Morris v Murray
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Morris v Murray [1991] 2 QB 6 is an English tort law case, concerning breach of duty.[1]
| Morris v Murray | |
|---|---|
| Court | Court of Appeal |
| Citation | [1991] 2 QB 6 |
Facts
The defendant had a pilot licence. He drank 17 whiskeys with the plaintiff in pubs. Then he said ‘let’s go flying’ in wet and slippery conditions. They crashed. The defendant was killed, and the plaintiff sued the defendant's estate.
Asquith J rejected the volenti defence, but reduced damages by 20% for contributory negligence.
Judgment
Fox LJ cited Asquith J, that there are cases where getting into a plane or car with a drunk is like ‘intermeddling with an unexploded bomb or walking the edge of an unfenced cliff’. The passenger could not think ‘Mr Murray, who had been drinking all the afternoon, was capable of discharging a normal duty of care.’ Morris was ‘merry’.
Stocker LJ the risk in the plane ‘is far greater than driving a car in a similar condition of insobriety’. The plaintiff ‘actively sought’ the ‘joyride in the aircraft’. He was engaged in an ‘intrinsically and obviously dangerous occupation.’