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BOURHILL V.YOUNG

(1942) JELR 87227 (HL)

House of Lords  •  5 Aug 1942  •  United Kingdom

Coram
Lord Thankerton LordRussell of Killowen Lord Macmillan Lord Wright Lord Porter

Judgement

MY LORDS,

The Appellant is pursuer in an action of reparation, in which she claims damages from the Respondent as executor-dative of the late John Young, in respect of injuries alleged to have been sus-tained by her owing to the fault of John Young, on the occasion of a collision between a motor-cycle which the latter was riding and a motor car on the nth October, 1938, which resulted in the death of John Young, to whom I will hereafter refer as the cyclist.

After a proof, Lord Robertson assoilzied the Respondent on the ground that the cyclist had not been guilty of any breach of duty to the Appellant, and this decision was affirmed by the Second division, Lord Justice Clerk Aitchison dissenting.

The facts as to the occurrence of the collision and its relation to the Appellant are comparatively simple. The Appellant, who is a fishwife, was a passenger on a tramway car which was proceeding in the direction of Colinton along the Colinton Road, which may betaken as a south-westerly direction, and which stopped at a stopping-place at a short distance before Colinton Road is joined at right angles by Glenlockhart Road from the south-east, that is,on the near side of the tramcar. The Appellant alighted, and went round the near side and front of the tramcar, in order to lift herfishbasket from the off-side of the driver's platform. Meantime,the cyclist, travelling in the same direction as the tramcar, had come up and, as the Appellant was getting her basket, he passed on the near side of the tramcar and, when mostly across the opening of Glenlockhart Road, his cycle collided with a motor car, which had been travelling in the opposite direction, but had turned across the path of the cycle in order to enter Glenlockhart Road. The cyclist, who was held by the Lord Ordinary to have been travelling at an excessive speed, was thrown on to the street and sustained injuries from which he died. There is no doubt that the Appellant saw and heard nothing of the cyclist until the sound of the noise created by the impact of the two vehicles reached her senses. At that moment she had her back to the driver's platform and the driver was assist-ing to get the basket on to her back and the broad leather strap on to her forehead. It may be taken that the distance between theAppellant and the point of impact was between 45 and 50 feet. After the cyclist's body had been removed, the Appellant approached and saw the blood left on the roadway. The injuries alleged tohave been sustained by the Appellant are set out in condescendence 4 of the record, as follows: —

" Condescendence 4.—As an immediate result of the' violent collision and the extreme shock of the occurrence" in the circumstances explained, the pursuer wrenched and" injured her back and was thrown into a state of terror" and sustained a very severe shock to her nervous system."Explained that the Pursuer's terror did not involve any" element of reasonable fear of immediate bodily injury to" herself. The pursuer was about eight months pregnant at"the time, and gave birth to a child on 18th November,' 1938, which was still-born owing to the injuries sustained" by the pursuer."

The words italicised were inserted by amendment in the InnerHouse, after the Lord Ordinary had dismissed the action as irrelevant, and, as the result of the reclaiming motion, the case was sent to proof before answer.

After the proof, the Lord Ordinary expressed his view that while the Appellant had sustained a nervous shock as the result of hearing the noise of the collision, which disabled her from carrying on her business for some time, she had failed to prove either that the death of the child in utero or the injury to her back resulted from the shock or her immediate reaction to the fright of the event.The Respondent does not dispute the finding of the Lord Ordinary that the Appellant had sustained a nervous shock, which affected her business, and this finding is admittedly sufficient to raise the question of liability. At the hearing of the Appeal your Lordships decided to have the argument on liability completed on both sides,before considering the other injuries alleged to have resulted.

While both the Lord Ordinary and Lord Jamieson refer to an apparent inconsistency between the evidence given by the Appel-lant at the trial, and the averment added by amendment that theAppellant's terror did not involve any element of reasonable fear of immediate bodily injury to herself, the argument of the Appel-lant before this House was conducted on the footing that the added averment was correct; indeed, the Appellant's argument was that the shock ensued without any functioning of the brain at all. I am content to consider the question of liability on this footing.

It is clear that, in the law of Scotland, the present action can only be based on negligence, and " it is necessary for the pursuer in" such an action to shew there was a duty owed to him by the" defenders, because a man cannot be charged with negligence if" he has no obligation to exercise diligence "; per Lord Kinnear inKemp and Dougall v. Darngavil Coal Co.Ltd., 1909 S.C. 1314, at page 1319. I may further adopt the words of Lord Johnston in the same case, at page 1327, " the obligee in such a duty must be a" person or of a class definitely ascertained, and so related by" the circumstances to the obligor that the obligor is bound, in the" exercise of ordinary sense, to regard his interest and his safety." Only the relation must not be too remote, for remoteness must be" held as a general limitation of the doctrine."

My Lords, I doubt whether, in view of the infinite variation of circumstances which may exist, it is possible or profitable to laydown any hard and fast principle, beyond the test of remoteness as applied to the particular case. The Lord Justice Clerk, who dissented, accepted the test of proximity, although it is a littledifficult to follow how he made his conclusion satisfy this test. Inthe observations that I have to make, I shall confine myself to the question of the range of duty of a motor cyclist on the public road towards other passengers on the road; clearly this duty is todrive the cycle with such reasonable care as will avoid the risk of injury to such persons as he can reasonably foresee might beinjured by failure to exercise such reasonable care. It is nowsettled that such injury includes injury by shock, although nodirect physical impact or lesion occurs. If then the test of prox-imity or remoteness is to be applied, I am of opinion that such atest involves that the injury must be within that which the cyclistought to have reasonably contemplated as the area of potentialdanger which would arise as the result of his negligence, and thequestion in the present case is whether the .Appellant was withinthat area. I am clearly of opinion that she was not, for the following reasons:

Although admittedly going at an excessive speed, the cyclist hadhis machine under his control, and this at once distinguishes thiscase from such cases as those where the motor has been left stand-ing unoccupied and insufficiently braked, and has started off on anuncontrolled career. At the time of the collision with the motor,he was well past the tramcar, and the Appellant was not within therange of his vision, let alone that the tramcar obstructed any viewof her. The risk of the bicycle ricochetting and hitting the Appellant, or of flying glass hitting her, in her position at the time, wasso remote, in my opinion, that the cyclist could not reasonably beheld bound to have contemplated it, and I differ from the LordJustice Clerk on this point, but, as already stated, the Appellant'scase is not now based on any fear of such possibilities, but merelyon the sound of the collision. There is no suggestion that thevolume of the noise of the collision afforded any ground for argu-ment, and I am clearly of opinion that, in this case, the shockresulting to the Appellant, situated as she was, was not within thearea of potential danger which the cyclist should reasonably havehad in view. In my opinion, none of the cases cited presents suffi-ciently analogous circumstances, such as should control the de-cision in the present case.

