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LAW OF TORTS II 
PRESENTED BY: 
NURUL NUR SHAHIRAH AYOP 
MOHAMAD ASIF MOHD NOOR 
NUR SYAFIAH ATHIRAH BT AHMAD 
SHAFIQUE 
AHMAD FARID RASDI
• The issue is whether Jebat can sue Tuah 
under the law of strict liability as in the 
Rules in Rylands v Fletcher for the damage 
on his farm and for the injury suffered by 
him due to oils spills and leakage.
• Strict liability is a term used to describe liability which is 
imposed on the defendant without proof of fault on his 
part. 
• So, although the defendant might have taken all 
reasonable precautions to avoid or minimize risks arising 
from his activity, he may still be found liable if the tort 
which has arisen falls under the category of tort of strict 
liability.
Ryland V Fletcher 
• Facts: The Def (Rylands) employed independent contractors to 
construct a reservoir to supply water to the mill on its land; they did so 
negligently, unaware of mine shafts underneath; water escaped and 
flooded the Pl’s coal mine; the Pl sued its neighbour for the significant 
financial damage caused. 
Exchequer Decision: Blackburn J. held that where a Def brings 
something on his land for his benefit and knows it is likely to cause 
mischief if it escapes, he keeps it as his peril and is answerable for its 
escape. Limited defences are, however, available to the Def. 
HL Decision: Cairns L.J. modified the principle slightly, holding that the 
use of the thing must constitute a “non-natural” use of property to 
render the Def liable.
In order to bring an action under the rule in Rylands v Fletcher in 
the tort of strict liability, there are several elements must be 
satisfied: 
1. Accumulation 
2. For his own purpose 
3. Dangerous object / Likely to do mischief 
4. Escape 
5. Non-natural use of land 
6. Forseeability
INTENTIONAL ACCUMULATION AND FOR 
HIS OWN PURPOSE 
• The rule applies to an object or thing which the 
defendant purposely keeps and collects. Even if 
he himself has not accumulated the thing, he 
may still be liable if he has authorized the 
accumulation. The liability rests in those who 
have control over the thing
Miles V Forest Rock Granite 
• The defendant was blasting rocks using explosives which 
they had brought onto their land. Some of the rocks flew 
onto the highway and injured the claimant. The claimant 
brought an action based on the principal established 
in Ryland v Fletcher. 
Held: 
• The defendant was liable despite the fact that the rocks 
were not brought on to the land nor purposively collected 
and kept there. The explosives were accumulated and 
caused the rocks to escape.
Rainham Chemical Works V Belvedere Fish Guano 
• X and Y set up a company Z Ltd. The function of Z Ltd was to 
perform a contract entered into both X and Y, with another party, 
to manufacture explosives. Z Ltd was to manufacture the 
explosives on X and Y’s land. So Z Ltd was a licensee. An 
explosion occurred, damaging neighboring property. The House 
of Lords found Z Ltd liable as the licensee which had 
accumulated the thing. X and Y, as occupiers and landowners 
were also liable for the escape of the thing accumulated by their 
licensee as the accumulation was a discharge of X and Y’s 
contractual duty to another party.
• Applying to case above, the tank and the 
oils are owned by Tuah for his orchids. The 
oil has been accumulated by Tuah in the 
tank with the intention of heating the oil as 
to regulate the growing of his orchids in the 
glasshouse for selling.
• However, there was corrosion at the tank and 
due to that the oil leaks out and contaminates 
vegetables growing on the farm belonging to 
Jebat and the oils also spills out onto the road. 
Due to that it had caused damage to Jebat’s 
property and it also caused Jebat to skids his car 
and suffered injury when he was driving at the 
road where the oils had spilled. Since, Tuah had 
the intention to store the oils and the tank. 
Thus, he satisfied this element.
EXISTENCE OF DANGEROUS THINGS 
• The rule applies to anything that may cause damage if 
it escapes. It does not need to be dangerous per se. 
