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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Yorkshire Traction Company Ltd. v Searby [2003] EWCA Civ 1856 (19 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1856.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1856 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIS HONOUR JUDGE GRENFELL
AT LEEDS COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE MAY
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YORKSHIRE TRACTION COMPANY LIMITED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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WALTER SEARBY |
Respondent |
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MR B LANGSTAFF QC and MR P COPNALL (instructed by Towells,Wakefield, WF1 1NL) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 20th November 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"Suitability of work equipment"
(1) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is so constructed or adapted as to be suitable for the purpose for which it is used or provided.
(2) In selecting work equipment, every employer shall have regard to the working conditions and to the risks to the health and safety of persons which exist in the premises or undertaking in which that work equipment is to be used and any additional risk posed by the use of that work equipment.
(3) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is used only for operations for which, and under conditions for which, it is suitable.
(4) In this regulation 'suitable' means suitable in any respect which it is reasonably foreseeable will affect the health or safety of any person. "
"Q. If Mr Cooke, who is the engineer, is going to fit some more screens and he needs to satisfy his local Union about that before he puts them in, does he not? You agree? A. Mmm.
Q. It is not going to work unless he has agreement with the Union, the drivers though the Union? A. Yes, absolutely, yes.
Q. There has to be a considerable element of unanimity when he comes to do that ? A. Well, at least a majority position.
Q. He has got to be able to sit down with the CNC and come to a scheme that is agreed that is likely to work? A. That is right, yes."
"What I am saying to you is that you might eliminate one problem and gain two, perhaps three more".
"But we had to weigh it up. Putting a screen in created a greater problem for the drivers than what the assault was . It is a balance ".
Screens were not "trialled" between 1986 and 1988 because he believed that they would create more problems than they solved, though he later stated that there was no specific reason for the absence of trials. A trial was now taking place. Mr Cooke agreed that in 1986 the Cleveland Company and their drivers had been able to find a design which was thought mutually suitable. He said that it was possible that more work on the question would have come up with a design acceptable to the drivers.
"Give all drivers customer care training which will include how to deal with situations which could lead to acts of violence".
"26. I am satisfied that there was a reasonably foreseeable risk of injury by assault to a driver of a service which was at least partially urban and which covered the times when passengers were most likely to be intoxicated. From the evidence I have heard that would principally cover late evening services such as the service on which the claimant was injured in November 1998, but it could also extend to early afternoon services. Generally speaking, for rural services and those run at other times of the day, the risk would be sufficiently small that it could not be said that a bus was being operated in conditions for which it was suitable if it did not have a screen. However, for a late evening partially urban service such as the service in question, the risk of assault was sufficient to require some means of prevention, without which the bus was not being used under conditions for which, it was suitable. The only possible means of prevention, as opposed to the mere deterrence of, for example, mobile telephones and closed circuit television cameras, was a screen of some sort
30. As I have already indicated, Yorkshire Traction abandoned the concept of screens after their 1986 trial, largely it seems as a result of driver opposition to them. In my judgment, however, that did not relieve it of the employer's duty to investigate screen design more widely, particularly since experience in other parts of the country, where urban services were being run, showed that suitable screens were in use. If drivers were unhappy with the trials of screens, then it was up to the employer to meet those concerns and not simply give up. Had Yorkshire Traction done so, in my view, it should have discovered at least the seven requirements for a screen identified by Cleveland Transit and could have met any other concerns, for example avoiding obstruction of the nearside mirror, by appropriate consultation with drivers. It seems to me that an employer should not derive too much comfort from the fact that a union is not pressing for a particular preventative measure the union's lack of enthusiasm does not abrogate the employer's duty to take reasonable steps for the safety of its employees and to ensure compliance with the appropriate Regulations .
33. I am satisfied that, had Yorkshire Traction carried out the kind of investigation of design that, for example, Cleveland Transit did in the 1980s, it could have come up with a design of screen that was not only acceptable to drivers, but also one which importantly did not create other unacceptable risks. In that way, Yorkshire Traction would have fulfilled its statutory duty of ensuring that its buses were being used only under conditions for which they were suitable. I am satisfied that, had this been so, the claimant's bus would have been fitted with a screen on the night in question, because it was a service that started in an urban area in the late evening; and that as a result the assault either would not have occurred or at worst the claimant would not have been injured. In all probability, although this is not central to my findings, his earlier assaults would have been avoided."
a) While statistically extremely small, there was a risk of assault on bus drivers by members of the public. In a workforce of about 600, there had been 8 assaults in the year up to 1 November 1998.
b) In many parts of the country, particularly in urban areas, buses had been fitted with screens.
c) In some areas, such as Cleveland, screens which were acceptable to the workforce had been designed and installed.
d) The appellants had conducted a trial with screens in 1986 and it had not been successful because the bus drivers did not like them.
e) Screens brought problems of their own including light reflection, a sense of claustrophobia and a sense of isolation from passengers. These problems were not insubstantial.
f) The drivers did not like screens as evidenced by requests to remove them when buses with screens were purchased from other companies.
g) There was evidence that the problems, or perceived problems, could be overcome.
h) It is only since a date well after that of the accident that significant steps had been taken by the union to pursue the provision of screens. The need for agreement with the workforce has been stressed.
"In determining whether a party is negligent, the standard of reasonable care is that which is reasonably to be demanded in the circumstances."
" once a claimant establishes that his employer could have reasonably foreseen conditions which represent a possible cause of injury, and that the conditions resulted in his injury, he establishes a breach of [the regulation]".
Mr. Langstaff accepts that, by relating the duty entirely to what is reasonably foreseeable, the judge misstated the duty. The bus was not however suitable for use under conditions which included late evening operation on a journey partly through an urban area, and there was a breach of Regulation 5 (3).
"The court, as it seems to me, should stand back and ask itself by reference to the above factors as they existed before this accident took place and not with any benefit of hindsight, was this floor suitable ? Was it uneven to an extent which exposed persons to risk of their health or safety? My answer to those questions would be that it was suitable and that it did not expose persons to that risk. That is the view to which, in my judgment, the recorder should have come, rather than holding the absolute liability that he did."
"I do not consider that the existence of this small rise means that it should be regarded as rendering the floor unsuitable for the purpose for which it is used namely leaving or entering the shop. Another way of putting the point is to say that this degree of risk in this situation does not fall within the concept of constituting a risk to health and safety as used in this regulation."
Lord Justice Chadwick:
"In selecting the work equipment which he proposes to use, the employer shall pay attention to the specific working conditions and characteristics and to the hazards which exist in the undertaking . . . for the safety and health of the workers, and/or any additional hazards posed by the use of work equipment in question."
But that provision must be read with article 3(2):
"Where it is not possible fully so to ensure that work equipment can be used by workers without risk to their safety or health, the employer shall take appropriate measures to minimise the risks".
It is pertinent, also, to have in mind the provisions of article 8 of the work equipment directive which, in conjunction with article 11 of the framework directive, requires an employer to consult workers and workers' representatives and to allow them to participate in discussions on the measures to be taken.
Lord Justice May: