The plaintiff and her husband made a late booking into the defendant’s caravan park in July 2018. They were given a longer than usual pitch which exceeded the length of their caravan’s electricity cable.
The defendant, the owner of the caravan park gave them a black extension led to allow the plaintiff’s husband to connect the caravan to their service post. Her husband connected their orange cable to the post and extended it to their caravan using the defendant’s black extension lead.
The following day, which was bright and sunny, the plaintiff tripped on the electricity cable while on her way back from filling her kettle at the service post and in the process breaking her arm and injuring a thumb.
An engineer for the plaintiff gave evidence that the cable posed a tripping hazard when placed in a pedestrian area and at an excessive distance from a pitch. The plaintiff submitted that there was a duty of care owed by the defendant to minimise this risk by locating its service outlets which reduced the risk. It was claimed the hazard created a danger for the plaintiff.
The High Court Judge, Mr Justice Coffey said that the case fell within the provisions of section 3 of the Occupiers’ Liability Act, 1995. This provision sets out the duty of care a proprietor has towards a visitor to a premises to ensure that a visitor does not suffer injury or damage by reason of a danger there.
The judge looked at past cases on this subject. In Lavin v Dublin Airport Authority plc [2016] IECA 268, the court looked at the common law distinction between an ‘unusual danger’ and ‘usual’ danger. The latter could avoid a danger by taking reasonable care by the visitor.
Another case the judge considered was White v William Doherty & S&K Kerry Limited [2019] IECA 295, here the Court of Appeal decided that an uneven surface on which a plaintiff lost her footing was in keeping with the ‘naturalistic settings’ one expects to find at a caravan site and that a visitor would not expect ‘pristine conditions’ and so would be expected to take reasonable care as to any tripping hazard arising therefrom.
Mr Justice Coffey set out that no liability could arise under s.3 where as a matter of law, the risk complained of was a “usual danger” which on objective assessment is to be anticipated by the visitor, and where the risk can be avoided by the visitor taking reasonable care for their own safety.
On the balance of probabilities, the plaintiff knew the approximate angle at which her cable ran from the services post to their caravan and knew that she could have avoided contact with same had she gone around the front of her caravan. Instead, the court noted that the plaintiff walked around her husband’s parked car and was not exposed to an open cable for 16m as suggested by her engineer.
The court also noted that the plaintiff had stepped over the cable to fill her water without difficulty and would have had in her line of vision the orange cable while monitoring her kettle to ensure that it did not overflow and while turning off the tap.
It was also observed by the judge that the plaintiff was wearing flip-flops, and this did not assist in stepping over a cable.
The judge was satisfied that the electricity cable, whether hanging from the upright or lying on the ground, and whether on the path or in the grass in the immediate vicinity of the service post, could not as a matter of law be considered an unusual danger for the plaintiff and was a feature which one would expect to find at any caravan park.
In conclusion the judge ruled that there was no breach of the duty of care provided by s.3 of the 1995 Act and dismissed the action.
Scanlan v Michael McDonnell t/a The Woodlands Caravan and Camping Park [2024] IEHC 324.
Steen O'Reilly LLP Solicitors
Founded in 1911, we are a well-established legal firm based in Navan, Co. Meath with a valued reputation in all areas of law.
Steen O'Reilly LLP Solicitors
31 / 34 Trimgate Street
Navan, Co. Meath
Tel: 046 9076300
Email: solicitors@steenoreilly.ie
All Rights Reserved | Steen O'Reilly LLP Solicitors