Trespass to a burglar's person: tort defences

AuthorGilbert Kodilinye
PositionReader in Property Law, University of the West Indies
Pages598-611
TRESPASS TO A BURGLAR'S PERSON:
TORT DEFENCES
GILBERT KODILINYE*
In the recent case of Revill
v.
Newbery,1 a burglar claimed damages
from a landowner
who
had shot him as he was attempting to break into an
allotment shed in the middle of the night. Upholding the trial judge's
decision, the English Court of Appeal held that the burglar's claim in
negligence succeeded on the basis that, by enacting section 1 of the
Occupiers Liability Act 1984, the UK. Parliament had decided that an
occupier of premises cannot treat a burglar as an outlaw, and that the duty
owed to a trespasser was as defined by the section, viz., a duty "to take
such care as is reasonable in all the circumstances of the case to see that the
trespasser does not suffer injury on the premises by reason of the danger
concerned."
The approach and reasoning of
the
court is curious, and has already
been the subject of critical academic comment.2 The purpose of this note,
however, is not primarily to discuss the reasoning of the Court of Appeal
but to take the opportunity to examine, in the light of case-law from
various Commonwealth jurisdictions, the applicability of certain tort
defences to assault and battery in circumstances such as those which arose
in Revill - an opportunity which was denied to the Court of Appeal
because the claim based on trespass to the person was abandoned, and the
case proceeded solely on the basis of negligence. The defences which
would seem to be most relevant in this context are self-defence,
provocation, and ex turpi causa non oritur actio.
Self-Defence
Clearly, a householder has a right at common law to protect
himself,
his family and his property from burglars and other intruders, but it is
Reader in Property Law, University of the West Indies.
1 [1996]
1
A11E.R. 291
2 Weir, [1996] C.L J. 182. See also Zanifa McDowell,
p.612,
post.

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