Kent v Griffiths
Kent v Griffiths 2 All ER 474 is an English tort law case from the Court of Appeal concerning negligence, particularly the duty of care owed by the emergency services; particularly the ambulance service. The emergency services do not generally owe a duty of care to the public except in certain, limited circumstances.
Case
The claimant brought two simultaneous claims in negligence. The first, which was quickly dismissed, against her doctor, and the second, much more significant case against the London Ambulance Service after an ambulance, ordered by the doctor through a 999 call, took forty minutes to arrive at her house, where she was suffering a severe asthma attack, resulting in the claimant suffering respiratory arrest.In negligence cases, the claimant must prove that the defendant owed them a duty of care, that this duty was breached and that the injuries for which the claimant is seeking damages were a consequence of this breach.
The issue before the court was whether an ambulance service owe a duty of care to those relying on its services.
Judgment
The claimant won in the first instance and the LAS appealed, whereupon the Court of Appeal held:- It was 'reasonably foreseeable' that the claimant would suffer further illness if an ambulance did not arrive promptly
- The claimant and defendant were 'sufficiently proximate' once the LAS accepted the call and dispatched an ambulance, and a specific duty of care was established; there being no good reason for it failing to arrive within a reasonable time, this duty was breached.
- It was 'fair, just and reasonable' to allow a duty of care to exist between an ambulance service and its patients with regards to promptness of pickup where no good reason for delay is offered.