Neutral
Citation [2002] EWHC 490 (QB)
Case
No: HQ0005713
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF JUSTICE
QUEENS
BENCH DIVISION
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand,
London, WC2A 2LL
Date:
25 March 2002
Before
:
THE HONOURABLE
MR JUSTICE FIELD
Between
:
| |
Sam
Bogle and others
|
Claimants
|
| |
-
and -
|
|
| |
McDonald's
Restaurants Limited
|
Defendant
|
Mr.
Tim Horlock Q.C and Mr. Christopher Kennedy (instructed by Slater Heelis
Collier Littler) for the Claimants.
Miss
Kate Thirlwall Q.C. and Mr. Simon King (instructed by Vizards Wyeth) for
the Defendant.
Hearing
dates : 4, 5, 6 & 8 March 2002.
Approved
Judgment
I
direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A para 6.1 no official shorthand note shall
be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may
be treated as authentic.
Mr
Justice Field
Mr Justice Field:
Introduction
- This is the
trial of a set of preliminary issues ordered to be determined by Master Turner,
with the approval of the Lord Chief Justice. The issues are generic issues
arising from the pleaded cases of a group of claimants suing for personal
injuries caused by the spillage of hot drinks ( in two cases hot water) served
by the defendant ("McDonald's"). The claims are all separate and distinct,
but they share a number of common features and allegations. They were therefore
made the subject of a Group Litigation Order on 21 February 2001. There are
presently 36 claimants in the group. The majority are children; at least 16
were aged 4 or under at the time the injury was sustained.
- The period during
which most of the injuries were suffered is 1996 to 1998; one claim dates
from 1986, another from 1994 and a third from 1991. In all of the cases the
hot drink had been purchased by an adult and in all except one it is alleged
that a lidded cup containing a hot drink fell over either on or from a tray,
or on or from a table, the lid came off and part at least of the hot contents
poured over the claimant. A fairly typical set of alleged facts is afforded
by the case of Lamar Bartley who, aged almost 10 months, was taken by his
mother, Gail McDonald, to a McDonald's restaurant in Nottingham. Ms. McDonald
had her four other children with her as well as Lamar and was in the company
of four other adults with seven other children. Ms. McDonald bought three
hot drinks and five cold drinks and carried them to a table. It is alleged
that another customer put his tray on the same table and in so doing pushed
Ms. McDonald's tray off the table spilling hot coffee onto Lamar who suffered
serious scalding injuries requiring a skin graft under general anaesthetic.
- The exceptional
case is that of Sam Bogle who, aged 15 months, was taken by his child minder
to the McDonald's at Hinkley Town Centre. It is alleged that Sam went to a
drink a cup of hot coffee which had been left on a table with its lid removed,
and in doing so spilled the contents onto himself, sustaining scalding injuries
to his face, neck, chest, shoulders and back.
The
generic issues.
- The generic
issues ordered to be tried on a preliminary basis (with a few grammatical
amendments) are:
- The relevant
provisions of the CPA are as follows:
2
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this Part, where any damage is
caused wholly or partly by a defect in a product, every person to whom subsection
(2) applies shall be liable for the damage.
(2)
This subsection applies to –
(a) the producer of the product;
(b).....
3 (1) Subject to the following provisions of this subsection, there is a defect
in a product for the purposes of this Part if the safety of the product is
not such as persons generally are entitled to expect; and for those purposes
"safety", in relation to a product, shall include safety with respect to products
comprised in that product and safety in the context of risks of damage to
property, as well as in the context of risks of death or personal injury.
(2) In determining for the purposes of subsection (1) above what persons generally
are entitled to expect in relation to a product all the circumstances shall
be taken into account, including –
(a) the manner in which, and purposes for which, the product has been marketed,
its get-up, the use of any mark in relation to the product and any instructions
for, or warnings with respect to, doing or refraining from doing anything
with or in relation to the product;
(b)
what might reasonably be expected to be done with or in relation to the product;
and
(
c ) the time when the product was supplied by its producer to another; and
nothing in this section shall require a defect to be inferred from the fact
alone that the safety of a product which is supplied after that time is greater
than the safety of the product in question.
- Part 1 of the
CPA must be construed in light of the object and purpose of Council Directive
85/374 of July 25, 1985 ("the Directive"). The 2nd and 6th
Preambles of the Directive read:
"Whereas
liability without fault on the part of the producer is the sole means of adequately
solving the problem, peculiar to our age of increasing technicality, of a
fair apportionment of the risks inherent in modern technological production;"
"Whereas,
to protect the physical well-being and property of the consumer, the defectiveness
of the product should be determined by reference not to fitness for use but
to the lack of the safety which the public at large is entitled to expect;
whereas the safety is assessed by excluding any use of the product not reasonable
under the circumstances;"
- Articles 4 and
6 of the Directive read:
Article 4
The
injured person shall be required to prove the damage, the defect and the causal
relationship between defect and damage.
Article 6
1.
A product is defective when it does not provide the level of safety which
a person is entitled to expect, taking all circumstances into account, including:
(a) the presentation of the product;
(b) the use to which it reasonably could be expected that the product would
be put;
( c ) the time when the product was put into circulation.
2.
A product shall not be considered defective for the sole reason that a better
product is subsequently put into circulation.
- I gratefully
adopt the analysis of Burton J. of sections 3 and 4 of the CPA and Articles
6 and 7 of the Directive in A and others v The National Blood Authority
and another [2001] 3 All E R 289. Accordingly, I proceed on the following
basis: (a) the burden of proving that a product is defective is on the party
who so asserts (here the claimants); (b) in determining whether the safety
of the product is not such as persons generally are entitled to expect, the
court, acting as an informed representative of the public at large, must objectively
assess the legitimate expectations of persons generally and whilst those expectations
may accord with actual expectation, they may be more than what the public
actually expect; (c) in determining the safety of the product the court should
take into account all the relevant circumstances including in particular the
matters recited in s. 3(2) of the CPA; (d) however, the avoidability of the
risk of harm is not a relevant circumstance; (e) products that are obviously
dangerous (such as a knife) are not defective: the consumer has a free choice
whether to expose himself to the risk, but that choice must be an informed
choice.
- McDonald's accept
that in adding hot water to coffee grounds and tea bags it is a "producer"
of hot drinks to whom s. 2 (2) applies. The issue to be decided therefore
is whether the claimants have proved that during the relevant period the safety
of the tea and coffee served by McDonald's was not such as persons generally
were entitled to expect.
- The claimants
submit: (1) the expectations of persons generally will be affected by the
potential seriousness of injury that the tea and coffee served by McDonald's
("the product") can cause; (2) the temperature at which the product was served
was such that serious injury would result from the briefest contact; (3) the
product was served in containers and in circumstances in which they were liable
to tip or be knocked over with ease; (4) clear and unambiguous warnings of
the risk of injury could have been given to customers but were not; (5) the
size of McDonald's organisation and the resources available to it were such
that the public was entitled to expect that the subject of the safety of adult
and child customers had been fully researched, considered and assessed and
that appropriate reasonable measures were in place to safeguard them against
risks of serious injury. This was not done. There had been no research. The
risks had not been assessed. In reality and in contrast to the safety of employees,
safety of customers was not considered; (6) drinks were served to customers
in restaurants which were crowded and busy with excited children; and (7)
the safety of customers was dependent on three unwarranted assumptions made
by McDonald's: (i) the lid would be placed securely on the cup; this could
not be guaranteed particularly since it was a task likely to be performed
by youthful employees and, in the case of tea, if the string from the tea
bag was between the lid and the cup, security of the lid was less likely to
be achieved; (ii) the cup would not be knocked over with sufficient force
or in circumstances such that its contents would be spilled; (iii) adult customers
and child customers would be aware of the nature and extent of the risk of
scalding injury from contact.
- It is clear
on the evidence that hot coffee or tea spilled if: (a) a lidded cup was dropped
to the floor from a tray or table; (b) a lidded cup was violently knocked
over; (c) a cup was tipped over after the lid had been removed to allow the
drink to be consumed; (d) a lidded cup whose tab had been torn/pulled back
was tipped over, in which case the drink would escape through the resulting
gap in the lid, but much less quickly than if the lid were off. In the nature
of things spills onto a visitor were occasionally bound to occur causing a
deep thickness burn. There were no warnings given to customers until 1995
after which the words "Caution: Hot!" and "Caution: Contents Hot!" were printed
on the cup.
- However, I hold
that the safety of the hot drinks met the legitimate expectations of persons
generally. I do so for the following reasons. The serving staff were trained
and one of the matters included in the training was the capping of hot drinks
securely. This training took place as soon as an employee started his employment.
On his first day there was an orientation class followed over the next three
weeks by on-the-job training. At the end of this and before the end of the
fourth week a probationary review had to be successfully passed before continuous
employment was offered. Within the first three weeks every new employee had
to complete an Observation Check List ("OCL") which included the procedure
of capping hot drinks securely. By using OCLs and on-the-job training a full
time employee was fully trained after five months at a standard restaurant,
six months at a drive-thru restaurant. After full training the employee had
to complete ten OCLs in each succeeding six month period and the results were
discussed between the manager and the employee. Further, a Performance Appraisal
was conducted every six months at which OCL scores were considered. The staff
were also warned in McDonald's Health & Safety Manual that hot drinks
could be very dangerous, especially to young children and instructed, inter
alia, tactfully to advise customers if they thought drinks could be a hazard.
The training was thorough so that the fact that 70% of the serving staff were
between the ages of 16 and 20 did not mean that visitors were subjected to
greater risk than if the staff had been older.
- I accept Mr.
Hathaway's evidence that he carried out a risk assessment of hot drinks causing
serious burns and that the conclusion resulted in the warning and instruction
in the Health & Safety Manual mentioned above. But even if this step had
not been taken, the omission in itself would not be relevant, since in my
opinion what the court is concerned with is the ultimate safety of the product
and not what considerations the producer gave to its safety.
- The drinks were
served in polystyrene cups that were amply strong enough to hold their contents.
The serving staff were trained to place lids securely on the cups before they
were handed to customers. The insulation efficiency of the cups meant that
purchasers could not tell by holding the cup just how hot the contents were.
However, the great majority of those who bought tea and coffee would be of
teenage years or older and they could be expected to know that the tea and
coffee served by McDonald's was hot and would cause a serious scalding injury
if spilled on someone. The angle at which full cups tipped over was 20 degrees
in the case of a regular cup and 18 degrees in the case of a large cup. However,
having been designed and manufactured to do so, the lids stayed on the cups
if they were tipped over. This was so, in my judgement, even if the lid had
been removed and then put on again. If the tab had been torn back or off,
the lid would stay on but the contents would come out of the resulting gap
in the lid but much less slowly than if the lid had been removed.
- Persons generally
expect tea or coffee purchased to be consumed on the premises to be hot. Many
prefer to consume a hot drink from an unlidded cup rather than through a spout
in the lid. Persons generally know that if a hot drink is spilled onto someone,
a serious scalding injury can result. They accordingly know that care must
be taken to avoid such spills, especially if they are with young children.
They expect precautions to be taken to guard against this risk but not to
the point that they are denied the basic utility of being able to buy hot
drinks to be consumed on the premises from a cup with the lid off. Given that
the staff were trained to cap the drinks securely and given the capabilities
of the cups and lids used, I am satisfied that the safety of the hot drinks
served by McDonald's was such as persons generally are entitled to expect.
Accordingly, I hold that in serving hot drinks in the manner in which they
did McDonald's was not in breach of the CPA.
Conclusion
- The burns suffered
by many of the claimants were serious, involving severe pain and skin grafts.
I have taken this carefully into account whilst considering the issues I have
to determine. However, for the reasons given above, I answer "No" to all of
the preliminary issues; the allegations contained in those issues that McDonald's
are legally liable for these unfortunate injuries have not been made out.