Keppel Bus Co Ltd v Sa'ad bin Ahmad

JudgeLord Cross of Chelsea
Judgment Date15 May 1974
Neutral Citation[1974] SGPC 2
Defendant CounselGO Kellock QC and Ian Baillieu (Le Brasseur & Oakley)
Published date19 September 2003
CourtPrivy Council
Plaintiff CounselJG Le Quesne QC and Kenneth Hilborne (Coward Chance)

The respondent (plaintiff) was a passenger in a bus belonging to the appellants (first defendants). They employed as conductor of the bus the second defendant, who was a party neither to the proceedings before the Court of Appeal in Singapore nor to the present appeal. In the course of his journey the respondent was assaulted by the conductor. He brought an action claiming damages against both the conductor and also the appellants, as vicariously liable for the wrong committed by their servant. T Kulasekaram J, before whom the case was tried, decided for the respondent against both defendants, and assessed the damages at $20,290. The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal of the first defendants, and gave leave to appeal to the Board.

The facts, as they were found by the learned judge, may be stated as follows. At one point on the journey, an elderly Malay lady indicated that she wanted to get off the bus. The conductor ordered her `in a loud and rude manner` to go and wait near the exit. The respondent took exception to this instruction and the manner in which it was given; he remonstrated that it was not safe for the lady to stand by the exit, which was also the entrance. An altercation broke out between him and the conductor, in the course of which each tried to hit the other. The passenger intervened and separated them. The bus stopped, the lady got off, and some passengers got on. The conductor began collecting fares. As he did so he abused the respondent in Chinese, using a very rude expression, of which an English translation has not been furnished. The respondent stood up and asked the conductor not to use abusive language; he then sat down. After he had sat down the conductor struck him in the eye with the ticket-punch, breaking his glasses, and causing the loss of the sight of the eye. The learned judge specifically rejected the conductor`s version that the ticket-punch accidentally struck the glasses. The learned judge`s account of these facts was accepted by the Court of Appeal; there are therefore concurrent findings of these facts, which, in accordance with their usual practice, their Lordship would not review.

The question in the case is whether the conductor did what he did `in the course of his employment`. The course of the employment is not limited to the obligations which lie on an employee in virtue of his contract of service. It extends to act done on the implied authority of the master. In Poland v John Parr & Sons [1927] 1 KB 236 a carter, who had handed over his wagon and was going home to hid dinner, struck a boy whom he suspected, wrongly but on...

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