Rank: Forum user
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Hi all. A friend skidded on snow/ice on a petrol forecourt and hit the fuel pumps. Does the petrol station have a duty of care to keep their forecourt safe for drivers or is it the drivers fault?
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Rank: Super forum user
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I would say that the Workplace Regs 1992 would apply. The petrol station would be at fault, IMHO. Article 12 states:
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of paragraph (1), the requirements in that paragraph shall include requirements that—
(a) the floor, or surface of the traffic route, shall have no hole or slope, or be uneven or slippery so as, in each case, to expose any person to a risk to his health or safety; and.
Hope this is of some help.
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Rank: Super forum user
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This might be difficult to argue but presumably your friend drove a few miles across a white landscape to get to the petrol station and might reasonably expect the snow to have fallen there too. We had a similar complaint from an employee who drove 15 miles then complained of snow in our carpark. I guess the insurances will pay up without recourse to H&S legislation.
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Rank: Super forum user
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In the scenario described, I suggest that the Workplace Regs don't apply to your friend (as it was not his workplace). However, a common law duty of care is owed and the Occupiers Liability Act also applies, although the fact that they apply doesn't necessarily mean that the petrol station were at fault, depending on the circumstances i.e. if your friend was not driving in a manner appropriate to the conditions then I suggest they are not likely to be found at fault, although a court may decide otherwise.
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Rank: Super forum user
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The petrol station does have a duty of care under the previously mentioned OLA and possibly common law negligence, hence reasonable steps should be taken to ensure it is safe for customers. The DoC is not in question, however, to what extent the petrol station should be free from hazards, such as precipitation, is a matter of conjecture.
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Rank: Super forum user
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I would suggest your friend is lucky he is not being sued by the garage owner for the damage he did to the pumps. The weather was snowy and the roads were slippery, this requires the driver of any vvehicle to take extra care not steam into a filling station and expect the same level of braking etc as in the middle of August. As has already been pointed out the Workplace Regs would not apply to forecourts as the reg were written to cover workplaces. The regs state 'Workplace means, subject to para two, ant premises or part of premises which are not domestic premises and are made available any person as a workplace' The forecourt is not provided as a workplace but a place where someone buys fuel. The regs go on to talk about the premises the term when at work, buying petrol is hardly part of work unless you need to buy some whilst at work!
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Rank: Forum user
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Gregory40320 wrote:Hi all. A friend skidded on snow/ice on a petrol forecourt and hit the fuel pumps. Does the petrol station have a duty of care to keep their forecourt safe for drivers or is it the drivers fault?
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Rank: Forum user
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Thanks all for responses.
I was sure the workplace regs didn't apply, but wondered about Occupiers L A. Section 2(2)?
Bob - the person was travelling no more than 20mph, so was the following vehicle that smashed into two other vehicles -cctv footage showed both vehicles appeared to be travelling at a reasonable speed for the conditions, but losing control on the same stretch of forecourt. Police didn't see anything wrong with the speed of vehicles. Both vehicles were rear wheel drive if that has any implications? The garage manager had told attendants not to grit forecourt in case of litigation!!
Thanks again for replies everyone.
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Rank: Super forum user
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I would state that the driver is at fault - even with the attempt by the garage to make the area safe. He messed up!
Come on - conditions change by the minute.
The driver has the duty of care to drive to the conditions and not injure / damage anyone / anything. He did so guilty mi lord.
How coud the girls sitting at the tills have control, of the forecourt?
David
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Rank: Super forum user
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I think the above posting is being a bit too presumptuous and harsh. It is true a road user has a DoC to another road user, but accidents are inevitable and that is why there is vehicle insurance. Who is at fault in this scenario will depend on the circumstances. In the case of negligence (DoC) it must be reasonably foreseeable that harm will occur and there must be a proximity between the two parties. I suggest on the evidence that both tests could apply, but ultimately is up to the court to decide negligence or not.
'The garage manager had told attendants not to grit forecourt in case of litigation!!' In that case the garage deserves everything they get!
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Rank: Super forum user
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WHSW do apply; as a petrol station is a workplace for the staff working at that location and for those people officially servicing the petrol station e.g. Delivery drivers, maintainers etc and many people are at work whilst they are filling up at a petrol station e.g. Sales staff on their way to/from a sales meeting before setting off for home - refuse trucks filling up where their companies ahve contracts with certain suppliers - the list goes on and on!