The dictum of Kennedy L.J. in Dulieu v. White and Sons, (1901)2 K.B. 669, at p. 675, may well afford a useful test, in appropriatecases, of the area of potential danger, but I am not prepared toaccept it as a conclusive test in all cases. That dictum has receivedconsiderable acceptance in Scottish cases. There may be circum-stances under which it should not be applied, and I prefer to treateach case on its own facts as it arises, with assistance from cases inwhich the facts are so analogous as to afford guidance.

It would not be right, however, in view of the attention paid tothem in argument and in the opinions of the learned Judges, not torefer to three of the English decisions. In re Polemis and FurnessWithy and Co., (1921) 3 K.B. 560; in the Court of Appeal the issueonly related to the question of damages; Bankes L.J., at p. 571,says, " What a defendant ought to have anticipated as a reason-" able man is material when the question is whether or not he was" guilty of negligence, that is) of want of due care according to" the circumstances. ... In the present case the arbitrators have" found as a fact that the falling of the plank was due to the negli-" gence of the defendants' servants. The fire appears to me to have"been directly caused by the falling of the plank. Under these" circumstances I consider that it is immaterial that the causing of" the spark by the falling of the plank could not have been reason-" ably anticipated." The case is therefore of no assistance here, andI have no occasion to consider whether the principle so laid downas to assessment of damages correctly states the law of England,and, if so, whether the law of Scotland is the same. The same istrue of Hambrook v. Stokes Brothers, (1925) 1 K.B. 141, which wasthe case of a motor lorry left at the top of a steep and narrow streetunattended, with the engine running, and without being properlysecured, with the consequence that the lorry started off by itself andran violently down the incline. My noble and learned friend LordAtkin, then Atkin L.J., at p. 156, says, " I agree that in the present" case the plaintiff must show a breach of duty to her, but this she" shows by the negligence of the defendants in the care of their lorry.' I am clearly of opinion that the breach of duty to her is admitted"in the pleadings." But there are certain obiter dicta on thequestion of duty, which might be considered too wide, and I reserveany opinion on them. The remaining case is Owens v. LiverpoolCorporation, (1939) I K.B. 394, in which the defendants' tramcarcollided with a hearse, damaged it and caused the coffin to be over-turned, and mourners were held entitled to recover damages formental shock, although there was no apprehension, or actual sight,of injury to a human being. While each case must depend on itsown circumstances, I have difficulty in seeing that there was anyrelationship of duty between the parties in that case.

I am therefore of opinion that the Appellant has failed to estab-lish that, at the time of the collision, the cyclist owed any duty toher, and that the Appeal fails. I accordingly move that the Appealshould be dismissed, that the judgment appealed from should beaffirmed, and that the Appellant should pay the Respondent's costsof the Appeal.

21480 A 2

Lord

Thankerton

LordRussell ofKillowen

LordMacmillan

LordWright

LordPorter

HAY OR BOURHILL v-YOUNG

Lord Russell of Killowen

(READ BY LORD THANKERTON)

MY LORDS,

The pursuer seeks to recover a sum of £1,250 as reparation forinjuries alleged to have been sustained by her as the result of acollision between a motor-cycle and a motor car which occurred onthe 11th October, 1938, at the junction of Colinton Road andGlenlockhart Road, Edinburgh.

The motor-cycle was ridden by one John Young, who died asa result of the collision, and the action was raised against JamesYoung, his father and executor-dative.

The foundation of the pursuer's claim is fault or negligencealleged against John Young, an allegation which postulates abreach by him of some duty owed by him to the pursuer. There-fore the first essential for the pursuer to establish is the existenceof a duty owed to her by John Young of which he committed abreach.

As between John Young and the driver of the motor car, JohnYoung was admittedly negligent in that he was in breach of theduty which he owed to him of not driving, while passing thestationary tramcar, at such a speed as would prevent him frompulling up in time to avoid a collision with any vehicle which mightcome across the front of the tramcar from Colinton Road intoGlenlockhart Road. But it by no means follows that John Youngowed any duty to the pursuer. The facts relevant to this questionseem to me to be these: —The pursuer was not in any way physi-cally involved in the collision. She had been a passenger in thetramcar which had come from the direction of the city and hadstopped some 15 or 16 yards short of the point of collision. Shewas standing in the road on the off-side of the tramcar (which wasat rest), with her back to the driver's platform. The front partof the tramcar was between her and the colliding vehicles. Shewas frightened by the noise of the collision, but she had no reason-able fear of immediate bodily injury to herself.

In considering whether a person owes to another a duty abreach of which will render him liable to that other in damages fornegligence, it is material to consider what the defendant ought tohave contemplated as a reasonable man. This consideration mayplay a double role. It is relevant in cases of admitted negligence(where the duty and breach are admitted) to the question ofremoteness of damage, i.e., to the question of compensation, not toculpability; but it is also relevant in testing the existence of a dutyas the foundation of the alleged negligence, i.e., to the question ofculpability, not to compensation.

It will be sufficient in this connection to cite two passages fromwell known judgments. The first is from the judgment of Brett,M.R. in Heaven v. Fender (11 Q.B.D. 503 at p. 509): —

" Whenever one person is by circumstances placed in such a positionwith regard to another that every one of ordinary sense who did thinkwould at once recognize that if he did not use ordinary care and skill inhis own conduct with regard to those circumstances he would causedanger of injury to the person or property of the other, a duty arises touse ordinary care and skill to avoid such danger."

The second is from the speech of Lord Atkin in Donoghue v.Stevenson (1932 AC 562 at p. 580): —

" You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which youcan reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour. Whothen in law is my neighbour? The answer seems to be—persons who areso closely and directly affected by my act that I ought reasonably to havethem in contemplation as being so affected when I am directing my mindto the acts or omissions which are called in question."

A man is not liable for negligence in the air; the liability onlyarises "where there is a duty to take care and where failure in" that duty has caused damage" (see per Lord Macmillan inDonoghue v. Stevenson (at p. 618). In my opinion such a duty onlyarises towards those individuals of whom it may be reasonablyanticipated that they will be affected by the act which constitutesthe alleged breach.

Can it be said that John Young could reasonably have antici-pated that a person, situated as was the pursuer, would be affectedby his proceeding towards Colinton at the speed at which he wastravelling ? I think not.

