Toal v. North British Railway Co. [1908] UKHL 683_1 (26 May 1908)


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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Toal v. North British Railway Co. [1908] UKHL 683_1 (26 May 1908)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1908/45SLR0683_1.html
Cite as: [1908] UKHL 683_1, 45 ScotLR 683_1

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SCOTTISH_SLR_House_of_Lords

Page: 683

House of Lords.

Tuesday, May 26. 1908.

(Before the Lord Chancellor (Loreburn), Earl of Halsbury, Lord Ashbourne, Lord Robertson, and Lord Collins.)

45 SLR 683_1

Toal

v.

North British Railway Company.

(In the Court of Session, October 31, 1907, 45 S.L.R. 45, 1908 S.C. 48.)


Subject_Reparation — Railway — Negligence — Passenger on Platform Knocked Down by Open Carriage Door — Duty of Railway Servants — Relevancy.
Facts:

The pursuer in an action of damages for personal injuries against a railway company averred that about 6 p.m. on a November day he, having alighted from a train and standing on a platform of the station, was knocked down by the open door of one of the carriages of the train which the railway servants had failed to close in the execution of their duty before the train was restarted, the station being so dark that he could not see if the doors were closed.

Held ( rev. judgment of the First Division) that the action was relevant to go to trial.

Headnote:

This case is reported ante ut supra.

Toal, the pursuer, appealed in forma pauperis to the House of Lords.

At delivering judgment—

Judgment:

Lord Chancellor—The question here is whether the pursuer avers, and offers to prove, facts from which a jury might legitimately infer that this accident was caused by the neglect of the Railway Company, and I do not suppose that your Lordships will conjecture whether or not that is the right conclusion, for it is really the province of the jury not only to ascertain the facts but to draw their own inferences from the facts that are ascertainable. I find in this case the pursuer says that the duty of the defenders was to close the door of the carriage before it started; that it was their duty to do so on the occasion of this accident; that they did not close the door and so swept the pursuer from the platform on to the rails; and further, that the station was so dark that the pursuer could not see whether the doors were closed or not.

What was the duty of the Railway Company in this matter, and what they did or omitted to do, is for a jury to determine. Accordingly, with the most sincere respect for the opinion of the Court of Session, I am constrained to the view that in this case there is material from which the proper tribunal might conclude that the accident was due to the neglect of the defenders.

I will not express any opinion of my own upon the subject, because I think it is not

Page: 684

my province to deal with matters of fact, but the province of the constitutional tribunal.

Earl of Halsbury—I am entirely of the same opinion. I abstain from expressing any opinion of my own on the point, which is simply a question that the jury will have to determine. It is enough for me to say that in my view there was a case to be properly submitted to a jury, and it was for them to determine it.

Lord Ashbourne—I agree.

Lord Robertson—My opinion is that this appeal must be allowed. I differ with the greatest reluctance from a tribunal so able and experienced in administering this particular jurisdiction, but I think in this instance they have gone too fast.

I must not, however, be supposed in the least degree to hold that because the parties are not agreed as to the facts therefore a case must go to trial. That is a much cruder view than has ever been accepted by the Scotch Courts or by your Lordships in Scotch Appeals. Much time and money have been saved by a more critical view of the case presented by the claimant. When a case comes, as this one did, from the Sheriff Court for trial by jury the duty of the Court of Session is to see before a jury is summoned that there is a case to try. This means an ascertainment of the gist or gravamen of the action. The mere fact that in what is probably an unnecessarily detailed averment of circumstances there is a dispute about facts is in no way decisive of the right to go to trial. If the defender can demonstrate that, assuming all the pursuer says, he has no case, then the Court has habitually, and most rightly, ended the litigation. This, however, is a delicate jurisdiction, because it depends in dubious cases on the language very often obscure applied to facts very often equivocal.

As I think this case must go to trial I do not enter into any analysis of the points in the case, for that would merely prejudice the trial. My interposition at all is merely because in my humble judgment it has got to be remembered that the Scotch system obliges the pursuer to show his hand and state his case before he is allowed to go to trial, and thus compels the Court, when invited, to ascertain the value of the case thus stated. In the present instance I think the Court have criticised the statements too severely and nicely.

Lord Collins—I am of the same opinion.

Their Lordships reversed the judgment appealed from with costs on pauper scale.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellant— Munro— J. A. Christie. Agents— Thomas Scanlan & Company, Glasgow— St Clair Swanson & Manson, W.S., Edinburgh— Warlow & Patey, London.

Counsel for the Respondents—Solicitor-General ( Ure, K.C., M.P.)— Forbes Lankester, K.C. Agents— James Watson, S.S.C., Edinburgh— John Kennedy, W.S., Westminster.

1908


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