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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Electricity North West Ltd, R v [2018] EWCA Crim 1944 (23 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/1944.html Cite as: [2018] WLR(D) 561, [2018] 4 WLR 148, [2018] EWCA Crim 1944 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT PRESTON
HHJ Altham
T2016 0266
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
and
MR JUSTICE GOSS
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Regina |
Respondent |
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and |
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Electricity North West Ltd |
Appellant |
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Mr Nigel Lawrence QC (instructed by Fieldings Porter Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19 July 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
Introduction
The facts in outline
The statutory and regulatory provisions relied on and charges in the indictment
Count 3
(1) It shall be the duty of every employer to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare at work of all his employees;
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of an employer's duty under the preceding subsection, the matters to which that duty extends include in particular –
(a) the provision and maintenance of plant and systems of work that are, so far as reasonably practicable, safe and without risks to health;
…
(c) the provision of such information, instruction, training and supervision as is necessary to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety at work of his employees.
That you, being an employer, did on and before 22 November 2013 fail to discharge the duty imposed on you by section 2(1) of the Act in failing to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare of your employees, including John Flowers and other linesmen, whilst working at height during the course of their employment with you whereby you are guilty of an offence …
Count 1
(1) Every employer shall make a suitable and sufficient assessment of -
(a) the risks to the health and safety of his employees to which they are exposed whilst there are at work; and
(b) the risks to the health and safety of persons not in his employment arising out of or in connection with the conduct by him of his undertaking,
for the purpose of identifying the measures he needs to take to comply with the requirements and prohibitions imposed upon him by or under the relevant statutory provisions.
That you, being an employer, did on and before 22 November 2013 fail to discharge the duty imposed on you by Regulation 3(1) … in failing to carry out a suitable and sufficient risk assessment in relation to risks to the health and safety of your employees, including John Flowers and other linesmen, to which they were exposed whilst carrying out work at height during the course of their employment with you whereby you were guilty of an offence …
Count 2
Every employer shall ensure that work at height is –
(a) properly planned
(b) appropriately supervised; and
(c) carried out in a manner which is so far as is reasonably practicable safe,
and that its planning includes the selection of work equipment in accordance with regulation 7.
(1) Every employer, in selecting work equipment for use of in work at height, shall -
(a) give collective protection measures priority over personal protection measures; and
(b) take account of -
…
(vii) the other provisions of these Regulations
(2) An employer shall select work equipment for work at height which -
…
(b) is in other respects the most suitable work equipment, having regard in particular to the purposes specified in regulation 6.
That you being an employee, did on and before 22 November 2013 fail to discharge the duty imposed on you by regulation 4(1) [of WAHR] in failing to ensure that work at height carried out by linesmen on the Vegetation Management Section, including John Flowers, was properly planned, appropriately supervised and was carried out in a manner which was so far as reasonably practicable safe, and that its planning included the selection of work equipment in accordance with regulation 7, whereby you are guilty of an offence by virtue of the provisions of section 33(1)(c) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 and are liable to penalty as provided by the said Act as amended.
The prosecution case as opened to the jury
The reality is that nothing was planned … for the work the linesmen had to perform in clearing vegetation or ivy from dead wood poles. There was no documented or other safe system of work for this task … the bottom line, though, is that it wasn't properly planned, it wasn't appropriately supervised and it certainly wasn't then carried out safely. Not only this but, as regulation 4 requires, there was no proper selection of work equipment in accordance with regulation 7 either.
An outline of the evidence
The summing-up
The Judge's assessment of the basis on which the jury convicted on count 2, having acquitted on counts 1 and 3
There was no site-specific assessment done in relation to the clearing of the poles. However, there was no need for that because there was a combination of generic risk assessment in [CP 430] and the dynamic risk assessment which was done on the day the work was to be done by the linesman themselves and clearly that regime was, as the jury found and I accept of course, a suitable and sufficient risk assessment procedure. However, there was no planning to ensure that the tools required to do the work at height were readily available. Indeed, the linesmen went to the site on the day the work was to be done without even knowing whether there was work at height to be done. That meant that when the linesmen had completed their suitable and sufficient risk assessment at the site and determined that they needed in this case a MEWP there was no MEWP readily available. That, of course, did not expose them to a risk of foreseeable harm because there were MEWPs available at the yard which in this case happened to be close by, but often could be hours away or, of course, they could use the MEWP which the vegetation management had … Because there was no proper planning of the tools required to do the work the linesmen were left … to either return to the yard to pick up a MEWP or to disrupt the work of the vegetation management team by borrowing their MEWP for potentially a number of hours. That cannot be proper planning. (emphasis added).
The test in relation to count 3 was exposure of linesmen to foreseeable harm. As already stated, regulation 4 of the [WAHR] does not require any risk of foreseeable harm to be proved, but that does not mean that there is no likelihood of harm at all. The jury would have been quite entitled to conclude that by having a MEWP available at the yard and on site, though being used principally by the vegetation management team, there was no foreseeable risk of a person attempting to do this work from a ladder. However, that does not mean that a failure to plan the work properly so that a MEWP is available carries absolutely zero risk. The [WAHR] create a strict liability to plan when work at height is carried out, presumably for good reason that liability is strict, presumably because of the potentially catastrophic consequences of work at height. The regulations require the work at height to be properly planned irrespective of whether there was a foreseeable risk of harm, so that planning should be done even when the risk is not foreseeable.
The argument on the appeal
Discussion
Ground 1
Ground 2
… the jury is not a precise instrument. It delivers its decision ordinarily in one or two words; it gives no reasons; it provides no explanation. While jurors ordinarily listen with obvious attentiveness to judicial directions, no one can be sure what they make of those directions in the course of their deliberations. It may be that, if their processes were subjected to logical analysis, flaws would be found. If, however, a flawless process of reasoning were required, a jury would be a strange body from which to require it.
Sometimes it appears to a jury that, although a number of counts have been alleged against an accused person, and have been technically proved, justice is sufficiently met by convicting him of less than the full number.
See also Fanning at [11] and [16].
The appeal against sentence
Conclusion