Understanding the Law
March 3, 2006

Negligence

It is important to note from the start that negligence could be either a tort or a criminal action. It is however the aim of this article to deal with negligence in tort as we have been looking at tort quite recently. Negligence is a fairly modern tort. It has become very important because of the complex nature of society and the numerous interactions between individuals. There could be negligence where the driver of a motor vehicle runs into another injuring persons and damaging property; or where the postman loses your letter that contains money; or where a doctor performs an operation carelessly so as to cause serious injury to an individual; or a manufacturer produces a defective product that causes injury to the purchaser. {{more}}



Three judges in England during the late 1800’s and the early 1900’s gave shape and form to the law that is currently used to determine cases of negligence. In 1856 Alderson B in Blyth v Birmingham Waterworks Co. thought that negligence was doing something or omitting to do something that a prudent and reasonable person would not do. In 1932 Lord Atkin provided another dimension to the law in his famous “neighbor principle.” In 1934, Lord Wright in Lochgelly Iron and Coal Co v Mc.Mullan went a step further and put forward a three dimensional test which involves (1) a duty of care to the claimant , (2) breach of that duty by the defendant and (3) damages caused to the claimant. In a court of law these three elements must be proven for a claimant to be successful.



Lord Atkin’s celebrated case of Donohue v Stevenson (1934) provides distinctive guidance on the duty of care that we all owe to persons with whom we come into close contact or who are directly affected by our acts. It is the product that you buy from the company which establishes the duty of manufacturer and consumer. In the case that he considered, the plaintiff bought ginger beer in a dark opaque glass bottle from a retailer. She had already consumed a glass of the beer and was pouring another drink into a glass when she noticed the decomposed remains of a snail floating from the bottle. She became sick afterwards and sued the manufacture of the drink for negligence.



The manufacturer has a duty to provide a product that is clean and healthy for his consumers. The honourable judge in that case made it quite clear that we should take ‘reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably foresee that would be likely to injure your neighbour.” (Donoghue v Stevenson, 1934).



In pleading your case your lawyer must convince the court that there is a duty of care owed to you by the defendant. There have been many recognized instances where the duty of care arises. Professional people have a duty of care to persons with whom they have a professional relation; the driver of a vehicle has a duty of care to his passenger; employers to their employees and occupiers of property to visitors or even the trespasser.



You may wonder what duty could one have to a trespasser but there is that duty of common humanity which is expected of you so that you do not leave an open hole on your premises that anyone could stumble into and you do not leave the live electric wire on your property which could cause death to anyone who happens to become entangled in it.