Two Types of Causation: Re: Polemis (1921) CA
Two Types of Causation: Re: Polemis (1921) CA
Two Types of Causation: Re: Polemis (1921) CA
What amounts to
‘Remoteness’?
Old test: Direct • D is liable to P for all direct consequences suffered from
consequence test any damage caused that he would have foreseen as
likely to result from his act.
• Re Polemis
Test of Remoteness
Held:
Held:
• The wind and tide carried the oil beneath P's wharf
where welding operations were being carried on by P's
employees.
• After being advised that they could safely weld, P's
employees continued their work.
Held:
• D not liable for the fire but liable for the fouling
(polluting) on P’s wharf.
The implementation in
Malaysia
Govt. of Malaysia v. Jumat • The Federal Court reversed the trial court’s decision on
bin Mahmud [1977] the D’s liability and held that the injury sustained by the
student (R) was not the kind/type of class reasonably
foreseeable as a result of the teacher’s act/omission.
Manner of occurrence
Held:
Extent of harm
Held:
Eggshell Skull Rule “If P is negligently run over or otherwise negligently injured in
his body, it is no answer for the claim that he would have
suffered less injury, or no injury at all, if he had not had an
unusually thin skull or an unusually weak heart”
Dulieu v White & Sons • Here D was liable for causing P (bar worker who was
[1901] pregnant) shocked and to give a premature birth.
Smith v Leech Brain & Co • P was burnt in his lip during work, due to the
Ltd [1962] employer’s negligence.
Chin Keow v Govt. of the • Doctor was liable for giving a patient (allergic to
Fed. of Malaya [1964] penicillin) an injection of procaine penicillin from
which the patient died within an hour.
Decisions/Circumstances
where damage was too
remote…
• of natural even
• *penniless/lack of money
Held:
Held:
• D2 was liable.
Held:
Held:
Held: