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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Wandsworth Borough Council, R (on the application of) v HM Senior Coroner For Inner West London [2021] EWHC 801 (Admin) (31 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/801.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 801 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE CAVANAGH
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE TEAGUE QC,
CHIEF CORONER OF ENGLAND AND WALES
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THE QUEEN on the application of |
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WANDSWORTH BOROUGH COUNCIL |
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- and - |
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HER MAJESTY'S SENIOR CORONER |
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FOR INNER WEST LONDON |
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The Defendant did not participate in proceedings
Hearing date : 17 March 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Teague QC, Chief Coroner of England and Wales:
Introduction
The facts
"My recollection is that we came home together. We opened the door. I had my own key... We walked in. Our green sofa had this talcum powder stuff on it. There was a hoover-looking vacuum thing that was sitting there… I have no precise memory of my mother clearing up the mess, but she must have done… It did not look like there was any damage to the machine – it looked intact. It looked as if something had happened whereby what it was meant to do was to vacuum dust up but what it had in fact done is blown it out… There were bits of what looked like talcum powder. It was white. It was not distributed evenly. There was a patch on the sofa – it was not the entire sofa that was covered. The majority of the dust fell within a radius of about 1 metre of the hoover but there were bits of dust scattered around the room."
"I am entirely satisfied that the cause of her death is that as presented by the pathologist, of 1a bronchopneumonia and 1b malignant mesothelioma and this is completely supported by all the medical evidence in this case from the GP and from the professor who explained that Linda had presented in July with shoulder tip pain, was diagnosed and died within weeks of her diagnosis. The court is entirely satisfied that the only reasonable place that Linda can have been exposed to asbestos was whilst she was resident in Flat 8 of Eliot Court. I am satisfied that she was not exposed to asbestos during the course of her employment having considered the exhibit from the Department of Work and Pensions in relation to her employment. I am satisfied that asbestos was present in the flat based upon the exhibit C2 [i.e. the analyst's certificate of August 1984] which confirmed the presence of asbestos fibres (sic) at number 8 Eliot Court. I note that these panels were removed in October of 2003 and I make a logical inference that this removal will have also raised dust within the flat, but when the exposure occurred, I cannot say whether it was during the removal of the asbestos or whether it was just during Linda living [in] that flat. But I am entirely satisfied on the balance of probabilities that the source of asbestos to which she was exposed was at 8 Eliot Court. After consideration of the evidence of Dr Coumbe, I am also entirely satisfied that malignant mesothelioma virtually never arises without exposure to asbestos and therefore Linda's malignant mesothelioma was caused by exposure to asbestos and that this occurred whilst she was resident at number 8 Eliot Court and that this exposure to asbestos has led to and caused her death by causing her to develop malignant mesothelioma. This is therefore a natural death and I will make findings and determinations upon the record of inquest that properly reflect this."
The legal framework
"It is the duty of the coroner as the public official responsible for the conduct of inquests, whether he is sitting with a jury or without, to ensure that the relevant facts are fully, fairly and fearlessly investigated… He fails in his duty if his investigation is superficial, slipshod or perfunctory. But the responsibility is his. He must set the bounds of the inquiry. He must rule on the procedure to be followed. His decisions, like those of any other judicial officer, must be respected unless and until they are varied or overruled".
(i) whether there is evidence upon which the jury properly directed can properly reach the particular conclusion or finding; and
(ii) whether it would be safe for the jury to reach the conclusion or finding.
In many cases, where there is evidence upon which a jury properly directed could properly reach a particular conclusion or finding, then it is likely to follow that the jury could reach it safely: R (Chidlow) v HM Senior Coroner for Blackpool and Fylde [2019] EWHC 581 (Admin). Where, as in the present case, there is no jury, the coroner will naturally consider the safety of any conclusion or finding he or she proposes to make as well as the sufficiency of the evidence available to support it, but need not expressly articulate a self-direction on both limbs of the 'Galbraith plus' test.
The claimant's submissions
(i) as a matter of generality, living in a property that contains asbestos does not constitute exposure to asbestos;
(ii) there was no positive evidence that Mrs Johns had ever been exposed to freely circulating asbestos fibres at any time during her tenancy at 8 Eliot Court;
(iii) although malignant mesothelioma is often caused by exposure to asbestos, there are other possible causes which the evidence did not adequately exclude or address;
(iv) even if Mrs Johns had developed malignant mesothelioma as a result of such exposure, it could have occurred elsewhere than at 8 Eliot Court;
(v) the coroner was wrong to rely upon Dr Coumbe's evidence that it was "reasonable to assume" that exposure to asbestos at 8 Eliot Court had caused Mrs Johns's malignant mesothelioma, because that was not a matter on which Dr Coumbe was qualified or entitled to express an opinion; and
(vi) the coroner failed to apply the 'Galbraith plus' test by asking herself, first, whether there was sufficient evidence upon which to conclude that Mrs Johns developed malignant mesothelioma as a result of exposure to asbestos at 8 Eliot Court and, second, whether such a finding or conclusion was safe.
Discussion and conclusions
Mr Justice Cavanagh:
Lord Justice Popplewell: