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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
Ed. 1978]
CHAPTER 33
OCCUPIERS' LIABILITY
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AN ACT TO AMEND THE LAW
AS TO THE LIABILITY OF OCCUPIERS AND OTHERS FOR INJURY OR DAMAGE RESULTING TO
PERSONS OR GOODS LAWFULLY ON
ANY LAND OR OTHER PROPERTY FROM DANGERS DUE TO THE
STATE OF THE PROPERTY OR TO THINGS DONE OR OMITTED TO BE DONE THERE, AND FOR
PURPOSES
CONNECTED THEREWITH
[19th August, 1968.]
Short title
1. This Act may
be cited as the Occupiers' Liability Act.
Application to Crown
2. This Act shall
bind the Crown, but as regards the Crown's liability in tort shall not bind the
Crown further than the Crown is made
liable in tort by the Crown Proceedings
Act.
(Cap. 24)
Preliminary
3.- (1) The
provisions of sections 4 and
5, shall have effect, in place of the
rules of the common law, to regulate the duty which an occupier of premises owes
to his visitors
in respect of dangers due to the state of the premises or to
things done or omitted to be done on them.
(2) The provisions of sections
4 and
5 shall regulate the nature of the duty
imposed by law in consequence of a person's occupation or control of premises
and of any invitation
or permission he gives, or is to be treated as giving, to
another to enter or use the premises, but they shall not alter the rules
of the
common law as to the persons on whom a duty is so imposed or to whom it is owed;
and accordingly for the purpose of those
provisions the persons who are to be
treated as an occupier and as his visitors are the same as the persons who would
at common law
be treated as an occupier and as his invitees or
licensees.
(3) The provisions of sections
4 and
5 in relation to an occupier of
premises and his visitors shall also apply in like manner and to the like extent
as the principles
applicable at common law to an occupier of premises and his
invitees or licensees would apply, to regulate-
(a) the obligation of a person occupying or having control over any fixed or movable structure, including any vessel, vehicle or aircraft; and
(b) the obligations of a person occupying or having control over any premises or structure in respect of damage to property including the property of persons who are not themselves his visitors.
Extent of occupier's ordinary duty
4.-
(1) An occupier of premises owes the
same duty, the common duty of care, to all his visitors, except in so far as he
is free to and does
extend, restrict, modify or exclude his duty to any visitor
or visitors by agreement or otherwise.
(2) The common duty of care is a
duty to take such care as in all the circumstances of the case is reasonable to
see that the visitor
will be reasonably safe in using the premises for the
purposes for which he is invited or permitted by the occupier to be
there.
(3) The circumstances relevant for the present purpose include the
degree of care, and of want of care, which would ordinarily be
looked for in
such a visitor, so that, for example, in proper cases-
(a) an occupier must be prepared for children to be less careful than adults; and
(b) an occupier may expect that a person in the exercise of his calling, will appreciate and guard against any special risks ordinarily incident to it, so far as the occupier leaves him free to do so.
(4) In determining whether the
occupier of premises has discharged the common duty of care to the visitor,
regard is to be had to
all the circumstances, so that, for example-
(a) where damage is caused to a visitor by a danger of which he had been warned by the occupier, the warning is not to be treated, without more, as absolving the occupier from liability, unless in all the circumstances it was enough to enable the visitor to be reasonably safe; and
(b) where damage is caused to a visitor by a danger due to the faulty execution of any work of construction, maintenance or repair by an independent contractor employed by the occupier, the occupier is not to be treated, without more, as answerable for the damage if in all the circumstances he had acted reasonably in entrusting the work to an independent contractor and had taken such steps, if any, as he reasonably ought in order to satisfy himself that the contractor was competent and that the work had been properly done.
(5) The common duty of
care does not impose on an occupier any obligation to a visitor in respect of
risks willingly accepted as his
by the visitor, and in this respect, the
question whether a risk was so accepted shall be decided on the same principles
as in other
cases in which one person owes a duty of care to another.
(6)
For the purposes of this section, persons who enter premises for any purpose in
the exercise of a right conferred by law are to
be treated as permitted by the
occupier to be there for that purpose, whether they in fact have his permission
or not.
Effect of contract on occupier's liability to third party
5.- (1) Where an
occupier of premises is bound by contract to permit persons who are strangers to
the contract to enter or use the premises,
the duty of care which he owes to
them as his visitors cannot be restricted or excluded by that contract, but,
subject to any provisions
of the contract to the contrary, shall include the
duty to perform his obligations under the contract, whether undertaken for their
protection or not, in so far as those obligations go beyond the obligations
otherwise involved in that duty.