His road was clear of pedestrians; the pursuer was not withinhis vision, but was standing behind the solid barrier of the tram-car; his speed in no way endangered her. In these circumstancesI am unable to see how he could reasonably anticipate that, if hecame into collision with a vehicle coming across the tramcar intoGlenlockhart Road, the resultant noise would cause physical injuryby shock to a person standing behind the tramcar. In my opinionhe owed no duty to the pursuer, and was therefore not guilty of anynegligence in relation to her.

The duty of the driver of a motor vehicle in a highway has oftenbeen stated in general terms which if literally interpreted wouldinclude persons to whom the driver would obviously owe no dutyat all, as for instance, persons using the highway but who havingpassed the vehicle are well on their way in the opposite direction.I think the true view was correctly expressed by Lord Jamiesonin the present case when he said: —" No doubt the duty of a driver" is to use proper care not to cause injury to persons on the highway" or in premises adjoining the highway, but it appears to me that" his duty is limited to persons so placed {hat they may reasonably" be expected to be injured by the omission to take such care."

The pursuer was not in my opinion " so placed "; or (to use thelanguage of Lord Mackay) she has " failed to bring herself into any" relationship to the cyclist which infers a duty of care in driving" owed by him towards her."

On this ground the Interlocutor appealed against should beaffirmed, and the Appeal dismissed.

My Lords, we heard a lengthy argument addressed to the ques-tions whether the case of Hambrook v. Stokes (1925, 1 K.B. 141)was rightly decided; and if so whether the decision was in accord-ance with the law of Scotland, as expounded in the numerousScottish decisions cited to us. In the view which I have taken ofthe present case it is unnecessary to express a final view upon thesequestions. I will only say that, as at present advised, I see noreason why the laws of the two countries should differ in thisrespect, and I prefer the dissenting judgment of Sargant LJ. to thedecision of the majority in Hambrook v. Stokes. It was saidby counsel for the pursuer that it was impossible to affirm theInterlocutor under appeal without disapproving of the decision inHambrook v. Stokes. I do not agree, for the simple reason thatin that case the negligence, which was the basis of the claim, wasadmitted; whereas in the present case we are affirming becauseJohn Young was guilty of no negligence in relation to the pursuer.

Lord

Thankei-

ton

LordRussell of

Killowen

LordMacmillan

Lord

Wright

LordPorter

[6]HAY OR BOURHILL

v.YOUNG

Lord Macmillan

MY LORDS,

It is established that the pursuer in this action suffered in herhealth and in her ability to do her work by reason of the shockwhich she sustained when a motor cycle ridden by the deceasedJohn Young collided with a motor car in her vicinity. The questionfor decision is whether the Defender as representing the late JohnYoung can be rendered accountable at law for what the pursuerhas suffered.

It is no longer necessary to consider whether the infliction ofwhat is called mental shock may constitute an actionable wrong.The crude view that the law should take cognizance only of physicalinjury resulting from actual impact has been discarded, and it isnow well recognised that an action will lie for injury by shocksustained through the medium of the eye or the ear without directcontact. The distinction between mental shock and bodily injurywas never a scientific one, for mental shock is presumably in allcases the result of, or at least accompanied by, some physical dis-turbance in the sufferer's system. And a mental shock may haveconsequences more serious than those resulting from physical im-pact. But in the case of mental shock there are elements of greatersubtlety than in the case of an ordinary physical injury and theseelements may give rise to debate as to the precise scope of legalliability.

Your Lordships have here to deal with a common law actionfounded on negligence. The pursuer's plea is that she has" sustained loss, injury and damage through the fault of the said" John Young " and that she is " entitled to reparation therefor out" of his estate." She can recover damages only if she can showthat in relation to her the late John Young acted negligently; toestablish this she must show that he owed her a duty of care whichhe failed to observe and that as a result of this failure in duty onhis part she suffered as she did. As was said by Lord Kinnear:" A man cannot be charged with negligence if he has no obligation" to exercise diligence." (Kemp and Dougall v. Darngavil Coal Co.,Ltd., 1909 S.C. 1314 at p. 1319, quoted by Lord Thankerton inDonoghue v. Stevenson [1932] AC 562 at p. 602.)

In dealing with a case of alleged negligence it is thus necessaryto ascertain first what in the circumstances was the duty of theperson alleged to be in fault and second to whom that duty wasowed.

The late John Young was riding a motor bicycle in an Edin-burgh street. What duty then was incumbent upon him? Itcannot be better or more succinctly put than it was by LordJamieson in the Second Division in the present case when he saidthat " the duty of a driver is to use proper care not to cause injury" to persons on the highway or in premises adjoining the high-" way." Proper care connotes avoidance of excessive speed, keep-ing a good look-out, observing traffic rules and signals and so on.Then to whom is the duty owed ? Again I quote and accept LordJamieson's words: ' To persons so placed mat they may reason-" ably be expected to be injured by the omission to take such care."The duty to take care is the duty to avoid doing or omitting to doanything the doing or omitting to do which may have as its reason-able and probable consequence injury to others and the duty isowed to those to whom injury may reasonably and probably beanticipated if the duty is not observed.

There is no absolute standard of what is reasonable and prob-able; it must depend on circumstances and must always be aquestion of degree. In the present instance the late John Youngwas clearly negligent in a question with the occupants of the motorcar with which his cycle collided. He was driving at an excessivespeed in a public thoroughfare and he ought to have foreseen thathe might consequently collide with any vehicle which he mightmeet in his course, for such an occurrence may reasonably andprobably be expected to ensue from driving at a high speed in astreet. But can it be said that lie ought further to have foreseen thathis excessive speed, involving the possibility of collision withanother vehicle, might cause injury by shock to the pursuer? Thepursuer was not within his line of vision, for she was on the otherside of a tramway car which was standing Between him and herwhen he passed and it was not until he had proceeded some dis-tance beyond her that he collided with the motor car. The pursuerdid not see the accident and she expressly admits that her " terror" did not involve any element of reasonable fear of immediate" bodily injury to herself." She was hot so placed that there wasany reasonable likelihood of her being affected by the deceased'scareless driving.

In these circumstances I am of opinion with the majority ofthe learned Judges of the Second Division that the late John Youngwas under no duty to the pursuer to foresee that his negligence in driving at an excessive speed and consequently colliding with amotor car might result in injury to the pursuer, for such a resultcould not reasonably and probably be anticipated. He was there-fore not guilty of negligence in a question with the pursuer.

