Causation Flashcards

1
Q

Barnett v Chelsea and Kensington Hospital

A

Factual Causation

  • Hospital breached duty of care owed to a patient.
  • Doctor failed to carry out proper examination.
  • Patient died of arsenic poisoning after drinking poisoned tea.
  • Evidence showed he would have died even if doctor HAD examined him.
  • Little or no chance that necessary medicine would have been administered on time.
  • No factual causation. ‘But for’ test could not be satisfied.
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2
Q

Wilsher v Essex

A

Multiple Independent Causes

  • Premature baby suffered condition that caused him to go blind.
  • Evidence to suggest blindness could have been caused by 1 of 5 factors, including doctor’s negligence (therefore 1 tortious & 4 non-tortious factors).
  • Applied ‘but for’ test.
  • Could not prove on balance of probabilities (51%) that blindness caused by breach as opposed to other factors.
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3
Q

Hotson v East Berkshire Health Authority

A

Loss of Chance (medical negligence)

  • Child fell from tree and broke leg.
  • Hospital was negligent in its treatment and child left paralysed.
  • Medical evidence showed 75% risk of paralysis even if hospital treatment perfect.
  • ‘But for’ failed - C could only prove 25% chance breach caused paralysis.
  • Originally awarded 25% of value of the claim, but H of L rejected this. Claim failed.
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4
Q

Gregg v Scott

A
  • Rejection of claim for loss of life expectancy due to negligent failure to diagnose claimant’s cancer which reduced survival rate by half.
  • Courts reluctant to apply ‘loss of chance’ argument to medical negligence situations.
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5
Q

Allied Maples Group v Simmons & Simmons

A
  • SS negligence meant that C lost chance to negotiate a better deal.
  • Courts allowed claim. Causation successful as C able to prove real and substantial chance seller would have agreed to the clause.
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6
Q

Bonnington Castings v Wardaw

A

Multiple Cumulative Causes

  • C contracted respiratory disease from dust exposure at work.
  • Claimed compensation in negligence from his employers.
  • Some exposure deemed to be natural consequence of work being carried out (non-tortious).
  • Some exposure due to D’s breach of duty.
  • Non-tortious and tortious factors operated together.
  • Apply ‘but for’ –> but for dust exposure, C would not have contracted the disease.
  • Fails ‘but for’ though because can’t tell how much of the loss was caused by the tortious exposure.
  • Material contribution test introduced.
  • If D’s breach can be proved to have materially contributed to C developing the disease, D would be liable for the loss.
  • Material contribution means ‘more than negligible’
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7
Q

Bailey v Ministry of Defence

A
  • Showed that material contribution test can be applied to more than just industrial cases.
  • C suffered brain damage due to cardiac arrest.
  • Cardiac arrest either caused by natural progression of C’s condition (non-tortious) or negligent lack of care by D (tortious).
  • Medical experts could not say if negligent treatment was on B of P the cause.
  • But able to prove the tortious/non-tortious factors worked together.
  • Factual causation satisfied - the breach materially contributed to the brain damage.
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8
Q

McGhee v National Coal Board

A
  • What happens when you don’t know whether the multiple causes acted independently or cumulatively?
  • C contracted dermatitis due to brick dust exposure.
  • Worked with brick dust during working hours - no breach re: exposure (non-tortious cause).
  • But D did not provide washing facilities to wash off at end of day, so time on skin extended (tortious).
  • But for dust exposure, D would not have contracted dermatitis.
  • Important difference to Bonnington.
  • Medical evidence could not establish that dermatitis was a cumulative condition - could have been due to single exposure. Could have been caused by non-tortious dust or tortious dust.
  • BUT could establish that longer dust on C’s skin, greater risk of contracting dermatitis.
  • MATERIALLY INCREASED THE RISK.
  • Distinguish from Wilsher in that there was more than one causal agent, whereas here there was one (dust).
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9
Q

Fairchild v Glenhaven Funeral Services Ltd & Others

A
  • D worked for numerous employers at different times in 1960s.
  • 25 years later developed form of lung cancer associated with asbestos exposure.
  • Science could not establish if disease caused by cumulative exposure to A or single asbestos fibre.
  • C of A decided one fibre to blame.
  • ‘But for’ failed - could not prove which employer exposed C to single fibre.
  • C might have been exposed to single fibre before started working for D.
  • Held that D materially increased the risk.

