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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bussey v 00654701 Ltd [2018] EWCA Civ 243 (22 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/243.html Cite as: [2018] 3 All ER 354, [2018] EWCA Civ 243, [2018] WLR(D) 120, [2018] ICR 1242, [2018] PIQR P11 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
HH JUDGE YELTON
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
and
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Veronica Bussey (widow and executrix of the Estate of David Edwin Anthony Bussey) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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00654701 Limited (formerly Anglia Heating Limited) |
Respondent |
____________________
Charles Feeny (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 23rd January 2018
Judgment Approved
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jackson:
Part 1 - Introduction | Paragraphs 2 - 9 |
Part 2 - The facts | Paragraphs 10 - 14 |
Part 3 - The present proceedings | Paragraphs 15 - 23 |
Part 4 - The appeal to the Court of Appeal | Paragraphs 24 - 28 |
Part 5 - The Law | Paragraphs 29 - 39 |
Part 6 - Foreseeability and breach | Paragraphs 40 - 61 |
"Exhaust ventilation
7. -(l) Subject to the provisions of the next following Regulation, no process to which these Regulations apply shall be carried on in any factory unless equipment is provided, maintained and used which produces an exhaust draught which prevents the entry into the air of any workplace of asbestos dust:
Provided that the foregoing requirements of this Regulation shall not apply where any such process is carried on in such a manner as to be as safe as it would be if the said requirements were complied with.
(2) Exhaust ventilation equipment provided in accordance with this Regulation shall while any work of maintenance or repair to the machinery, apparatus or other plant or equipment in connection with which it is provided is being carried on, be kept in use so as to produce an exhaust draught which prevents the entry into the air of any workplace of asbestos dust.
(3) Exhaust ventilation equipment provided in accordance with this Regulation shall be inspected at least once in every seven days and shall be thoroughly examined and tested by a competent person at least once in every period of fourteen months, and a report of the results of every such examination and test containing approved particulars and signed by the person making or responsible for the carrying out of the examination and test shall be made within fourteen days after the examination and test.
(4) Every such report as aforesaid shall be attached to the general register and be preserved and kept available for inspection by any inspector for a period of two years after it is made.
Protective equipment
8. - (1) Where in any factory the requirements of paragraph (1) or (2) of the last foregoing Regulation apply, but it is impracticable to comply with those requirements, there shall be provided for the use of each person employed in any part of the factory, being a part into which asbestos dust from a process to which these Regulations apply is liable to escape-
(a) approved respiratory protective equipment; and
(b) protective clothing.
(2) All respiratory protective equipment and protective clothing provided in pursuance of the foregoing paragraph of this Regulation shall be maintained.
(3) All respiratory protective equipment and protective clothing so provided shall be used by persons for whom they are provided while employed in any such part of the factory as aforesaid.
(4) No respiratory protective equipment so provided which has been worn by a person shall be provided for the use of another person unless it has been thoroughly cleaned and disinfected since last being worn.
(5) No person shall be employed to perform any work for which respiratory protective equipment is provided in pursuance of this Regulation unless he has been fully instructed in the proper use of that equipment."
"In this note guidance is given on how HM Inspectors of Factories will interpret the expression 'dust consisting of or containing asbestos to such an extent as is liable to cause danger to the health of employed persons' and how the measurements may be made. It is emphasised that these notes have been prepared for the guidance of HM Inspectors since only the Courts can give binding decisions in these matters. It is important to bear in mind that these standards are provisional and may have to be revised from time to time.
Chrysotile, amosite and fibrous anthophyllite
(a) Where the average concentration of asbestos dust over any 10 minute sampling is less than 2 fibres/cc or 0-1 mg/m5, HM Factory Inspectorate will not seek to enforce the substantive provisions of the Regulations, in particular regulations 7 and 8. Where the concentration is 2 fibres/cc or 0.6 mg/m5 or more (but not more than 12 fibres/cc or 0.6 mg/m5-1 further sampling over a four hour period will be carried out to determine whether the average concentration of asbestos dust still exceeds 2 fibres/cc or 0.1 mg/m5.