That is sufficient for the disposal of the case and absolves mefrom considering the question whether injury through mental shockis actionable only when, in the words of Kennedy, J., the shockarises from a reasonable fear of immediate personal injury to one-self (Dulieu v. White and Sows [1901] 2 KB 669 at p. 675) whichwas admittedly not the case in the present instance. It alsoabsolves me from considering whether, if the late John Youngneglected any duty which he owed to the pursuer, which, in myopinion, he did not, the injury of which she complains was tooremote to entitle her to damages. I shall observe only that theview expressed by Kennedy, J., has in Scotland the support of asubstantial body of authority, although it was not accepted by theCourt of Appeal in England in Hambrook v. Stokes Bros. [1925]1 K.B. 141, notwithstanding a powerful dissent by Sargant, L.J.This House has not yet been called upon to pronounce on the ques-tion either as a matter of Scots Law or as a matter of English Law,and I reserve my opinion upon it. The decision in Owens v. Liver-pool Corporation [1939] I K.B. 394 , if it is the logical consequenceof Hambrook's case, shows how far-reaching is the principle in-volved.

On the second point it was argued that once an act is properlycharacterised as negligent, that is to say, as a breach of a duty ofcare owed to a particular person, then the party at fault is liable tothat person for everything that directly follows from the negligentact whether or not it could have been foreseen as a natural andprobable result of the negligent act. For this the case of In rePolemis and Furness, Withy and Co. [1921] 3 K.B. 560, was cited.Whether the law there laid down is consonant with the law of Eng-land it will be for this House to pronounce when the occasion arises.As at present advised, I doubt if it is the law of Scotland, and Icould cite ample authority to the contrary. But again this is nota point which I deem it necessary to discuss now.

I am accordingly for affirming the decision of the Second Divi-sion of the Court of Session and dismissing the Appeal.

LordThan-kerton

LordRussell ofKillowen

LordMacmillan

Lord

Wright

LordPorter

[8]HAY or BOURHILL

v.

YOUNGLord Wright

MY LORDS,

That damage by mental shock may give a cause of action isnow well established and is not disputed in this case, but as Philli-more J. pointed out in his admirable judgment in Dulieu y. White,1901, 1 K.B. 600, the real difficulty in questions of this kind is todecide whether there has been a wrongful act or breach of dutyon the part of the Defendant vis-à-vis the Plaintiff. That being theprior question, if it is answered against the Plaintiff the matter isconcluded. I shall therefore consider that issue in the first place.

The Appellant, according to the finding of the Lord Ordinary,suffered substantial damage, and suffered it owing to the conductof the motorist. But the infliction of damage on a plaintiff doesnot in itself give a cause of action. Damage due to the legitimateexercise of a right is not actionable, even if the actor contemplatesthe damage. It is damnium absque injuria. The damage must beattributable to the breach by the defendant of some duty owingto the plaintiff. Where there is no immediate physical action bythe defendant upon the plaintiff, but the action operates at a dis-tance or it not direct or is what is called nervous shock, difficultiesarise in ascertaining if there has been a breach of duty. Somecases are comparatively simple. Thus in Smith v. London andSouth Western Railway Co., L.R. 6, C.P. 14, at p. 22, Blackburn J.makes some observations, obvious enough but not to be forgotten,' If the negligence were once established it would be no answer' that it did much more damage than was expected. If a man fires' a gun across a road where he may reasonably anticipate that' persons will be passing and hits someone, he is guilty of negligence' and liable for the injury he has caused; but if he fires in his own' wood, where he cannot reasonably anticipate that anyone will be,' he is not liable to anyone whom he shoots, which shows that what' a person may reasonably anticipate is important in considering' whether he has been negligent." Much to the same effect ScruttonL.J., in the Polemis case, 1921, 3 K.B. 560, at p. 577, said, " To deter-" mine whether an act is negligent, it is relevant to determine" whether any reasonable person would foresee that the act would" cause damage; if he would not the act is not negligent. . . . Once" the act is negligent the fact that its exact operation was not fore-" seen is immaterial." These simple propositions are as much apart of the law of Scotland as of England. It would be, I repeat, agrievous defect if in a branch of law, of modern development likethat of negligence; and one affecting the ordinary life of the people,there were a divergence in principle between the two laws. Buthaving regard to the views on this point expressed by Lord Mackayand Lord Jamieson, I take it that they accept the test. LordJamieson quotes the well-known aphorism of Lord Atkin inDonoghue v. Stevenson, 1932, A.C. 562, a Scotch case, at p. 580,' You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which" you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neigh-" hour." And " neighbour " means " persons so closely and directly" affected by my act that I ought reasonably to have them in con-" templation as being so affected when I am directing my mind to" the acts or omissions which are called in question ". I do notread Lord Atkin's language in a similar context in Hambrook v.Stokes, 1925, 1 K.B. 141, at p. 156, as going beyond what he saidhi Donoghue (supra).

This general concept of reasonable foresight as the criterionof negligence or breach of duty (strict or otherwise) may be criti-cised as too vague. But negligence is a fluid principle, which hasto be applied to the most diverse conditions and problems of humanlife. It is a concrete not an abstract idea. It has to be fitted to thefacts of the particular case. Willes J. defined it as absence of careaccording to the circumstances (Vaughan y. Toft Vale Co., 5H. and N. 079, at 688). It is also always relative to the individualaffected. This raises a serious additional difficulty in the caseswhere it has to be determined not merely whether the act itselfis negligent against someone but whether it is negligent vis-à-vis theplaintiff. This is a crucial point in cases of nervous shock. Thusin the present case John Young was certainly negligent in an issuebetween himself and the owner of the car which he ran into, butit is another question whether he was negligent vis-à-vis theAppellant.

