The tort of Negligence is the most pervasive form of civil liability in modern jurisprudence. It is defined as the breach of a legal duty to take care, which results in damage, undesired by the defendant, to the claimant. This doctrine is complemented by the procedural rule of Res Ipsa Loquitur and the liability-modifying defence of Contributory Negligence.
I. The Tort of Negligence: Elements and Principle #
Negligence is established upon proof of four core elements:
A. Duty of Care #
The defendant must owe a legal duty of care to the claimant. This relationship is not universal but must be based on the concept of foreseeability and proximity.
- The Neighbour Principle: The landmark decision in Donoghue v. Stevenson (1932) established the universal test for the existence of a duty of care. The principle holds that a person owes a duty of care to those 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.”
- Advanced Topic: The Three-Stage Test (Caparo Test): Modern common law (and highly influential in Indian jurisprudence) employs a three-stage incremental approach to determine duty of care, particularly in novel situations:
- Foreseeability: Was the harm reasonably foreseeable?
- Proximity: Was there a relationship of close and direct proximity between the claimant and the defendant?
- Fair, Just, and Reasonable: Is it fair, just, and reasonable to impose a duty of care on the defendant?
FIRAC Analysis: Caparo Industries plc v. Dickman (1990) (House of Lords) #
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Facts | Caparo Industries purchased shares in a company (Fidelity) based on audited accounts prepared by the defendant auditors (Dickman). Fidelity later performed poorly, and Caparo sued Dickman, alleging negligence in the audit. |
| Issue | Did the auditors owe a duty of care to potential investors (like Caparo) relying on the publicly released accounts for investment decisions? |
| Rule | The House of Lords rejected the expansion of duty beyond established categories and formulated the incremental three-stage test. The duty must be owed to the claimant for a specific, known purpose. |
| Application | While loss was foreseeable, the necessary proximity was absent. The auditors prepared the accounts for the shareholders as a body, not for individual members of the public or potential investors making specific investment decisions. It was not fair, just, and reasonable to impose liability on the auditor to everyone who might potentially read and rely on the accounts. |
| Conclusion | The claim failed. This case restricted the scope of duty of care, requiring a more proximate and purpose-specific relationship between the parties for liability to arise. |
B. Breach of Duty #
The defendant must have breached that duty by falling below the standard of care required.
- Standard of Care: The standard is that of a reasonable and prudent person in the same circumstances. The court considers the likelihood of harm, the gravity of the harm, the social utility of the defendant’s conduct, and the cost of taking precautions.
Case Law (Breach and Likelihood of Harm): Bolton v. Stone (1951) (House of Lords) #
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Facts | The claimant was struck by a cricket ball hit out of the defendant club’s ground. Evidence showed the ball had only been hit out of the ground about six times in 30 years. The fence was 17 feet high. |
| Issue | Did the defendant breach their duty of care when the likelihood of harm was extremely remote? |
| Rule | The standard of care involves considering the probability of injury. A reasonable person will only guard against reasonable probabilities, not remote possibilities. |
| Application | While the defendant owed a duty of care, the breach was not established. The risk of the ball clearing the high fence was so small that a reasonable man was justified in disregarding it. The low likelihood outweighed the cost of taking extraordinary precautions. |
| Conclusion | The defendant was not held negligent. This case established that the low probability of harm can justify a failure to take precautions, even where the potential severity of the harm is high. |
C. Causation in Fact and Law #
The claimant must prove that the defendant’s breach caused the damage.
- Causation in Fact (‘But For’ Test): The damage would not have occurred but for the defendant’s negligent act.
- Causation in Law (Remoteness of Damage): The damage suffered must not be too remote a consequence of the breach. The established test is foreseeability of damage.
- Advanced Topic: Foreseeability Test (The Wagon Mound No. 1, 1961): Damage is recoverable only if the kind of damage suffered was reasonably foreseeable at the time of the breach. It is immaterial that the extent of the damage or the precise manner of its occurrence was not foreseeable.
D. Damage #
The claimant must have suffered actual damage, as negligence is not actionable per se. The damage must be measurable and compensable (e.g., physical injury, property damage, or recognized psychiatric harm).
II. Doctrine of Res Ipsa Loquitur (The Thing Speaks for Itself) #
Res Ipsa Loquitur is a rule of evidence that shifts the onus of proof onto the defendant in specific negligence cases where the facts speak so strongly of negligence that the defendant must provide an explanation to rebut the inference.
A. Conditions for Application #
The doctrine is applicable only if the claimant establishes three conditions:
- The Occurrence Must be Such as Pledges Negligence: The event must be one that does not ordinarily happen without negligence (e.g., a barrel of flour falling from a window).
