Occupiers Liability Flashcards

1
Q

Who is an occupier

A

Wheat v E Lacon - could be multiple people, manager / employers
Harris v Birkenhead - person with control of premises
Bailey v Armes - person with insurance or could be no one

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2
Q

What is a premises

A

S1(3)(a) OLA 1957 - “fixed or moveable structure, including any vessel, vehicle and aircraft”
Ship in dry dock, lift, ladder

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3
Q

What duty does the occupier owe a lawful visitor

A

2(1) common duty of care
2(2) “reasonably safe in using the premises for the purpose for which he is invited”

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4
Q

Who is a lawful visitor

A

Invitees - persons who have been invited and who have express permission to be there
Licensees - express / implied permission to be on the land for a particular period
Contractual permission - e.g. entry ticket
Statutory right - police with warrant and meter readers

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5
Q

Cases to show reasonable safety of premises

A

Laverton v Kiapasha Takeaway Supreme - slip resistant tiles and mopping were reasonable precautions
Rochester Cathedral - must be a real source KD danger, not a minor defect. Has the be above the risk of a minor blemish / defect.
Cole v Royal British Legion - duty could not extend past 2 years

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6
Q

Statute for liability to children

A

2(3) “the premises must be reasonably safe for a child of that age”
Standard of care measures subjectively

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7
Q

Cases for liability to children

A

Glasgow Corporation v Taylor - should guard against “allurements”
Phipps v Rochester Corporation - not liable as occupiers are entitled to expect that parents should keep children safe
Jolley v LBS - “allurement” was a clear danger, foreseeable children would play on it

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8
Q

Tradesmen

A

2(3)(b) - can be expected to “appreciate and guard against any special risks ordinarily incident to it so far as the occupier leaves him free to do so”
Roles v Nathan - chimney sweep should have been aware of risk

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9
Q

Can D pass claim to contractor?

A

Yes - s(2)(4)

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10
Q

3 requirements for D to pass claim to contractor

A
  1. Must be reasonable for D to pass claim to contractor. More likely if work is specialist. (Haseldine v Daw & Son Ltd)
  2. Contractor must be competent for task, and occupier should check references / insurance. (Bottomley v Tormorden Cricket Club)
  3. Occupier must check work is properly done. If work is technical and D is not an expert, a surveyor or architect may be required. (Woodward v Mayor of Hastings).
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11
Q

Defences to occupiers liability

A

Contributory negligence
Consent
Warning notices
Exclusion Clauses

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12
Q

Warning notices statute and cases for visitors

A

Can be oral or written
S2(4) a warning is ineffective unless “in all circumstances, it was enough to enable a visitor to be reasonably safe
Rae v Marrs - additional warnings needed for very dangerous areas
Staples v West Dorset District Council - where danger is very obvious, no warning needed

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13
Q

Exclusion clauses statute rules

A

Can limit liability
Whether an exclusion works against a child visitor may depend on age and ability to understand
For businesses, Consumer Rights Act and Unfair Contract Terms Act means personal injury or death cannot be excluded

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14
Q

What duty is owed to trespassers under OLA 1984

A

they owe a duty of ‘common humanity’ (Herrington) if:
S1(3) a. They are aware of the danger or have reasonable grounds to believe it exists
b. They have reasonable grounds to believe the other is in the vicinity of the danger or may come into it
c. The risk is one against which they may be expected to offer some protection
S1(4) “take such care as is reasonable in the circumstances to see that he is not injured by reason of the danger”

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15
Q

Case to say occupier will not be liable if trespasser is injured by an obvious danger

A

Ratcliff v McConell
Student diving into pool at night

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16
Q

Case to say time of day / year of trespassing may be relevant

A

Donoghue v Folkestone Properties
Would not expect someone to dive into harbour in winter at midnight

17
Q

Legal points from Tomlinson v Congleton Borough Council

A

Not liable as
1. Danger wasn’t due to premises but a dangerous act
2. D chose to run a risk
3. Was not reasonable to spend a lot of money making premises inaccessible as the danger was obvious

18
Q

Case to say occupier will not be liable if they had no reason to suggest presence of trespasser

A

Higgs v Foster

19
Q

Case to say occupier will not be liable for trespasser if they were not aware of danger or had no reason to suspect it

A

Rhind v Astbury Water Park

20
Q

Cases for child trespassers

A

Keown v Coventry Healthcare NHS Trust - premises (fire escape) weren’t faulty, child’s act was just dangerous. Occupier not liable.
Baldacinno v West Wittering - no need to warn against obvious danger (diving off beacon). Occupier not liable.

21
Q

Warning notice trespasser case

A

Westwood v Post Office - warning should have been sufficient for adult

22
Q

Remedies

A

Invitees - personal injury and property damage
Trespassers - personal injury only