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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Pratley v Surrey County Council [2003] EWCA Civ 1067 (25 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1067.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1067, [2004] ICR 159, [2004] PIQR P17, [2003] IRLR 794 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION (BUCKLEY J.)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
and
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
____________________
MAUREEN ELISABETH PRATLEY |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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SURREY COUNTY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Edward Faulks QC & John Norman (instructed by Messrs Weightman Vizards) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mance:
"Elderly cases/PH 40 to be transferred to SJ [Sally Jagger, another case manager] and MP.
MP feels that she is "going under".
BD has c. 60 cases."
This is not the case there are only two Eld PD cases to be reallocated
MP's case load 111
SJ c. 110
BD 60
281
i) Need to slow down the incoming new work
ii Day to Day work i.e. dealing with crises on cases is manageable
SE ® Memo to Carol Foster to explain pressures and get snr. Managers to recognise the problems.
Agreed to write to Carol to inform her of decision to stack new cases because of pressure of incoming work.
MP fears repercussions on her personal health as a result of pressures. Agreed this is recorded, should MP need to seek further advice/ and for future protection of her personal position.
Date for next meeting 16th October 11.30 a.m."
The phrase added in "This is not the case there are only 2 Eld PD cases to be reallocated" is joined by a line drawn to the underlined word above it "transferred".
"the feared transfer of 40 extra cases seemed to be Miss Pratley's primary concern. That she did not think that she could cope with that especially when she was just going on holiday and it was that aspect of the matter that provoked the discussion about Miss Pratley's health and the reference in the note to it."
That passage follows paragraph 45 of Mrs Elrick's witness statement, recording that she thought that it was Miss Pratley's belief (subsequently corrected) that she was about to receive 40 new cases that provoked the further discussion about Miss Pratley's health recorded in the last paragraph of the note. It is true that the note as copied to Miss Pratley continues to reflect the original fears communicated at the meeting, but the judge was entitled and bound to have in mind that their primary basis had been removed by the enquiries made.
"Mrs Elrick's recollection . is that Miss Pratley told her she was concerned that her health might suffer in the future but that she did not say that her health was already suffering or that she had seen her general practitioner. Overall she did not have the impression that Miss Pratley was telling her that she was then seriously under stress or unwell. She agrees that she may well have been her suggestion that they should wait until Miss Pratley's return from holiday to decide whether she wished to be referred to the Occupational Health Officer. She is sure however that she did not "persuade" Miss Pratley to postpone her requests. Overall Mrs Elrick had had not previous indication that Miss Pratley was suffering from stress, there was no evidence at all of her work deteriorating, and her reason for not immediately writing to Carol Foster was that her overall feeling was that the situation could wait until after Miss Pratley's holidays. Mrs Elrick felt that she was dealing with a very professional and calm person and Miss Pratley's fear was for the future. . However, she very fairly agreed that it would not have been unreasonable for Miss Pratley to expect "stacking" to be implemented on her return. She had no idea that Miss Pratley would react as she did in the two days she was back at work after her three week holiday and before signing off sick .."
"28. .. Miss Pratley did mention a health concern at the August meeting, but I readily accept Mrs Elrick's interpretation and recollection that it was a concern for the future, if the work load was not reorganised in some way. Mis Pratley had not seen fit at that time to go to her own G.P., the Occupational Health Department or the counselling services available. That evidences her own view of her health at the time and is some evidence of the impression she would have given to Mrs Elrick. Her work was not suffering. To find that Mrs Elrick should, in those circumstances, have realised that action had to be taken by the day Miss Pratley returned to work after a three week holiday, would be unreal. It was in my judgment, entirely reasonable for Mrs Elrick to see how things were and how Miss Pratley felt on their joint return to work before taking specific action. The first indication of a concern for Miss Pratley's health was at the 21st August meeting. Mrs Elrick had no medical evidence at all. Simply Miss Pratley's expressed fear for the future. Miss Pratley herself thought that her 3 weeks holidays would sort her out.
