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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 >> Cooper v Bright Horizons Family Solutions Ltd [2013] EWHC 2349 (QB) (31 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/2349.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2349 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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Aileen Cooper |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Bright Horizons Family Solutions Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr Michael Lemmy (instructed by Plexus Law) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2nd – 3rd July 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
David Pittaway QC:
Introduction
Witness Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Expert Evidence
Regulations
"Suitability of work equipment
4.—(1) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is so constructed or adapted as to be suitable for the purpose for which it is used or provided.
(2) In selecting work equipment, every employer shall have regard to the working conditions and to the risks to the health and safety of persons which exist in the premises or undertaking in which that work equipment is to be used and any additional risk posed by the use of that work equipment.
(3) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is used only for operations for which, and under conditions for which, it is suitable.
(4) In this regulation "suitable" means suitable in any respect which it is reasonably foreseeable will affect the health or safety of any person.
Maintenance
5.—(1) Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is maintained in an efficient state, in efficient working order and in good repair.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that where any machinery has a maintenance log, the log is kept up to date.
Information and instructions
8.—(1) Every employer shall ensure that all persons who use work equipment have available to them adequate health and safety information and, where appropriate, written instructions pertaining to the use of the work equipment.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that any of his employees who supervises or manages the use of work equipment has available to him adequate health and safety information and, where appropriate, written instructions pertaining to the use of the work equipment.
(3) Without prejudice to the generality of paragraphs (1) or (2), the information and instructions required by either of those paragraphs shall include information and, where appropriate, written instructions on—
(a) the conditions in which and the methods by which the work equipment may be used;
(b) foreseeable abnormal situations and the action to be taken if such a situation were to occur; and.
(c) any conclusions to be drawn from experience in using the work equipment.
(4) Information and instructions required by this regulation shall be readily comprehensible to those concerned.
Training
9.—(1) Every employer shall ensure that all persons who use work equipment have received adequate training for purposes of health and safety, including training in the methods which may be adopted when using the work equipment, any risks which such use may entail and precautions to be taken.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that any of his employees who supervises or manages the use of work equipment has received adequate training for purposes of health and safety, including training in the methods which may be adopted when using the work equipment, any risks which such use may entail and precautions to be taken."
"Duties of employers
4.—(1) Each employer shall—
(a) so far as is reasonably practicable, avoid the need for his employees to undertake any manual handling operations at work which involve a risk of their being injured; or
(b) where it is not reasonably practicable to avoid the need for his employees to undertake any manual handling operations at work which involve a risk of their being injured—
(i) make a suitable and sufficient assessment of all such manual handling operations to be undertaken by them, having regard to the factors which are specified in column 1 of Schedule 1 to these Regulations and considering the questions which are specified in the corresponding entry in column 2 of that Schedule,
(ii) take appropriate steps to reduce the risk of injury to those employees arising out of their undertaking any such manual handling operations to the lowest level reasonably practicable, and
(iii) take appropriate steps to provide any of those employees who are undertaking any such manual handling operations with general indications and, where it is reasonably practicable to do so, precise information on—
(aa) the weight of each load, and
(bb) the heaviest side of any load whose centre of gravity is not positioned centrally.
(2) Any assessment such as is referred to in paragraph (1)(b)(i) of this regulation shall be reviewed by the employer who made it if—
(a) there is reason to suspect that it is no longer valid; or
(b) there has been a significant change in the manual handling operations to which it relates;
and where as a result of any such review changes to an assessment are required, the relevant employer shall make them."
"Amendment of the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992
4. Regulation 4 of the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 shall be amended by adding the following paragraph—
"(3) In determining for the purposes of this regulation whether manual handling operations at work involve a risk of injury and in determining the appropriate steps to reduce that risk regard shall be had in particular to—
(a) the physical suitability of the employee to carry out the operations;
(b) the clothing, footwear or other personal effects he is wearing;
(c) his knowledge and training;
(d) the results of any relevant risk assessment carried out pursuant to regulation 3 of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999;
(e) whether the employee is within a group of employees identified by that assessment as being especially at risk; and
(f) the results of any health surveillance provided pursuant to regulation 6 of the Management of Health and Safety Regulations 1999."
Discussion
"77. It is therefore necessary to remind ourselves of the evidential status of such material. What the doctor writes down as having been told him by the patient, as opposed to the opinion that he expresses on the basis of those statements, is not at that stage evidence of the making of the statement that he records. Rather where, as here, the record is said to contradict the evidence as to fact given by the patient, the record is of a previous inconsistent statement allegedly made by the patient. As such, the record itself is hearsay. It may however be proved as evidence that the patient did indeed speak as alleged in two ways. First, if the statement is put to the witness, she may admit to having made it. Alternatively, if she does not "distinctly" so admit the statement may be proved under section 4 of Lord Denman's Act 1865. Second, by section 6(5) of the Civil Evidence Act 1995 those provisions do not prevent the statement being proved as hearsay evidence under section 1 of that Act. If the court concludes that such inconsistent statement has been made, that goes only to the credibility of the witness; the statement itself cannot be treated itself as evidence of its contents. Authority is scarcely needed for so protean a proposition, but I would venture to mention the observations of Lord Esher MR in North Australian v Goldsborough [1893] 2 Ch 381 at p 386.