However reasonably practicable must be considered here and I agree that the driver is lucky if they do not get sued
Additionally its usually cheaper not to grit etc and chance a claim as many are now doing, because few claims are now getting past the common sense phase with the 'Claims Are Us' types because judges appear to have got their sensible heads back on
There are cases [sports centres are examples] where community minded businesses have gritted only to lose in court because they gritted improperly! -They are saying " 'why bother' we will risk a claim and fight it thereafter"
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Rank: Super forum user
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I hope my post at #4 didn’t cause the confusion about whether the Workplace Regs apply to petrol station or not? Of course the Workplace regs apply to a petrol station, it IS a workplace.
However, I believe that the essence of the original post revolved around the civil liabilities of the driver and/or occupier. In that respect, I don’t think that the customer would have been able to make a claim for breach of a duty under the Workplace regs, because I don’t think he was owed a duty under them (happy to be wrong) Hence my suggestion, that if anything, either the CLDOC or a duty under OLA was more applicable.
I thought it was interesting if not revealing, how the duty of care and blame (liability?) were ’thrown together’ in the original post.
Hope that makes more sense?
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Rank: Super forum user
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ACT OF GOD. This phrase denotes those accidents which arise from physical causes, and which cannot be prevented.
2. Where the law casts a duty on a party, the performance shall be excused, if it be rendered impossible by the act of God; but where the party, by his own contract, engages to do an act, it is deemed to be his own fault and folly that he did not thereby provide against contingencies, and exempt himself from responsibilities in certain events and in such case.
Get out of jail free card, for insurance companies
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Rank: Guest
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I would say an act of god could be considered as a tsunami or a hurricane. Thus mentioned are difficult to react to and control and could therefore cause ',misjudgements or accidents' which a petrol garage would have no control over.
Personally I feel the garage could have done more to prevent the accidentn (given the facts) especially considering the high explosive atmosphere within a forecourt.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Came around a left hand bend on a minor road, slipped on the icy road and damaged a parked car and own, fully comp insurance, was informed ice is due to weather and not controllable there for not covered, clause being act of god.
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Rank: Forum user
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Notwithstanding that the garage could have done more to prevent the build up of a slippery surface where vehicles are EXPECTED to go, the drivers must accept some responsibility. With modern cars and the myriad of safety features engineered into them as standard, the physics are often forgotten. Given the that the majority of drivers will underestaimate their actual speed to begin with, we'll use the asseted example of 20mph.
I would suggest 20mph is way too fast to be approaching an area where pedestrians and cars are moving slowly, particulalry in sub-zero temperatures. factor in that the stopping distance at 20mph (including reaction time) is 43.6 ft (13.3 m), the drivers should have been slowing well before entering the garage forecourt as this is for dry conditions.
If their speed was lower then the damage may have been reduced or even avoided. However, hindsight is a wonderful thing and as in all accidents a combination of factors led to the accident(s). Speed, lack of surface treating, type and condition of vehicle, driver skill and alertness, luck etc etc.
Ultimately it is for the insurers and /or courts to decide, but there - is in my view - contributory negligence on the drivers' part
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Rank: Super forum user
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Stevel, fight your insurers very hard and find a new one at renewal. Take recommendations from friends etc on claims performance and take that into account, not only price.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Ok Since everyone is having a go here’s my tuppence worth:
1. WHSW regs apply but only for employee, so in this case it’s not relevant
2. The occupier of the garage has a duty of care to all visitors to his premises
3. The “girls” in the tills can only do what they can do but the duty is not with them but with the company.
4. The company would be expected to do what is reasonable to prevent the accident
5. Definition of reasonable is a bit nebulous but taking into account certain cases; there was one I recall where a florists at Waterloo station was sued for failing to ensure that the area in front of its shop was clear of drips and petals, I would guess that in this case that the garage operator had failed to do everything reasonable especially if as you said the manager decided NOT to grit the forecourt.
6. Any bad driving on the part of the driver should be taken into account.
7. This is one of those cases for the lawyers to hammer out, and to be honest it’s a bit of a lottery but that’s the system we have and I can’t really see any alternative.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Can't see the lawyers being bothered by this, one for the insurers to sort.
Whilst not all that relevant, I would suggest that the entire Petrol Filling Station is a workplace, where the undertaking is retail sale of fuel. The general duty to "others" arising from that undertaking is an obvious one.
Other H&S and related risk issues include:
Modern PFS have dispensers mounted on substantial high-kerb islands -there to stop collision with the pumps themselves. A build-up of snow and ice would tend to negate that safety feature.