29. Mrs. Elrick was described in one of the witness statements as a caring individual. Having seen and heard her, I accept that description. I found her to be intelligent, impressive and frank. Had she found a continuing problem on her return, she would have dealt with it. To find she should have perceived a risk of Miss Pratley reacting as she did and breaking down almost immediately on her return, would be grossly unfair. The truth of the matter clearly is that Miss Pratley was unwell to a greater extent in August, than she herself realised. There was nothing at the time to alert Mrs. Elrick to that. I am very sympathetic to Miss Pratley, who has an excellent work record and who is herself a thoroughly decent and caring lady who has made a real contribution to society through her work. But for the reasons given I cannot hold the Council to have been in breach of duty and the claim must be dismissed."
"Many, alas, suffer breakdowns and depressive illnesses and a significant proportion could doubtless ascribe some at least of their problems to the strains and stresses of their work situation: be it simply overworking, the tensions of difficult relationships, career prospect worries, fears or feelings of discrimination or harassment, to take just some examples. Unless, however, there was a real risk of breakdown which the claimant's employers ought reasonably to have foreseen and which they ought properly to have averted, there can be no liability."
"Foreseeability [23] To say that the employer has a duty of care to his employee does not tell us what he has to do (or refrain from doing) in any particular case. The issue in most if not all of these cases is whether the employer should have taken positive steps to safeguard the employee from harm: his sins are those of omission rather than commission. Mr Robert Owen QC, for the appellant defendant in Bishop's case, saw this as a question of defining the duty; Mr Ralph Lewis QC, for the appellant defendant in Jones' case, saw it as a question of setting the standard of care in order to decide whether it had been broken. Whichever is the correct analysis, the threshold question is whether this kind of harm to this particular employee was reasonably foreseeable. The question is not whether psychiatric injury is foreseeable in a person of 'ordinary fortitude'. The employer's duty is owed to each individual employee, not to some as yet unidentified outsider (see Paris v Stepney BC [1951] 1 All ER 42, [1951] AC 367). The employer knows who his employee is. It may be that he knows, as in Paris' case, or ought to know, of a particular vulnerability; but he may not. Because of the very nature of psychiatric disorder, as a sufficiently serious departure from normal or average psychological functioning to be labelled a disorder, it is bound to be harder to foresee than is physical injury. Shylock could not say of a mental disorder, 'If you prick us, do we not bleed?' But it may be easier to foresee in a known individual than it is in the population at large. The principle is the same as in other cases where there is a contractual duty of care, such as solicitors' negligence (see Cook v S, McLoughlin v Grovers).
[24] .. The notion that some occupations are in themselves dangerous to mental health is not borne out by the literature to which we have already referred: it is not the job but the interaction between the individual and the job which causes the harm. Stress is a subjective concept: the individual's perception that the pressures placed upon him are greater than he may be able to meet. Adverse reactions to stress are equally individual, ranging from minor physical symptoms to major mental illness.
[25] All of this points to there being a single test: whether a harmful reaction to the pressures of the workplace is reasonably foreseeable in the individual employee concerned. Such a reaction will have two components: (1) an injury to health; which (2) is attributable to stress at work. The answer to the foreseeability question will therefore depend upon the interrelationship between the particular characteristics of the employee concerned and the particular demands which the employer casts upon him. As was said in McLoughlin v Grovers, expert evidence may be helpful although it can never be determinative of what a reasonable employer should have foreseen. A number of factors are likely to be relevant.
[26] These include the nature and extent of the work being done by the employee. Employers should be more alert to picking up signs from an employee who is being overworked in an intellectually or emotionally demanding job than from an employee whose workload is no more than normal for the job or whose job is not particularly demanding for him or her. It will be easier to conclude that harm is foreseeable if the employer is putting pressure upon the individual employee which is in all the circumstances of the case unreasonable. Also relevant is whether there are signs that others doing the same work are under harmful levels of stress. There may be others who have already suffered injury to their health arising from their work. Or there may be an abnormal level of sickness and absence amongst others at the same grade or in the same department. But if there is no evidence of this, then the focus must turn to the individual, as Colman J put it in Walker's case [1995] 1 All ER 737 at 752:
'Accordingly, the question is whether it ought to have been foreseen that Mr Walker was exposed to a risk of mental illness materially higher than that which would ordinarily affect a social services middle manager in his position with a really heavy workload.'