KEY POINT: Weigh fact that D might be held liable for damage he did not cause against fact that people who suffer harm due to employers’ breach need to be compensated for their loss.

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10
Q

Apportionment

Bonnington Castings v Wardlaw; McGhee v National Coal Board

A
  • In both Bonnington and McGhee, D was held 100% liable for loss despite non-tortious factor.
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11
Q

Fitzgerald v Lane & Patel

A
  • C crossing road when lights were red.
  • First D driver collided with him, C thrown into road where run over by second D driver.
  • Both drivers held negligent.
  • But C also negligent.
  • Each held one third to blame - C by 50%, two Ds 25% each.
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12
Q

Humber Oil Terminal Trustee v Sivand

A

LEGAL CAUSATION
- Acts of God/Natural Events

  • D’s tanker negligently collided with and damaged C’s dock - property damage.
  • During repair further expenses occurred when seabed collapsed.
  • Further expenses caused by sea bed collapse still recoverable - collapse not a NAI as it was in realms of foreseeability.
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13
Q

Meah v McCreamer

A
  • C suffered injury in road accident leading to personality disorder.
  • Disorder led C to commit various criminal acts including rape.
  • Disorder linked to original tort, could not break chain of causation.
    KEY POINT: if later act can be linked to D’s breach, no break.
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14
Q

Knightley v Johns

A

ACTS OF 3RD PARTIES

  • First D caused road traffic accident.
  • Police inspector negligently handled traffic afterwards.
  • Negligence led to claimant police officer being killed (ordered to drive down tunnel against traffic flow).
  • First D argued negligent handling broke chain of causation. Police inspector’s actions unforeseeable.
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15
Q

Scott v Shepherd

A
  • If 3rd party acted instinctively i.e. heat of the moment, no break in chain of causation.
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16
Q

Robinson v Post Office

A
  • C injured through D’s negligence and given anti-tetanus injection which he was allergic too.
  • Doctor should have carried out allergy test.
  • Did not break chain of causation as not considered ‘palpably wrong’.
  • Doctor’s actions foreseeable and connected to original breach.
  • Could not break chain.
  • D liable for initial injuries and extent to which they were made worse by doctor’s subsequent actions.
17
Q

Spencer v Wincanton

A
  • Strike balance between allowing Cs to live lives free from criticism and imposing to onerous liability on Ds.
  • Emphasised importance of fairness - taking into account if further injury is caused by the claimant not the tortfeasor (who caused original injury).
18
Q

McKew v Holland

A
  • C’s leg sometimes gave way without notice due to injury caused by D’s negligence.
  • Advised to be careful going down stairs etc.
  • Carrying child down steep stairs, fell, further injuries.
  • Test used - unreasonable and unforeseeable? Yes, not fair to hold D responsible for these additional injuries.
19
Q

Wieland v Cyril Lord Carpets

A
  • C had neck brace due to D’s original negligence.
  • Fell down some stairs.
  • Should D be responsible? Yes, she was not doing something so unreasonable/taking extra risk. Would not have fallen down stairs if not for D’s original negligence.
20
Q

McFarlane v Tayside HA

A
  • Wrongful life claims now restricted - unlikely claim will succeed resulting from birth of healthy baby due to failed sterilisation.
  • But again here refusal to have abortion not a NAI.
21
Q

Reeves v MPC

A
  • Actions of C will not be treated as NAI where duty of care on D requires them specifically to prevent C taking certain actions.
  • Police under duty to ensure prisoner did not commit suicide (known suicide risk).
  • Prisoner killed himself due to failings by custody officers.
  • Prisoner’s actions did NOT count as NAI.
22
Q

Corr v IBC Vehicles

A
  • C suffered head injury in accident at work.
  • Physical injuries and also PTSD.
  • Six years later killed himself.
  • Employer held responsible, although no specific duty to prevent C’s suicide.
  • Rare for courts to find acts of C breaks chain as C’s contribution to loss can be dealt with by contributory negligence defence.