- The Thing Causing the Damage Must be Under the Control of the Defendant: The instrumentality that caused the accident must have been under the exclusive management and control of the defendant or their servants.
- The Cause of the Accident Must Not be Known: The exact cause of the accident must be unexplained or unknown to the claimant.
B. Effect of the Doctrine #
When successfully invoked, Res Ipsa Loquitur does not automatically prove negligence, but it raises a presumption of negligence, casting an evidential burden upon the defendant to prove they were not negligent. If the defendant offers a plausible explanation consistent with due care, the evidential burden shifts back to the claimant.
FIRAC Analysis: Syed Akbar v. State of Karnataka (1979) (SC) #
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Facts | A bus belonging to the State Transport Corporation skidded off the road and fell into a ditch, resulting in injuries and deaths. The claimant sued, but the exact cause of the skid (e.g., oil on the road, mechanical failure, driver error) was not specifically known. |
| Issue | Could the claimant invoke the doctrine of Res Ipsa Loquitur to establish a prima facie case of negligence against the State, despite the unknown cause of the accident? |
| Rule | The Supreme Court reiterated that the rule is a rule of evidence based on common sense. It applies when the cause of the accident is known, but the means by which the accident occurred is not, and the instrumentality was under the defendant’s control. |
| Application | The accident—a public bus leaving the road and falling into a ditch—is inherently one that does not ordinarily happen if the driver and vehicle were exercising due care. The vehicle was exclusively controlled by the State Corporation. Hence, the doctrine applied. |
| Conclusion | The State was burdened to provide a satisfactory explanation for the skid. Since it failed to do so, negligence was inferred, and the State was held liable. |
III. Doctrine of Contributory Negligence #
Contributory negligence is an act or omission on the part of the claimant which materially contributed to the damage suffered. It is a partial defence used to apportion liability.
A. The Common Law Position (The ‘All-or-Nothing’ Rule) #
Historically, under Common Law, if the defendant could prove that the claimant’s negligence contributed in any degree, however slight, to the accident, the claimant’s action failed completely. This ‘all-or-nothing’ rule was notoriously harsh and led to the evolution of the Last Opportunity Rule to mitigate injustice.
Case Law (Historical Position): Davies v. Mann (1842) #
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Facts | The claimant negligently tethered his donkey on the highway. The defendant, driving a wagon too fast and carelessly, ran over and killed the donkey. |
| Rule (Last Opportunity Rule) | Notwithstanding the claimant’s negligence, the defendant will be held solely liable if they had the last opportunity to avoid the accident by exercising reasonable care but failed to do so. |
| Application | The claimant was negligent for tying the donkey on the road. However, the defendant, by driving carelessly, had the last opportunity to see and avoid the donkey. Therefore, the defendant was deemed solely responsible. |
| Significance | This rule was an attempt to soften the harshness of the total defence but proved difficult to apply in cases of simultaneous negligence. |
B. The Modern Statutory Position (Apportionment of Liability) #
The Common Law rule was abolished by statute in most jurisdictions, including the UK (Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act, 1945) and, implicitly, in India via judicial interpretation.
- Principle of Apportionment: Modern law mandates that where the damage is the result of the combined negligence of the claimant and the defendant, the damages recoverable by the claimant are reduced to the extent that the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant’s share in the responsibility for the damage.
FIRAC Analysis: Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Subhagwanti (1966) (SC) #
| Element | Description |
|---|---|
| Facts | A clock tower in a busy locality of Delhi collapsed, killing several people. The clock tower was structurally defective and had not been maintained for years by the MCD (defendant). The victims were present in the area, a public space, when it collapsed. |
| Issue | Was the presence of the victims in the public space a form of contributory negligence, and what was the liability of the MCD for the structural collapse of its property? |
| Rule | The duty of care on public authorities maintaining structures in public spaces is exceptionally high. Regarding contributory negligence, mere presence in a public space does not constitute negligence unless the victims ignored a specific, known, imminent danger. |
| Application | The Supreme Court held that the MCD’s negligence was overwhelming—it had failed in its non-delegable duty to inspect and maintain the dangerous structure. The victims’ mere presence was not considered negligent. The principle of Res Ipsa Loquitur was also effectively invoked due to the collapse of a structure under the defendant’s control. |
| Conclusion | The MCD was held liable. This case, while primarily focused on the defendant’s high duty of care, implicitly affirms the modern doctrine: contributory negligence must be a direct contributing factor to the damage, not merely the occasion of the accident. |