusive view that when the jury stated as they did that the pit was unsuitable because of damp, they did not intend to affirm that it was defective because of damp. Apart from that, however, the questions put by the Sheriff bear to be self-sufficient, self-contained, and exhaustive. That they were so intended by the Judge and were so treated by the jury does not appear to me to admit of doubt. The questions purport to elicit from the jury all the materials necessary to enable them to affirm or deny the common law liability of the defenders. In my opinion a cardinal—nay, indispensable—part of the first question was missing, viz., to whose fault was the defect due? That being so, I respectfully demur to the view that that fundamental defect may safely be deemed to have been remedied by something which the Sheriff may have said in the course of his charge.
It was further argued for the defenders that at the worst the Sheriff laid down bad law, that that is a risk incidental to any judicial proceeding, and that its consequences cannot therefore be regarded as a fundamental nullity. To my mind the question is one of degree. When I find, as
I find here, that the Sheriff excluded from the effective consideration of the jury the whole of the pursuers' common law case, I cannot assimilate the result to an ordinary error in law. The position is much the same as if, the pursuer having claimed the right to submit two cases to the jury—one at common law and one under the Act—the Sheriff had arbitrarily and openly decided that he would submit one of these to the jury, but had definitely refused to submit the other. If that had happened I should regard the result as involving a grievous miscarriage of justice, and I think it is inconceivable that our law should be impotent to afford a remedy.
If the case had been tried in this Court it would have been tried upon a document which would in effect, if not indeed in terms, have submitted to the jury two questions—(1) Whether the defenders were in fault at common law; and (2) whether they were in fault under the Employers' Liability Act. The second and third questions adjusted by the Sheriff quite properly put to the jury the case of fault under the Act. The first question omits all reference to fault at common law, and, as I have already indicated, until it be ascertained by the jury to whose fault the defect was due—and that is a pure question of fact—it is, in my view, impossible either to affirm or to deny the common law liability of the defenders. If the question of fault was appropriate and necessary for the consideration of the jury under questions1and 3, I can see no reason why it should be inappropriate and unnecessary in question 1. On the contrary, I think it was essential.
It therefore appears to me that all the propositions which I premised are proved, and if that be so, then for aught yet seen this verdict cannot, in my judgment, stand.
There remains for consideration the questions
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As regards ( a) it must be remembered that both parties on the invitation of the Sheriff had proposed questions for the trial of the issue, and that the Sheriff, rejecting the proposals both of the pursuers and of the defenders, himself adjusted the questions which he conceived to be appropriate. In effect, after hearing parties, he gave judgment in the matter. In these circumstances I am not disposed to blame the pursuers' agent for the attitude which he adopted. He may well have thought that it would not have been seemly to protest against the considered opinion of the Sheriff. In any event, had the pursuers' agent protested, his protest might not have been recorded, and an exception was not open to him because the evidence was not taken down in shorthand. In any event I am not prepared to hold that the failure of the pursuers to resort to the futilities of protest or exception instructs an agreement on their part to waive the objection which they now take. As regards ( b) the pursuers have already been penalised for their supineness, if it be supineness, in dispensing with a record of the evidence. Their appeal to this Court has been dismissed as incompetent. But that is quite another matter from holding that by the omission of the pursuers to require the evidence to he recorded they have forfeited all other rights open to them— e.g., suspension or reduction—by the exercise of which they may get rid of an obnoxious verdict. I know of no authority for that proposition, which seems to me to be without warrant.
I will add one further observation only. It appears to me that the passing of the Sheriff Court Act 1913 has greatly intensified the responsibilities and increased the difficulties of the judge who tries a Sheriff Court action such as this. Prior to that Act the Sheriff adjusted the questions for the jury beforehand at his leisure, and either party if aggrieved had with his consent a right of appeal. Now the Sheriff is enjoined to adjust the questions, not prior to but in the course of, it may be, a complicated case, and that without any right of review, unless in the, I take it, exceptional case where the evidence is recorded in shorthand. I am bound to say that I sympathise with the position in which the presiding judge is thus placed. It is obviously difficult for him, under the circumstances which I have figured, to steer an unexceptionable course. It is obviously easy at one's leisure and after the event to criticise and correct what he has done. But I think it is by no means inappropriate that in an exceptional case such as this reduction should be resorted to as being the equivalent of the right of appeal, of which both parties are now deprived.
In the view which I take it is unnecessary for me to offer a concluded opinion regarding the other grounds of reduction on which the pursuers rely. I will only say that as at present advised I should find great difficulty in giving effect to them separately or cumulatively.
But as I think that the verdict is vitiated by the considerations to which I have adverted, my opinion, in which I differ with profound respect and regret from the consulted Judges and from your Lordships, while it cannot affect the result, is that the judgment of the Lord Ordinary should be recalled, decree of reduction granted, and a new trial ordered.
