Did the primary judge err in finding that it was not reasonable for the respondent to have instituted a system of regular and close inspection of the playing area in order to identify and remedy indentations of the nature of that which caused the appellant's injuries?
39 As is apparent from the statements of principle to which I have referred above taken from the judgment of Ipp AJA in Kondrajian, relevantly in the present case it may be accepted that the mere fact that a serious injury may occur to a student who was playing a game of touch football at the College will not automatically result in a finding of breach of the respondent's duty of care even though such an injury and the risk thereof was clearly foreseeable.
40 Critically, the question is whether the respondent failed to take such reasonable precautions for the safety of those playing the game as would have prevented the harm that in fact befell the appellant in the present case. In other words, in all the circumstances was it reasonable for the respondent to take the precaution of instituting a system of regular inspections of the surface of the playing area, square metre by square metre, in order to identify any unexpected potholes or indentations in that surface which, if not remedied, might result in a student who was focussed on the game he was playing inadvertently stepping into that hole or indentation and thereby twisting an ankle or knee.
41 His Honour answered this question in the negative essentially upon the basis that the College staff had had no notice that there was any problem with the surface of the playing area, there being no complaint or other incident that might have alerted them to the existence of a condition of the surface which created a risk of injury. Furthermore, his Honour took into account the fact that the playing area was large and that any regular square metre by square metre inspection would be time-consuming and possibly expensive. However, it is to be noted with respect to these last two factors that the respondent made no submission to the primary judge nor to this Court, firstly, that the institution of any such system of inspection would be beyond its financial resources or, secondly, that it would be beyond its human resources to have implemented such a system.
42 Furthermore, it is well established that the absence of any prior injuries or complaints, whilst relevant to that part of the Shirt calculus relating to the degree of probability of the occurrence of the risk, is not determinative of the reasonable response of the party sought to be made liable: Fairfield City Council v Petro [2003] NSWCA 150 at [21] and [34]; Roads and Traffic Authority v McGregor [2005] NSWCA 388 at [81].
43 The appellant submitted that, although there was some form of system whereby those involved, either actively or in a supervisory capacity, in activities on the playing area would report anything that they found to be unsafe with respect to its surface, such an ad hoc system was in the circumstances inadequate or, if it was not, inspections made pursuant to the system were themselves inadequate. That was particularly so given that the playing area only six weeks prior to the accident had been inundated by reasonably deep flood waters. Simply to assume that the effect of those floodwaters on an area, which had been levelled, top dressed and seeded only some two or three months prior to the flood, would have resulted in no damage to the surface of the playing area, other than bringing some pebbles or stones to the surface, was without justification.
44 Reliance was placed by the appellant on the decision of the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia in Staines v Commonwealth of Australia (1991) Aust Torts Reports 81-106. That case involved a plaintiff who was an organiser of junior hockey walking from a playing area occupied by the defendant down a slope through grass several inches high towards a small retaining wall of the carpark where she had left her car. The slope was often used for access. She did not see any irregularity in the ground but put her foot into a hole where it jammed causing her to fall and fracture her foot. The only evidence led by the plaintiff was from a witness who testified to having seen the hole and to the grass being of a uniform height so as to have disguised its presence. No evidence was led as to any system of mowing and inspection that might reasonably have been expected of the defendant although it seemed that the grass had been mown with some degree of regularity. The defendant called no evidence at all.
45 The majority, Foster and Higgins JJ, held that it could be inferred that the hole had been in existence and visible to a vigilant viewer for a significant period of time and, therefore, if a proper system of inspection had been implemented, the hole would have been eliminated before the plaintiff trapped her foot in it.
46 The dissentient, Davies J, found for the defendant upon the basis that the circumstances giving rise to the danger and the length of time during which it had existed were unknown and that, as the existence of the danger was not apparent to a person walking in the area, no reasonable inference could be drawn that there was fault on the part of the defendant or that any such fault contributed to the accident.
47 The majority acknowledged that there was no evidence to support a finding that the defendant through its servants and agents actually knew of the existence of the hole. It was accepted that it owed a duty of care but whether there was a breach of that duty required the application of the Shirt balancing exercise. Their Honours said (at 68,981):
"In the present case, clearly, a reasonable person knowing that the slope was used by persons as a thoroughfare from the carpark to the oval would bear in mind that any defects in the surface of the slope, especially in circumstances where they might be concealed by the growth of grass, could constitute a risk to such persons. In these circumstances the question necessarily arises whether any response was called for and, if so, what response."