(b) Where the average concentration of asbestos dust over a four hour sampling period is 2 fibres/cc or 0.1 mg/m5 or more the extent to which HM Factory Inspectorate will require the standard of control to be improved will depend upon the amount by which it exceeds 2 fibres/cc or 0.1 mg/m5 and the duration of exposure.
(c) When the average concentration of asbestos dust over any 10 minute period exceeds 12 fibres/cc or 0.6 mg/m5' Inspectors will normally seek to confirm or otherwise the accuracy of the test by means of a further sample before taking action to enforce regulations 7 or 8 whichever is appropriate."
"Mesothelioma can occur after low level asbestos exposure and there is no threshold dose of asbestos below which there is no risk. However, the risk that mesothelioma will occur increases in proportion to the dose of asbestos received and successive periods of exposure each augment the risk that mesothelioma will occur.
There is on average, a long latent interval between first exposure to asbestos and the onset of clinical manifestations of mesothelioma, more than 30 years in most series, but the range of intervals is large, extending down to ten years and perhaps less in rare cases, and upwards with no upper limit. The latent interval between first exposure and the onset of clinical manifestations should not be confused with the interval between commencement of the growth of the tumour from the first cell and the onset of clinical manifestations. The latter period is usually much shorter than the former because the mesothelioma does not start to grow as soon as the first fibres are inhaled but after a period of years during which repeated interactions between asbestos fibres and mesothelial cells occur, eventually resulting in malignant transformation of a mesothelial cell. It is at this point that the tumour starts to grow. Initially growth of the tumour is not dependent upon growth of new blood vessels, a process known as angiogenesis, but eventually this is necessary for growth of the tumour to continue so that it may eventually become clinically manifest."
i) Exposure to asbestos dust caused Mr Bussey to develop mesothelioma
ii) Mr Bussey did not receive any advice from Anglia about reducing his exposure to asbestos dust.
iii) 1965, the year Mr Bussey started working for Anglia, marked a turning point in knowledge about mesothelioma. A paper was published in the Journal of Industrial Medicine about the link between asbestos exposure and mesothelioma. This was followed by an article in the Sunday Times to the same effect.
iv) On balance of probabilities, Mr Bussey was not exposed to levels of asbestos dust beyond those set out in TDN13. This laid down levels of 12 fibres/ml for a TWA of 10 minutes or 2 fibres/ml for a TWA of 4 hours. Those levels would now be regarded as far too high.
v) In order to succeed, the claimant must prove on balance of probabilities that it was reasonably foreseeable by Anglia at the time that Mr Bussey could contract mesothelioma from the asbestos dust to which he was being exposed.
vi) If Anglia had foreseen the risks, they could have reduced Mr Bussey's exposure to asbestos by requiring him to wear a respirator or to carry out his work outside.
vii) The Court of Appeal held in Williams v University of Birmingham [2011] EWCA Civ 1242 that in relation to a period before 1970 the claimant could not succeed if his exposure to asbestos was below that provided in TDN 13.
viii) Williams cannot be distinguished. It is not open to the judge to treat Williams as decided per incuriam.
ix) Therefore the claimant's claim fails.
i) Williams was decided per incuriam because earlier relevant authorities were not cited to the court.
ii) Alternatively Williams should be distinguished because that case concerned a lawful visitor, rather than an employee.
iii) On the evidence, in the period 1965 to 1968 it was reasonably foreseeable that exposure to the levels of asbestos at issue in this case could cause mesothelioma. Insofar as Williams holds otherwise, it was wrongly decided.
iv) In any event Mr Bussey's employment with Anglia preceded the publication of TDN13. That Technical Data Note cannot be the touchstone test for breach in respect of any period before 1970.
"From these authorities I deduce the principles, that the overall test is still the conduct of the reasonable and prudent employer, taking positive thought for the safety of his workers in the light of what he knows or ought to know; where there is as recognised and general practice which has been followed for a substantial period in similar circumstances without mishap, he is entitled to follow it, unless in the light of common sense or newer knowledge it is clearly bad; but, where there is developing knowledge, he must keep reasonably abreast of it and not be too slow to apply it; and where he has in fact greater than average knowledge of the risks, he may be thereby obliged to take more than the average or standard orecautions. He must weigh up the risk in terms of the likelihood of injury occurring and the potential consequences if it does; and he must balance against this the probable effectiveness of the precautions that can be taken to meet it and the expense and inconvenience they involve. If he is found to have fallen below the standard to be properly expected of a reasonable and prudent employer in these respects, he is negligent."
"I shall direct myself in accordance with this succinct and helpful statement of the law, and will make only one additional comment. In the passage just cited, Swanwick J drew a distinction between a recognised practice followed without mishap, and one which in the light of common sense or increased knowledge is clearly bad. The distinction is indeed valid and sufficient for many cases. The two categories are not, however, exhaustive: as the present actions demonstrate. The practice of leaving employees unprotected against excessive noise had never been followed "without mishap." Yet even the plaintiffs have not suggested that it was "clearly bad," in the sense of creating a potential liability in negligence, at any time before the mid-1930s. Between the two extremes is a type of risk which is regarded at any given time (although not necessarily later) as an inescapable feature of the industry. The employer is not liable for the consequences of such risks, although subsequent changes in social awareness, or improvements in knowledge and technology, may transfer the risk into the category of those against which the employer can and should take care."
"However, where an employer cannot know the extent of any particular employee's exposure over the period of his employment, knows or ought to know that exposure is variable, and knows or ought to know the potential maximum as well as the potential minimum, a reasonable and prudent employer, taking positive thought for the safety of his workers, would have to take thought for the risks involved in the potential maximum exposure. Only if he could be reassured that none of these employees would be sufficiently exposed to be at risk could he safely ignore it."
"The point which impressed the judge was the certain knowledge that asbestos dust was dangerous and the absence of any knowledge, and indeed any means of knowledge, about what constituted a safe level of exposure. Mr Mackay's argument relies heavily on the explosion of knowledge which took place during the 1960s. Only then did it become apparent that mesothelioma could result from very limited exposure. In particular, it was only then that knowledge began to develop of the risks to those outside the workplace, such as the wife washing her shipyard worker husband's overalls (as in Gunn) or people living near to asbestos works. But just as courts must beware using such later developments to inflate the knowledge which should have been available earlier, they must beware using it to the contrary effect. The fact that other and graver risks emerged later does not detract from the power of what was already known, particularly as it affected employees such as these, working in confined spaces containing a great deal of asbestos which might have to be disturbed at any time. There is no reassurance to be found in the literature that the level of exposure found by the judge in this case was safe and much to suggest that it might well not be so. The judge was entitled to conclude that a prudent employer would have taken precautions or at the very least made enquiries about what precautions, if any, they should take."
"Before 1965 neither the industry generally, nor those responsible for safety and health, nor the Factory Inspectorate, nor the medical profession, suggested that it was necessary, or even that it would be prudent, for risks arising from familial exposure to be addressed by the industry. In truth, the alarm did not sound until late 1965, when it began to be appreciated that there could be no safe or permissible level of exposure, direct or indirect, to asbestos dust. Thereafter, the learning curve about the risks arising from familial exposure was fairly steep. In my judgment, however, Morland J's conclusion that the risk of serious injury to Mrs Maguire's health was "reasonably foreseeable, indeed obvious" to her husband's employers is not sustainable."
"In any event in Jeromson v Shell Tankers UK Ltd [2001] P.I.Q.R. 19 this court preferred the approach of Buxton J to that of Waterhouse J; in my judgment, we are, therefore, bound to proceed on the basis that as between employer and employee, the employer will be in breach of duty if he fails to reduce his employee's exposure "to the greatest extent possible", reading possible as meaning "practicable", the word used in s.47 of the Factories Act 1937."
i) The deceased was exposed to asbestos fibres for between 52 and 78 hours in total. The concentration of asbestos in the atmosphere was close to or just above .1 fibres\ml but less than .2 fibres/ml. See [8] and [43].
ii) The test for negligence in the present case was:
"Ought the University reasonably to have foreseen the risk of contracting mesothelioma arising from Mr Williams' exposure to asbestos fibres by undertaking the speed of light experiments in the tunnel in the manner contempiated - and done in fact-to the extent that the University should (acting reasonably) have refused to allow the tests to be done there, or taken further precautions or at the least sought advice."