In such cases terms like " derivative" and " original" and" primary " and " secondary " have been applied to define and dis-tinguish the type of the negligence. If, however, the Appellant hasa cause of action it is because of a wrong to herself. She cannotbuild on a wrong to someone else. Her interest which was in herown bodily security, was of a different order from the interest ofthe owner of the car. That this is so is also illustrated by cases suchas have been called in the United States " rescue " or " search "cases. This type has been recently examined and explained in theCourt of Appeal in Haynes v. Harwood, 1935, 1 K.B. 146, wherethe Plaintiff, a police constable, was injured in stopping runawayhorses, in a crowded street, in which were many children. Hisact was due to his mental reaction, whether instinctive or deliberate,to the spectacle of others' peril. The Court of Appeal approvedthe language used by the trial judge, Finlay J. (1934, 2 K.B. 247),when he held that to leave the horses unattended was a breachof duty not only to any person injured by being run over (in fact,no one was so injured), but to the constable. Finlay J.'s wordswere: " It seems to me that if horses run away it must be quite" obviously contemplated that people are likely to be knocked" down. It must also, I think, be contemplated that persons will" attempt to stop the horses and try to prevent injury to life or" limb." I may also refer to the admirable judgment of Cardozo J.in the New York Court of Appeals, in Wagner v. InternationalRailway Co., 232, N.Y. 176, a " search " case, which is to the sameeffect. This again shows how the ambit of the persons affected bynegligence or misconduct may extend beyond persons who areactually subject to physical impact. There indeed may be no oneinjured in a particular case by actual impact. But still a wrong maybe committed to anyone who suffers nervous shock or is injured inan act of rescue. The man who negligently allows a horse to bolt,or a car to run at large down a steep street, or a savage beast toescape is committing a breach of duty towards every person whocomes within the range of foreseeable danger, whether by impactor shock. But if there is no negligence or other default, there canbe no liability for either direct impact or for nervous shock. Thus,if owing to a latent defect or some mischance for which no one isliable, a terrifying collision occurs between vehicles on the road,and the occupants are killed or suffer horrible injuries, a bystanderwho suffers shock, whether through personal fear or merely horror,would have no action. On somewhat similar principles may besolved the problem of the old lady at Charring Cross, who suffersshock because she narrowly escapes being run over. She cannotclaim damages if the driver is driving carefully, whether he hitsher or not.

The present case, like many others of this type, may, however,raise the different question whether the Appellant's illness was notdue to her peculiar susceptibility. She was eight months gone in pregnancy. Can it be said, apart from everything else, that it waslikely that a person of normal nervous strength would have beenaffected in the circumstances by illness as the Appellant was?Does the criterion of reasonable foresight extend beyond people ofordinary health or susceptibility, or does it take into account thepeculiar susceptibilities or infirmities of those affected which theDefendant neither knew of nor could reasonably be taken to haveforeseen ? Must the manner of conduct adapt itself to such specialindividual peculiarities? If extreme cases are taken, the answerappears to be fairly clear, unless indeed there is knowledge of theextraordinary risk. One who suffers from the terrible tendency tobleed on slight contact, which is denoted by the term " a bleeder,"cannot complain if he mixes with the crowd and suffers severely,perhaps fatally, from being merely brushed against. There is nowrong done there. A blind or deaf man who crosses the traffic ona busy street cannot complain if he is run over by a careful driverwho does not know of and could not be expected to observe andguard against the man's infirmity. These questions go to " culpa-" bility, not compensation ", as Bankes L.J. said in the Polemis case(supra), at p. 571. No doubt it has long ago been stated and oftenrestated that if the wrong is established the wrongdoer must takethe victim as he finds him. That, however, is only true, as thePolemis case (supra) shows, on the condition that the wrong hasbeen established or admitted. The question of liability is anteriorto the question of the measure of the consequences which go withthe liability. That was the second point, decided not for the firsttime, but merely reiterated in the Polemis case (supra). It mustbe understood to be limited however to " direct" consequences tothe particular interest of the Plaintiff which is affected. TheLiesbosch case, 1933, A.C. 449, illustrates this limitation.

What is now being considered is the question of liability, andthis, I think, in a question whether there is duty owing to membersof the public who come within the ambit of the act, must generallydepend on a normal standard of susceptibility. This, it may besaid, is somewhat vague. That is true. But definition involveslimitation, which it is desirable to avoid further than is necessaryin a principle of law like negligence, which is widely ranging andis still in the stage of development. It is here, as elsewhere, aquestion of what the hypothetical reasonable man, viewing theposition, I suppose ex post facto, would say it was proper to fore-see. What danger of particular infirmity that would include mustdepend on all the circumstances; but generally, I think, a reason-ably normal condition, if medical evidence is capable of definingit, would be the standard. The test of the Plaintiff's extraordinarysusceptibility, if unknown to the Defendant, would in effect makehim an insurer. The lawyer likes to draw fixed and definite linesand is apt to ask where the thing is to stop. I should reply itshould stop where in the particular case the good sense of the juryor of the Judge decides. I should myself be disposed, as at presentadvised, to say that it should have stopped short of judgment forthe Plaintiff in Owens v. Liverpool Corporation, 1939, 1 K.B. 394.The particular susceptibility there was to my mind beyond anyrange of normal expectancy or of reasonable foresight. I cannot,however, forbear referring to a most important case in the HighCourt of Australia, Chester v. WaverleyCorporation, 62 C.L.R. 1,where the Court by a majority held that no duty was made outThe dissenting judgment of Evatt J. will demand the considerationof any judge who is called upon to consider these questions.

But when I apply the considerations which I have been dis-cussing to the present appeal, I come to the conclusion that thejudgment should be affirmed. The case is peculiar, as indeed,though to a varying extent, all these cases are apt to be. Thereis no dispute about the facts. Upon these facts, can it be said thata duty is made out, and breach of that duty, so that the damage which is found is recoverable? I think not The Appellant wascompletely outside the range of the collision. She merely hearda noise, which upset her, without her having any definite idea atall. As she said: " I just got into a pack of nerves and I did notknow whether I was going to get it or not." She saw nothingof the actual accident, or indeed any marks of blood until later.

1 cannot accept that John Young could reasonably have fore-seen, or more correctly, the reasonable hypothetical observer couldreasonably have foreseen, the likelihood that anyone placed asthe Appellant was, could be affected in the manner in which shewas. In my opinion John Young was guilty of no breach of dutyto the Appellant and was not in law responsible for the hurt shesustained. I may add that the issue of duty or no duty is indeeda question for the Court, but it depends on the view taken of thefacts. In the present case both Courts below have taken the viewthat the Appellant has, on the facts of the case, no redress, and Iagree with their view.