48 Their Honours considered that the trial judge was correct in finding that some response was called for and that to have done nothing and allowed lawful entrants to its oval to use the slope for ingress and egress would be unreasonable given the risk of harm from some concealed danger. They concluded that it was incumbent upon the defendant to institute and maintain some appropriate system of inspection through an employee or employees charged with that duty. The majority considered that given that occupiers and controllers of sporting ovals and their associated facilities commonly employed groundsmen charged with the duty of caring for the oval, this required the defendant to instruct the employee who performed the mowing or tidying operations to keep a proper lookout for any dangerous conditions observable on the slope including any irregularities or defects in its surface so that appropriate steps might be taken for their rectification.
49 The appellant submitted that the primary judge in the present case should have adopted a similar approach. Although the College did not, apparently, have any employee who was specifically charged with the duty of mowing the playing area or otherwise inspecting it on a reasonably regular basis for the purpose of identifying any dangerous objects or conditions and removing or rectifying them, nonetheless it was not suggested by the respondent either that such a person or persons could not have been so charged or that it was beyond its budgetary constraints to have provided for such a system of inspections to be implemented.
50 The respondent submitted that the relevant question was the degree of imperfection which was acceptable in a recreational playing area of the nature of that the subject of the present case. Furthermore, there was no evidence that a regular system of inspections would have discovered the subject pothole or indentation. However, it is apparent from his Honour's reasoning that a system of regular inspections of the playing area "square metre by square metre" would in all probability have revealed the particular condition of the surface which caused the appellant's injury although his Honour held that it was not reasonable in the circumstances for such a system to have been implemented.
51 The respondent further submitted that given the extensive use of the playing area and the nature of the depression or pothole in question, had it been perceived as a danger it would have been drawn to the attention of the teachers even if there had been no prior incident arising out of it. As this did not occur, it could not have had the significance contended for by the appellant. In any event, it was more an undulation than a pothole. Undulations in an informal playing area of the nature of that in question were to be expected and reasonable care did not require them to be identified and removed.
52 I have already referred to the system which was in place as being ad hoc or hit and miss. It was one which was clearly inadequate for the purpose of identifying depressions, potholes or indentations of the dimensions of that which caused the appellant's accident. That the College regarded such a condition as constituting a danger requiring identification and remediation was conceded by Ms Eljed in the passage from her evidence recorded in [30] above. Furthermore, this was an area where soccer and touch football were being played. Such sports involved their participants in running and dribbling a ball (as in soccer) or running with a ball and sidestepping opponents (as in touch football). In such circumstances, in terms of the Shirt balancing exercise the magnitude of the risk was high in that any injury resulting from stepping unexpectedly and without warning into a pothole or depression of the dimensions found by the primary judge could potentially be extremely serious.
53 As to the degree of probability of the risk's occurrence, the fact that such an accident appears not to have occurred prior to that of the appellant was a factor to be taken into account in the balance. However, it must be remembered that the playing area had only been in use for six weeks prior to the incident in question, although it was in reasonably constant use during that period. It was in my view an accident waiting to happen.
54 It must also be recognised that the playing area had been inundated at the end of January but it does not seem that the effect of any such flooding upon its relatively new surface was acknowledged except to the extent that it may have brought pebbles and stones to the surface. Ms Eljed acknowledged that there was a necessity to remove such pebbles and stones in order to "keep the surface smooth". Further, she prohibited any use of the playing area for approximately one week after the flood had subsided until it had dried out. In cross-examination Ms Eljed, when asked whether holes of the sort described (being that into which the appellant placed his left foot), assuming they existed, posed a risk to students when they were playing ball games, responded that
"we didn't allow the students back onto that area until we had checked it and were quite happy that it was safe."
55 Admittedly, Ms Eljed was not further challenged on that response and, in particular, as to the nature of what was done in order to enable her to be happy that the surface was safe for the playing of ball games. In any event, it is clear that whatever inspection was made occurred some six weeks before the appellant's accident.
56 Critically however, the following question and answer when combined with those recorded in [30] above, make it clear that Ms Eljed, as the Deputy Principal of the College, appreciated the danger of a hole or depression in the surface of the playing area to students playing touch football:
"Q Assume that the holes are there, they're unsafe aren't they for children playing ball sports?
A If they were there, they would be unsafe."
57 In the present case, young male students were permitted to play touch football and soccer in circumstances where the surface of the playing area contained a dangerous pothole or depression which Ms Eljed would have regarded as unsafe and where the risk of serious injury to a young student might affect him for the rest of his life.
58 Although there was some attempt by the respondent to suggest that the pothole in question was obvious, I do not regard that factor, even if correct, (which is far from clear) as being relevant in the circumstances. This is because of the nature of the activity in question which, to the knowledge of the respondent, involved the students understandably concentrating on the game they were playing rather than where they were putting their feet. In that sense, even if the pothole in question may have been discoverable by close inspection, it constituted a form of trap to youngsters playing touch football.