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As regards the first question framed by the Sheriff, to which alone the pursuers' counsel confined his criticisms, I think that it fairly put to the jury the only defect in the pit clearly and properly averred on the record, viz., defective construction or condition owing to a broken pipe, bad drainage, etc., asdistinguished from unsuitability, which latter might be a merely casual defect not necessarily implying common law liability on the part of the employer but only negligence on the part of a fellow workman. No doubt the first question if considered by itself and merely in the light of the pleadings and without any further explanations may be regarded as suggesting an incomplete and even a misleading view of the case which the pursuers intended to present of common law liability on the part of the defenders, but it must be assumed that the Sheriff gave to the jury all necessary explanations in regard to the law applicable to the facts of the case and bearing on the question as framed by him. That assumption is always made in the Court of Session in considering the effect or validity of a verdict when no exceptions have been taken to the law as laid down by the presiding judge at the trial. If the same assumption is made (as I think that it ought to be made) in the present case the criticisms which have been made upon the form of the first question lose their force. If the pursuers' agent thought that the question as framed was misleading he had only to ask the Sheriff to give such a direction to the jury as he “thought necessary in order to obviate any danger from this source. If the Sheriff refused to give such a direction I see no reason to doubt that the pursuers could have excepted and appealed upon the ground of misdirection in terms of section 31 of the Act of 1907 and rule 148—assuming of course that the pursuers had complied with the statutory condition of having a record of the proceedings taken by an official shorthand writer of the Court. It is easy to figure a case tried either in the Sheriff Court or in the Court of Session where an objection to a verdict, or a question how it should be applied, could be satisfactorily disposed of without any reference to the notes of evidence at the trial, but it was I think assumed in the Sheriff Court (Scotland) Acts 1907 and 1913 (sections 31–33 and rules 133–150), just as it was assumed in the Court of Session (Scotland) Act 1868 (sections 34–50) and earlier legislation, as a condition-precedent to the right to raise any such objection or question that there should be an authentic record of the proceedings at the trial, and that this record would be made available if the Court of Appeal or the court applying the verdict or one or other of the parties should desire to refer to it. Accordingly I am of opinion that if there was a miscarriage of justice (as to which I am doubtful) the pursuers have dispensed with any right to insist upon its being remedied. I therefore think that the Lord Ordinary properly disposed of the action in so far as regards the question with which the consulted Judges are alone concerned.
As the parties before the Sheriff agreed to dispense with the proceedings at the trial being recorded we do not have these before us and as we do not know, apart from the terms of the question complained of, how the topics relevant to liability were handled at the trial by the parties and by the Sheriff in his charge, I confess that I do not find myself sufficiently seised of the case to be in a position satisfactorily to form an opinion as to what may have been, if any, the demerits of the question as a contribution to a solution of the ultimate question of liability. Assuming, however, what I understand to be the gist of the pursuers' case that the question as stated did not duly reflect all the elements of fact which on a correct view of the law entered into the question of liability on the part of the defenders, it remains to consider whether this affords a good ground for reducing the verdict. One thing is clear, that where, as in the present instance, there has by consent been no record of the proceedings at the trial, the statute explicitly withholds the right of appeal which it gives where the evidence has been recorded. The pursuers' counsel, however, maintained that the erroneous nature of the question as alleged was such as to constitute a fundamental nullity or irregularity in the proceedings warranting reduction at common law. I am unable to adopt that view. The Sheriff was of course entirely in accordance with the statute in proponing questions, and as to what the terms of any questions proponed should be that was a matter confided to his judicial discretion. The pursuers' case as it was presented to us does not seem to go further than this, that the Sheriff in stating the question under consideration as he did misapplied the law and did not formulate
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The reclaiming note should be refused.
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In the course of the argument pursuers' counsel laid greater stress upon one point than apparently he put upon it when the case was argued before the Lord Ordinary. That point was whether the questions framed by the learned Sheriff for the jury's consideration were so absolutely defective that the pursuers' case had never been properly put before the jury. I confess for my own part that I never regarded this matter as of any importance in the present case, because I have never seen how the pursuers could put their argument upon this branch of the case upon any logical footing. But it was a matter upon which we were not at one, and we have taken the opinion of three Judges of the First Division. I express my entire concurrence in the opinion expressed by these Judges.
I confess I am at a loss to understand how, sitting here without any information as to the evidence which was before the Sheriff and the jury, we can possibly say of the questions that were framed and to which the jury were asked to deliver answers that these were not questions which enabled them to determine the whole case that was put before them. It seems to be suggested that because the pursuers averred a case—in my opinion a case of very doubtful relevancy—at common law and under the Employers' Liability Act, they were therefore entitled to have answers given by the jury as to whether there was fault under the one category or the other. To that view I entirely dissent. They had no such right. The fact that the defenders did not insist upon their plea of irrelevancy merely meant this, that the case would go to proof upon the averments, and that upon the facts as brought out at the trial, the judge and the jury, each doing his part of the work—and after all it is a composite piece of work—the proper result in law would be arrived at. In this particular case, after hearing the evidence, the Sheriff put to the jury as the first question, whether there was defect in connection with the outside pit that was used on this particular occasion, and if there was defect, in what particular? The jury, under that question, were entitled to find, first that the pit was defective, and then to state particulars. On that there remained the duty—which was that of the judge and not of the jury—to say whether the case at common law had been made out or not.
