ShinyShoe
Well-Known Member
What are you asking them to disclaim? Liability if they trip and break an ankle on the pontoon? Or liability because the lifejacket you supplied has been at the bottom of a locker for 5 years, hasn't been tested and probably doesn't work?I'll just get all my visiting mates to sign a disclaimer!
The first - they would have struggled to be your fault (see the reference to the "Ordinary Man on the Clapham Omnibus" - a legal test of what is reasonable behaviour). I'd expect a half decent defence lawyer to be saying to a judge or jury - look here are 20 photos of pontoons. They all clearly have trip hazards. This one is no different. They didn't need a sign to say "trip hazard" they are obvious, they didn't need a sign to say "slippy surface" its near the sea what would the man on the Clapham Omnibus expect. The disclaimer need never be waved
The second I'd expect a decent lawyer for the claimant to be saying no man on the Omnibus would sign away his rights to be owed a common sense duty of care like being provided a lifejacket that can be expected to work. You can't disclaim all liability...
I think the examples to OP posted are not about asking someone to jump off. They are about equipment failure. Would a court feel you had a duty of care to have working life jackets on board a yacht for everyone carried... I suspect so. If you were moving from pontoon A to pontoon B and said "Jim can you give me hand" and then when he came aboard said "Oh no - I've left the lifejackets at home - and Jim says - I can swim I'll be fine..." I think you have a defence that he was aware of the risks and was happy to continue. If you are moving from Plymouth to Portsmouth - I don't think you can defend making the journey. I may be wrong.The argument it usually about duty of care and whether that has been breached. Normally it is difficult to show duty of care in social situations such as mates sailing with you unless you specifically ask somebody to do something that goes wrong - the jumping off the boat being a good example. It changes if there is a professional relationship such as under instruction where the instructor owes a duty of care.
So returning to the OP's examples. He provides a life jacket but it fails. The test will be did he did the duty of care include ensuring the life jacket was functional. The jury will decide (and every jury is different). But I'd fully expect guidance on Sea Safety Checks etc to be brought into court. A "reasonably competent" skipper would presumably check his life jackets at least annually with an inflation test and check cylinders more often. If you've done that... it is hard to see there would be liability if there is it doesn't sound reckless.That is not the view of the courts. A deliberate act is recklessness, not negligence, and is specifically excluded by my insurance policy. To successfully sue for the tort of negligence you need to establish 3 things, on the balance of probabilty.
1. That a duty of care was owed. This is a very broad concept and is often cited as a duty owing to a neighbour, famously defined by Lord Denning as the man on the Clapham omnibus, i.e. anyone you come into contact with.
2. That a loss was incurred.
3. That a reasonably competent person, in this case the skipper, would not have caused the loss.
On the other hand. If the OP went out last week with a different friend who lent against the guard wire, it snapped and he fell in. The friend is fished out and says "The life jacket didn't inflate. I had to blow it up by mouth". In the following week the skipper 'repairs' the guard wire with some 3mm cord he has lying in a locker. He washes off the lifejacket and gives it a quick examine and says "Oh the cylinder was loose and tightens it, then folds it all up and puts it away" and then his fresh mate joins him this weekend and is issued same lifejacket. Asked to sign a disclaimer or not - if he goes out falls against the 3mm cord which snaps because it only had a breaking strain of 800N and the fall was an 80kg guy hitting it. He then falls in the water and surprise surprise the life jacket fails and he drowns...
There would certainly be a discussion of "recklessness" to be considered. But even if your insurer was prepared to cover the financial costs - can you convince me that there wouldn't be a case for manslaughter gross negligence?
There does seem to be more of an appetite for this sort of charge recently. The guy doing the Shoreham Air Show for instance...
If the test is "reasonably competent person" it doesn't matter in terms of the test.Not an expert but I think there is a difference between the man on the clapam omnibus and the man driving the clapam omnibus.
Certificate or not you are in charge of a boat you have a duty of care to anyone who comes with you.
BUT the punishment may be higher... ...you see it in driving cases... professional drivers get punished harder. Plus loose future job prospects.
I may be wrong - but I think a Jury is likely to frown on things that are seen to be "cost saving" more than things that are poor skill. So you provide a 15 year old lifejacket from the bottom of the locker you are stuffed. You misjudge a manouvre and jibe - you might be OK. Put yourself in the Jury's shoes: you can assume all Yachty types have money! So in your shoes they have money and they'd buy new lifejackets. But they couldn't have sailed any better than you.
If you have insurance - my worry would not be "liability" in terms of ££££. It would be liability in terms of criminal prosecution - that can not be insured against if it has a prison sentence...