This conclusion disposes of the present case and makes it un-necessary to decide the difficult question which was the subject oflengthy argument and elaborate citation of authorities before yourLordships. I have carefully considered all the authorities cited,and it may well be that some day this House will have to examinethe exact meaning and effect of what Kennedy J. said in Dulieu v.White (supra). He was, he said, inclined to think that there wasat least one limitation: " the shock where it operates through the"mind must be a shock which arises from a reasonable fear of" immediate personal injury to oneself." That statement, if meant!to lay down a rigid rule of law, has been overruled by the Court ofAppeal in Hambrook v. Stokes, 1925, 1 K.B. 141, which now laysdown the English Law unless it is set aside by this House. As atpresent advised, I agree with that decision. Kennedy J.'s dictum,if intended to lay down a rigid limitation, is not, I think, in accord-ance with principle or with cases like Wilkinson v. Downton, 1897,

2 Q.B. 57. It finds no support in the judgment of Phillimore J.,who implicitly lays down a wider principle. But as I may some dayhave to decide the question in this House, I prefer to express hereno final opinion. If indeed the Inner House, having to determinea case like Hambrook v. Stokes(supra), takes a different view,this House may have to decide between the conflicting views ofthe two Appellate Courts, because in a modern and developingbranch of law like that of negligence, the law adopted by the twoCourts should, if possible, be uniform. But that is a matter for thefuture. Kennedy J.'s dictum does indeed give a rough criterionwhich may be useful in some cases. But, always assuming that thewrongful act is established, the damage to be proved is physicalinjury due to nervous shock. Modern medical science may perhapsshow that the nervous shock is not necessarily associated withany particular mental ideas. The worst nervous shock may for'the moment at least paralyse the mind. But I do not pursue thesequestionings on this occasion.

I concur in the motion proposed.

Lord

Thanker-

ton.

LordRussell ofKillowen

Lord

Macmillan

LordWright

LordPorter

[12]

HAY OR BOURHILL

v.YOUNG

Lord Porter (read by lord wright)

MY LORDS,

This case raises a question which has been much canvassedduring the period beginning with Victoria Railways v. Coutlas,13 App Cas 222, and ending with Hayes v. Harwood [1935],1 K.B. 146.

The problem to be determined is whether the driver of a vehiclewho through his negligence causes physical injury to one person isresponsible for any and (if so) what consequent emotional injury toanother, at any rate if that emotion results in physical illness, orperhaps it may be put more generally by asking to whom and forwhat effects of his negligence a tort feasor is liable.

In considering the question it is I think essential to bear in mindthe distinction drawn in Polemis v. Furness Withy [1921],3 K.B. 560; a distinction which is perhaps best expressed in thewords of Channell B., taken from Smith v. L and N.W. Rail-way, L.R. 6 C.P. 14, at p. 21, which are quoted by Scrutton L.J.at p. 574. " Where there is no direct evidence of negligence the" question what a reasonable man might foresee is of importance in" considering the question whether there is evidence for the jury" of negligence or not . . . but when it has been once determined" that there is evidence of negligence the person guilty of it is" equally liable for its consequences whether he could have foreseen" them or not."

For the present I think it immaterial to consider whether thesecond proposition is accurate or not. Before any decision uponquantum of damage is required, it has first to be determined whetherthe defender has been guilty of any negligence towards the pursuer.' The law takes no cognizance of carelessness in the abstract. It" concerns itself with carelessness only where there is a duty to" take care and where failure in that duty has caused damage "(per Lord Macmillan in Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932] AC 562at p. 618. It is not enough to say that the Respondent was guiltyof negligence towards some one. Admittedly he was, and I willassume without deciding that for all damages, whether expectedor unexpected, to that person he is liable. But is he therefore liablefor all damages of whatsoever nature to all other persons affectedby his negligence whether he could reasonably foresee that hewould injure them or not ?

For the present purpose I am also prepared to assume withoutdeciding that all types of injury are included, physical, mental andemotional, and that once a defender is shown to be negligenttowards a pursuer he is liable for all such consequences.

Does it follow from this assumption that the defender is guiltyof negligence towards all persons on the highway because con-ceivably they might in other circumstances have suffered physicaldamage, and amongst others towards those who were never in per- sonal danger themselves or in fear for their children or even forthird persons but were merely emotionally disturbed because someperson was in fact injured and because they heard the crash or sawthe result of the accident ?

In Dulieu v. White [1901], 2 K.B. 669, Kennedy J. thoughtthat only those in reasonable fear for their own safety could re-cover, not, I think, because he thought the damage was too remotebut because he thought that unless there was such fear no legal dutywas involved. As he says at p. 675, " A has no legal duty not to  shock B's nerves by the exhibition of negligence towards C or towards the property of B or C In Smith v. Johnson and Co.

" (unreported) a man was killed by the defendants' negligence in" the sight of the plaintiff and the plaintiff became ill, not from'"the shock produced by fear of harm to himself, but from the" shock of seeing another person killed. The Court held that this" harm was too remote a consequence of the negligence. I should" myself, as I have already indicated, have been inclined to go a step" further and to hold upon the facts in Smith v. Johnson (supra) that" as the defendant neither intended to affect the plaintiff injuriously" nor did anything which could reasonably or naturally be expected" to affect him injuriously there was no evidence of any breach of" legal duty towards the plaintiff or in regard to him of that absence" of care according to the circumstances which Willes J. in Vaughan" v. Taft Vale Railway Co., [1860] 5 H. and N. 679 at p. 688 gave" as a definition of negligence." So Phillimore J. in the same caseafter suggesting at p. 684: " It may be (I do not say that it is" so) that a person venturing into the streets takes his chance of" terrors. If not fit for the streets at hours of crowded traffic he or" she should not go there," says at p. 685, " The difficulty in these" cases is to my mind not one as to the remoteness of the damage," but as to the uncertainty of there being any duty." It is true thathe does also envisage the possibility of liability for mental shockapart from fear of personal injury in the remark on p. 682: " I" think there may be cases in which A owes a duty to B not to inflict" a mental shock on him or her and that in such a case if A does" inflict such a shock upon B, and physical damage thereby ensues," B may have an action for the physical damage though the" medium through which it has been inflicted is the mind." Buthis previous remarks show that he would not necessarily includemental shock due to the sight of an accident in the streets.

