(2) whose presence at a particular time was or should have been known to constitute a source of danger to other patrons."
71 In the subsequent hotel case of Spedding v Nobles [2007] NSWCA 29; (2007) 69 NSWLR 100 a licensee's "duty of care owed to patrons in relation to the risks of violent behaviour of other patrons" was recognised, referring to Chordas v Bryant (Wellington) Pty Ltd and other cases; it was firmly tied to control, as distinct from a "special relationship" (at [49]-[50], [55] per Basten JA, with whom Beazley JA agreed and McColl JA agreed with a presently irrelevant reservation). In relation to control, Basten JA said at [50] -
" … First, it is clear from the authorities which have upheld the existence of a duty of care owed by a licensee to patrons that that conclusion depends not on the existence of a "special relationship" recognised by law, but on the element of control. Although the Liquor Act 1982 does not impose a statutory duty of care on licensees, enforceable by patrons, by conferring a power of control and an obligation to exercise that power, the statute provides the basis for a finding with respect to control, which in turn attracts the common law duty of care and informs its content. The relevant statutory provisions may be found in s 2A of the Liquor Act which identifies as a primary object of the statute "the minimisation of harm associated with the misuse and abuse of alcohol (such as harm arising from violence and other anti-social behaviour)", in combination with s 103(1) which empowers a licensee or an employee of a licensee to "turn out, or cause to be turned out of the licensed premises", any person who is intoxicated. The section authorises the use of "such reasonable degree of force as may be necessary" to turn a person out: s 103(3A). In addition, s 125 of the Liquor A ct provides:
'125 Conduct on licensed premises (1) A licensee shall not: …
(b) Permit intoxication, or any indecent, violent or quarrelsome conduct on his or her licensed premises'."
72 In Collingwood Hotel Pty Ltd v O'Reilly Basten JA again delivered the principal judgment. His Honour said -
"21 The Appellants accepted that the relevant principles governing their potential liability in negligence for the deliberate acts of third parties were those explained by this Court in Wagstaff v Haslam and Anor [2007] NSWCA 28 and in Spedding v Nobles; Spedding v McNally [2007] NSWCA 29, applying, amongst other cases, Chordas v Bryant (Wellington) Pty Ltd (1988) 20 FCR 91 (FCAFC). These cases held that someone in the position of a hotel manager or licensee may be liable for injury to a patron caused by the deliberate and unlawful act of another patron. The duty which gives rise to this liability depends upon the capacity, and indeed the statutory obligation, of the hotel manager or licensee to control conduct on licensed premises, pursuant to ss 103 and 125 of the Liquor Act 1982 (NSW). These provisions not only permit the licensee to "turn out, or cause to be turned out" any person who is intoxicated, and to use reasonable force to that end, but also impose an obligation on a licensee not to permit intoxication on licensed premises, an offence which is deemed to be committed by the presence of a person who is intoxicated on the premises, unless the licensee has asked the person to leave the premises, sought police assistance to remove the person and refused to serve the person alcohol: s 125. As will be seen shortly, there was a complaint that the relevant employee of the hotel believed that a number of patrons were sufficiently affected by alcohol to justify refusal of service, yet no steps were taken to eject those persons from the premises, until the relevant outbreaks of violence. However, it should be emphasised there is no statutory cause of action for breach of the Liquor Act , if such a breach occurred. Rather, the relevant duty to exercise reasonable care for the safety of patrons, depends upon proof that the hotel manager or licensee knew or ought to have known facts requiring intervention to protect patrons and, in those circumstances, failed to take reasonable steps to safeguard the plaintiff from a foreseeable risk of harm: see, generally, Wagstaff [2007] NSWCA 28 at [28]-[37]."
73 One of the cases to which Basten JA referred in Spedding v Nobles was Club Italia (Geelong) Inc v Ritchie [2001] VSCA 180; (2001) 3 VR 447, where the plaintiff was a police officer injured in a brawl at a club on the occasion of a debutante ball. It was said in that case that the facts "bear no resemblance to those in Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty Ltd v Anzil" (at [34]), and that the assailant was allowed to misbehave "when he should have been kept under control by the club which had invited him onto its premises and allowed him to remain there for the purposes of its business" (at [36]). The duty of care was found as follows -
"[36] Quite apart from what the expert and other evidence disclosed in this case, it is a matter of common sense and experience that, where liquor is to be sold to large numbers of people at nocturnal entertainments extending over a long period of time, there is a danger of drunkenness and violent and other offensive behaviour. There is a general recognition that the use of crowd controllers is usual and (given that there are to be such entertainments) appropriate. What the club was really doing here was, in the course of its business, creating a potentially dangerous situation on its own premises, as it recognised, even before the night began, by its engagement of five crowd controllers. Crowd controllers are there to control crowds; 5 they are there because of the danger that things will get out of control, notably, one might add, in relation to physical violence. As the regulations already referred to show, one of the functions of the crowd controller - again this is only a matter of common sense and common experience - is to assist in maintaining order by removing disorderly persons from premises. Persons in the position of the club realise that in the course of their business they are attracting potential trouble-makers to their premises, and they take steps to deal with the resulting danger of violent and other disorderly behaviour. If a person becomes drunk or criminally disorderly on their premises, then it is they who have invited the potential criminal to their premises and created the environment in which the criminal activity has occurred. They are under a statutory duty - we are not here concerned with rights of action for breach of a statutory duty - to expel drunk and disorderly persons and they recognise that they are under a responsibility to maintain order on their premises.
