Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

news

Insurer tries to cut damages pay out to teenage pedestrian due to her lack of hi vis clothing on country road

Case goes to Court of Appeal and could have implications for cyclists

An insurance company says that a teenage girl left brain damaged after she was hit by a car on a country lane at night is partly to blame for her injuries because she should have known to take the precaution of wearing reflective clothing. The case, which is due to go before the Court of Appeal, echoes previous ones in which insurers have attempted to establish contributory negligence on the part of cyclists not wearing helmets.

Should the Court of Appeal establish that there was an element of contributory negligence on the victim’s part, the case could have repercussions on cyclists in terms of what they choose to wear when on their bikes.

Pointing out that in many of the UK's fellow EU Member States the legal system presumes liability on the drivers' part in incidents in which more vulnerable road users suffer death or injury, Roger Geffen, Campaigns and Policy Director at National Cyclists' Organisation CTC said: "In many other western European countries, a 13 year old girl brain-damaged in a car collision would be presumed to be entitled to compensation from the driver's insurance.

"Yet in Britain, she and her family not only have to deal with the aftermath of her horrific injury, but are also now facing the trauma of proving that it was not her fault. 

"It is high time we reversed this creeping assumption that injured pedestrians and cyclists are to blame for not warning the driver that they were there. 

"If the Government wants to encourage more people to walk and cycle, it must provide much better legal protection for those who do so, expecially for children and older people."

Bethany Probert was aged 13 at the time of the incident, which took place near Silverstone, Northamptonshire, in 2009, reports The Times [£]. She was returning home on foot from the stables where she kept her horse, having decided to walk instead of waiting for her mother to come and give her a lift home.

As she walked along the unlit road, described as “narrow and bending” and which had no pavement, pedestrians instead having to use the grass verge, Bethany, now aged 16, was struck by a car driven by fitter Paul Moore, who was on his way to work and said he had not seen the teenager.

After the collision, he searched for her and discovered her in a ditch, his actions said to have saved her life.

Speaking to The Times, Bethany’s mother Jo said: “Her head was just open like a book. For a while they just dripped morphine in. They didn’t expect her to live. I am not going to say the word ‘thankful’ to the driver but I don’t feel animosity.”

Moore’s insurers, Churchill, admit liability on his part but are seeking to reduce the quantum of damages, which may amount to £1 million, by arguing that given her experience of horse riding Bethany, now aged 16, should have known to take the precaution of high visibility clothing.

Lawyers acting on behalf of Churchill said that Bethany “should have been obvious to a girl of her age.”

That argument was rejected by High Court judge, Mr David Pittaway, QC, who said: “An ordinary 13½-year-old should not be expected to consider taking the same level of precautions as an adult.

“It would be asking too much of her to say that she should not have started to walk home at all or should not have started to walk home without borrowing a high-visibility jacket, reflective markings or torch from the stables. Her decision to walk home was ill-informed but not culpable.”

He added that the speed of Moore’s vehicle, 50 miles an hour at the time of impact, was too high for the type of road and fact he was driving at night, although the speed limit in force was not reported.

In reaching his decision, the judge was upholding a principle established in a 1966 decision by the Court of Appeal regarding a 13-year-old girl who had walked into the path of an approaching vehicle.

The test to be used was that the behaviour should be assessed in line with the behaviour of an ordinary child, with the Lord Justice Salmon saying in that case: 
“I do not mean a paragon of prudence; nor do I mean a scatterbrained child; but the ordinary child of 13,” he said.

While the judge in Bethany’s case has awarded full damages against Moore to help adapt a new home for her condition and compensation for her injuries, permission has been granted for the decision to be challenged in the Court of Appeal, with Churchill saying: “While we accept that our insured was liable in part for the accident, we are appealing the decision that he was entirely to blame.”

RJW Slater & Gordon, the firm of solicitors acting for Bethany, commented: “This is the first case on the question of an accident victim’s culpability for walking on the road at night for more than 20 years and the first case of a child’s culpability.”

An article on contributory negligence on the website of national cyclists’ organisation CTC discusses attempts made in recent years by insurance companies to establish an element of contributory negligence in cases where cyclists have been injured who were not wearing helmets at the time of collision.

Insurers have even tried to get judges to accept that such claimed contributory negligence applies in cases where involving child cyclists for example where no head injury was involved.

One judge cited in the CTC article suggested that arguments that cyclists not wearing helmets could carry a proportion of blame, although Paul Kitson of Russel Jones & Walker, CTC’s solicitors, said he believed that such remarks were made obiter dicta – observations made by a judge that are of general application rather than being pertinent to the case in question – and would therefore not be binding.
 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

Add new comment

54 comments

Avatar
jonathing | 11 years ago
0 likes

Surely hi-viz only works when the driver is looking where they are going?

Avatar
Some Fella | 11 years ago
0 likes

My contempt for insurance companies grows ever deeper.
How do these people sleep at night?

Avatar
cidermart replied to Some Fella | 11 years ago
0 likes
Some Fella wrote:

My contempt for insurance companies grows ever deeper.
How do these people sleep at night?

Seconded insurance companies are vermin of the lowest order.

I suppose the next one will be "Well the victims should have worn flak jackets if they didn't want to get shot how can it be my clients fault that they died me lud".

Avatar
paulmerrett | 11 years ago
0 likes

Why oh why do they always try to blame the victim, can they not just behave responsibly for once

Avatar
vsmith1 | 11 years ago
0 likes

Does the Highway Code say that pedestrians should wear such things in such circumstances?

I think not.

But it will say that it is the motorist who needs to take care of other road users.

I rest my case.

Avatar
Al__S replied to vsmith1 | 11 years ago
0 likes
vsmith1 wrote:

Does the Highway Code say that pedestrians should wear such things in such circumstances?

I think not.

But it will say that it is the motorist who needs to take care of other road users.

I rest my case.

Actually, Rule 3 does suggest it however it doesn't even use the foreceful "Should" used in some Rules; it certainly doesn't use "MUST" which would idicate a statutory obligation.

Regardless, the case is dangerous victim blaming nonsense, and what is worse is the point that is being argued is that a 13 yr old should not be expected to do what an adult would be expected to do- ie the High Court has effectively ruled (though it would hopefully not be a precedent) that were this an adult it would have been contributary negligence to not wear hi vis. This is scary.

Avatar
northstar replied to vsmith1 | 11 years ago
0 likes
vsmith1 wrote:

Does the Highway Code say that pedestrians should wear such things in such circumstances?

I think not.

But it will say that it is the motorist who needs to take care of other road users.

I rest my case.

Avatar
Roberj4 | 11 years ago
0 likes

"I'm so sorry 'your Honor' for knocking down that cyclist, I was temporarily blinded from the glare of the day-glow clothing"!!

I wonder which side of the road the girl was walking on. Surly if she was walking the opposite side of the road to the car, the driver/insurance must accept total responsibility. If not then the Insurance must take into account the girls age (as a minor) who may not have known, or told the correct side of the road to walk. The distress this must be causing the family they should just settle and let the family move on.

Avatar
Paul M | 11 years ago
0 likes

This case just goies to show how vital it is to introduce strict liability. Thi spoor girl has already waited nearly 4 years for justice when she clearly cannot afford to wait a single day. She will evidently have to wait longer while the appeals process plays out.

Strict liability would establish that a motorist has liability to pay redress - covered coimpulsorily by insurance - unless they can PROVE that the victim is at fault. The rule applies in any circumstance involving a smaller/more vulnerale road user and a larger/less vulnerable one, eg a Fiesta driver struck by a 44 tonne artic. It doesn't seek to apportion blame - the liablity is independent of fault - and the estimated cost adds about £50 to the average annual car insurance premium - about half what fraudulent whiplash claims already cost.

Avatar
notfastenough | 11 years ago
0 likes

Must be the victims fault.

Avatar
iambrianjones | 11 years ago
0 likes

Perhaps the local council is culpable for not ensuring pedestrians have a safe environment to walk in at night?

Avatar
pedalingparamedic | 11 years ago
0 likes

All road users (and judges) please note:
You MUST be able to stop in the distance you can see to be clear.
If you can't do this, you're liable.

Avatar
therevokid replied to pedalingparamedic | 11 years ago
0 likes
pedalingparamedic wrote:

All road users (and judges) please note:
You MUST be able to stop in the distance you can see to be clear.
If you can't do this, you're liable.

This never seems to get brought up does it ?????

I was just about to go car insurance hunting - guess
who wont be on the list !

