In the common law of torts, res ipsa loquitur (Latin for
"the thing speaks for itself") is a doctrine that infers negligence
from the very nature of an accident or injury, in the absence of direct
evidence on how any defendant behaved. Although modern formulations differ
by jurisdiction, common law originally stated that the accident must
satisfy the necessary elements of negligence, which are duty, breach of duty, causation, and injury. In res
ipsa loquitur, the elements of duty of care, breach, and causation are inferred from an injury
that does not ordinarily occur without negligence.
History
Latin phrase
The term comes from Latin and is literally translated "the thing
itself speaks", but the sense is well conveyed in the more common
translation, "the thing speaks for itself." The earliest known use of
the phrase was by Cicero in his defence speech Pro Milone. The circumstances of the genesis of the
phrase and application by Cicero in Roman legal trials has led to questions
whether it reflects on the quality of res ipsa loquitur as a legal
doctrine subsequent 52 BC, some 1,915 years before Byrne v Boadle, as well as the question whether Chief Baron
Pollock might have taken direct inspiration from Cicero's application of the
maxim in writing his judgment in that case.
Leading case
Elements of res ipsa loquitur
- The injury is of the kind that does not ordinarily occur without negligence.
- The injury is caused by an agency or instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendant.
- The injury-causing accident is not due to any voluntary action or contribution on the part of the plaintiff.
- Defendant’s non-negligent explanation does not completely explain plaintiff’s injury.
The first element may be satisfied in one of
three ways:
(a) The injury itself is sufficient to prove
blatant or "palpable" negligence as a matter of law. e.g. amputation
of the wrong limb, leaving instruments inside body after surgery.
(b) The general experience and observation of
mankind is sufficient to support the conclusion that the injury would not have resulted
without negligence. e.g. A hysterectomy (removal of the uterus) was performed
when the patient consented only to a tubal ligation (clipping of the fallopian
tubes for purposes of sterilization).
(c) Expert testimony creates an inference
that negligence caused the injury. e.g. An expert general surgeon testifies
that he has performed over one thousand appendectomies (removal of the
appendix) and has never caused injury to a patient's liver. He also does not
know of any of his surgeon colleagues having inflicted injury to a patient's
liver during an appendectomy. This testimony would create an inference that
injuring the liver in the course of an appendectomy is negligence.
The second element is discussed further in
the section below. The third element requires the absence of contributory
negligence from the plaintiff. The fourth element emphasizes that defendant may
defeat a res ipsa loquitur claim by producing evidence of a non-negligent
scenario that would completely explain plaintiff's injury and negate all
possible inferences that negligence could have occurred.
The exclusive control requirement
The common law traditionally required that
"the instrumentality or agent which caused the accident was under the
exclusive control of the defendant." See e.g., Eaton v. Eaton, 575 A2d 858
(NJ 1990). However, the Second and Third versions of the Restatement of Torts
eliminated this strict requirement, because it can be difficult to prove
"exclusive control." Accordingly, this element has largely given way
in modern cases to a less rigid formulation: that the evidence eliminates, to a
sufficient degree, other responsible causes (including the conduct of the
plaintiff and third
parties). For example, in New York
State, the defendant's exclusivity of control must be such that the likelihood
of injury was, more likely than not, the result of the defendant's negligence.
The likelihood of other possibilities do not need to be eliminated altogether
but they must be so reduced that the greater probability lies with the
defendant.
For a fictitious example of the exclusive
control rule:
- John Doe is injured when an elevator he has entered plunges several floors and stops abruptly.
- Jane's Corporation built, and is responsible for maintaining, the elevator.
- Doe sues Jane, and during the proceedings, Jane claims that Doe's complaint should be dismissed because he has never proved, or for that matter even offered, a theory as to why the elevator functioned incorrectly. Therefore, argues Jane, there is no evidence that they were at fault.
- The court holds that Doe does not have to prove anything beyond the fall itself.