[27] More important are the signs from the employee himself. Here again, it is important to distinguish between signs of stress and signs of impending harm to health. Stress is merely the mechanism which may but usually does not lead to damage to health. Walker's case is an obvious illustration: Mr Walker was a highly conscientious and seriously overworked manager of a social work area office with a heavy and emotionally demanding case load of child abuse cases. Yet although he complained and asked for help and for extra leave, the judge held that his first mental breakdown was not foreseeable. There was, however, liability when he returned to work with a promise of extra help which did not materialise and experienced a second breakdown only a few months later. If the employee or his doctor makes it plain that unless something is done to help there is a clear risk of a breakdown in mental or physical health, then the employer will have to think what can be done about it.
[28] Harm to health may sometimes be foreseeable without such an express warning. Factors to take into account would be frequent or prolonged absences from work which are uncharacteristic for the person concerned; these could be for physical or psychological complaints; but there must also be good reason to think that the underlying cause is occupational stress rather than other factors; this could arise from the nature of the employee's work or from complaints made about it by the employee or from warnings given by the employee or others around him.
[29] But when considering what the reasonable employer should make of the information which is available to him, from whatever source, what assumptions is he entitled to make about his employee and to what extent he is bound to probe further into what he is told? Unless he knows of some particular problem or vulnerability, an employer is usually entitled to assume that his employee is up to the normal pressures of the job. It is only if there is something specific about the job or the employee or the combination of the two that he has to think harder. But thinking harder does not necessarily mean that he has to make searching or intrusive inquiries. Generally he is entitled to take what he is told by or on behalf of the employee at face value. If he is concerned he may suggest that the employee consults his own doctor or an occupational health service. But he should not without a very good reason seek the employee's permission to obtain further information from his medical advisors. Otherwise he would risk unacceptable invasions of his employee's privacy.
[30] It was argued that the employer is entitled to take the expiry of a GP's certificate as implicitly suggesting that the employee is now fit to return to work and even that he is no longer at risk of suffering the same sort of problem again. This cannot be right. A GP's certificate is limited in time but many disorders are not self-limiting and may linger on for some considerable time. Yet an employee who is anxious to return to work, for whatever reason, may not go back to his GP for a further certificate when the current one runs out. Even if the employee is currently fit for work, the earlier time-limited certificate carries no implication that the same or a similar condition will not recur. The point is a rather different one: an employee who returns to work after a period of sickness without making further disclosure or explanation to his employer is usually implying that he believes himself fit to return to the work which he was doing before. The employer is usually entitled to take that at face value unless he has other good reasons to think to the contrary (see McIntyre v Filtrona Ltd [1996] CA Transcript 1310).
[31] These then are the questions and the possible indications that harm was foreseeable in a particular case. But how strong should those indications be before the employer has a duty to act? Mr Hogarth argued that only 'clear and unequivocal' signs of an impending breakdown should suffice. That may be putting it too high. But in view of the many difficulties of knowing when and why a particular person will go over the edge from pressure to stress and from stress to injury to health, the indications must be plain enough for any reasonable employer to realise that he should do something about it"
"Breach of duty
[32] What then is it reasonable to expect the employer to do? His duty is to take reasonable care. What is reasonable depends, as we all know, upon the foreseeability of harm, the magnitude of the risk of that harm occurring, the gravity of the harm which may take place, the cost and practicability of preventing it, and the justifications for running the risk (see the oft-quoted summary of Swanwick J in Stokes v Guest, Keen and Nettlefold (Bolts and Nuts) Ltd [1968] 1 WLR 1776 at 1783).
[33] It is essential, therefore, once the risk of harm to health from stresses in the workplace is foreseeable, to consider whether and in what respect the employer has broken that duty. There may be a temptation, having concluded that some harm was foreseeable and that harm of that kind has taken place, to go on to conclude that the employer was in breach of his duty of care in failing to prevent that harm (and that that breach of duty caused the harm). But in every case it is necessary to consider what the employer not only could but should have done. We are not here concerned with such comparatively simple things as gloves, goggles, earmuffs or non-slip flooring. Many steps might be suggested: giving the employee a sabbatical; transferring him to other work; redistributing the work; giving him some extra help for a while; arranging treatment or counselling; providing buddying or mentoring schemes to encourage confidence; and much more. But in all of these suggestions it will be necessary to consider how reasonable it is to expect the employer to do this, either in general or in particular: the size and scope of its operation will be relevant to this, as will its resources, whether in the public or private sector, and the other demands placed upon it. Among those other demands are the interests of other employees in the workplace. It may not be reasonable to expect the employer to rearrange the work for the sake of one employee in a way which prejudices the others. As we have already said, an employer who tries to balance all these interests by offering confidential help to employees who fear that they may be suffering harmful levels of stress is unlikely to be found in breach of duty: except where he has been placing totally unreasonable demands upon an individual in circumstances where the risk of harm was clear.
[34] Moreover, the employer can only reasonably be expected to take steps which are likely to do some good. This is a matter on which the court is likely to require expert evidence. In many of these cases it will be very hard to know what would have done some let alone enough good. In some cases the only effective way of safeguarding the employee would be to dismiss or demote him. There may be no other work at the same level of pay which it is reasonable to expect the employer to offer him. In principle the law should not be saying to an employer that it is his duty to sack an employee who wants to go on working for him for the employer's own good. .."
"Causation [35] Having shown a breach of duty, it is still necessary to show that the particular breach of duty found caused the harm. It is not enough to show that occupational stress caused the harm. Where there are several different possible causes, as will often be the case with stress related illness of any kind, the claimant may have difficulty proving that the employer's fault was one of them (see Wilsher v Essex Area Health Authority [1988] 1 All ER 871, [1988] AC 1074). This will be a particular problem if, as in Garrett v Camden London BC [2001] All ER (D) 202 (Mar), the main cause was a vulnerable personality which the employer knew nothing about. However, the employee does not have to show that the breach of duty was the whole cause of his ill-health: it is enough to show that it made a material contribution (see Bonnington Castings Ltd v Wardlaw [1956] 1 All ER 615, [1956] AC 613).
Apportionment and quantification
[36] Many stress-related illnesses are likely to have a complex aetiology with several different causes. In principle a wrongdoer should pay only for that proportion of the harm suffered for which he by his wrongdoing is responsible (see eg Thompson v Smiths Shiprepairers (North Shields) Ltd [1984] 1 All ER 881, [1984] QB 405, Holtby v Brigham & Cowan (Hull) Ltd [2000] PIQR Q293 and Rahman v Arearose Ltd [2001] QB 351, [2000] 3 WLR 1184). Thompson's case and Holtby's case concerned respectively deafness and asbestosis developed over a long period of exposure; not only were different employers involved but in Thompson's case some of the exposure by the same employer was tortious and some was not. Apportionment was possible because the deterioration over particular periods of time could be measured, albeit in a somewhat rough and ready fashion. [37] It is different if the harm is truly indivisible: a tortfeasor who has made a material contribution is liable for the whole, although he may be able to seek contribution from other joint or concurrent tortfeasors who have also contributed to the injury. ."
"But it does not follow that, no matter what the circumstances may be, it is justifiable to neglect a risk of such a small magnitude. A reasonable man would only neglect such a risk if he had some valid reason for doing so, e.g., that it would involve considerable expense to eliminate the risk. He would weigh the risk against the difficulty of eliminating it. If the activity which caused the injury to Miss Stone had been an unlawful activity, there can be little doubt but that Bolton v. Stone would have been decided differently. In their Lordships' judgment Bolton v. Stone did not alter the general principle that a person must be regarded as negligent if he does not take steps to eliminate a risk which he knows or ought to know is a real risk and not a mere possibility which would never influence the mind of a reasonable man. What that decision did was to recognise and give effect to the qualification that it is justifiable not to take steps to eliminate a real risk if it is small and if the circumstances are such that a reasonable man, careful of the safety of his neighbour, would think it right to neglect it."
"My Lords, in this calculation [i.e. the weighing exercise, to determine whether action should be taken, to which Lord Reid referred] it seems to me that the concession by the council is of significance. The council admit that they should have removed the boat. True, they make this concession solely on the ground that there was a risk that children would suffer minor injuries if the rotten planking gave way beneath them. But the concession shows that if there were a wider risk, the council would have had to incur no additional expense to eliminate it. They would only have had to do what they admit they should have done anyway. On the principle as stated by Lord Reid, the wider risk would also fall within the scope of the council's duty unless it was different in kind from that which should have been foreseen (like the fire and pollution risks in The Wagon Mound (No 1)) and either wholly unforeseeable (as the fire risk was assumed to be in The Wagon Mound (No 1)) or so remote that it could be 'brushed aside as far-fetched': see Lord Reid in The Wagon Mound (No 2) [1967] 1 AC 617.
I agree with my noble and learned friend Lord Steyn and the judge that one cannot so describe the risk that children coming upon an abandoned boat and trailer would suffer injury in some way other than by falling through the planks. Mr de Navarro QC says that apart from its rotten planking, the boat was simply a heavy object like any other. It was no more likely to cause injury to the children than any other heavy object they might be able to get hold of. He draws the analogy of a man who negligently leaves a loaded gun where children play with it and one child injures another by dropping it on his toe. The injury does not fall within the scope of the risk created by the fact that it is a gun rather than some other heavy but innocuous object. So Roch LJ said: 'Had the boat been sound, then no reason for its removal would have existed.' (See [1998] 1 WLR 1546, 1555.) I think that in a case like this, analogies from other imaginary facts are seldom helpful. Likewise analogies from real facts in other cases: I entirely agree with my noble and learned friend Lord Steyn in deploring the citation of cases which do nothing to illuminate any principle but are said to constitute analogous facts. In the present case, the rotten condition of the boat had a significance beyond the particular danger it created. It proclaimed the boat and its trailer as abandoned, res nullius, there for the taking, to make of them whatever use the rich fantasy life of children might suggest."
i) What was the nature of the risk and the type of injury foreseeable? Was it a general risk of illness at some or any time? Or was it a risk of illness arising through continuing work overload over a longer future term, as distinct from any risk of immediate collapse (which could include collapse following the disappointment of a "cherished idea" developed as a result of the conversation about the problems anticipated if there was continuing work overload over a future period)? And is the distinction drawn in the last sentence a relevant distinction?
ii) Second, if there is a relevant distinction between a risk of illness arising from continuing work overload over a future period and a risk of immediate collapse (such as mentioned in (i)), can Miss Pratley succeed on the simple basis that Mrs Elrick ought reasonably to have taken steps to address the former risk, and that the taking of such steps would in fact have prevented the latter risk materialising?
iii) Third, if the distinction is rejected, and the risk discussed between Miss Pratley and Mrs Elrick is properly categorised as a general risk of psychiatric illness, should Mrs Elrick have taken immediate steps to address it?
Lord Justice Buxton:
"it is not the act but the consequences on which tortious liability is founded"
The defendant will be deemed liable for those consequences, not because he has caused them in the course of some careless or otherwise undesirable activity; but only if they were caused by his failure to take precautions against a foreseen or foreseeable and legally relevant danger.
"Unless there was a real risk of breakdown which the claimant's employers ought reasonably to have foreseen and which they ought properly to have averted, there can be no liability"
"For the avoidance of doubt, it is alleged that it was foreseeable that, if the Claimant was required to manage an excessive case load, to work excessively long hours and to work under extremely stressful conditions, her long term health would be adversely affected" [emphasis supplied]
And it is entirely plain from the judge's judgment, and from his acceptance in full of the evidence of Mrs Elrick, that the perception that he attributed to her was of a danger from culmulative stress in the longer term if methods of alleviation were not provided. That is what the judge meant when he said, at § 28, that it was Mrs Elrick's recollection that it was a concern for the future, if the work load was not reorganised in some way. "For the future" could hardly sensibly mean "at any time after the meeting when Miss Pratley was at work", as it would have had to do to encompass the injury that Miss Pratley suffered: that would not be a concern for the future, but here and now in the present. And such a finding would have been contrary to the evidence, not only that Mrs Elrick had no inkling of any health problem affecting Miss Pratley until she raised it, in somewhat muted terms, at the meeting itself; but also Mrs Elrick's own evidence as to the implications of the meeting.