….
80. This failure to identify before the trial the issues in dispute with Mrs Fifield's account, and the material on which the dispute was based, meant that this part of the trial took on much of the worst aspects of the pre-Woolf world, with the case being developed only as the trial proceeded. Much of that was permitted to happen because of the universal assumption that the medical records are "evidence", without analysis of what if anything it is that they prove. To obviate such difficulties in future, and to ensure that factual issues in medical cases are economically and efficiently tried, the following procedure should be adopted. First, a party who seeks to contradict a factually pleaded case on the basis of medical records or reports should indicate that intention in advance, either by amendment of his pleadings or by informal notice. Then, the opposite party must indicate the extent to which they take objection to the accuracy of the records. When the area of dispute is identified, a decision will have to be taken as to whether the records need to be formally proved by either of the means referred to above. Thereby, not only will the ambit of the dispute be clarified in advance, but also it will be clear what interpretation is sought to be put on what my Lord has called somewhat Delphic records …"
"38. The employer's duty of care laid down by Regulation 5(1) applies to any work
equipment 'used at work': see Regulation 3. As the judge held, and I have already
confirmed, the Defendant was within Regulation 3 in relation to the maintenance
of the haybob and was subject to the employer's duty to see that it was
"maintained in an efficient state, in efficient working order and in good repair".
39. That was a duty in similar terms to the duty imposed by sections 22(1) and 152(1) of the Factories Act 1937, and alleged to have been breached in respect of the failed hoist mechanism in Galashiels v Millar. The headnote to the report of the
House of Lords' decision in that case accurately sets out the ratio of the decision,
namely that the duty imposed an absolute and continuing obligation, so that proof
of any failure in the mechanism of a hoist or lift established a breach of statutory
duty, even though it was impossible to anticipate such failure before the event or
to explain it afterwards, and even though all reasonable steps had been taken to
provide a suitable hoist or lift and to maintain it properly."
"In relation to Regulation 5(1), I do not accept the broad proposition of the judge
that, where there is an expendable part in a machine known to break from time to
time which can easily be replaced and it is one of a number of such parts so that
the mechanism can continue working in an overall effective and efficient manner,
no breach of Regulation 5(1) is demonstrable, "just like when one light bulb goes in a chandelier containing a large number of electric light bulbs." The Regulation
does not define the employer's duty in terms of the overall suitability of the
equipment to perform the task for which it is designed. It deals with the duty to
maintain it in an efficient state and working order and in good repair in respect of
all of its mechanical parts so as to prevent injury to the person using the
equipment. As in the case of the sections of the Factories Act 1937 considered in
Galashiels v Millar, the object of the Regulations is a broad one, namely to protect
workmen, and the task of the court is to view the maintenance and the condition of
the machinery supplied to them from the point of view of health and safety and
not that of productivity or economy."
"9. Mr Weir also complains that the risk of injury need not be significant. He refers to the one case (as far as we know) in which these regulations have previously been considered by this court, the case of Hawkes v London Borough of Southwark (unreported transcript 20th February 1998). In that case, Aldous LJ referred to their having to be a "real" risk for the purpose of the regulations. Mr Weir refers also to the Scottish case of Cullen v North Lanarkshire Council [1998] SC 451 at 455, where the court referred to the risk of injury needing to be "no more than a foreseeable possibility; it need not be a probability."
10. For my part, I am quite prepared to accept those statements as to the level of risk which is required to bring the case within the obligations of regulation 4; that there must be a real risk, a foreseeable possibility of injury; certainly nothing approaching a probability. I am also prepared to accept that, in making an assessment of whether there is such a risk of injury, the employer is not entitled to assume that all his employees will on all occasions behave with full and proper concern for their own safety. I accept that the purpose of regulations such as these is indeed to place upon employers' obligations to look after their employees' safety which they might not otherwise have.
11. However, in making such assessments there has to be an element of realism. As the guidance on the regulations points out, in appendix 1 at paragraph 3: . . . a full assessment of every manual handling operation could be a major undertaking and might involve wasted effort."
12. It then goes on to give numerical guidelines for the purpose of providing "an initial filter which can help to identify those manual handling operations deserving more detailed examination."
13. It also seems to me clear to be that the question of what does involve a risk of injury must be context-based. One is therefore looking at this particular operation in the context of this particular place of employment and also the particular employees involved. In this case, we have a small residential home with a small number of employees. But those employees were carrying out what may be regarded as everyday tasks, and this particular employee had been carrying out such tasks for a very long time indeed. The employer in seeking to assess the risks is entitled to take that into account."