• The test used is whether the thing is considered 
dangerous if it may cause damage when it escapes and 
it is determine through 
Ordinary Experience of Mankind : Whether a lay man 
would believe/foresee that the accumulated things would 
cause damage if it escaped.
Ang Hock Tai V Tan Sum Lee & Anor 
Plaintiff rented a shop house and lived on the first floor of 
the building. The ground floor was sublet to the defendant 
who was in the business of repairing and disturbing tyres. 
Defendant stored petrol for business purpose. One 
morning defendant’s premises caught fire and it spread to 
the first floor and the plaintiff’s wife and child died in the 
tragedy. Defendant liable under the rule in Rylands v 
Fletcher as the petrol was a dangerous thing.
• Applying the third element, any lay man would 
foresee that the oil stored would pose harm and 
likely to cause mischief if it escapes, as the 
nature of oil is poisonous towards biological 
entity and environment. And it is a fact that oil 
slick spills on any surface would cause it to 
turned slippery.
• In this case the oil escaped its tank and spilled 
into Jebat’s farm and contaminated vegetable 
grown making them spoilt. And spillage on the 
road caused the road to be slippery which made 
it dangerous to be driven on, and in fact causes 
Jebat who was driving on the road at that time to 
lose control of his car and involved in and 
accident. 
• Thus, this element is satisfied.
ESCAPE 
• The plaintiff must prove that there has been 
an escape. 
• Escape means the things had escaped 
from a place over which the defendant has 
control and authority to a place of which the 
defendant has no control and authority. 
Viscount Simon
Midwood & Co Ltd v Mayor, Aldermen and 
Citizens of Manchester 
• The defendant were held liable when an 
explosion on their property caused inflammable 
gas to escape into the plaintiff’s house and 
consequently set fire to the plaintiff’s property.
• Applying to the case above, the leakage of the 
tank had caused the oils to leaks out and 
contaminates the vegetable farm own by Jebat 
and spills out onto the road where most people 
used and not under the authority of Tuah. Since, 
the oils are under control of Tuah and because 
of the leakage it had contaminates to a place 
which is not under his control that is to Jebat’s 
farm and the road thus, the oils can be said had 
escape into Jebat’s property and onto the road.
• Therefore due to escape it had caused 
damage to Jebat’s property and because of 
that also Jebat suffered injury when his car 
skided. 
Hence, this element is satisfied.
NON NATURAL-USE OF LAND 
• The defendant will only be liable if in bringing or 
accumulating the thing onto his land, he makes a non-natural 
use of the land. 
Rickhards v Lothian 
It must be some special use bringing with it increased 
danger to others and must not merely be the ordinary use 
of the land or such a use as is proper for the general 
benefit of the community.
• The public benefit of the activity will probably be 
considered by courts to constitute a natural use of land 
but this has to be weighed against the extent of the risk 
that arises from that activity. 
• No conclusive test may be given as to what constitutes a 
non-natural use of land. It is often equated with 
extraordinary use. 
• Factors which the courts have taken into account were 
the quantity of the thing, the way in which it was stored 
and also the location of the defendant’s land.
Hoon Wee Thim V Pacific Tin Consolidated 
Corporation 
• D built reservoir on his land. Heavy rainfall caused 
water-bunds to collapse, water escaped to the adjacent 
land. Caused death to the deceased by drowning. 
Held: 
• Using sand-bunds to separate ponds of water 
constituted a dangerous and non-natural use of land 
and any resulting damage would be caught under the 
rule of Rylands.
• Growing and selling orchards in a garden center 
in a rural areas can be considered as natural 
use of land. However, as the conduct or activity 
carried out to grow the orchids by heating an 
extremely large average tanks oil in order to 
heat the glasshouses can be regarded as non-natural 
uses of land as the heating the oil is 
highly risk activity that can cause damage to his 
neighbors or surrounding if no reasonable 
precaution taken. 
Thus, this element can be said to be fulfilled.
