Search

How can we help?

Icon

Supreme Court revisits the law on vicarious liability

In the conjoined cases of Cox v Ministry of Justice and Mohamud v WM Morrison Supermarkets plc, the Supreme Court had to consider two aspects of vicarious liability.  Firstly, whether an employment relationship is necessary for vicarious liability to apply and secondly, whether an employer can be held liable for the criminal acts of its employees. 

In Cox, the claimant was a catering manager at HM Prison Swansea.  She was injured when one of the prisoners dropped a 25kg sack of rice on her back.  She brought a claim for personal injury against the MoJ claiming that it was vicariously liable for the acts of the prisoners notwithstanding that they are not employees.  The Supreme Court, finding in favour of the claimant, held that vicarious liability could arise in a non-employment relationship provided the wrongdoer carried on activities integral to the employer’s business and the employer had created the risk of harm by assigning these activities to the wrongdoer.

In Mohamud, an employee of Morrison’s (working at one of their petrol stations) racially abused the claimant after he asked for assistance.  The employee ordered the claimant to leave and then followed the claimant to his car and physically assaulted him.  The claimant brought a personal injury claim against Morrison’s relying on the principles of vicarious liability.  The issue for the courts to decide here was whether there was a sufficiently close connection between the employee’s acts and their employment.   The Court of Appeal determined that there was not, stating that the mere fact of authorised contact between the parties would not fix the employer with vicarious liability.  However, the Supreme Court overturned this decision and found in favour of the claimant.  It found that the act complained of was sufficiently connected to the ‘field of activities’ entrusted to the individual (such field to be construed broadly) to make it right for the employer to be held liable under the principle of social justice.  Whilst the employee’s conduct was ‘inexcusable’ the Supreme Court felt that his conduct when responding to the Claimant’s request for help was within the field of activities assigned to him, i.e. to attend to customers and respond to their enquiries.  The Supreme Court said that what followed was an ‘unbroken sequence of events’ and it would not be right to regard the employee as having ‘metaphorically taken off his uniform the moment he stepped from behind the counter’.  It drew attention to the fact that throughout the attack, the employee was giving an order for the claimant to leave and, in giving such an order, was purporting to act about his employer’s business.

 

Monica Atwal

Managing Partner

View profile

+44 118 960 4605

The Supreme Court, finding in favour of the claimant, held that vicarious liability could arise in a non-employment relationship provided the wrongdoer carried on activities integral to the employer’s business and the employer had created the risk of harm by assigning these activities to the wrongdoer.

The cases do not significantly change the existing law in this area but rather shed further light on how the legal tests should be applied.  This being said, it is likely that many will find the Mohamud ruling, in particular, surprising given the remote link between the act and the employee’s job role.  In light of these cases, employers should bear in mind the potential difficulty in distancing themselves from the actions of employees and other workers and should ensure that they clearly communicate and enforce the standards expected from those working for them regardless of whether or not they are employees.

About this article

Disclaimer

This information is for guidance purposes only and should not be regarded as a substitute for taking legal advice. Please refer to the full General Notices on our website.

Monica Atwal

Managing Partner

View profile

+44 118 960 4605

About this article

Read, listen and watch our latest insights

Pub
  • 11 October 2017
  • Litigation and dispute resolution

Hot topics in Directors’ Liabilities

This webinar gives some practical examples how those liabilities play out in practice and cases the Courts have had to consider and the lessons from these, and implications for Directors. 

art
  • 10 October 2017
  • IP and Commercial

EIS and SEIS – what are these and how can you benefit?

The Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) and Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) are schemes run by the government offering generous tax breaks to encourage SME growth and investment in such companies.

art
  • 06 October 2017
  • Employment

TUPE regulations apply even where large part of job becomes automated

In Anglo Beef Processors v Longland and Meat & Livestock Commercial Services, Mr Longland had been employed as a carcass service officer for Meat & Livestock, manually classifying carcasses in an abattoir.Mr Longland claimed at tribunal that the TUPE Regulations applied and as a result, he should transfer to Anglo Beef on the basis that the activities carried out were “fundamentally the same” both before and after the transfer

art
  • 06 October 2017
  • Commercial Real Estate

Real estate fraud – help us help you to eliminate the risk

One of the biggest benefits of the digital and information age has been the increased agility in carrying transactions – these are now able to take place almost instantaneously. This increased agility has brought with it the problem of increased vulnerability – especially to the risk of fraud.

art
  • 03 October 2017
  • Construction

Off-Site Goods and Materials: Legal Issues

There is no doubt that off-site manufacture is being embraced by the industry.

art
  • 03 October 2017
  • Construction

A victory for common sense – actual cost relevant to compensation event assessment

A defining principle of the NEC3 is that the parties should deal with issues as they arise and not save these up to the end. Hence the provision in the standard form contract allowing for forecast assessments of compensation events. However, this principle can get forgotten when the parties fail to comply with the contractual machinery and timeframes or the compensation events are disputed. A case from earlier this year in the Northern Ireland courts has looked at the question of whether actual costs are relevant to the assessment of compensation events: Northern Ireland Housing Executive…