Woman who slipped on pigeon droppings awarded €24,000

Leann Walsh fell while working in restaurant at Heuston Station in Dublin in May 2013

A woman who slipped on pigeon droppings at the open air restaurant in which she worked at Dublin’s Heuston Station, has been awarded almost €25,000 damages against CIE. Photographer: Dara Mac Dónaill.
A woman who slipped on pigeon droppings at the open air restaurant in which she worked at Dublin’s Heuston Station, has been awarded almost €25,000 damages against CIE. Photographer: Dara Mac Dónaill.

A woman who slipped on pigeon droppings at the open air restaurant in which she worked at Dublin’s Heuston Station, has been awarded almost €25,000 damages against CIE.

Circuit Court President Mr Justice Raymond Groarke heard that Leann Walsh (25) tended table on the decking outside the Heuston Station Refreshment Rooms and would often have to shoo away pigeons.

Barrister Karl Finnegan, counsel for Ms Walsh, told the Circuit Civil Court she had been working outdoors on May 15th, 2013 when she stepped on the droppings and her right leg went from under her.

Mr Finnegan said his client fell sideways on her knees and back, suffering soft tissue injuries to her ankle, knees and lower back.

READ SOME MORE

Gerry Ryan, counsel for CIE, told the court the company had entered a full defence. Barrister Sarah Corcoran, for the Heuston Refreshment Rooms, said her client had also denied liability.

Ms Corcoran told the court that pigeons were a serious problem for her client, who had asked CIE to deal with the matter.

Judge Groarke, awarding Ms Walsh, of Merrion Court, Blackhall Street, Dublin, €22,500 damages with special damages of €2,148, said he would grant judgment against both defendants but would make an order over in favour of the restaurant against CIE.

Visitation

The judge said what had been described to the court was a visitation by a number of pigeons calling to Heuston Refreshment Rooms outside restaurant area on at least six or seven times a day.

“Unbeknownst to Ms Walsh one of the pigeons had left a deposit on the floor on which she slipped and fell,” he said, noting Ms Walsh had left the deck area for a matter of seconds and had fallen on her return.

Judge Groarke said that with the comings and goings and deposits of pigeons the area was not a safe place of work for Ms Walsh who had to serve customers at tables as well as clean up the area.

He believed that an incident of the type before the court was foreseeable despite the fact that there had been no evidence of a similar slip in the 19 years during which Heuston Refreshment Rooms ran the restaurant.

“The first and second defendants were both very well aware that there was a very serious problem with pigeons coming into the building and the only work that seemed to have been undertaken was of a type to make life uncomfortable for pigeons in the building,” he said.

Among the work carried out was the placing of spikes, fire gel, a hawk on a pole with which the pigeons became very acquainted and humane traps. No permanent solution had been found to the problem.