[37] It is difficult to imagine a greater contrast between the facts of the present case and those of Modbury . The club concedes that it owed a duty of care to patrons to protect them against attacks by other patrons on the premises and that if the plaintiff in the car park here had been, not a member of the police force, but a patron, then no question would have arisen about the existence of a duty of care in relation to the kind of harm done. In our opinion a duty of care was owed to the plaintiff." (citation omitted)
74 The duty of care in the hotel and club cases has been held to arise from the combined position that the manager or licensee "knew or ought to have known facts requiring intervention to protect patrons" and had "the capacity … to control conduct on licensed premises", taking these phrases from the passage last cited from Collingwood Hotel Pty Ltd v O'Reilly. In Proprietors of SP 17226 v Drakulic [2002] NSWCA 381, (2002) 55 NSWLR 559 at [113] Heydon JA said of "cases like the Chordas case" -
"They recognise that the duty to take reasonable care to avoid a reasonably foreseeable risk of injury to lawful visitors owed by the occupier or person in control of a restaurant or other outlet for the on-site consumption of alcohol extends to the injuries caused by tortious or criminal acts of other lawful visitors. A justification for this is that it is highly foreseeable that some patrons may either arrive intoxicated or become intoxicated, and a segment of these may become violent."
75 However, in Club Italia (Geelong) Inc v Ritchie at [44] the Court questioned whether that case was rightly characterised as one of harm arising from criminal conduct, suggesting that it was one of harm arising from a state of affairs created by the club. In like manner, I would question whether the duty of care presently under consideration is to be regarded as particular content of an occupier's duty of care owed to persons who come onto the occupier's land.
76 The link with occupier's liability has particularly come about through the reference to Chordas v Bryant (Wellington) Pty Ltd in the reservation expressed by Hayne J in Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty Ltd v Anzil, but it is not an essential link. The preferable approach, in my respectful opinion, is that the knowledge of facts requiring intervention to protect patrons may come from the nature of the establishment or the function to be conducted at the establishment, in the manner described in Club Italia (Geelong) Inc v Ritchie, and it is the foreseeability of injury from conduct on the premises plus the capacity to control the conduct, rather than the status of occupier, from which the duty of care comes. The status of occupier, of course, may be important because it provides the ability to control entry upon and conduct on the premises, but a licensee or manager of licensed premises may have control although not the occupier. That the conduct may be criminal is not of itself a bar. As was said in Club Italia (Geelong) Inc v Ritchie at [44] in relation to the state of affairs created by the club, "the club's position, as regards duty of care, might be no different if, instead of being attacked by a trouble-making ruffian, the plaintiff had been unintentionally struck by a peaceable patron defending himself against an assault, or accidentally knocked to the ground by non-violent patrons trying to avoid the melee."
77 References in the cases to the licensee of premises does not mean that the duty of care can only be owed by the licensee. A licensee is frequently a natural person distinct from, although connected with, the person or corporation conducting the hotel or club, but through the licensee the hotel or club has the capacity to control the conduct of hotel patrons. So in Collingwood Hotel Pty Ltd v O'Reilly Basten JA referred to "someone in the position of a hotel manager or licensee". Collingwood Hotel Pty Ltd was the occupier, the licensee was Mr Porter (at [16]): his Honour noted that their responsibilities were treated by the parties as the same (at [55]). In Wagstaff v Haslam the defendants were Mr Haslam, the licensee, and D & D Haslam Pty Ltd, the occupier of the premises. No distinction was drawn between them in relation to the duty of care. As has been seen, his Honour saw the basis of the duty said to be owed to the plaintiff in the control and knowledge of the occupier, and the licensee is often equated with an occupier. In Spedding v Nobles the cases to which there was reference for support for a duty of care owed "by licensees" to patrons in relation to the risks of violent behaviour of other patrons included South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football Club Ltd v Cole [2002] NSWCA 205; (2002) NSWLR 113, referring at [153] to the duty owed "by the occupier or person in control of a hotel, restaurant, bar or similar establishment".
78 The cases to which there was reference also included TAB Ltd v Atlis [2004] NSWCA 322. TAB Ltd v Atlis was not a hotel case at all: the defendant was the occupier of a TAB outlet. Mason P said bluntly at [3] that the defendant owed a duty of reasonable care to patrons who came to its premises to place bets, the content of which extended "to the taking of reasonable measures to control rowdy and dangerous patrons whose activities had the potential to thereafter threaten the safety of other patrons". Ipp JA, with whom Beazley JA agreed, said after referring to the duty of care as recognised by Mason P In Oxlade v Gosbridge Pty Ltd -
"35 Such a duty is capable of being extended in scope. In my reasons in South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football Club Limited v Cole (2002) 55 NSWLR 113 (with which Heydon JA and Santow JA agreed) I said (at 137, [152]):
'[The general duty on the part of the occupier to take reasonable care to avoid a foreseeable risk of injury to the entrant] ordinarily concerns risk of injury from the condition of the premises, but this is not an inevitable limitation on the scope of the duty. If, to the knowledge of the occupier, activities conducted on the premises bring about a risk of injury to the entrant, the circumstances may give rise to a duty of care wide enough to encompass a duty to take reasonable care to avoid a foreseeable risk of injury arising from those activities: Canterbury Municipal Council v Taylor [2002] NSWCA 24. Typically, the foreseeable risk of injury in such a case is the risk of physical injury directly caused by the known activities on the premises.'
Nothing in the reasons of the High Court in this case ( Cole v South Tweed Heads Rugby League Football Club Limited (2004) 78 ALJR 933) is inconsistent with these remarks.