- The elevator evidently malfunctioned (it was not intended to fall nor is that a proper function of a correctly functioning elevator).
- Jane was responsible for the elevator in every respect
- So Jane's Corporation is responsible for the fall.
- The thing speaks for itself: no further explanation is needed to establish the prima facie case.
In some cases a closed group of people may be
held in breach of a duty of care under the rule of res ipsa loquitur. In
Ybarra v.
Spangard, a patient undergoing surgery experienced back
complications as a result of the surgery, but it could not be determined
exactly which member of the surgical team had breached his or her duty, and so
it was held that they had all breached, because it was certain that at least
one of them was the only person who was in exclusive control of the
instrumentality of harm.
In jurisdictions that employ this less rigid
formulation of exclusive control, this element subsumes the element that the
plaintiff did not contribute to his injury. In modern case law, contributory
negligence is compared
to the injury caused by the other. For example, if the negligence of the other
is 95% of the cause of the plaintiff's injury, and the plaintiff is 5%
responsible, then the plaintiff's slight fault cannot negate the negligence of
the other. This new type of split liability is commonly called comparative
negligence.
Typical in medical malpractice
Res ipsa loquitur often arises in the "scalpel left behind" variety of case. For example, a person goes to
a doctor with abdominal pains after having his appendix removed. X-rays show
the patient has a metal object the size and shape of a scalpel in his abdomen.
It requires no further explanation to show the surgeon who removed the appendix
was negligent, as there is no legitimate reason for a doctor to leave a scalpel
in a body at the end of an appendectomy.
Contrast to prima facie
Res ipsa loquitur is often confused with prima facie ("at first sight"), the common law
doctrine that a party must show some minimum amount of evidence before a trial
is worthwhile.
The difference between the two is that prima
facie is a term meaning there is enough evidence for there to be a case to
answer. Res ipsa loquitur means that because the facts are so obvious, a
party need not explain any more. For example: "There is a prima facie
case that the defendant is liable. They controlled the pump. The pump was left
on and flooded the plaintiff's house. The plaintiff was away and had left
the house in the control of the defendant. Res ipsa loquitur."
Examples by jurisdictions
Canada
In Canada the doctrine of res ipsa
loquitur has been largely overturned by the Supreme
Court. In case of Fontaine v.
British Columbia (Official Administrator) the Court rejected the use of res
ipsa loquitur and instead proposed the rule that once the plaintiff has
proven that the harm was under exclusive control of the defendant and that they
were not contributorily negligent a tactical
burden is placed on the defendant in
which the judge has the discretion to infer negligence unless the defendant can
produce evidence to the contrary.
Hong Kong
Hong Kong is one of the common law
jurisdictions that use the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.
Some lawyers prefer to avoid the expression res
ipsa loquitur (for example, Hobhouse LJ in Radcliff v. Plymouth). But other lawyers (and judges too) still find
the expression a convenient one (for example, see the judgement of Mr Justice Bokhary, a Permanent Judge of the Court of
Final Appeal of Hong Kong, in Sanfield
Building Contractors Ltd v. Li Kai Cheong).
The expression res ipsa loquitur is
not a doctrine but a “mode of inferential reasoning” and applies only to
accidents of unknown cause. Res ipsa loquitur comes into play
where an accident of unknown cause is one that would not normally happen
without negligence on the part of the defendant in control of the object or activity which injured the plaintiff or damaged his property. In such a situation the court is able to
infer negligence on the defendant's part unless he offers an acceptable explanation consistent with
his having taken reasonable
care.
South Africa
In South African law (which is modelled on Roman Dutch Law),
there is no doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, although the phrase is used
regularly to mean the "facts speak for themselves." Res ipsa
loquitur does not shift any burden of proof or onus from one party to the
other. The phrase is merely a handy phrase used by lawyers.
United Kingdom
England and Wales
In English tort law, the effect of res ipsa loquitur is a
strong inference in favour of the claimant that negligence has taken place. It
does not however fully reverse the burden of
proof (Ng Chun Pui v. Li Chuen Tat,
1988).
The requirement of control is important in
English law. This requirement was not satisfied in Easson v. LNE Ry
[1944] 2 KB 421, where a small child fell off a train several miles after it
had left the station. It was considered that the door of the train was not
sufficiently under control of the railway company after the train started
moving and could have been opened by somebody for whom the company was not
responsible. This case was distinguished from the earlier Gee v. Metropolitan
Ry where the plaintiff fell from the train immediately after it left the
station, when the door through which he fell could still be considered to be
fully controlled by the railway company.
The requirement that the exact cause of the
accident must be unknown is illustrated by the case of Barkway v. South
Wales Transport. In this case a bus veered across the road
and it was known that the accident was caused by a flat tire. In this case, the
plaintiff could not be assisted by res ipsa loquitur and had to go on to
prove that the flat tire was caused by the transport company's negligence.
Scotland
The doctrine exists in the Scots law of delict.
The leading case is that of Scott v London & Catherine Dock Co. This case laid down 3 requirements for the doctrine to apply:
- There must be reasonable evidence of negligence
- The circumstances must be under the direct control of the defender or his servants
- The accident must be of such a type that would not occur without negligence.
In Scott, the court held that sacks of
sugar do not fall out of warehouses and crush passers-by without somebody having
been negligent along the way.
Recent examples in Scotland are McDyer v
Celtic Football Club and McQueen v The Glasgow Garden Festival 1988 Ltd.
United States
Under United States common law, res ipsa
loquitur has the following requirements:
- The event doesn't normally occur unless someone has acted negligently;
- The evidence rules out the possibility that the actions of the plaintiff or a third party caused the injury; and
- The type of negligence in question falls with the scope of the defendant's duty to the plaintiff.
Most American courts recognize res ipsa
loquitur. The Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 328D describes a two
step process for establishing res ipsa loquitur. The first step is
whether the accident is the kind usually be caused by negligence, and the
second is whether or not the defendant had exclusive control over the instrumentality
that caused the accident. If found, res ipsa loquitur creates an
inference of negligence, although in most cases it does not necessarily result
in a directed verdict. The Restatement (Third) of Torts, § 17, adopts a similar
test, although it eschews the 'exclusive control' element.
The doctrine was not initially welcome in
medical malpractice cases. In Gray v. Wright, a seven-inch hemostat was left in Mrs. Gray during gall bladder surgery in June, 1947,
and despite her chronic complaints about stomach pain over the years, the
device was not found until an X-ray in March, 1953, when it was removed. Her
$12,000 award was reversed by the Supreme Court of West Virginia because she was
outside the statutes of limitation when she filed and could not prove that the
doctor concealed knowledge of his error. This "guilty knowledge"
requirement disappeared over the years, and the "discovery rule" by
which statutes of limitation run from the date of discovery of the wrongdoing
rather than the date of the occurrence has become the rule in most states,
allowing res ipsa loquitur to take its rightful place.
Forty years later, leaving a medical device
in a patient was medical malpractice, provable without expert testimony, in
almost every jurisdiction. Virginia has limited the rule. "In Virginia the doctrine, if not
entirely abolished, has been limited and restricted to a very material
extent." It may be utilized only when the circumstances of the incident,
without further proof, are such that, in the ordinary course of events, the
incident could not have happened except on the theory of negligence..."
A contention of res ipsa loquitur
commonly is made in cases of commercial airplane accidents. It was part of the
commentary in a train collision in California in 2008: "If two trains are in the same place at the same
time, someone was negligent."
In some states, the doctrine of res ipsa
loquitur is also used as a method of proving the intent or mens rea element of the inchoate crime of attempt. Under the Model Penal Code, "the behavior in question is thought
to corroborate the defendant's criminal purpose," for example:
Possession of materials to be employed in the
commission of the crime, which are specifically designed for such unlawful use
or which serve no lawful purpose of the actor under the circumstances
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