Supreme Court of Canada
Ruch et al. v. Colonial Coach Lines Limited, [1969]
S.C.R. 106
Date: 1968-10-01
Ida Ruch and
William Ruch (Plaintiffs) Appellants;
and
Colonial Coach
Lines Limited (Defendant) Respondent.
1968: May 29, 30; 1968: October 1.
Present: Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and
Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Negligence—Standard of care—Passenger
reclining on rear seat of bus—Injuries sustained when bus passed over
bump—Whether carrier negligent in failing to warn of danger in using rear seat
in reclining position.
The female plaintiff suffered injuries while
she was a passenger on an overnight trip in a bus owned by the defendant
company. The plaintiff stated that at the time she was injured she was
“reclining” with her back propped against the side of the bus and her legs
stretched out across the three rear seats when the vehicle went over a bump and
she was bounced around, causing her to hit her hip and back on the window
ledge. The jury found no negligence on the part of the driver, but found that
the defendant was negligent in failing to warn the plaintiff of the hazard
inherent in using the back seats of the bus in a reclining position. No such
negligence had been pleaded but after the verdict the trial judge permitted an
amendment to the statement of claim whereby such negligence was alleged. The
judgment rendered at trial was reversed on appeal to the Court of Appeal. An
appeal from the Court of Appeal’s judgment was then brought to this Court.
Held (Spence
J. dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per Martland,
Judson, Ritchie and Hall JJ.: In the circumstances of this case no duty lay
upon the carrier to warn its passengers not to recline on the back seat of its
bus. Nor was it in any other way in breach of its undertaking to take all due
care of its passengers and to carry them safely as far as reasonable care and
forethought could attain that end.
Per Spence J.,
dissenting: The amendment to the statement of claim was proper and the
plaintiffs were entitled to recover on the basis of negligence found by the
jury. The company’s driver and its depot employees, realizing that passengers
almost inevitably would doze or sleep as the bus proceeded during the night,
should have warned the passengers that they might recline safely in the seats
on either side of the aisle but that it was most dangerous to lie along the
unprotected rear seat. Failure to do so was failure to meet the standard of
care set by this Court in Day v. Toronto Transportation Commission, [1940]
S.C.R. 433.
[Kauffman v. Toronto Transit Commission,
[1960] S.C.R. 251, applied; De Courcey v. London Street Railway, [1932]
O.R. 226, distinguished.]
[Page 107]
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, allowing an appeal
from, and setting aside, a judgment of Costello Co.Ct.J. Appeal dismissed,
Spence J. dissenting.
Edward J. Houston, Q.C., and Gordon P.
Killeen, for the plaintiffs, appellants.
E. Peter Newcombe, Q.C., and John I.
Tavel, for the defendant, respondent.
The judgment of Martland, Judson, Ritchie and
Hall JJ. was delivered by
RITCHIE J.:—This is an appeal from a judgment of
the Court of Appeal for Ontario1 allowing an appeal from, and
setting aside, the judgment rendered at trial by Costello Co.Ct.J., pursuant to
the verdict of a jury whereby the female appellant was awarded $15,000 and the
male appellant $6,093.85 in respect of damage suffered by Mrs. Ruch when
she was a passenger in a bus owned by the respondent Colonial Coach Lines
Limited.
At the time when she was injured, Mrs. Ruch
has stated that she was “reclining” with her back propped against the side of
the bus and her legs stretched out across the three rear seats when the bus
went over a bump and she was bounced around, causing her to hit her hip and
back on the window ledge. By its verdict the jury found that the plaintiff’s
injuries were not caused by any negligence on the part of the bus driver, but
gave the following particulars of the negligence which they found against the
appellant:
The defendant Colonial Coach Limited was
negligent in not warning Ida Ruch of the danger inherent in using the back
seats of the bus in a reclining position. This warning could have been given by
a suitable sign posted over the seats or by other means.
No such negligence had been pleaded by the
appellants but after the verdict they were given leave to amend the statement
of claim by adding para 5(a) in the following terms:
In the further alternative the plaintiffs
say that the defendant Colonial Coach Limited was negligent in not warning its
passengers of the danger inherent in using the back seats of the bus when in a
reclining position.
[Page 108]
I am in complete agreement with the reasons for
judgment rendered on behalf of the Court of Appeal by Mr. Justice
MacGillivray and I have very little to add to those reasons.
It does, however, seem to me to be desirable to
adopt the clear statement regarding the duty of carriers to their passengers
which is to be found in the reasons for judgment rendered by Kerwin C.J., on
behalf of himself and Mr. Justice Judson in this Court in Kauffman v.
Toronto Transit Commission, where
he said:
While the obligation upon carriers of
persons is to use all due, proper and reasonable care and the care required is
of a very high degree, Readhead v. Midland Railway Co. (1869), L.R.
4 Q.B. 379, such carriers are not insurers of the safety of the persons whom
they carry. The law is correctly set forth in Halsbury, 3rd ed., vol. 4, p.
174, para. 445, that they do not warrant the soundness or sufficiency of their
vehicles, but their undertaking is to take all due care and to carry safely as
far as reasonable care and forethought can attain that end.
Like Mr. Justice MacGillivray, I do not
feel that in the circumstances of this case any duty lay upon the carrier to
warn its passengers not to recline on the back seat of its bus, or that it was
in any other way in breach of its undertaking to take all due care of its
passengers and to carry them safely as far as reasonable care and forethought
could attain that end, but the appellant’s counsel has laid great stress on one
passage in the reasons for judgment of Fisher J.A. in De Courcey v. London
Street Railway, where
it was held that the carrier was liable to a passenger who fell forward from
the front seat of a bus when it came to a sudden stop and it was found that
there was a lack of care and foresight on the part of the carrier in not having
a rail or guard in front of the unprotected front seat. The passage from
Mr. Justice Fisher’s decision upon which the appellant relies reads as
follows:
The fact that the passenger was thrown from
the seat on which she was invited to sit without negligence on her part is
proof that the seat was not safe, and under the cases the onus was on the
company to show it could not have been made safer than it in fact was.
This appears to me to be tantamount to saying
that whenever a passenger is thrown from one of the seats of a
[Page 109]
public vehicle without negligence on his part,
the rule embodied in the maxim res ipsa loquitur applies so as to place
upon the carrier the burden of proving that the seat could not have been made
safer than it in fact was, and if the learned judge intended to give expression
to any such general proposition, then with all respect I feel it desirable that
such a proposition should be rejected. It was proved through the respondent’s
general manager that the bus seats in the present case were up to date and of a
type in general use in the industry and I do not think that the mere fact of a
passenger being thrown from such a seat through collision or sudden stop
necessarily affords proof that the seat itself was unsafe.
The facts of the De Courcey case were, in
my opinion, clearly distinguishable from those with which we are here concerned
because the unguarded front seat in the London Street Railway bus did obviously
present a hazard to a passenger occupying it when the bus came to a sudden
halt, but it should also be remembered that in the De Courcey case there
was a finding that the driver was negligent whereas in the present case the
jury has absolved the driver from any negligence whatever.
As I have indicated, I adopt the reasoning of
Mr. Justice MacGillivray in the Court of Appeal and would therefore
dismiss this appeal with costs.
SPENCE J. (dissenting):—This is an appeal
from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario pronounced on October 20, 1965, whereby
that Court allowed the appeal of the defendants from the judgment of the County
Court of the County of Carleton delivered on November 23, 1964, after a trial
in that Court with a jury. By such judgment of the County Court, the plaintiff
William Ruch recovered from the defendant the sum of $6,093.85 and the
plaintiff Ida Ruch recovered from the defendant the sum of $15,000.
The plaintiff Ida Ruch had purchased from
Allan’s Travel Service in Ottawa a ticket for a return trip from Ottawa to New York City by
bus and for a two-day stop
[Page 110]
over in the latter city. The plaintiff testified
that she was assigned a seat in the bus, when it was departing from Ottawa for New York
City, by an office employee of Allan’s Travel Service.
That seat was the one which was situated across the rear end of the bus and was
capable of bearing three passengers. The seat was a straight seat with no arm
rests and it ran from the one side wall of the bus to the wall of the powder
room in the other corner of the bus. A small aisle which the plaintiff said was
about two feet in width ran across the front of that seat and then the main
aisle of the bus ran forward to the front with seats on each side of it, in
rows, for two persons each. Those seats running up the bus had arm rests on the
outside, that is, close to the wall of the bus, and also on the side next to
the aisle, but no arm rests between the two passengers occupying the seats.
The bus left Ottawa at about 8:00 p.m. on Friday and, driving all night, arrived at New York City early the next morning. At
the end of the holiday weekend on October 11, 1960, at about 8:00 p.m., the
bus left the New York terminal
for its return overnight trip to Ottawa. The plaintiff Ida Ruch, although she sat in another seat in the
bus for the first half-hour or so after leaving New York, returned to her
original seat at the back of the bus and sat in that seat until about 2:00 a.m.
when, according to the evidence of the driver one Lewis Shane, the bus
developed a defective tire and the driver was forced to make a stop of about
one hour while the tire was changed. The bus then proceeded on its way. This
occurred near Booneville in the State of New York.
The plaintiff, when she retired to the rear seat
of the bus, stretched out along the length of the seat. It being for the
accommodating of three persons was too short to permit her to lie at full
length on the seat so she occupied a semi-reclining position with her back
against the opposite wall of the bus and her legs and feet along the seat her
feet being toward the powder room. According to her evidence at trial, she was
dozing but more awake than asleep when the bus struck either some obstruction
in the road or some
[Page 111]
pothole, and she was thrown in the air coming
down with her back and side against the side wall of the bus, and thereby
sustaining the injury which was the basis of her action.
The bus driver, giving evidence at trial in
November 1964, had no memory whatsoever of the bus having struck any such
object.
It was the plaintiff’s evidence that no one and
particularly not the driver Shane had given her any instructions or advice or
suggestion as to how she should occupy the seat in the bus. Of course, this bus
and for that matter no other bus had any seat belts and there was no protection
whatsoever to prevent the passengers on the rear seat of the bus falling
forward or in any other direction. The passengers who sat in the seats at
either side of the main aisle, of course, were sitting only a very short
distance behind the seat of the row in front and if tossed forward or upward by
the motion of the bus had means of steadying themselves by grasping the
upholstered seat in front of them or by grasping the arm rests, one being
available to each such passenger. Neither of these protections was available to
any passenger occupying this rear seat. In addition, of course, the rear seat
being at the end of the bus body any motion of the bus upward due to unevenness
of the road would have its maximum effect there. The seats on either side of
the aisle were so arranged that the occupant of each seat could place the back
of the seat in a sloping position and then the passenger occupying such seat
would recline in an angle which was said to be even as much as 45 degrees, and
yet be sitting in the seat facing forward, so that a tossing motion would leave
such passenger able to protect himself in any of the fashions which I have
outlined. The passenger stretched along the rear seat, that is, lying at right
angles to the line of travel of the bus, with no protection by way of arm rests
or the back of the seat in front of him, would be in the very hazardous
position of having no opportunity to protect himself if the bus made a sudden
stop or if the rear of the bus were tossed in the air as it went over any kind
of a
[Page 112]
bump in the road. In travel on a highway, the
necessity of making a rapid decrease in the speed of the vehicle may occur on
many occasions. No highway is so perfect that there may not occur occasions
when the vehicle receives a heavy bump when passing over the road such as will
inevitably cause passengers to be tossed around. In either of those cases, the
passengers in the seats to each side of the aisle have a considerable measure
of protection available to them. The passenger stretched out on the rear seat,
as was the plaintiff, has none.
This bus had been travelling all night from Ottawa to New York
City and was returning to Ottawa from New York City
by night. Such a course was not unusual. The driver, Lewis Shane, swore that he
had taken the trip about ten times a year and that about half of those trips
had been night trips. A fellow passenger, Mrs. Warren, giving evidence for
the plaintiff swore that she had taken seven such previous trips to New York
and that they were usually at night. One occupant after another of the bus gave
evidence that the lights were dimmed and that nearly everyone in the bus
appeared to be asleep. In short, it was the regular course of the defendant
Colonial Coach Ltd. to encourage occupants of the bus during this all night
trip to recline and to sleep. The seats along the aisle were designed to permit
such reclining. The lights in the bus were dimmed for this reason and it was
the usual thing for the passengers to board and then sleep or doze as the bus
drove through the night between the two cities.
