McCabes News
In the recent case of Carnemolla v Arcadia Funds Management [2020] NSWCA 308, the NSW Court of Appeal considered the duty of a shopping centre manager to maintain a dry floor surface.
Author: Demi McGowan
Judgment date: 27 November 2020
Citation: Carnemolla v Arcadia Funds Management [2020] NSWCA 308
Jurisdiction: NSW Court of Appeal
The plaintiff claimed damages for injuries sustained when she slipped and fell on terrazzo tiles outside a public bathroom at Neeta City Shopping Centre, Fairfield on 29 September 2016. The plaintiff, by her mother as tutor, commenced proceedings in the District Court of NSW against Arcadia Funds Management Ltd (the defendant) as the manager and occupier of the Shopping Centre. At the time of the plaintiff’s accident, the defendant engaged Asset Cleaning Services Pty Ltd (Asset) to provide cleaning services. Asset was not a party to the proceedings.
The primary judge found no liability on the part of the defendant and concluded that the plaintiff did not fall on water, or alternatively, did not discharge her burden to establish that she did. The plaintiff’s claim was dismissed with costs reserved.
The plaintiff appealed the primary judge’s findings on liability and the refusal of the primary judge to consider future attendant care services. The plaintiff argued that she experienced difficulties in giving evidence due to her intellectual disability and psychological impairment.
The Court of Appeal upheld the primary judge’s decision and found that the primary judge was entitled to reject the plaintiff’s claim that there was water on the floor and in the alternative, if there was water, it was not a result of a breach on the part of the defendant.
In dismissing the Appeal, the Court reasoned that in the absence of direct evidence from the plaintiff or her mother that the plaintiff slipped on water and that a contemporaneous incident report made no reference to water being present following an inspection within two minutes of the plaintiff’s accident, the primary judge was justified in concluding that there was insufficient evidence of the cause of the plaintiff’s accident. The Court also considered this in light of the plaintiff’s evidence of the mechanism of her fall being inconsistent with a slip and that there were no previous incidents in the area.
The Court clarified that the duty of the defendant as occupier was to take reasonable steps to ensure that the floor was dry and not slippery which necessitated a system for identifying and cleaning up of spills. There was no criticism of the cleaning system by the plaintiff and further it was admitted to be adequate. In this respect, the Court gave particular regard to a Notice to Admit issued by the defendant prior to the trial seeking admissions in respect of the adequacy of the cleaning system and the timing of the plaintiff’s fall in respect of the last inspection.
The plaintiff’s liability expert, Mr Ian Burn agreed that the terrazzo floor surface on which the plaintiff slipped was appropriate if the surface was kept dry and was universally used in shopping centres in NSW. Should the plaintiff have attempted to advance an argument that the terrazzo flooring was not suitable in a common area, the Court concluded that the evidence of the costs and burden of replacing the terrazzo floor would be required, of which there was none.