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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Webster Thompson Ltd v J G Pears (Newark) Ltd & Ors [2009] EWHC 1070 (Comm) (18 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/1070.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1070 (Comm) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
WEBSTER THOMPSON LIMITED | ||
Claimant | ||
- and - | ||
J G PEARS (NEWARK) LIMITED | ||
Defendant | ||
- and - | ||
OMEGA PROTEINS LIMITED | ||
Third Party | ||
- and - | ||
NORTHERN COUNTIES MEAT LIMITED | ||
Fourth Party |
____________________
Mr Jeremy Stuart-Smith QC and Mr James Purchas (instructed by Dewey & LeBoeuf) appeared for the Third Party
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background-Legislation
"As part of the price for the lifting of the export ban on beef, the UK agreed that its definition of Category 1 materials should become more rigorous and fall in line with other EU Member States so that it now included materials from the vertebral columns of bovine animals that were more than 24 months old rather than over 30 months old as had obtained previously. The relevant statutory provisions are as follows:
a) EC Reg. 1774/2002 provides that Category 1 material includes animal by-products which are specified risk material or mixtures of Category 1 material with either Category 2 material or Category 3 material or both;
b) Specified risk material is defined at Article 2 (1) (o) as having the meaning given to it in Annex V of EC Reg. 999/2001;
c) In May 2006 the transitional provisions at Annex XI to EC Reg. 999/2001 remained in force. They provided that specified risk material included materials from the vertebral columns of bovine animals that were more than 24 months old;
d) Before EC Reg. 657/2006 came into force the UK enjoyed a derogation from this provision which allowed the use of vertebral column derived from bovine animals under the age of 30 months;
e) EC Reg. 657/2006 amended Annex XI to EC Reg. 999/2001 such that there was no derogation from the limit to 24 months applicable in other Member States;
f) On 3 May 2006 the Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (No. 2) Regulations 2006 (2006/1228) ("the TSE (No. 2) Regs".) came in to force. These established the regulatory regime within the United Kingdom.
The Category into which animal by-products fell was defined by the relevant statutory provisions and was not susceptible to re-categorisation or re-definition by the minister, DEFRA or anyone else either pursuant to an exercise of discretion or otherwise."
- Category 1 material includes all specified risk material ("SRM"). It must be labelled "for disposal only", and must be indelibly colour-stained bright blue or green in order to assist its identification and tracing through a supply chain. It has only limited commercial use: unless incinerated and burnt as fuel, it must be buried in landfill. It is not permitted to enter any food chain, whether human or animal.- Category 2 products include those which would have been fit for human consumption but for some reason no longer are, for example because they became soiled in a cutting plant. They are not relevant to this case.
- Category 3 material is defined in Article 6. It should be labelled "not for human consumption" but can be used to manufacture other products, including tallow and pet food. Category 3 material is not stained.
- Article 1(1)(a) emphasises the breadth, scope and application of the Regulation, which governs "the collection, transport, storage, handling, processing and use or disposal of animal by-products, to prevent these products from presenting a risk to animal or public health".
- Article 3(1) lays down the general requirement that "Animal by-products, and products derived therefrom, shall be collected, transported, stored, handled, processed, disposed of, placed on the market, exported, carried in transit and used in accordance with this Regulation".
- The Regulation applies not merely to the animal by-products themselves but also to the places concerned in their handling and storage, which must be appropriately licensed. Article 6(3) provides that the intermediate handling and storage of Category 3 material shall take place only in Category 3 intermediate plants approved in accordance with Article 10. Article 17(1) provides that a Category 3 processing plant (such as Pears' Market Harborough facility) "shall be subject to approval by the competent authority", such approval only being given if the plant satisfies the conditions stipulated in Article 17(2). Accordingly, all material originating from a Category 3 approved plant must lawfully be Category 3 and not anything else.
- Article 17(3) provides that "Approval shall be suspended immediately if the conditions under which it was granted are no longer fulfilled".
- Paragraph 4 of Chapter 1 provides that "Only Category 3 material … that has been handled, stored and transported in accordance with Articles 7, 8 and 9 may be used for the production of processed animal proteins and other feed material".
