Standard of Care CASES
In English negligence law, standard of care is the objective measure of the caution and skill expected in the circumstances—what a reasonable person (or professional) would do.
Definition and principles
The test is objective and context-sensitive. Key factors include the probability of harm, seriousness of potential injury, cost and practicality of precautions, and the social utility of the activity. Compliance with regulations or industry codes is persuasive but not conclusive. For professionals, the standard is judged by a responsible body of opinion that withstands logical analysis. Learners are held to the competent standard of the role; children are measured against a reasonable child of similar age.
Common examples
- Driver fails to adjust speed and lookout in heavy rain, causing a collision.
- Hospital adopts a technique supported by responsible medical opinion—no breach unless the opinion is illogical.
- Employer omits simple, low-cost safeguards despite a foreseeable risk of injury.
- Sports participant commits a reckless tackle well beyond what the game reasonably contemplates.
Legal implications
- Breach is assessed against the standard; expert evidence is typical in professional cases.
- Statutory or regulatory breach is evidence of negligence, not automatic liability.
- Contributory negligence may reduce damages where the claimant fell below their own reasonable standard.
- In clinical negligence, risk disclosure duties are analysed distinctly from pure treatment skill.
Practical importance
Early focus on hazards, risk assessments, training records, and feasible precautions sharpens breach analysis, expert instructions, and settlement strategy.
See also: Duty of care; Breach; Professional negligence; Risk assessment; Contributory negligence; Causation; Remoteness.
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A professional photographer unfamiliar with horses was injured at a horse show when a competitor's horse veered off course during a galloping competition. The Court of Appeal held the rider was not negligent, establishing that participants in sporting events owe spectators a duty not to show reckless disregard for their...
A fireman was injured when a heavy jack, hastily loaded unsecured on a lorry during an emergency call to free a trapped woman, shifted and crushed his leg. He sued his employer in negligence. The Court of Appeal held there was no breach of duty, emphasising the higher risks justified...
Mr Bolam, a voluntary psychiatric patient, suffered rare pelvic fractures during unmodified electro-convulsive therapy. He alleged negligence for not using relaxant drugs, restraints, or giving warning. The court held doctors are not negligent if acting in accordance with a responsible body of medical opinion. Facts The plaintiff, John Hector Bolam,...
Two patients became paralysed after spinal anaesthetics administered at a hospital. Phenol had seeped through invisible cracks in glass ampoules into the anaesthetic. The Court of Appeal held neither the hospital nor the anaesthetist was negligent, as the risk of invisible cracks was not foreseeable in 1947. Facts Two working...
A driving instructor was injured when a learner driver lost control and crashed into a lamp post. The Court of Appeal held that learner drivers owe the same standard of care as experienced drivers, even to their instructors. The instructor's damages were reduced by half for contributory negligence. Facts Mrs...
Children were scalded when a tea urn was dropped in a narrow passage at a tea room managed by the Corporation. The House of Lords held that the manageress could not reasonably have foreseen the accident occurring from permitting the urn to be carried through, and thus no negligence was...
Mrs De Freitas sued Mr O'Brien, a spinal surgeon, for negligence after a second back operation caused her permanent disability. The Court of Appeal upheld the trial judge's finding that a small body of specialist spinal surgeons could constitute a responsible body of medical opinion under the Bolam test, and...
Miss Stone was struck by a cricket ball hit out of the Cheetham Cricket Club ground onto a public road. The House of Lords held the club not liable for negligence, as the risk of such an accident was so small that a reasonable person would not have taken precautions...
A two-year-old boy suffered brain damage after cardiac arrest caused by respiratory failure. The doctor negligently failed to attend when called but argued intubation would not have been performed anyway. The House of Lords clarified that expert medical opinion must be logically defensible to satisfy the Bolam test. Facts Patrick...
Water from defendants' fire-plug escaped during an exceptionally severe frost and flooded plaintiff's house. The court held the defendants not negligent as they had taken reasonable precautions against ordinary weather conditions and could not have foreseen the unprecedented frost. This case established the classic definition of negligence. Facts The defendants,...