Rebutting the Statutory Presumption of Contributory Negligence
Category: Industrial, Manufacturing & Logistics, Financial Services & Insurance
Date: 19 February 2024
Author: Hunt & Hunt - Genuine People
The decision in Allen v Chadwick [2015] HCA 47 concerns the operation and interpretation of Parts' 6 and 7 of the Civil Liability Act 1936 (SA) which construct a regime for determining negligence and create a presumption of contributory negligence where:
Date: 19 February 2024
Author: Hunt & Hunt - Genuine People
- The injured person has relied on the care and skill of a driver who they knew or ought to have known was intoxicated '€“ ' Section 47(1)
- The injured person was not wearing a seatbelt as required under the Road Traffic Act 1961 '€“ Section 49(1)(a).
The facts
Ms Chadwick, aged 21, and Mr Allen, aged 28, had been in a relationship of several years' duration.' At the time of the accident, Ms Chadwick had recently discovered that she was 9 or 10 weeks pregnant. On 10 March 2007, the couple and Ms Chadwick's 5-year-old daughter set off from their home in the Adelaide Hills on for a weekend on the Yorke Peninsula.' The following morning they met up with Mr Allen's friend, Martlew, and his two children, in Port Pirie.' The group then travelled in Martlew's car to Kadina, Port Broughton and Wallaroo before arriving at Port Victoria late in the afternoon.' The two men consistently consumed alcohol over the course of the day and until the early hours of the morning on 12 March 2007 when the collision occurred. Between 1.30am and 2.00am, Ms Chadwick decided to go for a drive in order to purchase cigarettes.' Mr Allen and Martlew accompanied her.' The length of the journey and route taken were a matter of conjecture but it was found that Ms Chadwick drove around the town and its environs for approximately 10-15 minutes, during which time it was accepted that Mr Allen and Martlew were shouting a series of confusing directions at her. At one point, Ms Chadwick pulled over to the side of the road and exited the vehicle in order to urinate.' It was later ascertained that the car was stopped on the edge of the township, approximately 500m from the Port Victoria Hotel where they were staying with street lighting in the distance, to the north and south east, some 200m away in each direction.' Notwithstanding these undisputed facts, Ms Chadwick gave evidence that she was "in the middle of nowhere", in complete darkness and disoriented as to her whereabouts. When Ms Chadwick returned to the car, Mr Allen had assumed the driver's position and insisted that she get in.' There was an argument between Ms Chadwick and appellant as to who should drive, with Mr Allen ultimately prevailing. Mr Allen took off and drove into town aggressively and erratically. Ms Chadwick did not put on her seatbelt and it was contended that the gravitational forces generated by Mr Allen's manner of driving made it impossible for her to engage the seatbelt mechanism.' A short time later he lost control negotiating a bend at high speed and collided with a tree.' Ms Chadwick was ejected from the vehicle on impact, suffering spinal injuries resulting in complete L3 paraplegia. Mr Allen's blood alcohol concentration at the time of the collision was estimated to be 0.229%.' Ms Chadwick consumed minimal alcohol during the course of the day and night and returned a zero blood alcohol reading.The decisional history
At first instance, the Trial Judge (Judge Tilmouth) found that:- Ms Chadwick ought to have been aware that Mr Allen's capacity to drive was impaired by alcohol, such that the presumption of contributory negligence applied and she was liable to have her damages reduced by 50% pursuant to Section' 47 of the Act.
- Ms Chadwick, however, satisfied the exception contained within 47(2)(b) of the Act in that she could not reasonably be expected to have avoided the risk of travelling with Mr Allen.
- Ms Chadwick had no objective choice but to enter the car based on her belief that she was in a darkened area and her misapprehension of just how close she, in fact, was to the township.' This was despite his findings that Ms Chadwick had "lied profusely in order to enhance her damages claim", the presence of streetlights and their operation on the night in question and the fact that Ms Chadwick was "within 600' m or less than 10' minutes walking distance from the motel unit".
- As a matter of law, Ms Chadwick's failure to fasten her seatbelt might be excused on the basis that she was prevented complying with the statutory requirement to do so by the conduct of another, or in this case the erratic driving of the vehicle by Mr Allen.
- However, the "act of a stranger" defence was not made out on the facts as the evidence indicated that there were at least two opportunities in which Ms Chadwick could have fastened her seatbelt.' Accordingly, she was contributorily negligent and her damages were reduced by 25%.
- By grant of Special Leave, Mr Allen appealed to the High Court (French' CJ, Kiefel, Bell, Keane and Gordon' JJ) on the issue of contributory negligence which unanimously dismissed his appeal in relation to Section 47 and unanimously allowed his appeal in relation to Section 49, observing:
- Section 47(2)(b) contemplates an objective evaluation of relative risk in a given situation by the exercise of reasonable powers of observation and appreciation of one's environment, as well as the exercise of a reasonable judgment of the relative risk of alternative responses to the environment as observed and understood.
- The evaluation which Section 47(2)(b) involves makes no allowance for a claimant's subjective difficulties of cognition and decision-making, nor will confusion, panic or anxiety on the part of the claimant reduce what reasonableness requires.
- On the evidence, it was not unreasonable for Ms Chadwick to have had no clear appreciation of her proximity to the township from the driver changeover point.' Once accepted that Ms Chadwick did not know where she was, the availability of a relatively low-risk alternative to travelling with Mr Allen was not readily apparent.' Although a reasonable person may have taken the time to reflect upon their geographical location, they would not necessarily have appreciated that they were a relatively easy walk from the hotel and might still have formed the same imperfect understanding of their situation.
- Ms Chadwick's age, pregnancy, the fact that she was on a dark and unfamiliar country road an uncertain distance from the township in the early hours of the morning could reasonably lead to an evaluation of a real risk of harm.' The risk of riding with Mr Allen could reasonably be regarded as lessened to a relatively acceptable level due to the absence of other vehicular traffic on the roads at that time.
- On a reasonable evaluation of these facts and the relative risks associated with them, Ms Chadwick could not reasonably be expected to have avoided the risk of travelling with Mr Allen.
- The relevant question in relation to Section 49 was not whether Ms Chadwick's failure to fasten her seatbelt was an understandable, or even a reasonable response, to Mr Allen's driving, but whether she was prevented from doing so by him.' The evidence did not support such a conclusion and there was no reason to interfere with the Trial Judge's findings of fact.
