Liability in Negligence for Injury to People and Damage to Property: Negligence - Causation Flashcards

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1
Q

What does factual causation involve? Does all factual causation involve legal causation?

A
  • Involves showing the link between the defendant’s act or omission and the injury or loss caused
  • Not all factual causation involves legal causation
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2
Q

What does legal causation refer to? For instance?

A
  • When the defendant is legally responsible for the injury or loss
  • For instance, for the defendant to be liable for an injury it must be shown that the reasonable person could foresee the injury occurring
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3
Q

Give an example case for legal causation

A
  • Bhamra v Dubb (2010)
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4
Q

What happened in Bhamra v Dubb (2010)?

A
  • Dubb catered for a Sikh wedding. knowing full well that none of the food should have contained egg (forbidden to Sikhs)
  • Some of the food contained egg, which Mr Bhamra had an allergic reaction to and died
  • Mr Dubb held to have breached his duty of care
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5
Q

For factual causation, what must the claimant show?

A
  • A causal link between the defendant’s act or omission and the damage caused
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6
Q

What is the test used to establish the factual cause?

A
  • Sine qua non (the ‘but for’ test)
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7
Q

What happened in Blyth v the Company of Proprietors of the Birmingham Waterworks (1856)?

A
  • Birmingham waterworks installed a water main on Blyth’s street
  • 25 years later it sprung a leak due to frost
  • There was no evidence of negligence
  • HELD - Birmingham Waterworks did not breach their duty. It was simply an accident (no causation)
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8
Q

Explain the but for test

A
  • It must be shown that but for the defendant’s act or omission the claimant would not have suffered damage or loss
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9
Q

Give four cases in which the but for test was used

A
  • Barnett v Chelsea & Kensington Hospital (1969)
  • Bonnington Castings Ltd v Wardlaw (1965)
  • McGhee v National Coal Board (1973)
  • Fairchild v Glenhaven Funeral Services Ltd (2003)
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10
Q

What happened in Barnett v Chelsea & Kensington Hospital (1969)?

A
  • Man went to hospital but was turned away
  • Later died of arsenic poisoning
  • The hospital was not liable as he would not have lived even if he had been treated
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11
Q

What happened in Bonnington Castings Ltd v Wardlaw (1965)?

A
  • Claimant fell seriously ill after working for many years in dusty conditions in a foundry
  • There were 2 types of dust, one of which should have been extracted by law
  • Defendants held liable as although there were two possible causes of the illness, both kinds of dust contributed
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12
Q

What happened in McGhee v National Coal Board (1973)?

A
  • Claimant employed to clean kilns
  • No wash facilities provided
  • Dermatitis (brick dust)
  • HoL found employer liable for negligence as they had materially increased the risk by not providing wash facilities
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13
Q

What happened in Fairchild v Glenhaven Funeral Services Ltd (2003)?

A
  • Employee (deceased) had been exposed to asbestos by several different employers
  • Contracted cancer as result
  • HoL decided each employer who exposed him to asbestos was liable as they had each materially increased the risk of harm towards the claimant
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14
Q

What does loss of chance refer to? What does this usually involve?

A
  • Cases where the defendant’s negligence deprived the claimant of the opportunity to avoid a loss
  • Usually involves medical negligence
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15
Q

Give two cases for loss of chance due to medical negligence

A
  • Hotson v East Berkshire Area Health Authority (1988)

- Greg v Scott (2005)

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16
Q

What happened in Hotson v East Berkshire Area Health Authority (1988)? Were damages awarded? Why?

A
  • School boy fell from tree injuring his hip
  • Hospital failed to diagnose the fracture. Without this negligence he would have had a 25% chance of a full recovery
  • As chance of recovery was reduced by less than 50%, no damages were awarded
17
Q

What happened in Gregg v Scott (2005)? Were damages awarded? Why?

A
  • Claimant’s cancerous tumour was incorrectly diagnosed as benign, which led to a 9 month delay in treatment
  • No damages as in a case like this they will only be awarded if the initial prospects were 50% or higher
18
Q

What does Novus Actus Interveniens mean?

A
  • A new intervening act
19
Q

The link between the defendant’s act or omission and the injury or loss suffered is often referred to as what?

A
  • The chain of causation
20
Q

What does it mean if an intervening act breaks the chain of causation?

A
  • The defendant will not be liable for the injury or loss suffered by the claimant
21
Q

Give three cases where a novus actus interveniens broke the chain of causation

A
  • Knightley v Johns (1982)
  • Jobling v Associated Dairies (1982)
  • McKew v Holland & Hannen & Cubitts (Scotland) Ltd (1969)
22
Q

Give a case where a novus actus interveniens did not break the chain of causation (as in there wasn’t one) What did the CoA say on appeal?

A
  • Baker v Willoughby (1969)

- It was in fact a novus actus interveniens and contributory negligence made the claimant responsible for 50%

23
Q

What happened in Knightley v Johns (1982)?

A
  • Senior police officer instructed a constable to drive the wrong way through a tunnel to close it (John’s car had overturned in the tunnel), which resulted in the constable crashing into a car travelling through the tunnel
  • Johns not liable, but the senior officer was. His instructions led to the collision, and were a novus actus interveniens that broke the chain of causation
24
Q

What happened in Jobling v Associated Dairies (1982)? What case did it distinguish from?

A
  • Claimant injured his back due to his employer’s negligence
  • He later developed an unrelated spinal disease
  • HoL said that the spinal disease was a novus actus interveniens and therefore the employer was no responsible for the losses incurred after the disease
  • Distinguished from Baker v Willoughby (1969)
25
Q

What happened in Baker v Willoughby (1969)?

A
  • Claimant knocked down by defendant’s car
  • Sustained a severe leg injury and had to take a lower paid job
  • 3 years later he was shot in the leg at work, and it had to be amputated
  • Defence said shooting was a novus actus interveniens
  • HoL disagreed and it was held that the claimant’s loss of earnings was a result of the original injury
26
Q

What happened in McKew v Holland & Hannen & Cubitts (Scotland) Ltd (1969)?

A
  • Claimant suffered a serious leg injury as a result of his employer’s negligence
  • He later fell down the stairs
    HoL decided that going down the stairs without a handrail or assistance was a novus actus interveniens