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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Pinder v Cape Plc [2006] EWHC 3630 (QB) (20 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/3630.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3630 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
Crown Square, Manchester M3 3FL |
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B e f o r e :
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Mr. John Pinder |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Cape PLC |
Defendant |
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Charles Feeny (instructed by Helen Fraser, In House Lawyer Cape PLC) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7 and 8 December 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr. Justice Ramsey:
Introduction
Factual Matters and Evidence
Mr Pinder's exposure to asbestos
The provenance of the asbestos
"So far as I am aware, the bulk of the asbestos waste from Acre Mill, Wadsworth, was disposed of outside the district by private arrangements made by the company. From time to time this Council was asked to receive on their refuse disposal tip limited quantities of asbestos waste, and it was a condition of the Council that this waste should be wetted before delivery to the tip so that it could be easily handled for covering on the tip by domestic refuse. On occasions some of the waste was delivered to the tip in polythene bags.
Any acceptance by the Council of asbestos from Acre Mill had ceased some time prior to the issue of Circular 80/69."
"It goes without saying, of course, that you will do exactly what the Council ask you to do and meet all their requirements if at all possible. They ask us to wet the waste and not to put it in sacks or polythene bags. I would have thought that it would have been far better for all concerned to wet it and put it in bags. Is it possible for us to ensure that after dumping waste earth or some other suitable cover is put on top in the tip.
When I am up at Acre Mill next week would you please show us the Public Tip at Pecket Well and also let me have details of exactly how we dispose of our waste, and exactly how the Council's requirements are now being carried out."
"It was found that the necessary conditions were being complied with including the fencing of the quarries, some of which can still be seen to-day. The general tipping was carried out in layers as follows:- 6'-8' depth of tyres; 4' quarry waste; 6' asbestos waste; 4' quarry waste and repeated."
"This site is still in use as a waste disposal site under the direct control of the West Yorkshire Metropolitan County Council.
Asbestos waste was deposited on this site. It is, however, at least ten years since the site was used for such purpose and it is suggested that such waste will be at least 25 feet below the present tip surface."
"This site is in private ownership. Apparently some 25 to 30 years ago vast amounts of asbestos waste were deposited at Scout End. The site itself is large, is steep, and is covered by proliferation of vegetation, principally young trees, bushes, bracken and grass. The asbestos waste does not appear to have been covered with any consolidating material whatsoever. Consequently one can feel the ground to be "spongy" underfoot.
There is a public footpath which runs through the site.
Two residents have been interviewed but they do not recollect any nuisance caused by this tip.
It seems that at least some of this asbestos waste material is in fact blue asbestos waste.
Further information has come to light in connection with asbestos waste disposal at this site. A person has been interviewed who was employed casually by the owner of this site. To his definite knowledge asbestos waste was tipped up to 1954. He claims that vehicles delivering this waste were in the ownership of a firm of asbestos manufacturers and not in the ownership of a separate haulage contractor. His main concern was that in 1954 this waste was delivered to Scout End Tip in Hessian sacks and that to his knowledge two or three dozen of these sacks were sold to another firm in Hebden Bridge.
This matter has been checked. It appears that the statement is correct and that over a number of years this firm received a considerable number of hessian sacks. The state of these sacks was such that they all passed through a cleaning machine prior to being used. The actual cleaning works were carried out by two employees of the firm who are still in the same employment. After cleaning, the sacks were packed with the firms own product and distributed to their customers. Consequentially the distribution of these sacks will be very wide.
So far as the Scout End Tip itself is concerned, the situation is that the site, which is very steep, is overgrown with small trees and shrubs and that there is little or no covering material other than that accumulated together with the grass over the years. It seems that it is the grass roots and moisture which is holding the waste together."
"Twenty five to thirty five years ago considerable amounts of asbestos were tipped on this site. There are evident signs of the asbestos either on or just below ground level and covering material is either non-existent or minimal."
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"I am glad to read that you confirm that there appears to be no cause for concern on any of the site alleged to be used by Acre Mill. You except the site at Scout End, Mytholmroyd which is now also alleged, for the first time to my knowledge, also to have been used. Such enquiries as I have been able to make to date have not confirmed the use of the site by the Acre Mill Factory. My information is that, until Scotland quarries were brought into use under the control of the Sowerby Bridge UDC, all unusable waste was disposed of, as industrial waste, to the Hepton RDC tip."
There is a manuscript note referring to the Hepton RDC tip as Pecket Well.
"Calderdale Council have traced the owner of the land, who states that the waste was tipped somewhere between 1940 and 1946 or 47 and that it came from Cape."
"…in your letter dated 27 July 1976 addressed to Mr Barraclough of the Environmental Health Department you indicated that there was no direct evidence to support the claim that the Cape Group was responsible for the tipping of asbestos waste at the Scout End Tip.
In view of the costs involved, I have been making further enquiries into this matter and I have now obtained a statement from a former Cape employee who is prepared to give evidence to the effect that over a period of 10 years between 1948 and 1958, whilst in the employment of Cape he delivered asbestos waste to the Scout End Tip on many occasions. This is evidence that was not available to me at the time we last corresponded on the matter.
My Council is strongly of the opinion that the public interest demanded that action be taken to eliminate the possibility (howsoever remote) of any health hazards arising from the presence of asbestos at the Scout End Tip. There now exists clear evidence that Cape were responsible for tipping that waste and in these circumstances my Council think it is not unreasonable that Cape should consider making some contribution towards the cost of the works."
i) Much of the asbestos is adjacent or near to the central site track.
ii) There are isolated areas of asbestos on the southern half of the site.
iii) Large portions of the site are free from asbestos. In particular, the
majority of the site to the north of the site road and discrete areas to the south.
"I think that there was so much asbestos waste that drivers had to use Scout Road tip as well as Pecket Well tip. It was common knowledge that the asbestos was coming from Cape's factory."
"We took asbestos materials in the form of damp waste from the pipe making department to Scout Road Tip and also to Peckett Tip. I took about half a dozen loads to Scout Road myself but other people from Cape took loads down there. The loads of asbestos were taken in Cape's own lorries."
The law
"You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour. Who then in law is my neighbour? The answer seems to be-persons who are so closely and directly affected by my act that I ought reasonably to have them in contemplation as being so affected when I am directing my mind to the acts or omissions which are called in question."
"It seems probable, therefore, although further research is very necessary, that not only is a certain minimal quantity of the dust required for the production of a generalised fibrosis, but that inhalation of the dust in high concentration results in the production of a more marked degree of fibrosis in a shorter time, than when the concentration is low." [page 13]"The fibrosis resulted
"… from the inhalation of asbestos dust, the proximate causes being concentration of dust in the air breathed and length of exposure to it. Thus the incidence rate is highest in the most dusty processes and amongst those longest employed." [page 16/17]"
"The appropriate methods for suppression of dust may only be fully determined when the harmful effects of comparatively low concentrations of asbestos dust are fully appreciated". [Page31].
"…the very certain and grave risk which accompanies continued exposure to heavy concentrations of asbestos dust."
"…it seems clear that exposure to heavy concentrations of asbestos dust for a comparatively short period of years results in the appearance sooner or later of a disabling fibrosis,…"
(1) At page 14, Dr Wyers referred to "At least two cases of asbestosis and tuberculosis, following brief exposures to asbestos dust, are known to have occurred in adolescent boys."
(2) At page 29 Dr Wyers acknowledged that "Fibrosis in the human being has been detected as post mortem after as little as 6 months exposure."
(3) On pages 100 and 101, Dr Wyers referred to a case of "endothelioma of the pleura" which was "…the first to be recorded in association with asbestosis, so far as the writer is aware."
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"concludes that, by virtue of Dr Wyers' involvement with them since 1941 and of his analytical approach to the data on asbestos-related disabilities and deaths, [Cape] were well aware of the incidence of asbestosis in their Barking workforce, of the association of lung cancer with asbestosis, of the occurrence of the first case of endothelioma of the pleura in association with asbestosis and of the development of asbestos-induced conditions in some individuals after relatively short periods of exposure to asbestos-containing dusts. [Mr Clark] concludes that, during the material period, [Cape] were at the forefront of knowledge of asbestos-related maters and that they were not only aware of the consequences of being exposed to asbestos fibres and/or asbestos-containing dusts but that they also knew what control measures could and should have been taken to limit their employees' occupational exposures to such fibres and/or dusts."
"A planned maintenance system was introduced in 1954; from at least 1949 the servicing of the filter units and the regular collection and disposal of waste was organised on a scheduled basis by a specialist team equipped with respirators and protective clothing."
"would have known from the middle 1950s that exposure to asbestos should be kept to the lowest possible level" and that from 1951 "the threats posed by asbestos were sufficiently well-known, and sufficiently uncertain in their extent and effect for employers to be under a duty to reduce exposure to the greatest extent possible."
"It does not necessarily follow that an employer who should have appreciated the risk of harm to his employees, and taken precautions for their safety, or investigated the possible need for precautions against direct exposure at work, should simultaneously have appreciated, and addressed, a familial risk arising from secondary exposure."
"In relation to the present litigation this analysis begs the critical question whether it was, or by April 1965, should have been, apparent to those whose employees were working with asbestos, that the health of individuals whose contact with it came, so to speak, second-hand and intermittently, and whose exposure to it lasted for peak periods only, was under threat."
"Before 1965 neither the industry generally, nor those responsible for safety and health, nor the Factory Inspectorate, nor the medical profession, suggested that it was necessary, or even that it would be prudent, for risks arising from familial exposure to be addressed by the industry. In truth, the alarm did not sound until late 1965, when it began to be appreciated that there could be no safe or permissible level of exposure, direct or indirect, to asbestos dust."
"In summary, a family member is not precluded from establishing liability based on environmental contamination with asbestos dust. In an appropriate case, the environmental principle may apply to members of an employee's family as to anyone else living in the immediate vicinity of premises working with asbestos. However, in this case, it was not established that the dust to which Mrs Maguire was exposed effectively replicated her husband's level of exposure, nor indeed that her level of exposure, if repeated in factory conditions, would have constituted a breach of duty to an employee. Therefore liability on the basis of "environmental" exposure did not arise for consideration."
"From a commonsense point of view, when considering the potential impact of the disposal of their asbestos wastes on persons who could be affected by such wastes, it is our view that such persons should have included those who handled and transported such wastes to waste tips, those persons who were likely to be exposed to airborne asbestos dusts/fibres as a result of lorry loads of asbestos waste being driven along public roads and those who were concerned with the ultimate disposal of such wastes at waste tips."