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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Smith v Northamptonshire County Council [2008] EWCA Civ 181 (11 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/181.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 181, [2008] 3 All ER 1054, [2008] ICR 826 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM NORTHAMPTON COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Metcalf
5NG13468
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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Smith |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Northamptonshire County Council |
Appellant |
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Mr Hugh Preston (instructed by Messrs Shoosmiths) for the Appellant
Hearing date : 4th February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
The Facts
Legal issues
The 1998 Regulations
"Article 2 - Definitions
For the purposes of this Directive, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
(a) 'work equipment': any machine, apparatus, tool or installation used at work;
(b) 'use of work equipment': any activity involving work equipment such as starting or stopping the equipment, its use, transport, repair, modification, maintenance and servicing, including, in particular, cleaning;
(e) 'operator': the worker or workers given the task of using work equipment.
Article 3 General obligations
1. The employer shall take the measures necessary to ensure that the work equipment made available to workers in the undertaking and/or establishment is suitable for the work to be carried out or properly adapted for that purpose and may be used by workers without impairment to their safety or health.
In selecting the work equipment which he proposed to use, the employer shall pay attention to the specific working conditions and characteristics and to the hazards which exist in the undertaking and/or establishment, in particular at the workplace, for the safety and health of the workers, and/or any additional hazards posed by the use of work equipment in question.
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 minimize the risks."
"'use' in relation to work equipment means any activity involving work equipment and includes starting, stopping, programming, setting, transporting, repairing, modifying, maintaining, servicing and cleaning;
'work equipment' means any machinery, appliance, apparatus, tool or installation for use at work (whether exclusively or not);"
"3. . . .
(2) The requirements imposed by these Regulations on an employer in respect of work equipment shall apply to such equipment provided for use or used by an employee of his at work.
(3) The requirements imposed by these Regulations on an employer shall also apply
(a) to a self-employed person, in respect of work equipment he uses at work;
(b) subject to paragraph (5), to a person who has control to any extent of
(i) work equipment;
(ii) a person a work who uses or supervises or manages the use of work equipment; or
(iii) the way in which work equipment is used at work, and to the extent of his control."
"Suitability of work equipment
4. (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.
Maintenance
5. (1) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is maintained in an efficient state, in efficient working order and in good repair.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that where any machinery has a maintenance log, the log is kept up to date.
Inspection
6. (1) Every employer shall ensure that, where the safety of work equipment depends on the installation conditions, it is inspected
(a) after installation and before being put into service for the first time; or
(b) after assembly at a new site on a new location,
to ensure that it has been installed correctly and is safe to operate.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment exposed to conditions causing deterioration which is liable to result in dangerous situations is inspected -
(a) at suitable intervals; and
(b) each time that exceptional circumstances which are liable to jeopardise the safety of the work equipment have occurred,
to ensure that health and safety conditions are maintained and that any deterioration can be detected and remedied in good time.
(3) Every employer shall ensure that the result of an inspection made under this regulation is recorded and kept until the next inspection under this regulation is recorded.
(4) Every employer shall ensure that no work equipment
(a) leaves his undertaking; or
(b) if obtained from the undertaking of another person, is used in his undertaking.
unless it is accompanied by physical evidence that the last inspection required to be carried out under this regulation has been carried out.
"24. Although the definition of what may be work equipment is to be found in Regulation 2, the ambit of the expression "work equipment" in these Regulations is determined by Regulation 4. I am myself doubtful whether taking Regulation 2 alone, the wheel bolt was "work equipment" within the definition. However Regulation 4, it will be recalled, provides that -
"The requirements imposed by these regulations on an employer shall apply in respect of work equipment provided for use or used by any of his employees who is at work ..... "
This indicates, in my view, that the Regulations are concerned with what may loosely be described as the tools of the trade provided by an employer to an employee to enable the employee to carry out his work. I emphasis that my use of the expression "tools of the trade" is intended to be illustrative and not definitive. There plainly are many things such as, for instance, a hoist, which may be work equipment, for which the word "tools" would be inapt. The requirements of the regulation are imposed in relation to "work equipment" falling within the definition of Regulation 2 (1) which is provided by an employer for use by his employees when they are at work. It does not apply to an object which the employee is working on provided by others. Thus, the car which is taken to a garage for repair is not work equipment in the context of the garage and its employees. In the present case, the police van was not the property of the first defendant, but of the second defendant. The van might well be work equipment of a policeman driving it, but not of the police mechanic repairing it, at least where the van is not the property of the employer of the mechanic. In the case of Kelly, it looks as if the track upon which the pursuer was working was the property of the pursuer's employers. I would reserve the question which does not arise in the present case, whether that is a valid distinction. If it were not a valid distinction, I would respectfully disagree with the decision which Lord Abernethy made in that case.
25. There are, in my view, other clear indications that these regulations do not extend to that which the employee is working on as distinct from the equipment which he is using to undertake his work. These include:
(a) the general sense of both the Directive and the 1992 Regulations is that they are concerned with equipment which the employer provides to the employee (or which the employee brings along himself) to carry out his work - see especially Article 3 of the Directive and paragraph 4 of the Regulations.
(b) Regulation 5 (1) is not apt, in its reference to work equipment being suitable for the purposes for which it is used, to refer to the car having its tyres changed or the part assembled work piece on an assembly line.
(c) The reference to 'selecting work equipment' in Article 3 of the Directive and Regulation 5 (2) is not apt for the car brought in by a customer to have its tyres changed, nor the part assembled work piece on the assembly line. The employer does not select the car, just as he does not within these Regulations provide it for use by his employees in their work.
(d) Regulation 5 (3) is equally inapt for the wide construction advocated by Mr Carr.
(e) Although 'use' is defined by Regulation 2 (1) to include 'any activity involving work equipment', you do not 'use' something you are working on or repairing. You do by contrast use the equipment provided to enable you to do the work."
"I would not permit it to be argued in this court that the lift was not work equipment, because the point was not taken below. However, I accept that the expression "work equipment" should be given a broad construction. The word "installation" is capable of covering a lift in a building as "a large piece of equipment installed for use", one of the definitions of installation in the Concise Oxford Dictionary (10th Edition). If the point had been open, I would have welcomed further argument. If the respondent had descended by the stairs and her hand had become jammed in a faulty fire door, I doubt whether the Regulations would have applied. A distinction is necessary between "work equipment" on the one hand and the structure and condition of premises on the other. The Workplace Regulations, considered later in this judgment, limit the employer's duties to workplaces under the employer's control."
"16. Since the lift must be taken to be work equipment, the case turns on the expression "use at work" in Regulations 2 and 3(2). If the lift was being "used at work", it need not, as the Regulation is drafted, have been "provided" by the employer. For the respondent, Mr Huckle submits that, in the case of an employee whose work takes him from building to building, such as a travelling salesman, the Regulation would cover, in relation to the employer, the lift in every such building and also public transport used in travelling between them.
17. For the appellants, Mr Vincent concedes that, had the respondent been running an errand for the appellants at the material time, such as collecting the appellants' mail from the lobby, the appellants would have been liable under Regulation 5. The issue is as narrow as that. Because, when the accident happened, the respondent had left the appellants' premises at the end of the day's work, they were not liable, it is submitted. It is relevant to bear in mind, it is submitted, that the lift was outside the appellants' premises, outside their control and was not for their employees' exclusive use. The existence of a contractual remedy for want of repair does not, for present purposes, confer any degree of control over the lift, it is submitted."
"21. The test is whether the equipment is being used "at work" and there is a definition of that expression in the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 ("the 1974 Act"). The 1998 Regulations are made in the exercise of powers conferred by that Act. Section 52(1)(b) of the 1974 Act provides that "an employee is at work throughout the time when he is in the course of his employment, but not otherwise". That definition, however, applies for the purposes of Part I of the 1974 Act, by which the general duty upon an employer is to ensure the health, safety and welfare at work of all his employees, "so far as is reasonably practicable". I do not consider that the absence of a spatial restriction in that definition necessarily operates to impose an absolute obligation under the 1998 Regulations upon an employer wherever the employee is working and whatever work equipment is involved. The definition cannot, in my judgment, be transposed verbatim into the application of the 1998 Regulations, which create strict liabilities."
22. Whether the employee is acting in the course of his employment is, in my view, certainly an important factor to be considered in deciding whether he is using equipment "at work" in the material time. However, the expression 'at work', as used in the context of the Directive, with its reference to 'undertaking' and 'establishment', may import a spatial or geographical limitation upon the places at which, and hence upon the equipment to which, the duty attaches. The degree of control exercised over the equipment by the employer may also be a factor in deciding whether the equipment is being used at work within the meaning of the Regulations.
23. While a tool used by an employee or equipment such as a bicycle, as in Stark, may come within the definition "work equipment" used at work wherever used by the employee, an installation, something installed in premises, may require a closer territorial link with the employer's place of business. These issues do not require decision in the present case. I mention them to indicate that a finding in the employee's favour in the present case does not involve acceptance of the submissions of Mr Huckle as to the extent of an employer's duties under the 1998 Regulations.
"40. In the light of the facts as set out in paragraphs [2], [8] and [11] of the judgment of Pill LJ, it appears to me that, to put it at its lowest, Her Honour Judge Faber was entitled to conclude that the lift in this case constituted "work equipment" falling within regulation 5(1), and that it fell within the ambit of regulation 3(2), in relation to the respondent and her employment by the appellant."
41. I reach this conclusion on the basis of the following facts:
(a) The lift was within the building containing, and served as a means of access to and egress from, the office in which the appellant carried on business and in which the respondent carried on her work as an employee of the appellant;
(b) The use of the lift was the one, at any rate, a natural and obvious means for obtaining such access and egress for employees of the appellant, the only alternative being stairs, also in the common parts of the building;
(c) The lift was used by the respondent as a means of access to, and egress from, the office, when coming to, and leaving, work, and when carrying out errands in the course of her employment with the appellant;
(d) The right to use the lift, together with its employees and visitors, was included in the demise to the appellant in its lease of the office;
(e) The lease included an obligation, enforceable at the suit of the appellant, by its landlord to repair maintain and renew the lift;
(f) The accident the subject of the instant claim was suffered by the respondent when using the lift to get out of the building after leaving the office at the end of her day's work for the appellant.
42. I am not saying that each or any of these factors is vital or determinative of the issue which we or the judge had to decide. What I am saying is that, in much the same way as Lord Wrenbury in the second sentence of his speech, my judgment is that, in the light of all these factors, the judge was entitled to reach the conclusion that she did."
Discussion
Lord Justice Richards :
Lord Justice Rimer :