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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Winterton v R. [2018] EWCA Crim 2435 (06 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/2435.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Crim 2435 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JULIAN KNOWLES
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WALL QC
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE CACD)
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ANDREW WINTERTON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Oliver Glasgow QC and Matthew Corbett-Jones (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 10 October 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Macur DBE:
The facts
"No work should take place until a competent person who fully understands the dangers and necessary precautions has inspected excavation supports at the start of the shift.
The collapse was foreseeable but when it would collapse could not be foreseen, so precautions to protect those in the trench, either by a trench box [ie, a metal structure used for protecting workers working in a trench] or battering and those who might fall in by way of handrails must be put in place. If Shane was being asked to go into the trench it should've been supported … The principal contractor has to engage a competent contractor. I don't think Clearview was competent to do the work and this was illustrated by the fact that the trench collapsed.
The trench alone without it collapsing would've been sufficient for an HS[E] inspector to have stopped work. Any competent person would have attempted to stop the work. The same applied to Conquest: a competent principal contractor would not have allowed that work to proceed without protection of battering.
Representatives of the principal contractor should have been competent enough to recognise that these works were not being done safely and to have stopped the work. If the representative had failed to stop it, the company has failed. If the company's not putting competent eyes and ears on the ground, then it has failed.
I'm not aware that Conquest had sight of documentation to prove that Mr Wortley could manage health and safety. From what I've seen evidence, he could not manage health and safety and this would have been obvious to a site manager, Mr Winterton, if the site manager had seen a particular excavation."
Mr Wonford was shown a photo of the trench and he said that it :
"Shows a face which is pretty nearly vertical. It's not unsafe if a person is not in it. The gravel makes it less safe. Nowhere near the width it should be if the excavation was 2m deep. A competent site manager would've known what equipment the sides would be battered back, remove any men from inside the trench …"
"There was a person compacting stone in the trench using a whacker. There was a digger outside plot 6 with an operator in it. The depth gave me concern as I said there should've been some trench support; using a vibrating tool in a trench is not safe. The side of the trench might fall in. The depth was either waist or head height; it was very stony ground, it made me say something. I told the person in the trench words to the effect that it wasn't clever to be doing that … I said about there being no trench support. The man in the trench did not say anything … to me. I made my point to him; he didn't say a lot. I was introduced to the person on the digger by the site manager/agent and I asked the man on the digger about granular fill. I said about there being no trench support. The trench looked stony and looked like a wall with Collyweston stone. I was told it was alright and it was really good ground. I'd said my piece really … It was not my remit but I said something because it looked unsafe and everyone has a duty of care."
Mr Burrows said that the did not think the Appellant had been there when he had had this conversation, although it was put to him on behalf of Mr Wortley that the Appellant had been present.
"… Mr Winterton was on site daily and that he should have been aware that the trenches were not being battered back or that other precautions were not being taken to prevent collapse.
With that knowledge, Andy Winterton should have stopped any further work on the trench and yet did nothing and this led to the collapse of the trench which killed Shane Wilkinson."
"Q33. Are we sure that Dean Wortley and the others with him were carrying out the excavation of the trenches in a way that presented an obvious risk of death to those on the site?
If your answer to this question is no, you will find Andrew Winterton not guilty of count 7 and your deliberations will cease. If the answer to this question is yes, proceed to question 34.
Q34 Are we sure that Andrew Winterton knew about this or should have known about this?
If the answer to this question is no, you will find Mr Winterton not guilty of count 7 and your deliberations will cease. If the answer to this question is yes, proceed to question 35.
Q35 Are we sure that Andrew Winterton was in breach of his duty of care to Shane Wilkinson by failing to prevent Dean Wortley from carrying out the work in the manner which carried the risk of death?
If the answer to this question is no, you will find Mr Winterton not guilty of count 7 and your deliberations will cease. If the answer to this question is yes, proceed to question 36.
Q36 Are we sure that this breach of duty caused or significantly contributed to the death of Shane Wilkinson ?
If the answer to this question is no, you will find Mr Winterton not guilty of count 7 and your deliberations will cease. If the answer to this question is yes, proceed to question 37.
Q37 Taking into account the risk of death from the collapse of a trench, are we convinced that in failing to prevent Dean Wortley from carrying out work on the trench in a manner which carried the risk of death, Andy Winterton was responsible for a breach of duty that was gross? In other words, that it went far beyond incompetence or even serious negligence so that it can properly be characterised as a serious crime; namely, manslaughter?
If your answer to this question is no, you will find Mr Winterton not guilty of count 7 and your deliberations will cease. If the answer to this question is yes, you will find him guilty of count 7 and your deliberations will cease."
The application for permission to appeal and the single judge's ruling
a. 1. The judge was wrong to have rejected the Appellant's submission that there was no case for him to answer.
b. 2 and 3. The judge erred in giving the jury "a lengthy document on the law and the issues before the jury which was not the usual "route to verdict" document and that it was deficient because it did not mention the Appellant's defence that he genuinely thought Jarek Kondrats was competent.
c. 4. The judge was wrong to allow cross-examination of the Appellant in relation to the back dated risk assessment and method statement that had been created by Dean Wortley following Mr Wilkinson's death.
d. 5. The judge wrongly allowed the prosecution to adduce some rebuttal evidence about Dean Wortley's dealings with Anglian Water which was prejudicial to the Appellant's case.
Submissions
"Unlike the facts in R v Rose, the breach of the duty of care alleged against the appellant had nothing to do with a failure to carry out checks that would have put the appellant in possession of particular knowledge…
It was unnecessary for the appellant to carry out any particular inspection or investigation (as was required by the optometrist in R v Rose or the doctor in R v Rudding [2016] EWCA Crim 741) All he needed to do was open his eyes and ensure the health and safety of persons at the site as he accepted he was required to do. His position therefore is no different from the anaesthetist who failed to observe the disconnected endotracheal tube (see R v Adomako (1994) 98 Cr App R 282) or the doctors who allowed a post operative condition to go untreated (see R v Misra and Srivastava [2005] 1 Cr App R 21 ): those appellants failed to appreciate the danger that was obvious to everyone else and should have been obvious to them…. It was not a case of what [the Appellant] "ought to have known" had he carried out any investigation, but rather a case of what he should have known because it could not have been missed….the risk in this case was 'clear and unambiguous' and 'not one which might be apparent on further examination'."
That is, the judge was not wrong in his formulation of Question 34 or otherwise in his directions or summing up.
Discussion