Chapman v Hearse
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| Chapman v Hearse | |
|---|---|
| Court | High Court of Australia |
| Decided | 8 August 1961 |
| Court membership | |
| Judges sitting | Dixon CJ, Kitto, Taylor and Windeyer JJ |
Chapman v Hearse is a significant case in common law related to duty of care, reasonable foreseeability and novus actus interveniens within the tort of negligence. The case concerned three parties; Chapman who drove negligently, Dr Cherry who assisted him on the side of the road, and Hearse who, in driving negligently, killed Dr Cherry while he was assisting Chapman. In the Supreme Court of South Australia, Hearse was found liable for damages to Dr Cherry's estate under the Wrongs Act 1936. Hearse sought to reclaim damages from Chapman due to his alleged contributory negligence; Chapman was found liable to one quarter of the damages. Chapman appealed the case to the High Court of Australia on August 8, 1961, but it was dismissed as the results of his negligence were deemed reasonably foreseeable.[1] A duty of care was established between Chapman and the deceased and his claim of novus actus interveniens was rejected. Dr Cherry was considered a 'rescuer' and his respective rights remained.
On a dark wet evening in September 1958 Chapman was driving intoxicated and collided with another vehicle. Chapman fell out of his car rendering him unconscious and was noticed by an oncoming driver, Dr Cherry, who stopped and sought to assist Chapman. While attending to the unconscious Chapman another driver - Hearse - unwittingly hit and killed Dr Cherry.[1]
The executor of Dr Cherry's estate sought damages from Hearse under the Wrongs Act 1936. [2] During the case, Hearse stated that if he was found liable he should also receive compensation from Chapman as Dr Cherry would not have been on the road had it not been for Chapmans' contributory negligence. Judge Napier C.J. found Hearse's driving to be negligent and Hearse was ordered to compensate Dr Cherry's family. The trial judge also found that Chapman was liable to make a contribution to Hearse of one quarter of the damages.[1]
Preceding this case between Hearse and Dr. Cherry's estate, Chapman lodged an appeal to the full court of the Supreme Court of South Australia against Hearse on the grounds that he had no duty of care to the deceased and that Hearse's action had broken the chain of causation.[2] Chapman's appeal was dismissed and he appealed his case to the High Court of Australia.
Issues
Chapman v Hearse sought to answer whether or not Chapman (the appellant) owed a duty of care to Dr Cherry which would result in him being free from making contributions to Hearse (the respondent).
The court needed to look at whether Chapman would have been liable in the same suit Hearse faced against the executor of Dr.Cherry's estate. This required considering whether Chapman owed Dr. Cherry a duty of care; whether the separate acts were too remote; and whether the events were reasonable foreseeability.
Chapman's arguments
- That Chapman owed no duty of care to the plaintiff.
- That the respondent's actions were not reasonably foreseeable.
- That the respondent's negligent actions that resulted in the plaintiff's death were an act of novus actus interveniens, breaking the chain of causation of Chapman's liability.
- Proving these to be true would make him no longer liable for damages owed to the respondent.