In Hambrook v. Stokes [1925], 1 K.B. 141, in which the plaintiffsucceeded, negligence was admitted, and as Lord Atkin, thenAtkin L.J., pointed out, such an admission can only mean an admis-sion of negligence towards the plaintiff. But none of the LordsJustices who heard the case confined themselves to considera-tions founded upon this fact. Bankes L.J., at p. 151, expressedhimself thus: "... What a man ought to have antici-" pated is material when considering the extent of his duty." Upon the authorities, as they stand, the defendant ought" to have anticipated that, if his lorry ran away down mis" narrow street, it might terrify some woman to such an extent," through fear of some immediate bodily injury to her health, that" she would receive such a mental shock as would injure herself ",and he then goes on to assert that in his view no distinction can bedrawn between the fear of a mother for her own safety and herfear for her children. He was careful to limit the scope of hisdecision to the facts of the case then under consideration and toconfine his determination to cases where the claimant was in fearfor his or her own personal safety or that of his or her children.Of Smith v. Johnson and Co. he says, at p. 150: " It may well be that" the duty of a person to take care does not extend to a person in the" position of the plaintiff in Smith v. Johnson and Co. [supra) or to"the person indicated as B in Kennedy J.'s illustration, and yet"may extend to a person in the position of the plaintiff's wife."Atkin L. J., at p. 156, said: " Apart from the admission in the" pleadings I think that the cause of action is complete. The duty" of the owner of a motor car in a highway is not a duty to refrain" from inflicting a particular kind of injury upon those who are" in the highway. If so, he would be an insurer. It is a duty to" use reasonable care to avoid injuring those using the highway." It is thus a duty owed to all wayfarers, whether they are injured" or not. . . . Further the breach of duty does not take place" necessarily when the vehicle strikes or injures the wayfarer. The  negligent act or omission may precede the act of injury. In this" case it was completed at the top of Dover Street when the car"was left unattended. . . ." He continued, on p. 158: 'In"my opinion it is not necessary to treat this cause of" action as based upon a duty to take reasonable care to avoid"administering a shock to wayfarers. The cause of action, as" I have said, appears to be created by breach of the ordinary" duty to take reasonable care to avoid inflicting personal injuries" followed by damage, even though the type of damage may be"unexpected, namely, shock. The question appears to be as to"the extent of the duty and not as to remoteness of damage."Sargant L.J. differed and like Kennedy J. would confine liability tocases of reasonable fear for personal safety but only because inhis view the injury complained of could not reasonably have beenanticipated and therefore the defendant had broken no duty whichhe owed to the defendant. At p. 162 he says: " . . . I should"prefer, with Kennedy J., to put it not on the ground that the"harm was too remote a consequence of the negligence but on" (what is often practically equivalent) a consideration of the extent"of the duty of the defendant towards the plaintiff and others" on and near the highway. That is to say that, as the defendant" did not do anything which could reasonably or naturally be" expected to cause the harm in question to the plaintiff, there was"no evidence of any breach of duty towards him for which the" defendant could be rendered liable." In the result the plaintiff succeeded.

A conclusion in favour of the plaintiff was also reached by theCourt of Appeal in Owens v. Liverpool Corporation [1939],I K.B. 394, in which the driver of a tram negligently ran into a hearse containing the body of a relative of the plaintiffs and was held liable to them in respect of illness caused by the shock of seeing the accident. The Lords Justices seem to have accepted the view that the driver ought to have anticipated that the result of his negligence might be to cause emotional distress to spectators of the consequent accident and therefore was guilty of negligence towards any one physically affected by feelings induced by the sight presented to them. With all respect I do not myself consider the Court of Appeal justified in thinking that the driver should have anticipated any injury to the plaintiffs as mere spectators or that he was in breach of any duty which he owed to them.

I have however dealt with both these cases and particularly with Hambrook v. Stokes (supra) somewhat at length because they show the high water mark reached in claims of the character now in question. It will be observed that in the earlier case all theLords Justices were careful to point out that the vital problem was the extent of the duty and not the remoteness of damages—a view in which they were supported by the opinions of Kennedy and Phillimore JJ. in Dulieu v. White (supra). With this view Iagree, and ask myself whether the defenders in the present case owed any duty to the pursuer.

In the case of a civil action there is no such thing as negligence

in the abstract: there must be neglect of the use of care towards a

person towards whom the defendant owes the duty of observing

care. And I am content to take the statement of Lord Atkin in

Donoghue v. Stevenson [1932], A.C. 562, at p. 580, as indicating

the extent of the duty. ' You must take," he says, " reasonable

" care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably fore-

" see would be likely to injure your neighbour. Who then in law

" is my neighbour ? The answer seems to be, persons who are so

" closely and directly affected by my act that I ought reasonably

" to have them in contemplation as being so affected when I am

" directing my mind to the acts or omissions which are called in

" question."

Is the result of this view that all persons in or near the street down which the negligent driver is progressing are potential victims of his negligence? Though from their position it is quite impossible that any injury should happen to them and though they have no relatives or even friends who might be endangered, is a duty of care to them owed and broken because they might have been but were not in a spot exposed to the errant driving of the peccant car?

I cannot think so. The duty is not to the world at large. Itmust be tested by asking with reference to each several com-plainant, was a duty owed to him or her.

If no one of them was in such a position that direct physicalinjury could reasonably be anticipated to them or their relationsor friends normally I think no duty would be owed: and if inaddition no shock was reasonably to be anticipated to them as aresult of the defender's negligence, the defender might indeed beguilty of actionable negligence to others but not of negligencetowards them.

In the present case the defender was never herself in any bodilydanger nor reasonably in fear of danger either for herself or others.She was merely a person who as a result of the action wasemotionally disturbed and rendered physically ill by that emotionaldisturbance. The question whether emotional disturbance or shock,which a defender ought reasonably to have anticipated as likely tofollow from his reckless driving, can ever form the basis of a claimis not in issue. It is not every emotional disturbance or every shockwhich should have been foreseen. The driver of a car or vehicleeven though careless is entitled to assume that the ordinary fre-quenter of the streets has sufficient fortitude to endure such incidentsas may from time to time be expected .to occur in them, includingthe noise of a collision and the sight of injury to others, and is notto be considered negligent towards one who does not possess thecustomary phlegm.

In Hambrook v. Stokes (supra) the Defendant's lorry was leftunattended and improperly braked at the top of a steep and narrowstreet with the engine running, with the result that it started off byitself and ran violently down the hill, putting the Plaintiff in fearfor the safety of her children whom she had just left and therebycausing a serious illness and ultimately her death.

In such circumstances it might well be held that the negligencecomplained of was a potential danger to all those in the way andthat the careless driver should have foreseen the likelihood of actualor apprehended injury to anyone in the street down which the lorrymight run and the possibility of illness being produced in a motherfrom fear that the run-away car would injure her children.

The position of the defender in the present case is more favour-able. The rider of the cycle had not left it to career at its own will—he was always in control and his negligence was not to allthose in the highway but only to anyone turning or intendingto turn in front of him into a side road. The pursuer was notsuch a person and the only allegation of negligence which I canfind in the condescendence is not towards her but, as I understandit, towards traffic proceeding across or at any rate down the roadtowards the cyclist. So far as the pursuer is concerned she com-plains of nothing but the disturbance caused by an accident to thecyclist himself and in her claim confines her allegation to a generalaverment against him of negligence resulting in a collision with amotor car. She in no way connects that negligence with herselfexcept by the assertion that she sustained a very severe shock toher nervous system and by an amendment assented to in the InnerHouse expressly repudiates any fear of personal injury.