The learned trial judge submitted to the jury
the following questions:
1. Were the injuries to the Plaintiff
caused by any negligence on the part of the Defendant Colonial Coach Lines
Limited. Answer “yes” or “no”.
ANSWER: Yes.
2. If your answer to question one is “yes”,
state fully in what such negligence consisted.
ANSWER: The Defendant, Colonial Coach
Limited was negligent in not warning Ida Ruch of the hazard inherent in using
the back seats of the bus in a reclining position. This warning could have been
given by a suitable sign posted near the seats or by other means.
[Page 113]
3. Were the injuries to the Plaintiff
caused by any negligence on the part of the Defendant’s driver, Lewis Shane?
Answer “yes” or “no”.
ANSWER: NO.
4. If your answer to question three is
“yes” state fully in what such negligence consists.
ANSWER:
Therefore, the jury’s answers were that there
was negligence on the part of the defendant Colonial Coach Limited and the jury
outlined that negligence in their answer to question 2 in the fashion I have
set out. The jury, however, negatived any negligence on the part of the driver.
The allegations of the plaintiff that the driver drove negligently and caused
the vehicle to bump over some obstruction or pothole in the road having thus
been negatived by the jury need not be further considered, and the sole
question this Court has to determine is whether the plaintiffs are entitled to
recover upon the jury’s answers to questions 1 and 2 on its finding against the
defendant Colonial Coach Limited.
In the Court of Appeal, McGillivray J.A., giving
the reasons for judgment of the Court, accepted the grounds for appeal cited by
the appellant as follows:
4. The finding of negligence was not a proper
one.
5. The finding of negligence made was not
supported by the evidence.
Although McGillivray J.A. cited many English
authorities, I think it may be said that he relied on the decision of the Court
of Appeal for Ontario in Kauffman v. Toronto Transit Commission, as later affirmed in this Court in [1960]
S.C.R. 251. Although, of course, general principles as enunciated in the
reasons for judgment in that case are applicable, the case must be understood
as being one upon the facts there in issue. Those facts were very different
from those which are present in this appeal. In the Kauffman case, the
plaintiff had been a passenger on an escalator in one of the local subway
stations in Toronto and immediately ahead of her was a man preceded by two
[Page 114]
boisterous youths. The latter engaged in some
juvenile horseplay with the result that they fell against the man riding up the
escalator behind them and then all three tumbled against the plaintiff with the
result that the four fell to the bottom of the escalator. The issues considered
in all Courts in the Kauffman case were the sufficiency of the handrail
on the side of the escalator and the necessity or non‑necessity of having
a guard posted at each escalator. I do not regard the circumstances in that
case as having the slightest resemblance to those in the present appeal, and I
am of the opinion that the question the Court must determine here is as to
whether there should be liability upon the carrier if that carrier provides
equipment for overnight travel, encourages sleeping and reclining during that
overnight travel, and then fails to warn passengers of the danger of taking any
such extremely hazardous position in the vehicle as was occupied by the
plaintiff in the present case.
I am of the opinion that the liability of the
carrier is supported by some of the authorities to which McGillivray J.A.
referred in his reasons. McGillivray J.A. quoted and adopted Morden J.A.’s
judgment in the Kauffman case, and that learned justice in turn relied
on the words of Lord Dunedin in Morton v. Dixon, at p. 809, as follows:
Where the negligence of the employer
consists of what I may call a fault of omission, I think it is absolutely
necessary that the proof of the fault of omission should be one of two kinds,
either—to shew that the thing which he did not do was a thing which was
commonly done by other persons in like circumstances, or—to shew that it was a
thing which was so obviously wanted that it would be folly in anyone to neglect
to provide it.