Background- the facts
"I was contacted by yesterday. Northern Counties has been visited. They have not been segregating the >24months vertebral column from the column <24 months. It has all been consigned as category 3 material. They have now been enlightened as to the errors of their ways. The column has been through the category 3 intermediate plant and onto for processing into meat meal for petfood use…"
"5. On the 19 June 2006, during a routine SVS inspection of an animal by-product intermediate plant (Alba, Swalesmoor), it was suspected that material received as Category 3 (low risk) material from a cutting plant (Northern Counties Ltd) may have contained vertebral column from animals over 24 months of age thus making it Category 1 animal by-product. Further investigations confirmed that no arrangements had been made at the cutting plant since 2 May 2006 to segregate vertebral column from animals over 24 months from vertebral column from younger animals and all was being consigned in error as Category 3 material. Procedures at the cutting plant have now been rectified and the plant has been compliant since at least 11 July 2006.6. Tracings are in progress and a full report is being prepared. It has been confirmed so far that all the material consigned by the cutting plant between 2 May and 11 July has now passed through the intermediate plant chain to a processing (rendering) plant, redacted produces processed animal protein (PAP), the majority of which is used for petfood (with remainder going for incineration) and tallow which is sold to brokers."
"This letter confirms that on July 18 2006 DEFRA AHWDG (BAP Division) required that Meat and Bone Meal and Tallow produced at the above plant between May 3 and July 16 2006 inclusive not be consigned as Category 3 but be sent to a rendering plant which is approved under Regulation EC 1774/2002 to render Category 1 animal by-products or to an incinerator approved in accordance with that Regulation."
As Mr Corner, Pears' Site Manager at Market Harborough says in his statement, the plant continued to receive and separately process and store material both for bone meal and tallow. Until DEFRA cleared the product it would be regarded as Category 1 material and could only be dealt with on that basis. Market Harborough thus remained as a Category 1 facility until the SVS said otherwise. The report to Mr Bradshaw described the proposed corrective action as including tracing "all the bulk supplies of PAP and tallow and serve notices requiring the material to be disposed of as SRM". The SVS issued an emergency instruction on 20 July 2006 which, in relevant part, read as follows:-
"ACTION FOLLOWING TRACING OF SPECIFIED RISK MATERIAL TO CATEGORY 3 PROCESSING (RENDERING) PLANT
…
MBM or tallow produced at … between 2 May and 11 July 2006, are considered as derived from Category 1 material … tallow derived from Category 1 material must not be marketed as if it were derived from Category 3 material …
… batches of tallow or MBM produced by … between 2 May and 11 July 2006 must not be placed on the market outside, or exported from, the United Kingdom as Category 3 tallow, Category 3 MBM or as Category 3-derived finished products eg pet food, because they are derived from Category 1 material/SRM."
"Domestic SRM breachThe FSA received a report on 17 July that SRM vertebral column from cattle aged 24 to 30 months had been discovered at Alba Proteins Ltd in Halifax. The material had been received from Northern Counties Meat Group Ltd, approved cutting plant. Investigations revealed that Northern Counties had not been segregating and staining the material and disposing of it as Category 1 animal by-product as required by law since May 2006. Instead, they had been dispatching this material as low risk Category 3 animal by-product. Alba Proteins was not responsible for the breach".
Evidence
Issues between the parties
Express term - submissions of Pears
Express term – submissions of Omega
Express term – conclusion of the court
"The decision what (if any) to give to hearsay evidence involves an exercise of judgment. The court has to reach a conclusion as to its reliability as best it can on all the available material. Where a case depends entirely on hearsay evidence, the court will be particularly careful before concluding that it can be given any weight. But there is no rule of law which prohibits a court from giving weight to hearsay evidence merely because it is uncorroborated and cannot be tested or contradicted by the opposing party. I do not consider that the statements in the authorities relied on by Miss Rodway in her skeleton argument support such an extreme position".
Alternative claim that material was regarded by the SVS as being Category 1
Implied term as to satisfactory quality
Implied term of reasonable fitness for purpose
Damages
Omega's claim against NCML
Conclusion