DAMAGES MUST BE REASONABLE AND 
FORESEEABLE 
• Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather 
plc 
In the claim under strict liability the court held that the 
rule in Rylands v Fletcher would only applicable if it 
could be foreseen that damage of relevant type would 
occur as a result of an escape and the defendant does 
not take any steps to prevent the escape from 
occurring thus in this case defendant is not liable as 
the contamination of PCE spillage is not foreseeable. .
• Thus, applying the last element to Tuah’s case. 
The damage resulted from oil spillage from the 
escape from it its storage is of reasonable and 
foreseeable one. That the oil spill on the Jebat 
farm would contaminate and destroy Jebat’s 
vegetable and spillage on the road would cause 
an accident to occur. The damages suffered by 
Jebat are reasonably foreseeable. 
Thus, the last element is fulfilled.
CONCLUSION 
As all the elements in the rules of 
Ryland v Fletcher 
has been fulfilled, Tuah can be sued by 
Jebat under strict liability.
Would the advise be differ if the escape of oil had 
been caused by Kasturi? 
-Defence 
If the escape of oil was made by Kasturi, the 
escape is considered made by a third party.
ACT OF A THIRD PARTY 
• The test used to determine whether a person is 
a third party or otherwise is whether that person 
act outside the defendant’s control, the 
defendant may still be held liable if he ought 
reasonably to have foreseen the act of the third 
party. The unforeseeable act of a third party who 
is not under defendant control has been 
accepted to be a good defense.
Rickards v Lothian 
A third party deliberately blocked the waste-pipe of 
a lavatory basin in the defendant’s premises and 
thereafter turned on the tap water. The overflowed 
water then damaged the plaintiff’s property which 
was situated on the floor below. Raising this 
defence the defendant was held not liable by the 
court for the damage.
• In the case of that the escape of the oil had 
been cause by Kasturi which is a third party in 
this case, the advise that would be given to Tuah 
is that he may raise his defence as the 
unforeseeable act of a third party. 
• Act of Kasturi as a third party can be regarded 
as unforeseeable by Tuah and act of Kasturi was 
outside Tuah controls.
Thus, act of Kasturi can be raised as a defence 
and Tuah can escape liablity under the rulkes of 
Ryland v Fletcher , if and only if he can prove that 
the escape of oil was caused by act of the third 
party, Kasturi.

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Rylands slide

  • 1. LAW OF TORTS II PRESENTED BY: NURUL NUR SHAHIRAH AYOP MOHAMAD ASIF MOHD NOOR NUR SYAFIAH ATHIRAH BT AHMAD SHAFIQUE AHMAD FARID RASDI
  • 2. • The issue is whether Jebat can sue Tuah under the law of strict liability as in the Rules in Rylands v Fletcher for the damage on his farm and for the injury suffered by him due to oils spills and leakage.
  • 3. • Strict liability is a term used to describe liability which is imposed on the defendant without proof of fault on his part. • So, although the defendant might have taken all reasonable precautions to avoid or minimize risks arising from his activity, he may still be found liable if the tort which has arisen falls under the category of tort of strict liability.
  • 4. Ryland V Fletcher • Facts: The Def (Rylands) employed independent contractors to construct a reservoir to supply water to the mill on its land; they did so negligently, unaware of mine shafts underneath; water escaped and flooded the Pl’s coal mine; the Pl sued its neighbour for the significant financial damage caused. Exchequer Decision: Blackburn J. held that where a Def brings something on his land for his benefit and knows it is likely to cause mischief if it escapes, he keeps it as his peril and is answerable for its escape. Limited defences are, however, available to the Def. HL Decision: Cairns L.J. modified the principle slightly, holding that the use of the thing must constitute a “non-natural” use of property to render the Def liable.
  • 5. In order to bring an action under the rule in Rylands v Fletcher in the tort of strict liability, there are several elements must be satisfied: 1. Accumulation 2. For his own purpose 3. Dangerous object / Likely to do mischief 4. Escape 5. Non-natural use of land 6. Forseeability
  • 6. INTENTIONAL ACCUMULATION AND FOR HIS OWN PURPOSE • The rule applies to an object or thing which the defendant purposely keeps and collects. Even if he himself has not accumulated the thing, he may still be liable if he has authorized the accumulation. The liability rests in those who have control over the thing
  • 7. Miles V Forest Rock Granite • The defendant was blasting rocks using explosives which they had brought onto their land. Some of the rocks flew onto the highway and injured the claimant. The claimant brought an action based on the principal established in Ryland v Fletcher. Held: • The defendant was liable despite the fact that the rocks were not brought on to the land nor purposively collected and kept there. The explosives were accumulated and caused the rocks to escape.
  • 8. Rainham Chemical Works V Belvedere Fish Guano • X and Y set up a company Z Ltd. The function of Z Ltd was to perform a contract entered into both X and Y, with another party, to manufacture explosives. Z Ltd was to manufacture the explosives on X and Y’s land. So Z Ltd was a licensee. An explosion occurred, damaging neighboring property. The House of Lords found Z Ltd liable as the licensee which had accumulated the thing. X and Y, as occupiers and landowners were also liable for the escape of the thing accumulated by their licensee as the accumulation was a discharge of X and Y’s contractual duty to another party.
  • 9. • Applying to case above, the tank and the oils are owned by Tuah for his orchids. The oil has been accumulated by Tuah in the tank with the intention of heating the oil as to regulate the growing of his orchids in the glasshouse for selling.
  • 10. • However, there was corrosion at the tank and due to that the oil leaks out and contaminates vegetables growing on the farm belonging to Jebat and the oils also spills out onto the road. Due to that it had caused damage to Jebat’s property and it also caused Jebat to skids his car and suffered injury when he was driving at the road where the oils had spilled. Since, Tuah had the intention to store the oils and the tank. Thus, he satisfied this element.
  • 11. EXISTENCE OF DANGEROUS THINGS • The rule applies to anything that may cause damage if it escapes. It does not need to be dangerous per se. • The test used is whether the thing is considered dangerous if it may cause damage when it escapes and it is determine through Ordinary Experience of Mankind : Whether a lay man would believe/foresee that the accumulated things would cause damage if it escaped.
  • 12. Ang Hock Tai V Tan Sum Lee & Anor Plaintiff rented a shop house and lived on the first floor of the building. The ground floor was sublet to the defendant who was in the business of repairing and disturbing tyres. Defendant stored petrol for business purpose. One morning defendant’s premises caught fire and it spread to the first floor and the plaintiff’s wife and child died in the tragedy. Defendant liable under the rule in Rylands v Fletcher as the petrol was a dangerous thing.
  • 13. • Applying the third element, any lay man would foresee that the oil stored would pose harm and likely to cause mischief if it escapes, as the nature of oil is poisonous towards biological entity and environment. And it is a fact that oil slick spills on any surface would cause it to turned slippery.
  • 14. • In this case the oil escaped its tank and spilled into Jebat’s farm and contaminated vegetable grown making them spoilt. And spillage on the road caused the road to be slippery which made it dangerous to be driven on, and in fact causes Jebat who was driving on the road at that time to lose control of his car and involved in and accident. • Thus, this element is satisfied.
  • 15. ESCAPE • The plaintiff must prove that there has been an escape. • Escape means the things had escaped from a place over which the defendant has control and authority to a place of which the defendant has no control and authority. Viscount Simon
  • 16. Midwood & Co Ltd v Mayor, Aldermen and Citizens of Manchester • The defendant were held liable when an explosion on their property caused inflammable gas to escape into the plaintiff’s house and consequently set fire to the plaintiff’s property.
  • 17. • Applying to the case above, the leakage of the tank had caused the oils to leaks out and contaminates the vegetable farm own by Jebat and spills out onto the road where most people used and not under the authority of Tuah. Since, the oils are under control of Tuah and because of the leakage it had contaminates to a place which is not under his control that is to Jebat’s farm and the road thus, the oils can be said had escape into Jebat’s property and onto the road.
