McLoughlin v O'Brian

McLoughlin v O'Brian
Court House of Lords
Decided 6 May 1982
Citation(s) [1983] 1 AC 410, [1983] 1 AC 410, [1982] 2 All ER 298, [1982] UKHL 3, [1982] 2 WLR 982
Transcript(s) Full text of judgment
Keywords
Negligence, psychiatric harm, proximity

McLoughlin v O'Brian [1983] 1 AC 410 is an English tort law case, decided by the House of Lords, dealing with the possibility of recovering for psychiatric harm suffered as a result of an accident in which one's family was involved.

Facts

On 19 October 1973, a friend came to the claimant's (plaintiff's) house to tell her of a serious accident involving her husband and three children two hours after it had occurred. He drove her to the hospital where she was told one child was dead, and saw her husband and two other children seriously injured, covered in oil and mud. She suffered serious nervous shock as a result and sued the defendant who was responsible for the accident.[1]

Earlier decisions in English courts had allowed victims to recover damages for emotional injury. This case was unique at the time because the claimant suffered injuries away from the scene of the accident and hours after the accident occurred.

This case is frequently examined by law students and students of legal philosophy. Legal scholar Ronald Dworkin used the case as subject matter in a hypothetical case examined by a fictional, ideal judge named Hercules in his book Law's Empire.

Trial Judgment

The trial judge (Boreham J.) held that the defendants owed no duty of care because the injury was not foreseeable, and ruled against McLoughlin.

Court of Appeal Judgment

The Court of Appeal rejected McLoughlin's appeal on grounds of public policy. The Court held the injury was foreseeable, and a duty of care was owed to McLoughlin. However, they did not allow McLoughlin to recover damages. Stephenson L.J. held that the consequence of breach should be limited as a matter of policy. Griffiths L.J. held that the defendants had a limited duty of care (e.g. only towards persons near the road who were directly affected), and that foreseeable consequences did not automatically impose a duty of care.

The Court also held that only legislature should extend the scope of liability.

House of Lords Judgment

The House of Lords found in favour of McLoughlin, that the nervous shock suffered by McLoughlin was reasonably foreseeable and that policy considerations should not inhibit a decision in her favour.

Lord Wilberforce delivered the leading speech, and laid out the test for recovery of damages for personal injury resulting from nervous shock. First, a close familial relationship must exist between claimant and victim. (The Court disqualified an ordinary bystander.) Second, the claimant must be close proximity to the accident "in both time and place".[2] This includes witnesses of the immediate aftermath of the accident. Third, and last, the shock suffered by the claimant must "come through sight or hearing of the event or of its immediate aftermath".[3]

See also

References

  1. McLoughlin v O'Brian, 1982 UKHL 3, 1 (UKHL 6 May 1982).
  2. McLoughlin v O'Brian, 1982 UKHL 3, 5 (UKHL 6 May 1982).
  3. McLoughlin v O'Brian, 1982 UKHL 3, 6 (UKHL 6 May 1982).
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