Operators of Petrol Filling Stations have obligations to mitigate risk and comply with environmental legislation. This means keeping all drainage and gulleys leading back to petrol interceptors free-running to allow any accidental spillage to be captured. A further incentive to keep the surface free of compacted snow and ice - particularly in the tanker off-loading area!
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Rank: Forum user
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The garage is there to provide a service and sell petrol to customers much the same as a supermarket sells food to customers. Supermarkets are generally fastidious about ensuring a slip free environment for staff / customers - why shouldn't a petrol station act in a similar fashion?
Given the relatively small area a forecourt covers (usually under cover) I would think that it would be reasonably practicable to grit the area.
FH
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Rank: Forum user
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A Kurdziel has got it wrong when he states that the"Girls on the till do what they can do"
Each retailer has a duty to ensure that his staff are competent, this includes the safety of subcontractors and the public. Unforunately many of the major oil companies operating in the UK generally use transient staff and have a high turnover of staff, therefore training is provided begrudgingly.
The company who I am employed by maintains the forecourts, and we have been informed many times not to grit the work area incase of liability. This is something we strongly disagree with and we end up working safely after making the work area safe.
With regards to driving safely on forecourts - you will find that every maintenance contractor operating on petrol retail forecourts will list the General public as the largest causation factor of all near miss and potential instances. generally through ignorance or impatience. I think that the icy conditions and confined areas on a forecourt would lead to more conservative driving, once again this is not the case and we witness erratic driving in all conditions - you can't blame the operator of the site for these instances; well not unless you want to jump on the litigation bandwagon where the £ signs light up before common sense.
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Rank: Forum user
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It was winter, It was outdoors, there was snow all around, roads and other areas WILL be covered in ice. I'm amazed so many in H&S actulally think this driver was not responsible for his own actions, and we wonder why the profession gets such bad publicity.
Winter last year a collegue of mine recieved complaints from staff regarding the car park being covered in ice. His reponse was similar to one of the early comments on here. You've just driven 15 miles or more, much of it on un-gritted roads, why do you expect the car park to be so different? Their response "it's the law" His response "Fine, I'll close the car park, we have no obligation to provide parking and it's up to you ho you get to work".
Why is it we are always looking for someone else to blame? I'm off now for a quiet sit down in a dark room.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Have I missed something?
People are discussing duty of care and what the garage could have done but no one seams to have established what the garage HAD done!
I almost had a similar experience yesterday it started raining up here in Yorkshire at about 7:30 the rain falling onto cold ground. As I started to pull up to the pumps my car went straight on. Fortunately I was doing much less than 20 MPH as I had felt my tyres slip a few times on the way to the garage. When I got home my own path was equally slippery as the rain had frozen over my own salt. 20 minutes latter my path was fine as the salt had worked. Don't know what the garage had done.
The fact of the matter is salt is not some magic element it takes time to work. In some weather conditions an Ice film forms over the salt before it can work. Reasonably practicable for employers to do anything more if they have salted - the ground may still be slippery.
Sorry for that rambling reply but sometimes we have to take responsibility for our own actions.
Brian
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Rank: Super forum user
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@ previous two posts
Quote: The garage manager had told attendants not to grit forecourt in case of litigation!!
I think this was the line that changed opinions, after the fuss about litigation last year the government even issues this advice
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Nl1/Newsroom/DG_191868
I think failing to act is much worse than trying, it would appear (from information given) that the garage didn't try.... Just in case. Surely that is not what the reasonable man would do?
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Rank: Super forum user
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To put this in simpler terms, if it was on the public highway the driver could be facing a charge of driving without due care and attention. A driver should drive within the conditions that prevail at the time. He was driving at 20MPH in close proximity to an obstruction, going to fast and was unable to control his vehicle, end of the news.
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Rank: Super forum user
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teh boy
Thanks for that - I had missed that statement within the other emails - if they have done nothing then I don't think this garage had done all that is reasonably practicable.
Brian
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Rank: Super forum user
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'It was winter, It was outdoors, there was snow all around, roads and other areas WILL be covered in ice. I'm amazed so many in H&S actulally think this driver was not responsible for his own actions, and we wonder why the profession gets such bad publicity.'
Because the full facts are not known there are certain presumptions being made here. Approaching a petrol garage forecourt at 20mph may or may not be too fast. It could also be that the road was relatively clear of snow and ice but the forecourt was not, hence catching the driver off guard. Off course people should be responsible for their own actions. Equally those managing petrol stations and alike should do what is reasonable and it appears that no effort was made to clear and grit the forecourt of precipitation.
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