Alcock v. Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police

Alcock v. Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police

"Alcock v. Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police" [1992] 1 AC 310 is a leading English tort law case on liability for nervous shock (psychiatric injury).

Facts

The claims were brought by Alcock and several other claimants after the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, where 96 Liverpool fans died in a massive crush during the FA Cup Semi Final at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield. The accident was admittedly caused by the police negligently allowing too many supporters to crowd in one part of the stadium. Many saw their friends and relatives die in the crush and suffered psychiatric harm or nervous shock after the incident.

Judgment

The plaintiffs in this case were mostly secondary victims, i.e. they were not "directly affected" as opposed to the primary victims who were either injured or were in danger of immediate injury. The Judicial Committee of the House of Lords, consisting of Lord Keith of Kinkel, Lord Ackner, Lord Oliver of Aylmerton, Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle, and Lord Lowry has established a number of "control mechanisms" or conditions that had to be fulfilled in order for a duty of care to be found in such cases.

*The claimant who is a "secondary victim" must perceive a "shocking event" with his own unaided senses, as an eye-witness to the event, or hearing the event in person, or viewing its "immediate aftermath". This requires close physical proximity to the event, and would usually exclude events witnessed by television or informed of by a third party, as was the case with some of the plaintiffs in "Alcock".
*The shock must be a "sudden" and not a "gradual" assault on the claimant's nervous system. So a claimant who develops a depression from living with a relative debilitated by the accident will not be able to recover damages.
*If the nervous shock is caused by witnessing the death or injury or another person the claimant must show a "sufficiently proximate" relationship to that person, usually described as a "close tie of love and affection". Such ties are presumed to exist only between parents and children, as well as spouses and fiancés. Inother relations, including siblings, ties of love and affection must be proved.
* It must be reasonably foreseeable that a person of "normal fortitude" in the claimant’s position would suffer psychiatric damage. The closer the tie between the claimant and the victim, the more likely it is that he would succeed in this element. However, once it is shown that some psychiatric damage was foreseeable, it does not matter that the claimant was particularly susceptible to psychiatric illness - the defendant must "take his victim as he finds him" and pay for all the consequences of nervous shock (see "Eggshell skull" rule).

Impact of the decision

The impact of this on the area of law once described as a '"patchwork quilt of distinctions which are quite difficult to justify" [See Lord Steyn in "Frost v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police" [1999] 2 AC 455] is significant because the decision made by the Law Lords was heavily influenced by the greater social concern of allowing a flood of claims with which the judicial system would not be able to cope (the "floodgates argument"). The decision has been criticised as being excessively harsh on the claimants, as well as not fully corresponding with medical knowledge regarding psychiatric illness brough about by nervous shock. [See the Law Commission Report [http://www.lawcom.gov.uk/docs/lc249(1).pdf "Liability for Psychiatric Illness"] , Part III] Although reform has been widely advocated and a legislative proposal to mitigate some of the effects of "Alcock" was drafted by the Parliamentary Law Commission in 1998, the decision in "Alcock" represents the state of the law in the area of liability for psychiatric harm as it currently stands.

ee also

*Nervous shock (English Law)

Notes


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