Avatar
Farky replied to pedalingparamedic | 11 years ago
0 likes
pedalingparamedic wrote:

All road users (and judges) please note:
You MUST be able to stop in the distance you can see to be clear.
If you can't do this, you're liable.

There was a case in Scotland last year where the driver of a bus hit cyclists and got away with it due to the 'low morning sun' blinding him and preventing him from seeing them.
The fact he hadnt cleaned the window properly didnt make any difference either.
This meant the driver wasnt held responsible.
Insurance did pay out, the big issue being drivers not being responsible regardless of speed/conditions etc.

Avatar
benb | 11 years ago
0 likes

You can't really blame Churchill for attempting to minimise their losses - it's the corporate insurance system that obliges them to do that. Any other insurance company would do the same.

Drivers need to expect pedestrians in the roadway, especially on lanes with no pavement, and drive accordingly.

Even if she was dressed entirely in black, I would expect a normal set of headlights to pick her out, so if the driver still hit her, he must have either been driving too fast or he didn't look properly.

Avatar
Paul M replied to benb | 11 years ago
0 likes
benb wrote:

You can't really blame Churchill for attempting to minimise their losses - it's the corporate insurance system that obliges them to do that. Any other insurance company would do the same.

Drivers need to expect pedestrians in the roadway, especially on lanes with no pavement, and drive accordingly.

Even if she was dressed entirely in black, I would expect a normal set of headlights to pick her out, so if the driver still hit her, he must have either been driving too fast or he didn't look properly.

Yes, you can. I have not so far heard of any other insurer making such an outrageous claim.

All I can say is that it shows up the illogicality of distinguishing between someone walking on a road and someone cycling on it. Neither shoudl be subject to an assumption that they are takig on the motorist's responsibility for them.

Avatar
benb replied to Paul M | 11 years ago
0 likes
Quote:

I have not so far heard of any other insurer making such an outrageous claim.

Well I'm not aware of a similar case - this is fairly uncommon.

I would need some convincing (i.e. a similar case) that other insurance companies wouldn't also appeal.

I'm not saying they should - just that they would.

Avatar
sporran replied to benb | 11 years ago
0 likes
benb wrote:

You can't really blame Churchill for attempting to minimise their losses - it's the corporate insurance system that obliges them to do that. Any other insurance company would do the same.

Drivers need to expect pedestrians in the roadway, especially on lanes with no pavement, and drive accordingly.

Even if she was dressed entirely in black, I would expect a normal set of headlights to pick her out, so if the driver still hit her, he must have either been driving too fast or he didn't look properly.

Nail on the head. Of course it can be difficult to pick out someone dressed in dark clothing at night, but if you don't see them in time then you're going too fast.

And even hi-viz clothing will be no help if the driver meets the pedestrian on a blind corner and they're travelling too quickly.

Avatar
md6 | 11 years ago
0 likes

Having worked in the industry in the past, I can say that insurers are the lowest of the low, and will try virtually anything to avoid paying a claim. That said, this takes things to a new low. I will never use Churchill or any related entity, although i suspect they aren't the only ones to try this type of thing.

Avatar
Simon E replied to md6 | 11 years ago
0 likes
md6 wrote:

Having worked in the industry in the past, I can say that insurers are the lowest of the low, and will try virtually anything to avoid paying a claim. That said, this takes things to a new low.

@md6, you confirmed my suspicions
 2

The following is a brief message to Churchill Insurance and their legal vultures:

F**K OFF!

Avatar
velophilia | 11 years ago
0 likes

Disgusting. Insurance leeches.

Avatar
Joselito | 11 years ago
0 likes

Am I going to buy insurance from Churchill in the future?
Ah, no.
Boycott them and watch them squirm.

Avatar
Gkam84 | 11 years ago
0 likes

What a crock....You don't wear Hi Vis then you get hit, you have to accept some responsibly. I want to see EVERYONE that walks ANYWHERE in Hi Vis now....

Why not get everyone to wear body armour, full face motorcycle helmets aswell while at it

Avatar
rogan | 11 years ago
0 likes

If a driver in a 2012 BMW, hits another driver out for a drive in his pride and joy 70s rebuild, do insurance companies place blame on the injured because his car doesn't have 400 airbags in the door alone? No. What a load of bollocks this is.

Pages

Latest Comments