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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Heeds v Cleveland Police & Anor [2018] EWHC 810 (QB) (18 April 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/810.html Cite as: [2019] ICR 513, [2018] WLR(D) 226, [2018] PIQR P13, [2018] EWHC 810 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Sitting at Leeds Civil Justice Centre
and the Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Diane Heeds |
Appellant |
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and |
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The Chief Constable of the Cleveland Police Tascor Services Limited |
First Respondent Second Respondent |
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James Rowley QC and Corin Furness (instructed by Plexus Law) for the 1st Respondent
James Medd (instructed by Kennedys Law LLP) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates: 1 November 2017 and 15 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Jeremy Baker:
Introduction
The circumstances of the accident
The claim
The judge's findings
"86.…performs a useful, practical function within and in relation to the purposes of the business…."
It was argued that although ordinary doorways would be covered by the Workplace Regulations, as the doorway into and out of the custody suite was a high-security one, specifically designed for the purpose for which the custody suite existed, it was clearly an item of equipment to which the Equipment Regulations applied.
"12….In the case of ordinary work premises on land, this might be a good argument…."
Moreover, it was pointed out that although both Lord Rodgers (at paragraph 58) and Lord Carswell (at paragraph 74) warned against making too sharp a division between work equipment and the fabric of the premises, both acknowledged the possibility of such a demarcation, as did Lord Neuberger (at paragraph 94).
"77….I see the attraction of Mr O'Neill's submissions for saying that the Door in this case is not simply part of the fabric but is equipment by reason of its particular purpose in the undertaking. However, I take the view that I am indeed bound by Mason v Satelcom to construe the Regulations, where possible, so that they do not overlap. Whilst Lords Rodger and Carswell in Spencer-Franks v Kellogg appeared to see no objection to the differing Regulations overlapping, the matter was left open for future decision. Whilst technically predating the House of Lords decision, the Court of Appeal decision in Mason v Satelcom expressly addresses the issue. I accept the submission that I am bound by the decision in Mason v Satelcom. Once I accept that position, it seems to me in (sic) inevitable that I must find that the Door is governed by the Workplace Regulations. Notwithstanding it is a specialist door serving a particular function within the undertaking, it is nevertheless a door. Doors are expressly covered by the Workplace Regulations and it follows, in my judgment, that I must construe the Equipment Regulations so that they do not overlap with the Workplace Regulations and thus, as excluding doors."
Original grounds of appeal
The initial appeal hearing
The subsequent appeal hearing
Inter-relationship of the Regulations
"19. The first question is, therefore, whether the Workplace Regulations apply to falls from ladders at all and the second question is whether, if they do, it is those Regulations or the Construction Regulations which applied to the server room at the relevant time.
20. In order to answer the first question it is necessary to consider the inter-relationship of the three sets of Regulations. It is clear that a ladder is work equipment and, thus, liability for falls from ladders will be properly considered in the context of the Equipment Regulations. Is it also contemplated that falls from ladders should be considered under the Construction Regulations and/or the Workplace Regulations as well? If so, the matter becomes unnecessarily complex and, if Satelcom is right in its contention, the outcome is somewhat odd. That is because, if a fall from a ladder occurs, the Construction Regulations have nothing to say about such an accident whereas the Workplace Regulations do. Why should that be so?
21. To my mind the answer is that, where possible, the Regulations should not be construed so as to overlap. Dangers of work equipment should be dealt with under the Equipment Regulations; dangers in construction work should be dealt with under the Construction Regulations and dangers in the workplace should be dealt with under the Workplace Regulations."
This being echoed by Lord Justice Ward at paragraph 54,
"54. I have little to add to the other matters raised on this appeal. It seems to me to be perfectly obvious that the different sets of Regulations should not be construed so as to overlap. Each has its own area of application. The ladder was not a workplace as that has to be understood in the Workplace Regulations."
"I accept the submission that I am bound by the decision in Mason v Satelcom. Once I accept that position, it seems to me in (sic) inevitable that I must find that the Door is governed by the Workplace Regulations.",
although she may have expressed the matter too strongly, her general approach to this issue was correct. Moreover, not only had the appellant not argued at trial for the dual application of the two sets of Regulations, but between paragraphs 71 – 77 of her judgment, the judge carried out a careful analysis of the relevant factors upon which her ultimate determination that the Workplace Regulations, rather than the Equipment Regulations, applied to this accident. In these circumstances, and as reflected in the submissions made on appeal by both respondents, I am satisfied that the judge was entitled to find that whilst the custody suite door was a,
"specialist door serving a particular function within the undertaking, it was nevertheless a door.",
such that the Workplace Regulations, rather than the Equipment Regulations, applied.
The correct approach to Regulation 18(1) of the Workplace Regulations
"4(4) In this regulation "suitable" –
(a) Subject to sub-paragraph (b), means suitable in any respect which it is reasonably foreseeable will affect the health or safety of any person;
(b) …….."
It was because of this that Longmore LJ, in Hide, considered that as it was difficult to see any origin of this definition, other than Article 5(4) of the Council Directive 89/391/EEC, it was necessary to construe the definition of suitability in Regulation 4(4) of the Equipment Regulations, so as to be consistent with the limited concept of foreseeability in Article 5(4) of the directive, namely,
"5(4) This Directive shall not restrict the option of Member States to provide for the exclusion or the limitation of employers' responsibility where occurrences are due to unusual and unforeseeable circumstances, beyond the employers' control, or to exceptional events, the consequences of which could not have been avoided despite the exercise of all due care."
"25. Once, therefore, the claimant shows that he has suffered injury as a result of contact with a piece of work equipment which (or may be) unsuitable, it will be for the defendant to show that the accident was due to unforeseeable circumstances beyond his control or to exceptional events the consequences of which could not be avoided in spite of the exercise of all due care on his part. The fact that an injury occurs in an unexpected way will not excuse the defendant unless he can show further that the circumstances were "unforeseeable" or "exceptional" in the sense given to those words by the Directive."
"15. Two points to make on those submissions are that first, of course, a word like "maintained", as Mr Brown submitted, can be tested by whether the end has been achieved, whereas a word like "Suitability" seems on the face to involve a qualitative assessment. The second point is that it is not necessarily an answer to say that Regulation 12(1) imposes an absolute obligation. It may be absolute in terms of requiring a suitable floor but it does not assist in construing the word "suitable" unless one restricts the submission to saying that these regulations are intended to impose a very high degree of liability on the employer.
16. In my view, the provisions relied on by Mr Urquhart do not really assist in answering the question we have to answer in this case. The key to answering that question is this. Both Mr Urquhart and Mr Brown were inclined to accept that the words at the end of Regulation 12(2) (which I have already quoted and which I emphasise – "to expose any person to a risk to his health or safety") were of assistance in identifying whether a floor was suitable. Suitability must be examined from a health and safety point of view. The question under that regulation is thus whether there is, in the construction of the floor, a risk to health and safety.
…..
25. I am not sure that language such as "real risk" or "slight risk" necessarily encapsulates the exercise that it seems to me must be performed. It the risk, however slight, is of a very serious injury or death in falling from a high-storey building, then the fact that the risk is slight may not outweigh the cost and importance of taking adequate precautions. Equally no one would suggest that an employer should be entitled to have a seriously uneven floor if the risk is simply that some one may trip over – i.e., that the risk is not of a very serious injury. It seems to me that the exercise to be performed is one of taking into account all relevant factors……
….
27. The court, as it seems to me, should stand back and ask itself, by reference to the above factors as they existed before this accident took place and not with the benefit of hindsight, was this floor suitable? Was it uneven to the extent which exposed persons to risk of their health and safety?........."
Schiemann LJ at paragraph 35 added,
"I do not consider that the existence of this small rise means that it should be regarded as rendering the floor unsuitable for the purpose for which it is used; namely leaving or entering the shop. Another way of putting the point is to say that this degree of risk in this situation does not fall within the concept of constituting a risk to health and safety as used in this regulation."
"9. It was common ground on the appeal that if the partially open cell door presented no foreseeable risk of injury then it could not be said that the workplace was not maintained in an efficient state and thus there could be no breach of Regulation 5. I would perhaps myself frame the proposition a little more cautiously in terms of foreseeable risk of relevant injury, but it may be that this is pedantry. In Koonjul v Thameslink Healthcare Services [2000] PIQR 123, [2000] EWCA Civ 3020, which was concerned with the Manual Handling Regulations, Hale LJ spoke of "a real risk, a foreseeable possibility of injury" and a real risk is, I think, a material risk.
….
11. Hale LJ also pointed out in Koonjul that in making the risk assessment called for by the Manual Handling Regulations "there has to be an element of realism". The same is true in my judgment of the assessment which the court must make of the foreseeability of risk of injury in the context of the present Regulations. That is why the risk must be real or material, although it does not have to approach a probability.
12. It was for the judge to decide what is essentially a jury question. However, his decision on the point could properly be informed by the evidence which he heard from those responsible for the health, safety and welfare of those who worked within the police station……"
The judge's determination of liability under Regulation 18(1) of the Workplace Regulations
"78. All references to any Regulations in this section of my judgment are references to the Workplace Regulations. Regulation 18(1) provides that doors and gates shall be suitably constructed (including being fitted with any necessary safety devices). For the reasons I have already given I do not consider the Door was defective in any way, and I find that it was therefore suitably constructed. For the reasons I have already given I am not satisfied that there are any necessary safety devices which should have been fitted to the Door."
"13. It is conceded that the Learned Judge could have said slightly more at [78] but, since it was common ground that the case of Yorkshire Traction governed the Regulation and the test was less strict, it was inevitable that the Learned Judge would apply her earlier findings which led inexorably to negative any lack of suitability in construction."
"52…He is further of the opinion that even if such a risk had been formally identified and recorded on a risk assessment, he would not have expected any control measures to be implemented to mitigate that risk as he considers that the likelihood and severity of the hazard would ordinarily have been given low scores on an assessment (B367(iii) – B367(iv), paragraph 2.3). Given the number of times that the Door and doors like it have been used in this custody suite without any report of injury of this sort, including from the date of the incident in February 2011 to the date of the hearing, it seems to me that Dr Jones opinion in those respects is unassailable."
Conclusion