A grieving son is taking legal action against MacDonald Resorts after his mother died from hypothermia when she became trapped in an airing cupboard during her holiday.
Former policewoman Elizabeth Isherwood, 60, known as Mary, fought for several hours to free herself after a door handle broke, locking her in the cupboard in her en-suite bathroom in the middle of the night.
Her body was found by staff a week later.
The incident happened on the first night of a one-week stay at the Plas Talgarth holiday complex near Machynlleth, Wales, in September 2017.
According to a statement from law firm FBC Manby Bowdler, who is handling the case, she had tried to escape by clawing through brickwork and plaster, using a pipe she had broken as a chisel to try to cut through the walls.
But water spraying from the other end of the broken pipe drenched her as she battled to escape, accelerating the hypothermia.
Her son Craig, 33, is seeking compensation from holiday resort owners Macdonald Resorts.
He alleges that Macdonald Resorts was negligent in failing to check whether the door handle was working properly.
He said he was bringing the action to try to prevent any other family going through a similar ordeal.
"My mother died in the most terrible circumstances you could imagine. We think she had been trying to escape for several hours," he said.
"Tragically, she had made a hole big enough to climb through, but did not realise her way out was only blocked by a picture screwed to the other side of the wall.
"A couple in a neighbouring apartment heard banging and thought they would report it if it went on after 5pm. Sadly, my mother gave up her attempt at five past five so they assumed it had been maintenance workers who had finished for the day.
"Mum was fit and healthy and had years of a very happy life ahead of her."
He said the legal action was not about the compensation, adding: "How can you put a value on a life? It is about the fact that this should never have happened. I just want the company to admit that they made a mistake in not checking the door properly and make sure that this cannot happen to anyone else."
Adam Wilson, an associate in the serious injury and clinical negligence team at Midlands law firm FBC Manby Bowdler, said: "This was a quite horrific tragedy. There is no amount of money which can compensate Mr Isherwood and his two children for the loss of a much-loved mother and grandmother.
"But we believe that this was a tragedy which could, and should have been avoided. It is impossible to imagine the distress that Mrs Isherwood must have gone through as she tried to free herself from that cupboard.
"The central issue is whether the company was negligent in not correctly maintaining the door at the property, which we believe to be the case."
He said the action would seek compensation for Mrs Isherwood's injuries and the loss of the care she had been giving to her grandchildren.
An earlier inquest ruled Mrs Isherwood had died of misadventure.
Courtesy of Travelmole
Tragic.
It's never occurred to me to check whether the knob on the inside of an airing cupboard works or not because it's never occurred to me that anybody would go inside and close the door behind them. How and why did she end up in it in the first place? As it happened in a timeshare that the family had owned for sometime, one would expect her to know the layout of the apartment and hence it would be unlikely that she walked into it by mistake? I'm very puzzled!
Very strange. I wonder if she was locked in by someone..
2. Alone.
3. Went into the en suite during the night to use the toilet.
4. *probably * didn't put the light on ( my assumption)
5. Got disorientated and mistook the door to the airing cupboard as the door that would lead her back to the bedroom.
6. Stepped inside and door closed behind her.
7. Door knob fell off as the door shut behind her.
Tragic.
Sanji x
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Edited by
Sanji
2018-10-18 20:09:13
predictive text Grrrr
Very strang case never come accross an airing cupboard that had a door stronger than the walls. Also if there was water leaking from the pipe how come nobody spotted that surely it would be laking out of the cupboard.
I think that perhaps there are reporting restrictions in place and that there is additional information that was known to the coroner but isn't being put in the public domain because the verdict was 'death by misadventure' ie the victim voluntarily put themselves in danger, rather than 'accidental death' where the victim was unknowingly placed in danger in circumstances beyond their control or that of others.
It is very tragic for the family concerned and nothing takes away from that but I also wonder whether they are being exploited by a 'no win, no fee' claims firm? In some of the reports it is alleged that the basis for the claim is compensation to cover the cost of the loss of the free childcare she provided for her grandchildren and I'm not sure that is one of the things that would come to mind for a grieving family unless the seed was sown by somebody else.
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