A recent Court of Appeal case saw a Dunnes Store worker awarded €140,000 on appeal although there were no accident witnesses, and the CCTV footage of the accident was very poor.
The plaintiff used a ladder to stack shelves and one day she fell off the ladder and suffered a serious ankle injury. Both the plaintiff and defendant’s engineers reviewed the footage but contradicted each other as to the cause of the accident. Her engineers said she had fallen off a wobbly ladder while the opposing side were insisting, she had merely tripped over the ladder and not fallen from it. An accident report form prepared by Dunnes Stores supported the tripping argument.
She sued Dunnes Stores in the High Court where the judge found her to be an honest and credible witness. The CCTV footage was unhelpful, but he found it was more likely the plaintiff’s evidence was correct. The High court found the ladder was wobbly and this was likely to have caused her to fall. Damages of €160,000 were awarded by the High Court who found in her favour.
The defendant insurers appealed to the Court of Appeal, but the judge stated that a Court of Appeal should not ordinarily interfere with any findings of fact in a lower court which were supported by credible evidence. The Court of Appeal found the plaintiff was a consistent witness in that she had always said she was on the ladder when she fell off it. Her explanations for the accident were consistent with her statements in hospital and the medical evidence supported these.
A Dunnes Store employee who had reviewed the footage had been so clear in his conclusion that she had tripped over the ladder it had baffled the trial judge. An accident report form had gone missing.
The defendants had alleged also that the trial judge had not engaged with the evidence, but the Court of Appeal judge found this was not so and in any event an appeal court should not interfere with the findings of fact in the lower court. The court found that the High Court judge was simply saying that his own interpretation of the CCTV footage he viewed was like that of the plaintiff’s expert and he was entitled to say that. He was also entitled to find that the ladder was wobbly, and this was instrumental in her fall.
The Court of Appeal reduced her award to €140,000 to align it more closely with injuries of this nature but dismissed the defendant’s appeal on liability.
Gunta Kadege v Dunnes Stores [2023] IECA 27.
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