Volenti Non Fit Injuria 2
Volenti Non Fit Injuria 2
Volenti Non Fit Injuria 2
The spectator takes the risk because such an act involves no breach of the duty of care
owed by the participant to him and not because of the doctrine expressed by the maxim
volenti non fit injuria. As regards participants in a sporting event, they may be held to have
accepted risks which are inherent in that sport, but this doesnot eliminate all duty of care
of the one participant to the other; the question whether there has been a breach of such
duty will depend upon a variety of circumstances and the rules of the sport may be one of
those circumstances, but they are neither definitive of the existence of the duty nor does
their breach necessarily constitute a breach of any duty. In a football match the
defendant's foul play resulted in the plaintiff breaking his leg. In a suit for damages, the
defendant was held liable on the finding that he was guilty of ‘serious and dangerous foul
play which showed a reckless disregard of the plaintiff’s safety and which fell far below
the standards which might be expected in any one pursuing the game’. (76)
The maxim applies, in the second place, to consent to run the risk of harm which would
otherwise be actionable. The maxim, be it observed, is not ‘scienti non fit injuria' but
‘volenti’. Knowledge is not a conclusive defence in itself. But when it is a knowledge under
circumstances that leave no inference open but one, namely, that the risk has been
voluntarily encountered, the defence is complete. It is necessary to prove that the person
injured knew of the risk, and voluntarily took it. Thus, a person willingly undertaking to do
work which is intrinsically dangerous, notwithstanding that care has been taken to make it
as little intrinsically dangerous as possible cannot, if he suffers, complain that a wrong has
been done to him.(77) But if there is negligence on the part of the employer and he fails in
his duty towards the employed it cannot be said that the employee is willing, and that the
employer should thus a towards him simply because he does not straightway refuse to
continue in service. Il the plaintiff servant is himself in default which leads to his injury, a
distinction may have to be drawn whether it is a case of negligence or volenti. If the
plaintiff’s default is the sole cause of the injury, he would not be entitled to succeed
whether l be a case of negligence or volenti, for it does not matter in the result whether
one says 100 per cent contributory negligence or volenti non fit injuria.(78) But in cases
where the plaintiff's default is partially responsible for the injury, he would succeed to
some extent if it is a case of negligence but not at all if it is a case of volenti. For example,
there is a world of difference between two fellow servants collaborating
1. bid.
2. Buckpitt v Oates, [1968] 1 All ER 1145.