SponsoredBuild your website with Vincony

Ymwadiad: Nid cyngor cyfreithiol yw hwn. Mae deddfwriaeth a chyfraith achosion yn newid. Ymgynghorwch bob amser â chyfreithiwr cymwys ar gyfer eich sefyllfa benodol.

UK Law Reference
Pob achos
Tort Law
Queen's Bench Division
1962

Smith v Leech Brain & Co Ltd

[1962] 2 QB 405

Ratio Decidendi

The 'thin skull' rule (egg-shell skull rule) survived The Wagon Mound (No 1). A tortfeasor must take the victim as they find them. It is sufficient that the type of damage (physical injury) was foreseeable; the tortfeasor is liable for the full extent of injury even if it is more severe than expected due to a pre-existing vulnerability.

Ffeithiau

A worker was burned on the lip by molten metal due to his employer's negligence. The burn was minor, but it triggered cancer in the pre-malignant condition of his lip. He died of cancer three years later.

Crynodeb o'r dyfarniad

Lord Parker CJ held that the decision in The Wagon Mound (No 1) had not abolished the long-established 'thin skull' rule, and that the employers were liable for the death of their workman. The correct question was not whether the employers could have foreseen that a burn would develop into cancer and cause death, but whether they could reasonably foresee the type of injury the man suffered — namely a burn. Because a burn was foreseeable, and was negligently caused by molten metal splashing onto his lip, the employers were liable for the full extent of the harm that followed, including the cancer that developed in the pre-malignant tissue of his lip and his death some three years later. A tortfeasor must take the victim as they find them; the fact that the ultimate consequences were graver than could have been foreseen, because of the victim's pre-existing susceptibility, does not reduce liability. The case established that the thin skull rule survives, and sits alongside, the Wagon Mound foreseeability-of-type test — though damages were reduced to reflect the chance that the deceased might have developed cancer in any event.

Dyfyniadau allweddol

"The test is not whether these employers could reasonably have foreseen that a burn would cause cancer and that he would die. The question is whether these employers could reasonably foresee the type of injury he suffered, namely, the burn."

Lord Parker CJ

Triniaeth ddilynol

Good law

Confirmed the compatibility of the thin skull rule with the Wagon Mound foreseeability test.