And then Morden J.A. continued at p. 203:
After quoting these words, Lord Normand
said in Paris v. Stepney, [1951] A.C. 367 at p. 382:—
The rule is stated with all the Lord
President’s trenchant lucidity. It contains an emphatic warning against a
facile finding that a precaution is necessary when there is no proof that it is
one taken by other persons in like circumstances. But it does not detract from
the test of the conduct and judgment of the reasonable and prudent man.
[Page 115]
If there is proof that a precaution is
usually observed by other persons, a reasonable and prudent man will follow the
usual practice in the like circumstances. Failing such proof the test is
whether the precaution is one which the reasonable and prudent man would think
so obvious that it was folly to omit it.
It is true that in the present case there was no
proof that a precaution such as warning signs or some other means was used
customarily in other examples of bus travel, but even in the absence of any
such evidence surely the second test, as put by Lord Normand in Paris v.
Stepney, quoted above, is whether the precaution is one which the
reasonable and prudent man would think so obvious that it was folly to omit it
as applicable. Surely the driver of this bus, and surely the employees in the
bus depot in Ottawa before the first overnight trip had commenced, realizing
that passengers almost inevitably would doze or sleep as the bus proceeded
during the night, should have warned the passengers that they might recline
safely in the seats on either side of the aisle but that it was most dangerous
to lie along the unprotected rear seat. In my view, failure to do so was
failure to meet the standard of care set by this Court in Day v. Toronto
Transportation Commission, in the
words of Hudson J. at p. 441:
Although the carrier of passengers is not
an insurer, yet if an accident occurs and the passenger is injured, there is a
heavy burden on the defendant carrier to establish that he had used all due,
proper and reasonable care and skill to avoid or prevent injury to the
passenger.
(The italicizing is my own.)
That statement was adopted by this Court in Harris
v. Toronto Transportation Commission,
per Ritchie J. at p. 464.
I am further of the opinion that the respondent
Colonial Coach and its driver Shane could not rely on any employee of Allan’s
Travel Service to discharge the respondent’s duty to warn its passengers of
such a hazard.
Therefore, subject to what I shall say herein as
to the form of the pleadings, it would seem to me that the finding of
negligence as against the defendant Colonial Coach Lim-
[Page 116]
ited is the proper finding of negligence, that
is, a finding of a breach of its duty toward its passenger the plaintiff Ida
Ruch and that is fully supported by the evidence.
The endorsement of the writ of summons issued by
the plaintiff reads as follows:
The plaintiffs claim from the Defendant
damages representing personal injuries sustained by the Plaintiff, Ida Ruch,
and out-of-pocket expenses sustained by the Plaintiff, William Ruch. The
Plaintiffs say that the said damages were the result of the failure of the
Defendant to carry the Plaintiff, Ida Ruch, safely in one of its motor vehicles
on a voyage between the City of New York, in the State of New York and the City
of Ottawa, in the Province of Ontario. In the alternative, the Plaintiffs claim
is for negligence on the part of the operator of the said motor bus, in the
manner in which the said motor bus was being operated.
The plaintiffs in their statement of claim in
paragraphs 4 and 5 said:
4. The female Plaintiff says, as the fact
is, that the injuries which she sustained which are more particularly
hereinafter set forth, were caused by the negligence of the operator of the bus
acting within the scope of his employment and whose negligence the Defendant is
responsible in law in that:
(a) He was operating the said bus at a high
and improper rate of speed;
(b) He was not keeping a proper lookout;
(c) He failed to apply his brakes in a
timely and proper manner or at all.
5. In the alternative, the Plaintiffs say
that the Defendant was guilty of a breach of its contract with the female
Plaintiff for the safe carriage of her in the said bus.
Counsel for the plaintiffs in his opening
remarks to the jury said:
We expect to prove to your satisfaction
that these injuries were sustained on this bus and arose from the negligence of
the Defendant carrier and through the breach of this contract for safe carriage
of Ida Ruch. We will lead evidence of fellow passengers on the Colonial Coach
Lines bus to establish how that accident happened of which she sustained her
injuries and we have to show by a balance of probabilities, or a preponderance
of evidence, which His Honour will explain to you as a matter of law, we have
to show to you that the Defendant company is fully responsible for those
injuries sustained by the Plaintiff, Ida Ruch, and we hope to show you by way
of the evidence of the female Plaintiff and her husband and some of the other
witnesses I have indicated, she has suffered substantial damages and we will
ask you to award substantial damages to her on the basis of the evidence led in
this case.
Upon the jury returning the verdict which I have
outlined above, counsel for the plaintiffs moved for leave
[Page 117]
to amend the statement of claim by the addition
of paragraph 5(a). After some considerable argument, that motion was allowed
and the said para. 5(a) was added, reading as follows:
5(a) In the further alternative, the
Plaintiffs say that the Defendant Colonial Coach Lines Ltd. was negligent in
not warning its passengers of the hazards inherent in using the back seats of
its bus in a reclining position.
That amendment was the subject of serious
objection in the Court of Appeal and again in this Court, and it was said that
the plaintiffs by such amendment were in effect introducing a new cause of
action and that such new cause of action was in fact introduced after the
limitation period provided by the Ontario Highway Traffic Act had
elapsed.
I am of the opinion that in view of the terms of
the endorsement on the writ of summons which I have quoted above, the
plaintiffs were not introducing any new cause of action but were simply outlining
a new particular of negligence. The plaintiffs could not rely on para. 5 of the
statement of claim as originally delivered as that paragraph alleges a contract
of carriage between the plaintiffs and the defendant and the contract was made
between the plaintiffs and Allan’s Travel Service, which latter entity was not
a party to the action. I am of the opinion that the plaintiffs, therefore,
require the allegation in the amendment to the statement of claim wrought by
para. 5(a) of the statement of claim in order to be permitted to recover
against the defendant. It is true that that allegation was only added after the
verdict but it is difficult to see how the defendant was in any way prejudiced.
If the proof of the allegation had depended on the production of evidence of
what was customarily done by way of warning then I am ready to agree that it
has not been clearly demonstrated that the defendant had notice and opportunity
to produce such evidence. The fact was noted by McGillivray J.A. in his reasons
for judgment in the Court of Appeal for Ontario. In my view, however, the defendant’s liability is established not
on the basis of what was customary in other cases but on the basis of what was
lacking was a precaution which a reasonable and prudent man would think so
obvious that it was folly to omit it. Such a finding
[Page 118]
needed no demonstration by evidence and was in
fact made by the jury simply acting as persons of ordinary common sense.
For these reasons, I would allow the amendment
as did the learned trial judge.
It is true that in this Court, counsel for the
appellants sought to put the appellants’ case on the basis of the maxim res
ipsa loquitur pointing out in the words of Hudson J. in Day v. Toronto
Transportation Commission, supra, what was a heavy burden on the defendant
carrier to establish the use of the necessary skill and care and that the
defendant had failed to discharge such a burden. I am, however, of the opinion
that counsel for the respondent supplied an adequate answer to that submission
when he pointed to the opening to the jury made by counsel for the plaintiffs
where the counsel did not purport to rely in any way on the maxim and on the
other hand assumed the burden of proof. In Spencer v. Field, Davis J. said at p. 42:
It is unnecessary for us in this case to
consider whether or not that doctrine has any application to this case. It is
sufficient in our view to observe that the case for the respondents was
formulated in the pleadings and developed at the trial as an action of negligence
against the appellant without any reference to the rule of res ipsa
loquitur. And the case went to the jury, without any objection, on the
basis of an action for negligence in which the burden lay upon the respondents.
That being so, the respondents are not entitled upon an appeal to recast their
case and put it upon a basis which had not been suggested at the trial.
However, having come to the conclusion that the
amendment to the statement of claim was proper, I am of the opinion that the
plaintiffs are entitled to recover on the basis of the negligence found by the
jury and I would, therefore, allow the appeal with costs in this Court and in
the Court of Appeal and restore the judgment of the County court.
Appeal dismissed with costs, SPENCE J.
dissenting.
Solicitors for the plaintiffs,
appellants: Soloway, Wright, Houston, Galligan & McKimm, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the defendant, respondent:
Gowling, MacTavish, Osborne & Henderson, Ottawa.