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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hampshire Police v Taylor [2013] EWCA Civ 496 (09 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/496.html Cite as: [2013] ICR 1150, [2013] WLR(D) 171, [2013] PIQR P20, [2013] EWCA Civ 496 |
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ON APPEAL FROM WINCHESTER COUNTY COURT
MR RECORDER BLUNT QC
Claim No: 1UC75079
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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THE CHIEF CONSTABLE OF HAMPSHIRE POLICE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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KERRY ANN TAYLOR |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Andrew Roy (instructed by Slater & Gordon (UK) Llp) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 11 April 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
The 1992 Regulations.
"Every employer shall ensure that suitable personal protective equipment is provided to his employees who may be exposed to a risk to their health or safety while at work except where and to the extent that such risk has been adequately controlled by other means which are equally or more effective."
Regulation 6 requires the employer to check the equipment to ensure that it is suitable. Regulation 4(3) defines what constitutes suitable equipment. As Lady Justice Smith observed in Threlfall v Kingston Upon Hull City Council [2011] ICR 209 para 45 the essential point is that for equipment to be suitable, it must be effective. It is accepted that thick gloves would have been suitable equipment here.
"The purpose of PPE is, therefore, as a last resort after collective protection or methods of work organisation, to avoid or limit risks"
"(a) Try a less risky option, e.g use lower voltage tools.
(b) Prevent access to the hazard, e.g. by guarding.
(c) Organise work to reduce exposure to the hazard, e.g if there is a risk of falling objects, ensure restricted entry to that area if possible.
(d) If after all the above there is still a residual risk, you will need to provide PPE, e.g. in areas where fumes are present."
Were the Regulations engaged?
"If a residual risk exists, the regulation is engaged, provided that the risk of occurrence is not so slight as to be de minimis or the nature of the harm so trivial that it should properly be ignored."
"However, the video showed, amongst other things, that the cannabis farmer had installed substantial lengths of ventilation ducting, and he agreed that that would have had to have been "pulled down" by his team. He stated that there might be sharp edges on such ducting. In re-examination he stated that such ducting was often fixed by screws, but he also stated that there were inherent but low risks of encountering sharp edges in cannabis factories, and he re-affirmed that the ends of such ducting could be sharp, and that it needed to be taken down with care. This evidence was plainly based upon previous experience – either his own, or that of colleagues. Nevertheless, he stated that thick gloves were not usually used, and that in any event, that risk was controlled by appropriate working methods and did not require the provision of any protective equipment.
In closing submissions, made on behalf of the Defendant, it was asserted that acting PS Humphry's evidence in relation to the control of the risk had not been challenged. That is not surprising, because it was given in re-examination and was of a general nature.
Acting PS Humphry's evidence that there were no syringes or other signs of the use of hard drugs on the premises was not challenged, and was supported by the video. I accept that evidence. However, his evidence in relation to there being an inherent but low risk of encountering sharp edges in cannabis factories, his evidence relating to the ventilation ducting, and the lack of any convincing explanation as to how the risk of injury from sharp edges could be adequately controlled by means which were equally effective as, or more effective than, the provision of personal protective equipment such as thick gloves, leads inevitably to the conclusion that there was a risk of injury from sharp edges and that it was not so slight as to be de minimis or that the nature of the possible harm so trivial that it could properly be ignored. Accordingly, I am quite satisfied, and find as a fact, that Regulation 4(1) was engaged."
Was the duty to provide gloves engaged at the time of the accident?
"Of course, the Claimant was not injured whilst dismantling ventilation ducting nor by any sharp edge. She was injured by broken glass when she tried to open a window when she was engaged in removing cannabis plants. Nevertheless there was no suggestion that she was not to be included in carrying out any of the other tasks involved in dismantling the factory including the task of dismantling the ducting."
"However, there can be no doubt that if the Claimant had been wearing thick gloves (either of a type used for gardening or a type used in building works) her injuries would have been less or prevented entirely. Moreover, it seems to me that the burden lies on the Defendant to show that if he had complied with all his regulatory duties (including the duties in respect of the provision of information, instruction, and training imposed by Regulation 9) the injury would still have occurred. That this is so, is supported by paragraph 23 of the judgment of Longmore LJ in Ali Ghaith v Indesit Company UK Limited [2012] EWCA Civ 642, addressing the issue of causation, which is in the following terms:-
This is not a separate hurdle for the employee, granted that the onus is on the employer to prove that he took appropriate steps to reduce the risk to the lowest level practicable. If the employer does not do that, he will usually be liable without more ado It is possible to imagine a case when an employer could show that, even if he had taken all practicable steps to reduce the injury (though he had not done so), the injury would still have occurred e.g. If the injury was caused by a freak accident or some such thing: but the onus of so proving must be on the employer to show that that was the case, not on the employee to prove the negative proposition that, if all possible precautions had been taken, he would not have suffered any injury."
Appeal on costs.
Disposal.
Lord Justice Patten: