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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> AGC Automotive (UK) Ltd, R. v [2007] EWCA Crim 3396 (22 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/3396.html Cite as: [2008] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 26, [2007] EWCA Crim 3396, [2008] 2 Cr App R (S) 26 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
SIR RICHARD CURTIS
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R E G I N A | ||
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(UK) LIMITED AGC AUTOMOTIVE |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr I Bridge appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"Basis of Plea.
The company pleads guilty on the basis set out in this document, and no other or further basis. The breach of duty was the temporary use of a part of its site for the storage of stillages without putting in place a diverted pedestrian walkway.
Aggravating Features.
1. Injury
2. The issue of fork lift truck movements and pedestrian safety was raised in a letter dated 3 May 2006 from HSE to the company.
Mitigating Features
1. The Company had recently acted to improve its systems of pedestrian controls, particularly in respect in respect of those not in the Company's employment - see AGC's letter of 16 June 2006 to HSE.
2. Post-accident actions.
3. No previous convictions.
4. A good health and safety record.
5. Co-operation with HSE.
6. Guilty plea - the Company relies upon the letter dated 7 June 2007 to HSE."
"...in Unit B one fork-lift truck (FLT) was observed stacking stillages close to the primer operation area, where the manoeuvres it was making were regularly taking it over the demarcated pedestrian walkway yellow line and it was reversing very close to the area where employees were working. In the same unit several trucks were using a central route way through the unit where the gap for both trucks and pedestrians was very narrow in places and represented a transport pinch point. The arrangements that have been made for fork-lift truck use in unit B must be revised because of the obvious risk of a conflict between trucks and pedestrians."
The improvement notice served with that letter required the company, among other things, to:
"...set up a system for checking the extent to which vehicle drivers and pedestrians on your site are complying with safe practices (including your own site rules) in relation to risks from vehicle movements on site. The system should include arrangements for checking the behaviour of:
vehicle drivers (including drivers employed by you and other drivers, including visiting drivers); and pedestrians (including your own employees and other pedestrians, including visitors to the site)
The system should address in particular arrangements for checking whether:
drivers and pedestrians are staying within any designated areas and/or avoiding any obvious areas where they are in the path of one another (and if not any reasons for this)..."
It is common ground that that notice was promptly complied with and that the Executive in the letter of June referred to in the "Friskies schedule" had expressed itself satisfied with the measures taken. Its significance for present purposes, however, is that, having received so recent a reminder of the importance of segregation of vehicles and pedestrians, it was the more remiss of the company wholly to overlook it when creating the temporary stillage stacking area.
"But what concerns me is it's all very well when you're sort of caught doing wrong things to immediately say 'Terribly sorry' and put them right. What we have to do is examine what happened in that intervening period, and I have precious little information -- certainly nothing provided by the defendants -- to counteract the view that I expressed during argument, that although they may have been perfectly responsible and proper before and perfectly responsible and proper after, during this period they were thoroughly irresponsible and reckless. I say reckless because they must have (they, the defendants, through the appropriate offices in the company) must have been fully aware of the potential dangers because they had the notice served on them not all that long before and had immediately complied with it.
Such little information as I have is that in terms there was nowhere else to store these things on a temporary measure, but there is no evidence that anybody turned their mind to the risks that that might produce. No risk assessment; no-one saying, when the forklift truck driver is going to be moving these particular silages in the area where pedestrians walk, 'We must put up a barrier that says 'No entry on Foot' and/or big warning signs' (temporary of course, because it was a temporary matter). And I think what makes this more serious than Mr Kimblin on behalf of the defendants acknowledges in this argument is that they were in strict notice of his problem, having had, as I've said, notice about it earlier in the year and doing the improvements."
"I have to decide what is the appropriate level of fine. I totally disagree that it is the level within the jurisdiction of a summary court. My view is that the fine has to be such not merely to punish these defendants but to show them and other potential defendants that they cannot, even if they are good responsible employer, for whatever reasons, because it is favourable to their own business operation, ignore that, even if it's on a temporary basis, and in my judgment, the appropriate fine would be £150,000."