Case law

  • Case Details
    • National ID: 111/05
    • Member State: Ireland
    • Common Name:Scaife v Falcon Leisure Group
    • Decision type: Other
    • Decision date: 04/12/2007
    • Court: Supreme Court
    • Subject:
    • Plaintiff:
    • Defendant:
    • Keywords:
  • Directive Articles
    Package Travel Directive, Article 5, 1. Package Travel Directive, Article 5, 2.
  • Headnote
    The plaintiff/respondent entered into an agreement with the defendant/appellant, who is a provider of, inter alia, package holidays under which the defendant/appellant agreed, in consideration of the payment of an appropriate sum, to supply to the plaintiff/respondent, a package holiday, including flights and hotel accommodation (comprising half board, that is breakfasts and evening meals) in Spain.
    On the 21st May 1998 during the course of an evening meal, the plaintiff was injured when she fell on liquid foodstuff which had fallen on the floor behind a pillar in circumstances where, it was found by the High Court, she could not have seen the spillage and had no warning of its existence until she fell in it. She suffered physical injuries as a result, and these are not disputed by the defendant. The Defendant did not go into evidence, relying instead on legal submissions as to liability.
    Held: in dismissing the appeal and affirming the High Court Order, that the defendant/appellant was liable for the wrongful acts of the hotel owner, being the latter’s improper performance of one of the obligations under the package holiday agreement and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the defendant, damages in respect of the injuries sustained by her, by virtue of section 20 of the Package Holidays and Travel Trade Act of 1995.
    La demanderesse/intimée a conclu un contrat avec le défendeur/appelant, dont l’activité est notamment la fourniture de vacances à forfait. En vertu de ce contrat, le défendeur/appelant a accepté, contre paiement d’une somme raisonnable, de fournir à la demanderesse/intimée des vacances à forfait, incluant les vols et les nuits d’hôtel (comprenant la demi-pension, c’est-à-dire petits-déjeuners et dîners) en Espagne. Le 21 mai 1998, au cours d’un dîner, la demanderesse a été blessée en tombant sur un liquide répandu sur le sol. Ce liquide était répandu derrière un pilier, de telle manière que, comme la High Court a pu le considérer, la demanderesse ne pouvait pas la voir et n’avait pas été avertie de sa présence avant sa chute. En conséquence de cette chute, la demanderesse a subi des dommages corporels, ce qui n’est pas discuté par le défendeur. Le défendeur n’a pas accepté les éléments de faits et s’est fondé sur des arguments de droit pour que soit établie la responsabilité. Décidé: en rejetant l’appel et en confirmant l’ordonnance de la High Court, que le défendeur/appelant était responsable des actes fautifs commis par le propriétaire de l’hôtel, lesquels actes fautifs consistant en la mauvaise exécution de l’une des obligations prévues au contrat de vacances à forfait et que la demanderesse était fondée à recouvrir des dommages et intérêts de la part du défendeur en réparation des dommages subis par elle, en vertu de la section 20 de la Loi sur les vacances à forfait et le commerce du voyage de 1995.
  • Facts
    This was an appeal from a judgment and Order of the High Court of the 23rd February 2005 by which the High Court found in favour of the plaintiff/respondent against the defendant/appellant in respect of personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff/respondent in the course of a holiday in Spain contracted for with the defendant/appellant in the State.
    The plaintiff/respondent entered into an agreement with the defendant/appellant, a company registered in the United Kingdom and having a place of business in the State, and who is a provider of, inter alia, package holidays. The agreement in writing was made through a travelling companion of the plaintiff on 29th January 1998. By the terms of the agreement, the defendant agreed, in consideration of the payment of an appropriate sum, to supply to the plaintiff/respondent and others in a small group travelling with her, a package holiday, including flights and hotel accommodation (comprising half board, that is breakfasts and evening meals) at Cambrils Princess Hotel in Salou, Spain.
    On the 21st May 1998 during the course of an evening meal, taken towards the end of the serving period, the plaintiff was injured. The injury occurred when the plaintiff, while walking past a pillar on her way to the buffet table to serve herself, fell on liquid foodstuff which had fallen on the floor behind a pillar in circumstances where, it was found by the High Court, she could not have seen the spillage and had no warning of its existence until she fell in it. She suffered physical injuries as a result, and these are not disputed by the defendant. The Defendant did not go into evidence, relying instead on legal submissions as to liability.
  • Legal issue
  • Decision

    Having set out the relevant legislative context, including the Preamble to, and section 20 of, the Package Holidays and Travel Trade Act of 1995, which faithfully transposes Article 5 of Council Directive 90/314/ EEC on package travel, package holidays and package tours, Mackin J found that on a plain reading of section 20, when contractual obligations are assumed by an organiser as part of a package holiday contract entered into with a consumer, those obligations to the consumer remain the organiser’s obligations, and do not become the independent obligations of the service supplier, to the consumer.

    Mackin J then considered the Irish and United Kingdom caselaw on the appropriate test or standard to be applied. Based on case law, Mackin J concluded that both before and after the coming into force of the Directive and its transposition in national law, the established principle is that the organiser is not an insurer to the customer. The case law also established the principle that the test is not one of strict liability. The final principle clearly established by the caselaw is that the standard by which the acts in question are to be judged is that of reasonable skill and care, which standard, if not expressed in a contract will be readily implied into it.

    The final question was whether the plaintiff had established that there was a failure to perform an obligation under the contract on the part of the hotel proprietor in Spain by reference to the test of reasonable skill and care. With reference to the evidence, Mackin J found that the learned trial judge had before him evidence that the accident was a wholly foreseeable event on the part of the service supplier, the hotel in Spain, that they had in place a system which could have warned of the hazard and/or prevented the accident, but had not operated that system on the evening in question. Mackin J found that, in the circumstances, the learned High Court judge was entitled to find that the service in question was not supplied with reasonable skill and care.

    Therefore, Mackin J dismissed the appeal and affirmed the order of the High Court.

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