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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Goodwin v Bennetts UK Ltd [2008] EWCA Civ 1374 (11 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1374.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 1374 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PORTSMOUTH COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE DIXON
5PO 04194
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
and
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
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GOODWIN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BENNETTS UK Limited |
Respondent |
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Mr Jonathan Waite QC and Ms Claire Toogood (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mawer) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 11 November 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jackson :
Part 1.Introduction
Part 2.The Facts
Part 3. The Present Proceedings
Part 4. The Appeal to the Court of Appeal and the threshold question
Part 5. Breach and Causation
Part 6. Conclusion
"(2) In these Regulations-
(a) "display screen equipment" means any alphanumeric or graphic display screen, regardless of the display process involved:
(c) "use" means use for or in connection with work;
(d) "user" means an employee who habitually uses display screen equipment as a significant part of his normal work: and
(e) "workstation" means an assembly comprising-
(i) display screen equipment (whether provided with software determining the interface between the equipment and its operator or user, a keyboard or any other input device),
(ii) any optional accessories to the display screen equipment,
(iii) any disk drive, telephone, modem, printer, document holder, work chair, work desk, work surface or other item peripheral to the display screen equipment, and
(iv) the immediate work environment around the display screen equipment."
Regulation 2 of the 1992 Regulations provides as follows:
"2. (1) Every employer shall perform a suitable and sufficient analysis of those workstations which-
(a) (regardless of who has provided them) are used for the purposes of his undertaking by users; or
(b) have been provided by him and are used for the purposes of his undertaking by operators,
for the purpose of assessing the health and safety risks to which those persons are exposed in consequence of that use.
(2) Any assessment made by an employer in pursuance of paragraph (1) shall be reviewed by him if-
(a) there is reason to suspect that it is no longer valid; or
(b) there has been a significant change in the matters to which it relates;
and where as a result of any such review changes to an assessment are required, the employer concerned shall make them.
(3) The employer shall reduce the risks identified in consequence of an assessment to the lowest extent reasonably practicable."
Regulation 4 provides:
"4. Every employer shall so plan the activities of users at work in his undertaking that their daily work on display screen equipment is periodically interrupted by such breaks or changes of activity as reduce their workload at that equipment."
Regulation 6 provides:
"6. (1) Where a person-
(a) is already a user on the date of coming into force of these Regulations; or
(b) is an employee who does not habitually use display screen equipment as a significant part of his normal work but is to become a user in the undertaking in which he is already employed,
his employer shall ensure that he is provided with adequate health and safety training in the use of any workstation upon which he may be required to work."
Regulation 7 provides:
"7. (1) Every employer shall ensure that operators and users at work in his undertaking are provided with adequate information about-
(a) all aspects of health and safety relating to their workstations; and
(b) such measures taken by him in compliance with his duties under regulations 2 and 3 as relate to them and their work.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that users at work in his undertaking are provided with adequate information about such measures taken by him in compliance with his duties under regulations 4 and 6(2) as relate to them and their work.
(3) Every employer shall ensure that users employed by him are provided with adequate information about such measures taken by him in compliance with his duties under regulations 5 and 6(1) as relate to them and their work."
"Both wrists painful. Quite incapacitating. Not tried NSAID yet start. Certificate tenosynovitis."
The claimant returned to work in early November. Initially the claimant was put to work on projects other than renewals, but quite soon the claimant was once again dealing with renewals. It does seem, however, that the number of renewals which the claimant was dealing with per day, was lower than the number of renewals which she had been dealing with per day before 23 October.
"Hand improving because not typing. Heading for another job."
The claimant asserts that in late December 2002 and early January 2003 the number of renewals which the claimant did each day progressively increased. However the contemporaneous records (summarised by Mr Burton at his exhibit "RB7") show that the number of renewals undertaken by the claimant per day remained roughly constant during this period and subsequently. The claimant was doing between 25 and 30 renewals per day.
(i) The judge erred in finding that the defendant had not been in breach of his duty under regulation 4 of the 1992 Regulations.
(ii)The judge erred in finding that the defendant had not been negligent.
(iii) The judge erred in finding that, had the defendant complied with its duties, it would not have acted differently towards the claimant's work or that, even if it had acted differently towards the claimant's work, such differences would not have made any difference to what happened. This was referred to as the "general causation issue".
(iv) The judge erred in finding that the claimant's injury was not caused by the claimant's work. This issue was referred to as the "medical causation issue".
(v) The judge erred in rejecting the claimant's "fallback" argument that the recurrence of symptoms in early 2003 was caused by the defendant's negligence and/or breach of the 1992 Regulations.
"Dr Hull noted the onset of symptoms towards the end of the working day with a gradual increase in onset of symptoms earlier in the working day, relief with rest such as weekends, holidays and time of work. He noted that the symptoms had virtually resolved following her redundancy in June 2003. Mr Warwick feels that this relation of symptoms to work should be interpreted as meaning that work simply aggravates symptoms from any painful condition rather than primarily causes that condition."
Mr Warwick made a similar observation in the concluding section of his report.
(i) The claimant only used the keyboard to a moderate extent in relation to her work on renewals: see part 4 above.
(ii) The claimant was entitled to a one hour break during the day. The claimant could take this break at lunch time. Alternatively the claimant could take a 45 minute break at lunch time plus a further break or breaks totally 15 minutes at other times: see the judge's findings at page 4 of the judgment, which were open to him on the basis of Mr Burton's evidence.
(iii) As the judge found at pages 4 and 18 of the judgment, the claimant had a number of other tasks to do during the day which did not involve keyboard work. Examples of such tasks were making telephone calls, dealing with post and general administration. The judge was entitled to make these findings on the basis of the claimant's evidence and the evidence of Mr Burton.
"Mr Porter Yes? Thank you. And once she was signed off of course, you knew that she was being signed off because of the GPs diagnosis of tenosynovitis.
Mr Burton Yes .
Mr Porter All right, but what matters is what you knew, rather than what he pleaded and you knew that it was tenosynovitis. And did you know at that stage that was potentially a work related upper limb disorder?
Mr Burton No, I did not; no.
Mr Porter You did not? You still did not know after she had been signed off sick with a diagnosis of tenosynovitis that that might be connected with work?
Mr Burton I did not, at that stage that I received that doctor's note, no.
HHJ Dixon Did you know what tenosynovitis was or had you an idea of it?
Mr Burton I did not, no.
HHJ Dixon So you did not know if it was anything to do with her work or if she had contracted some disease or had an accident at home or what. It could have been anything.
Mr Burton Yes that is right; I did not know.
Mr Porter Okay. Would this note have been submitted to personnel and passed to you, or submitted to you and passed to personnel? What would have happened?
Mr Burton Yes, it would have been sent in for my attention and I would have passed it on to personnel or human resources.
Mr Porter So once you had seen it, it would have gone to personnel and someone in the personnel department would have seen it.
Mr Burton Yes.
Mr Porter And we know that the Claimant returned to work on a reduced workload, or a different workload anyway, In November and you have described how she was doing project work and audit work?
Mr Burton Yes.
Mr Porter Had anyone in the personnel department or anyone else explained to you what tenosynovitis was and what the complications were?
Mr Burton No.
Mr Porter No. So that no doubt is how it came about that by Christmas time you had her back to doing some renewal invitation work.
Mr Burton Yes.
Mr Porter Yes. And that before any advice had been sought from an occupational health physician or a doctor, was it not?
Mr Burton Yes.
Mr Porter And she ended up going into 2003 doing 20 to 30 renewals a day, did she not?
Mr Burton If that is the figure recorded, then yes.
Mr Porter Well it is the figure that she has given and I have not yet heard anyone challenge that, so do you accept that that is what happened?
Mr Burton Yes, that is probably about right.
Mr Porter Do you remember that she got a return of the symptoms, and it became worse again?
Mr Burton Yes.
Mr Porter You do recall that?
Mr Burton Yes."
Lord Justice Dyson
Master of the Rolls