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''Chadwick v. British Railways Board''
967 Year 967 ( CMLXVII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Europe * Spring – Emperor Otto I (the Great) calls for a council at Rome, to present the ne ...
2 All ER 945 was an English High Court (
Queen's Bench Division The King's Bench Division (or Queen's Bench Division when the monarch is female) of the High Court of Justice deals with a wide range of common law cases and has supervisory responsibility over certain lower courts. It hears appeals on point ...
) judgement, dealing with the possibility of recovering psychiatric harm suffered by helpers who have witnessed and assisted at an accident. The Court ruled that such helpers, as "primary victims" of the accident, could recover the damage caused by nervous shock in the same way as personal injury, unlike "secondary victims", who have merely witnessed the accident without being directly involved in it.The terminology of "primary" and "secondary" victim was introduced in a later Court of Appeal case of '' Page v. Smith''


Facts

The plaintiff, Henry Chadwick (Ellen Chadwick suing as administratrix of the estate of her late husband Henry Chadwick who had died in 1962) was described as a cheerful man who was very active in his local community and ran a successful window cleaning business. Though he had suffered in 1941 with psycho-neurotic symptoms, in following years he suffered no such symptoms. Chadwick and his wife lived 200 yards from the site of the
Lewisham rail crash On the evening of 4 December 1957, two trains crashed in dense fog on the South Eastern Main Line near Lewisham in south-east London, causing the deaths of 90 people and injuring 173. An electric train to had stopped at a signal under the bri ...
and upon hearing of the incident Chadwick went immediately to the site to assist and remained there until 6am the following day. Due to his small stature Chadwick was able to climb inside the wreckage to assist those who were trapped or injured inside. A key witness to this incident referred to only as Mrs Taylor who was trapped inside of the wreckage described the scene as a "sea of bodies", though she also described Chadwick as being "a most courageous man, very cheerful and encouraging, who allayed the fears of those around". Having assisted at a site of the
Lewisham rail crash On the evening of 4 December 1957, two trains crashed in dense fog on the South Eastern Main Line near Lewisham in south-east London, causing the deaths of 90 people and injuring 173. An electric train to had stopped at a signal under the bri ...
, Chadwick had become ill with anxiety disorder and required hospital treatment. He was no longer able to work and no longer took any interest or pleasure in activities which he had once been highly involved. He died in 1962 for causes unrelated to the accident. His personal representatives had sued the
British Railways Board British may refer to: Peoples, culture, and language * British people, nationals or natives of the United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories, and Crown Dependencies. ** Britishness, the British identity and common culture * British English, ...
, which had negligently caused the accident.


Judgment

The Court found in favour of the plaintiff for the following reasons: #It was reasonably foreseeable in the event of such an accident as had occurred that someone other than defendants’ servants might try to rescue passengers and might suffer injury in the process; accordingly defendants owed a duty of care towards Mr Chadwick. #Injury by shock to a rescuer, physically unhurt, was reasonably foreseeable, and the fact that the risk run by a rescuer was not exactly the same as that run by a passenger did not deprive the rescuer of his remedy. #Damages were recoverable for injury by shock notwithstanding that the shock was not caused by the injured person's fear for his own safety or for the safety of his children; #As a man who had lived a normal busy life in the community with no mental illness for 16 years, there was nothing in Mr Chadwick's personality to put him outside the ambit of defendants’ contemplation so as to render the damage suffered by him too remote.


See also

*
Nervous shock (English Law) In English law, a nervous shock is a psychiatry, psychiatric / mental illness or injury inflicted upon a person by intentional or negligence, negligent actions or omissions of another. Often it is a psychiatric disorder triggered by witnessing an ...
*
White v Chief Constable of the South Yorkshire Police ''White v Chief Constable of the South Yorkshire Police'' was a 1998 case in English tort law in which police officers who were present in the aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster sued for post traumatic stress disorder. The claim was rejected by ...
*''
Page v Smith is a decision of the House of Lords. It is part of the common law of England and Wales. The case concerns foreseeability of psychiatric damage and creates an important distinction between primary and secondary victims in the English law of neg ...
''


References


External links

* Text of judgemen
a-level-law.com
{{DEFAULTSORT:Chadwick V British Railways Board English tort case law English psychiatric injury case law High Court of Justice cases 1967 in United Kingdom case law Railway litigation in 1967