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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 >> Garner v Salford City Council & Anor [2013] EWHC 1573 (QB) (13 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/1573.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1573 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Penelope Garner |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) Salford City Council (2) P McGuiness and Company Limited |
Defendants |
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Mr John Williams (instructed by Forbes) for the First Defendant
Mr Charles Feeny (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 13-15 February and 14 March 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Keith:
Introduction
"Mesothelioma is a hideous disease that is inevitably fatal. In most cases, indeed possibly in all cases, it is caused by the inhalation of asbestos fibres. Unusual features of the disease led the House of Lords to create a special rule governing the attribution of causation to those responsible for exposing victims to asbestos dust. This was advanced for the first time in Fairchild v Glenhaven Funeral Services Ltd. [2003] 1 AC 32 and developed in Barker v Corus UK Ltd. [2006] 2 AC 572. Parliament then intervened by section 3 of the Compensation Act 2006 further to vary this rule. The rule in its current form can be stated as follows: when a victim contracts mesothelioma each person who has, in breach of duty, been responsible for exposing the victim to a significant quantity of asbestos dust and thus creating a 'material increase in risk' of the victim contracting the disease will be held to be jointly and severally liable for causing the disease."
These were the opening words of the speech of Lord Phillips in Sienkiewicz v Greif (UK) Ltd. [2011] 2 AC 229 at [1], in which the Supreme Court considered two appeals involving cases in which the defendant was the sole known cause of exposure to asbestos dust. In each case, the extent of the exposure was very small, but in each case the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal from the previous finding that the defendant was liable for causing the disease. The present case is not quite the same as those cases since the claimant's exposure to asbestos dust by the defendants was at the most very fleeting, if at all, and unlike one of those cases her exposure to it was not in the course of her work.
"There are cases where, as a matter of justice and policy, a court should say that the evidence adduced (whatever its type) is too weak to prove anything to an appropriate standard, so that the claim should fail."
A few basic facts
The generation of dust in the demolition
(i) Miss Garner. In her witness statement, Miss Garner said that "[d]uring the demolition there was an enormous amount of dust which inevitably spread into the playground where we played". When she came to give evidence, she added that she was aware of it every day while the demolition was going on unless it rained, and that she remembered the dust on the ground.
(ii) Tony Garner. Mr Garner had left the school in the summer of 1977, but he said he was in the area most days, playing football in the playground after school was over. In his witness statement, he said that he vividly remembered the baths being demolished, and the dust from the demolition spread among the surrounding streets as well as into the playground. He described it as blowing all over the place, and there was no way of avoiding it.
(iii) Emma Metcalfe. Mrs Metcalfe is a few years younger than Miss Garner, but like Miss Garner she was at the school when the baths were demolished. She used to see dust from the demolition in the playground next to White Street. It got into her eyes several times even though she wore glasses. She said that the dust came from the demolition "when the building was coming down".
(iv) Mark Plaister. Mr Plaister was in the same class as Miss Garner at the school, and he got in touch with her solicitors when he read about the case in the Manchester Evening News. He remembers dust coming over into the playground.
(v) Phyllis Hurst. Mrs Hurst was not well enough to come to court, but her witness statement said that her house in Derby Road was across the road from the baths. She was therefore the other side of the baths from the school, but she could recall dust from the demolition on the paths and coming through her windows. She said that clouds of dust were given off during the demolition. She had to vacuum each day when she got home from work, and she recalls insisting on her children taking their shoes off before they came in because the road was so dirty.
Asbestos fibres in the dust
"He warned against the danger of using statistics as a basis on which to prove proximate cause and indicated that it was necessary at the minimum to produce evidence connecting the statistics to the facts of the case. He gave an interesting illustration of a town in which there were only two cab companies, one with three blue cabs and the other with one yellow cab. If a person was knocked down by a cab whose colour had not been observed it would be wrong to suggest that there was a 75 per cent. chance that the victim was run down by a blue cab and that accordingly it was more probable than not that the cab that ran him down was blue and therefore that the company running the blue cabs would be responsible for negligence in the running down. He pointed out that before any inference that it was a blue cab would be appropriate further facts would be required as, for example, that a blue cab had been seen in the immediate vicinity at the time of the accident or that a blue cab had been found with a large dent in the very part of the cab which had struck the victim."
Mr Feeny contended that the same applies here. The fact that lagging with asbestos was more prevalent than lagging without it did not make it more likely that the lagging in the boiler house contained asbestos.
"… it was not possible to postulate that the risk of being knocked down by a negligent driver of a taxi-cab was proportional to the number of taxi-cabs in the town. Much more significant would have been the care taken by the rival taxi firms in employing competent drivers, and the past accident record of the firms in question."
In this case, it is not just the prevalence of lagging with asbestos when compared with lagging without asbestos which is important. Both Mr Finch and Miss Boyle relied on their experience to express a view on the likelihood of this lagging containing asbestos. It was if their experience was based only on the prevalence of lagging containing asbestos that it may have been appropriate to put their experience to one side, but that was never explored in the evidence.
"Emphasis has been given to demolition work and in particular demolition of large-scale works and public utilities. Previous insulation work often means that large tonnages of asbestos can be present and crocidolite (blue asbestos) has not infrequently been employed. The importance of carrying out a comprehensive programme of analysis of the lagging before considering demolition, so as to establish whether or not crocidolite is present, cannot be over-emphasised in view of the additional personal protection which may be required."
The company accepts that it did not commission an analysis of the lagging before removing it, and it is argued that it is not open to the company now to contend that there is no proof that the lagging contained asbestos, when the absence of proof is due to its failure to follow that guidance.
"4.1 This operation can give rise to very high dust levels, but these are capable of considerable reduction by pre-wetting and soaking.
4.2 It is likely that each job will require its own technique, e.g. non-absorbent surfaces will have to be punctured to permit water to be introduced into the insulation; this operation may be by a hollow probe drilled along its length to allow water to escape into the insulation, such probes in parallel being coupled to a suitable water supply.
4.3 Alternatively, a fine low pressure water spray may be used in such a way that dust does not arise from the impingement of the water on the surface.
4.4 Insulation should be removed by sawing or cutting away. The insulation should not be allowed to fall but should be placed into suitable plastic bags for removal from site and disposal by burying.
4.5 The slurry should not be permitted to dry out but be removed from all resting places while still wet."
Similar guidance about thoroughly soaking or spraying thermal insulation materials with water both before and during the stripping operation was said by the Advisory Committee on Asbestos in 1979 to have been given by the British Scrap Federation.
The escape of asbestos fibres into the playground
Other sources for Miss Garner's exposure to asbestos
Conclusion