See [35],
iii) The Supreme Court has reaffirmed in Baker v Quantum Clothing Group [2011] UKSC 17; [2011] 1WLR 1003 that the standard of conduct to be expected is that of a reasonable and prudent employer at the time, but taking account of developing knowledge about the particular danger concerned. See [36].
iv) There could only be a breach of the duty of care by the University if "it would have been reasonably foreseeable to a body in the position of the University in 1974 that if it exposed Mr Williams to asbestos fibres at a level of just above 0.1 fibres/ml for a period of 52-78 hours, he was exposed to an unacceptable risk of asbestos-related injury." See [60].
v) TDN13 was the best guide to what were acceptable and unacceptable levels of exposure to asbestos in 1974. See [61].
vi) Accordingly, the claimant failed on the issue of foreseeability.
During the period 1965 to 1968 ought Anglia reasonably to have foreseen that if Mr Bussey cut and caulked pipes in the manner set out in Part 2 above, he would be exposed to an unacceptable risk of asbestos-related injury?
"8. The evolving knowledge of the risks associated with asbestos as detailed in our reports are effectively agreed. To summarise, we agree that:
a) From the early 1930s there was knowledge that exposure to substantial quantities of asbestos dust was associated with a risk of developing asbestosis.
b) From the mid-1950s there was knowledge of a risk of developing lung cancer (Dr Hughson will say in 1955 it was identified there was an increased risk of lung cancer in patients with asbestosis).
c) From the mid-1960s there was knowledge that exposure to relatively small quantities of asbestos dust, in particular crocidolite, was associated with a risk of developing mesothelioma. It is generally agreed that this became common knowledge in 1965 following publication of an article by Newhouse and Thompson which received national press coverage."
9. We agree that the Deceased's employment with the Defendants would have post-dated knowledge of the risks of mesothelioma and that exposure to relatively small quantities of asbestos dust (and in particular exposure to crocidolite) was potentially harmful."
Lord Justice Underhill:
a) The first question is whether Anglia should at any time during Mr Bussey's employment - that is, between 1965 and 1968 (the precise dates are not known) - have been aware that the exposure to asbestos dust which his work involved gave rise to a significant risk of asbestos-related injury. (I say "significant" only so as to exclude risks which are purely fanciful: any real risk, albeit statistically small, of a fatal illness is significant.) That will depend on how quickly the knowledge, first widely published in 1965, of the fact that much lower exposures than had previously been thought to be dangerous could cause mesothelioma was disseminated among reasonable and prudent employers whose employees had to work with asbestos. One aspect of this question is whether, even though Anglia may have been aware of the risk in general terms, it was reasonable for it at the material time to believe that there was a level of exposure below which there was no significant risk, and that Mr Bussey's exposure was below that level.
b) If the answer to the first question is that Anglia should have been aware that Mr Bussey's exposure gave rise to such a risk (including that there was no known safe limit) the second question is whether it took proper precautions to reduce or eliminate that risk. On the facts of the present case, that question may not be difficult to answer, since, as Jackson LJ says at para. 56, the Judge found that there were two simple precautions that could have been taken, and there seems to be no suggestion that they were either impractical or unreasonably expensive: even if the risk was understood to be small, given its seriousness if it eventuated, the precautions ought to have been taken.
I do not in fact think that this differs from what Jackson LJ says at para. 49 of his judgment; my concern is only with the introduction in para. 44 of the concept of "unacceptable" risk. Although that term is indeed used in Williams I do not believe it forms part of Aikens LJ's ratio.
Lord Justice Moylan: