Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
Personal Injury Responsibility
Hi,
I wonder if anyone can advise...a gentleman had delivered a letter to my property and left it half out of the letter box and on realising he had delivered it to the wrong address he later returned to remove the letter and on leaving my front porch the slab on the step (which was cracked) wobbled or fell off its plinth and he slipped he hurt is ankle.
To set the scene, my house has a small porch which has two steps up to the door, the first of which is a concrete plinth with 2 slabs and this is on the public footpath. One of these slabs was cracked and has been for as long as I have lived here but unknown to me it was also loose...I never use the front door and nobody (postman, etc) has ever mentioned it or fallen to my knowledge.
How would liability be determined in this circumstance?
Thanks in advance for any help.
I wonder if anyone can advise...a gentleman had delivered a letter to my property and left it half out of the letter box and on realising he had delivered it to the wrong address he later returned to remove the letter and on leaving my front porch the slab on the step (which was cracked) wobbled or fell off its plinth and he slipped he hurt is ankle.
To set the scene, my house has a small porch which has two steps up to the door, the first of which is a concrete plinth with 2 slabs and this is on the public footpath. One of these slabs was cracked and has been for as long as I have lived here but unknown to me it was also loose...I never use the front door and nobody (postman, etc) has ever mentioned it or fallen to my knowledge.
How would liability be determined in this circumstance?
Thanks in advance for any help.
Answers
Part 2! Digested my above debz? OK let's crack on.
(a) The step/plinth in question is on a public footpath so unless your property deeds state that you have SOME PARTIAL responsibili ty for it, the responsibili ty lies with the Public Highways Authority not you! We can ignore complication s of who built the plinth and which came first: plinth or public...
(a) The step/plinth in question is on a public footpath so unless your property deeds state that you have SOME PARTIAL responsibili
19:58 Fri 31st Aug 2012
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i would very much doubt this story to be honest - who leaves mail poking out a letterbox? why was he hand delivering it? how did he suddenly realise it was the wrong place? what address did he mistake yours for?
is your house clearly numbered etc? is he a postman?
sounds like a blag to try to claim compo to me - perhaps he was hoping you'd offer him a few quid...
is your house clearly numbered etc? is he a postman?
sounds like a blag to try to claim compo to me - perhaps he was hoping you'd offer him a few quid...
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I thought the whole story was a bit odd to be honest...he was hand delivering (not postman) and no idea why or how he realised it was wrong address...house is clearly numbered but our street has lots of bits off it and people regularly get it wrong! I thought it was weird to leave it sticking out...happens with papers but who hand delivers a letter and leaves it sticking out?
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You are liable as an occupier of premises by virtue of the Occupiers Liabilty Act 1957 as amended by the like-named Act of 1984. I do not think it's arguable that the relevant step is wholly or partly on the public footpath and so not part of the 'premises' ! You have a common duty of care to visitors (which word is now widely defined and includes this man) to maintain your premises so that no danger is presented by reason of their condition.Your only defence (in practice) is to show that you had entrusted the maintenance of that part to a contractor and you had no reason to believe that he had not carried out the work necessary or that he was not competent. The common duty of care is somewhat higher than the duty of care in negligence. That you did not know that the slab was loose is unlikely to avail you.
If you didn't actually know that the steps presented a danger you still have a duty under the 1957 Act to ensure that the steps are reasonably safe. Support for this interpretation is found in the 1984 Act. That act extends 'visitors' to include trespassers, but your liability to them, inter alia, is only for dangers which you know or ought to be aware of. The inference is that your duty towards true visitors exists though you do not actually know of the danger and extends to making sure that the premises are reasonably safe for visitors. It may be argued that, in any event, the existence of a crack in the step suggests some defect which should be investigated and is a potential cause of danger.