  • 18. • Therefore due to escape it had caused damage to Jebat’s property and because of that also Jebat suffered injury when his car skided. Hence, this element is satisfied.
  • 19. NON NATURAL-USE OF LAND • The defendant will only be liable if in bringing or accumulating the thing onto his land, he makes a non-natural use of the land. Rickhards v Lothian It must be some special use bringing with it increased danger to others and must not merely be the ordinary use of the land or such a use as is proper for the general benefit of the community.
  • 20. • The public benefit of the activity will probably be considered by courts to constitute a natural use of land but this has to be weighed against the extent of the risk that arises from that activity. • No conclusive test may be given as to what constitutes a non-natural use of land. It is often equated with extraordinary use. • Factors which the courts have taken into account were the quantity of the thing, the way in which it was stored and also the location of the defendant’s land.
  • 21. Hoon Wee Thim V Pacific Tin Consolidated Corporation • D built reservoir on his land. Heavy rainfall caused water-bunds to collapse, water escaped to the adjacent land. Caused death to the deceased by drowning. Held: • Using sand-bunds to separate ponds of water constituted a dangerous and non-natural use of land and any resulting damage would be caught under the rule of Rylands.
  • 22. • Growing and selling orchards in a garden center in a rural areas can be considered as natural use of land. However, as the conduct or activity carried out to grow the orchids by heating an extremely large average tanks oil in order to heat the glasshouses can be regarded as non-natural uses of land as the heating the oil is highly risk activity that can cause damage to his neighbors or surrounding if no reasonable precaution taken. Thus, this element can be said to be fulfilled.
  • 23. DAMAGES MUST BE REASONABLE AND FORESEEABLE • Cambridge Water Co Ltd v Eastern Counties Leather plc In the claim under strict liability the court held that the rule in Rylands v Fletcher would only applicable if it could be foreseen that damage of relevant type would occur as a result of an escape and the defendant does not take any steps to prevent the escape from occurring thus in this case defendant is not liable as the contamination of PCE spillage is not foreseeable. .
  • 24. • Thus, applying the last element to Tuah’s case. The damage resulted from oil spillage from the escape from it its storage is of reasonable and foreseeable one. That the oil spill on the Jebat farm would contaminate and destroy Jebat’s vegetable and spillage on the road would cause an accident to occur. The damages suffered by Jebat are reasonably foreseeable. Thus, the last element is fulfilled.
  • 25. CONCLUSION As all the elements in the rules of Ryland v Fletcher has been fulfilled, Tuah can be sued by Jebat under strict liability.
  • 26. Would the advise be differ if the escape of oil had been caused by Kasturi? -Defence If the escape of oil was made by Kasturi, the escape is considered made by a third party.
  • 27. ACT OF A THIRD PARTY • The test used to determine whether a person is a third party or otherwise is whether that person act outside the defendant’s control, the defendant may still be held liable if he ought reasonably to have foreseen the act of the third party. The unforeseeable act of a third party who is not under defendant control has been accepted to be a good defense.
  • 28. Rickards v Lothian A third party deliberately blocked the waste-pipe of a lavatory basin in the defendant’s premises and thereafter turned on the tap water. The overflowed water then damaged the plaintiff’s property which was situated on the floor below. Raising this defence the defendant was held not liable by the court for the damage.
  • 29. • In the case of that the escape of the oil had been cause by Kasturi which is a third party in this case, the advise that would be given to Tuah is that he may raise his defence as the unforeseeable act of a third party. • Act of Kasturi as a third party can be regarded as unforeseeable by Tuah and act of Kasturi was outside Tuah controls.
  • 30. Thus, act of Kasturi can be raised as a defence and Tuah can escape liablity under the rulkes of Ryland v Fletcher , if and only if he can prove that the escape of oil was caused by act of the third party, Kasturi.