Now the answer given by the jury was, I think, rightly interpreted by the Sheriff as negative of the common law liability. In effect it was that the pit was unsuitable on this particular occasion because of dampness. That did not in any way indicate that there was common law responsibility upon the defenders. On the other hand, if the jury had found—which apparently they could not find, because, I presume, of an entire absence of evidence upon the matter—that the pit was structurally defective, there would or might have been a case against the defenders at common law.
In connection with this matter the Sheriff acted within his statutory power in putting special questions. If a Sheriff proceeds to put special questions to the jury I think he is quite right to put questions which deal solely with fact, and that it is objectionable that he should put questions of mixed fact and law. There is a clear distinction between the question whether a person other than the defenders has been guilty of negligence and the question whether the defenders have been guilty of negligence, because that second question is certainly one of mixed fact and law. The other question whether the particular employee of the defenders had been guilty of negligence was a matter upon which specific evidence was probably led.
Your Lordship in the chair has expressed the view that there had been a miscarriage of justice here. I confess I do not see it. Solfar as I can judge of the case, I think there might have been a miscarriage of justice if the Sheriff had thought fit to enter the verdict up for the pursuers. There is nothing, even now, stated by the pursuers which to my mind indicates that they had a common law case. One would have thought that since they desire to have the verdict for the defenders set aside and a new trial granted, they would have acquainted us with the facts which went to show that there was a common law liability—I mean a common law liability against the employers as that was laid down in Reid v. Bartonshill Coal Company (1858, 3 Macq. 268) and Wilson v. Merry & Cuninghame (1867, 6 Macph. (H, L.) 85), and after wards, it may be, extended by the House of Lords in the case of Smith v. Baker, [1891] AC 325. I find nothing to indicate that there was such a case,
It may be that the jury intended to give a verdict for the pursuers. But if the jury did intend to give a verdict for the pursuers and there was no legal evidence to support that verdict, that verdict would be a miscarriage of justice. Accordingly I think if the pursuers had got the verdict they would have got it upon grounds insufficient within the law to support it. It is not outside the experience of judges who preside at jury trials that with the directions which most experienced judges give
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But supposing in this case that there had been a wrong verdict I think it is quite clear that there would have been no right in law to the pursuers to get a new trial. They have no record of the proceedings, and therefore we are not in a position to know what the case was that was developed. They brought an appeal against what the Sheriff has done, because they maintained that the verdict returned by the jury was a verdict in their favour. That appeal was fully heard before us, and I must say I think it is a matter of regret that after there had been a full argument in that case as to the pursuers' right to have the verdict set aside, they should have prosecuted an action of reduction like the present, where, so far as I can judge of the matter, under a misuse of expressions like “fundamental nullity” and “miscarriage of justice,” they seek to get a new trial upon grounds which are similar to those upon which they sought to proceed in the appeal in which they were unsuccessful.
On the whole matter I am quite clear that the reclaiming note ought to be refused and the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor affirmed.
As regards the other ground of reduction, if it had been made clear that the pursuers' common law case had not been put to the jury, I should have been prepared to hold that there had been a fundamental nullity in the shape of a denial of justice entitling the pursuers to a new trial. But I do not read section 32 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1907 as imposing a duty on the Sheriff to frame questions in such form as to propone an exhaustive statement of the issues raised by the pleadings. It would undoubtedly be advantageous should questions be so framed, but the matter of framing questions is left to the discretion of the Sheriff, and his duty is, with the aid of the questions framed, to put to the jury the issues raised by the pleadings. Now the first question as framed seems to me to be useless in itself to determine any matter of legal responsibility. The defective character of the pit might have been due to damnum fatale or to the negligence of a third party, of a fellow-servant, or of the defenders. The question thus seems to be defective inasmuch as this essential matter of negligence is not adverted to. But the Sheriff charged the jury, and I am of opinion that we must assume that by his charge he supplemented the question so as to put to the jury the case made at common law by the pursuers. Anything lacking in the question to put that case must be assumed to have been stated by the Sheriff in his charge. I am therefore unable to hold that the pursuers have established that the common law case was not put to the jury. On this assumption the Sheriff was probably right, on the answer given by the jury to the first question, in entering the verdict as for the defenders.
I am therefore unable to affirm that this ground of reduction has been substantiated.
I accordingly agree that the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary should be affirmed.
I desire to make two further observations. What has happened in this case seems to suggest that it is highly inexpedient to dispense with a record of the proceedings, where, as here, the action raises questions of difficulty. In the present instance we are left to surmise what evidence was led, and to speculate as to whether or not the question was appropriate to that evidence. The other observation is this—that the unfortunate history of these proceedings seems to justify and confirm what I ventured to state in the case of Ferguson (1915 S.C. 556) as to the advisability of trying jury trials in the Sheriff Court, as in the Court of Session, on general and not on special issues.
The Court adhered.
Counsel for the Pursuers and Reclaimers— Fraser, K.C.— Maclean. Agents— Warden, Weir, & Macgregor, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Defenders and Respondents— D.-F. Sandeman, K.C.— Russell. Agents— J. & J. Ross, W.S.