The Lord Ordinary, if I understand him aright, was neverthelessprepared to treat the case on the basis that the pursuer had beenput in fear of bodily injury to herself. " At the best for her ", hesays, " it can be said that the shock arose from a fear of immediate" bodily injury to herself, but only from a fear which had no" rational basis—or in other words an unreasoned fear, and as the" whole facts disclose an unreasonable fear."

In your Lordships' House the pursuer's representatives preferredto rest their case upon the terms of the amended plea and confinedtheir arguments to considerations based upon an averment that thepursuer was not put in fear of injury to herself or others but wasonly emotionally disturbed and rendered physically ill by the crashand possibly by the sight of the injured man.

This limited contention was no doubt prudently adopted since,though the Lord Ordinary had found that any fear of personalinjury was unreasoned and unreasonable, he had made no similarfinding as to fear engendered by the crash or sight.

In order, however, to establish a duty towards herself, the pur-suer must still show that the cyclist should reasonably have foreseenemotional injury to her as a result of his negligent driving, and, asI have indicated, I do not think she has done so.

If I am right in thinking that the pursuer has established noduty towards herself in the deceased man and no breach of any dutyshe must fail unless it can be said that there is some principle inthe law of Scotland, which is not to be found in the law of England,under which she can recover. I should be loth to think that thereis any difference between the principles adopted in the two systems.Nor can I find in the cases quoted any decision or even dicta whichwould warrant a decision in favour of the pursuer in the presentinstance.

Taking the cases in the order in which they were quoted theclaim in Cooper v. Caledonian Railway Co. [1902], 4 F. 880, wasbased on an allegation of fear of personal physical injury and evenin that case the allegation was only held to be relevant if it appearedthat the fright resulting from the negligent act might reasonablyarise in a mind of average intelligence and strength, i.e., it must notbe unreasoned and unreasonable. Gilligan v. Robb [1910], S.C.856, contained an averment of negligence and fear of physicalinjury. In Ross v. Corporation of Glasgow [1919], S.C. 174, inwhich a tramcar was driven negligently on the wrong line butdrawn up slowly and carefully short of another car, it was heldthat fright thereby caused was not naturally or probably causedby the negligent act and that the defenders had no duty to antici-pate such a consequence. Brown v. Corporation of Glasgow [1922],S.C. 527, and Currie v. War drop [1927], S.C. 538, both led to con-siderable divergence of opinion and in each the conclusion that acause of action existed was reached by a majority of three againsttwo. In the former there was an allegation of fear of personalinjury and a finding by the Court that that fear was reasonable.In the latter a man and his fiancée walking together were knockeddown by a negligent motor driver—the man killed and the womansuffered physically from consequent nervous shock partly due tothe accident to herself and partly to fear for the safety of her com-panion. Undoubtedly there was in that case a duty to the pursuer(the woman) and a breach of that duty and the decision of themajority was due to that fact coupled with the impossibility of dis-tinguishing between the physical injury due to each type of shock.A v. B's Trustees [1906], 13 S.L.T. 830, in which a lodger committedsuicide in the lodgings he had hired and both did some materialdamage and administered a nervous shock to his landladies may beexplained as founded on contract or on the fact that the materialdamage might have been anticipated. Finally in Walker v. Pitlochry

Motor Co. [1930], S.C. 565, the pursuer was held entitled to recoverin respect of the physical consequences of shock occasioned by thesight of injury caused to a near relative, shock which it was heldmight reasonably have been anticipated as a result of the negligentact.

To the same effect is the Irish case of Bell v. Great NorthernRailway Co. of Ireland [1890], 26 L.R.Ir. 428, in which illness dueto reasonable apprehension of personal injury due to the defend-ants' negligence was held to give a cause of action.

These cases are at any rate no more favourable to the pursuer'scontention than those decided in England. In all three countriesno doubt shock occasioned by deliberate action affords a validground of claim (see Wilkinson v. Downton[1897] 2 QB 57 andJanvier v. Sweeney [1919] 2 K.B. 316 ), and so I think does shockoccasioned by reasonable apprehension of injury to oneself orothers, at any rate if those others are closely connected with theclaimant. What is reasonable may give rise to some difference ofopinion but whether illness due to shock which might reasonablyhave been anticipated as the result of injury to others can or cannotform the basis of a successful claim need not now be considered.No exceptionally loud noise or particularly gruesome sight is allegedor any circumstance suggesting that the cyclist should have anti-cipated he would cause a shock to the pursuer.

On the ground that there never was any duty owed by thedeceased man to the pursuer or breach of such a duty, I should dis-miss the Appeal. In so deciding, I believe I am following thereasoning and conclusion of the Lord Ordinary as well as those ofthe majority in the Inner House, with whose opinions I agree.

Mr. Montague Berryman

(COUNSEL FOR THE RESPONDENT) :

May it please your Lordships; before your Lordship puts theMotion to the House, there is one point which arises as to the coststo which I am instructed to draw your Lordships' attention andwith which I am instructed to invite your Lordships to deal. YourLordships will remember that the case started with an interlocutorof Lord Robertson dated the 26th April, 1940; upon that there wasa reclaiming motion which was heard before the Extra Divisionon the 1st August, 1940—your Lordships will find that at pages 12and 13 of the Appellant's Case—and upon that the case was re-mitted in order that there might be a proof before answer. On thatreclaiming motion the Respondent to this appeal was ordered to pay the costs, although in fact Lord Robertson, I think—I am so instructed; I was not there when the case was argued—had in fact arrived at the same conclusions as your Lordships without any reference to the argument at all

Lord Thankerton:

But that was purely on relevancy. The pursuer succeeded on her motion, and she got her expenses.

Mr. Berryman:

That is so. That is all I was dealing with.

Lord Thankerton:

That is not touched, of course.

Mr. Berryman:

No, at the moment that is not touched.

Lord Wright:

It is not the subject of appeal.

Lord Macmillan:

It is not the effect of our decision to deprive the pursuer of herexpenses in the Inner House on a preliminary discussion on relevancy.

Lord Thankerton:

No, we do not touch any interlocutor below. You need have no anxiety about your expenses. " Costs " here means only the costs of this Appeal.

Mr. Berryman:

It was only in our anxiety to get repayment of those costs thatI was instructed to address your Lordships.

Lord Thankerton:

It is not appealed against.

Mr. Berryman:

No, strictly I do not think it is. If your Lordships please.

(24180r) Wt, 8222—4 16 8/42 D.L. G. 338

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