(2) A contract shall not by virtue of
this section have the effect, unless it expressly so provides, of making an
occupier who has
taken all reasonable care answerable to strangers to the
contract for dangers due to the faulty execution of any work of construction,
maintenance or repair or other like operation by persons other than himself, his
servants and persons acting under his direction
and control.
(3) In this
section "stranger to the contract" means a person not for the time being
entitled to the benefit of the contract as a
party to it or as the successor by
assignment or otherwise of a party to it, and accordingly includes a party to
the contract who
has ceased to be so entitled.
(4) Where by the terms or
conditions governing any tenancy, including a statutory tenancy which does not
in law amount to a tenancy,
either the landlord or the tenant is bound, though
not by contract, to permit persons to enter or use premises of which he is the
occupier, this section shall apply as if the tenancy were a contract between the
landlord and the tenant.
(5) This section, in so far as it prevents the
common duty of care from being restricted or excluded, applies to contracts
entered
into and tenancies created before the commencement of this Act, as well
as to those entered into or created after its commencement;
but in so far as it
enlarges the duty owed by an occupier beyond the common duty of care, it shall
have effect only in relation to
obligations which are undertaken after that
commencement or which are renewed by agreement, whether express or implied,
after that
commencement.
Landlord's liability by virtue of obligation to repair
6.- (1) Where
premises are occupied by any person under a tenancy which puts on the landlord
an obligation to that person for the maintenance
or repair of the premises, the
landlord shall owe to all persons who or whose goods may from time to time be
lawfully on the premises
the same duty, in respect of dangers arising from any
default by him in carrying out that obligation, as if he were an occupier of
the
premises and those persons or their goods were there by his invitation or
permission, but without any contract.
(2) Where premises are occupied
under a sub-tenancy, the provisions of subsection (1) shall apply to any
landlord of the premises,
whether the immediate or a superior landlord, on whom
an obligation to the occupier for the maintenance or repair of the premises
is
put by the sub-tenancy, and for that purpose any obligation to the occupier
which the sub-tenancy puts on a mesne landlord of
the premises, or is treated by
virtue of this provision as putting on a mesne landlord, shall be treated as put
by it also on any
landlord on whom the mesne landlord's tenancy puts the like
obligation towards the mesne landlord.
(3) For the purposes of this
section, where premises comprised in a tenancy, whether occupied under that
tenancy or under a sub-tenancy,
are put to a use not permitted by the tenancy,
and the landlord of whom they are held under the tenancy is not debarred by his
acquiescence
or otherwise from objecting or from enforcing his objection, then
no persons or goods whose presence on the premises is due solely
to that use of
the premises shall be deemed to be lawfully on the premises as regards that
landlord or any superior landlord of the
premises, whether or not they are
lawfully there as regards an inferior landlord.
(4) For the purposes of
this section, a landlord shall not be deemed to have made default in carrying
out any obligations to the occupier
of the premises unless his default is such
as to be actionable at the suit of the occupier or, in the case of a superior
landlord
whose actual obligation is to an inferior landlord, his default in
carrying out that obligation is actionable at the suit of the
inferior
landlord.
(5) This section shall not put a landlord of premises under a
greater duty than the occupier to persons who or whose goods are lawfully
on the
premises by reason only of the exercise of a right of way.
(6) Nothing in
this section shall relieve a landlord of any duty which he is under apart from
this section.
(7) For the purposes of this section, obligations imposed
by any enactment in virtue of a tenancy shall be treated as imposed by the
tenancy, and "tenancy" includes a statutory tenancy which does not in law amount
to a tenancy, and includes also any contract conferring
a right of occupation,
and "landlord" shall be construed accordingly.
(8) This section applies
to tenancies created before the commencement of this Act, as well as those
created after its commencement.
LIABILITY IN CONTRACT
Implied term in contracts
7.- (1) Where
persons enter or use, or bring or send goods to, any premises in exercise of a
right conferred by contract with a person
occupying or having control of the
premises, the duty he owes them in respect of dangers due to the state of the
premises or to things
done or omitted to be done on them, in so far as the duty
depends on a term to be implied in the contract by reason of its conferring
that
right, shall be the common duty of care.
(2) Subsection (1), shall apply
to fixed and movable structures as it applies to premises.
(3) This
section does not affect the obligations imposed on a person by or by virtue of
any contract for the hire of, or for the carriage
for reward of persons or goods
in, any vehicle, vessel, aircraft or other means of transport, or by virtue of
any contract of bailment.
(4) This section does not apply to contracts
entered into before the commencement of this Act.
Controlled by Ministry of the Attorney-General
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