"what I saw in front of me was someone who was telling me very clearly and in a very professional and calm manner that she felt she was going under, that she feared repercussions on her personal health as a result of the pressures at a point in the future. Now, I haven't written in here 'At a point in the future' but that was my perception; that it wasn't something that was happening to Miss Pratley now. Yes, she was pressurised, she feared she might go under, or she felt she was going under, the workload was great, but that she feared the repercussions on her health at a point in the future. I didn't have a sense of immediate urgency, particularly on the basis that we had agreed that a referral for health purposes would wait until Miss Pratley's return from holiday .my belief was that we had an agreement that we would wait until she came back from leave to see how she felt before I wrote to occupational health and that, therefore, there was less urgency about the repercussions on her personal health."
That was a reply volunteered in cross-examination by a witness whose evidence was accepted in full by the judge. That evidence is wholly inconsistent with any suggestion the Mrs Elrick either did realise or should have realised that, unless stacking were in place as soon as Miss Pratley resumed work, Miss Pratley's health would be at risk. It fully justified the judge's finding, at § 28, that
"To find that Mrs Elrick should, in those circumstances, have realised that action had to be taken by the day Miss Pratley returned to work after a three week holiday, would be unreal. It was in my judgement entirely reasonable for Mrs Elrick to see how things were and how Miss Pratley felt on their joint return to work before taking specific action."
"it was actually foreseen by both the Claimant and her line manager that unless steps were taken to reduce the flow of incoming work which the Claimant had to do, her health might suffer (i.e. that it was actually foreseen that there was a risk to health if appropriate measures were not taken)"
So indeed it was foreseen. But there was no finding, and no evidence to support a finding, that it was either foreseen or foreseeable that steps needed to be taken to avert the injury that in fact occurred, a catastrophic collapse into mental illness immediately upon Miss Pratley's return to work.
"To find [Mrs Elrick] should have perceived a risk of Miss Pratley reacting as she did and breaking down almost immediately on her return, would be grossly unfair. The truth of the matter clearly is that Miss Pratley was unwell to a greater extent in August, than she herself realised. There was nothing at the time to alert Mrs Elrick to that."
That finding was inevitable on the evidence; was not challenged in the Grounds of Appeal; and is fatal to the extended argument advanced by the claimant.
Lord Justice Ward:
"I readily accept Mrs Elrick's interpretation and recollection [of the August meeting] that it [Miss Pratley's concern for her health] was a concern for the future, if the workload was not re-organised in some way."
The note of that meeting spells out the concern, namely that "MP feels she is "going under"" and "MP fears repercussions on her personal health as a result of pressure".
"What then is it reasonable to expect the employer to do? His duty is to take reasonable care. What is reasonable depends, as we all know, upon the foreseeability of harm, the magnitude of the risk of that harm occurring, the gravity of the harm which may take place, the cost and practicability of preventing it, and the justification for running the risk "
" It could not have been said to be a far-fetched or fantastic possibility that such a ball would strike someone in the road: people did pass along the road from time to time. So it could not have been said that, on any ordinary meaning of the words, the fact that a ball might strike a person in the road was not foreseeable or reasonably foreseeable it was plainly foreseeable. But the chance of its happening in the foreseeable future was infinitesimal. A mathematician given the data could have worked out that it was only likely to happen once in so many thousand years. The House of Lords held that the risk was so small that in the circumstances a reasonable man would have been justified in disregarding it and taking no steps to eliminate it.
But it does not follow that, no matter what the circumstances may be, it is justifiable to neglect a risk of such a small magnitude. A reasonable man would only neglect such a risk if he had some valid reason for doing so, e.g., that it would involve considerable expense to eliminate the risk. He would weigh the risk against the difficulty of eliminating it. If the activity which caused the injury to Miss Stone had been an unlawful activity, there can be little doubt but that Bolton v Stone would have been decided differently. In their Lordships' judgment Bolton v Stone did not alter the general principle that a person must be regarded as negligent if he does not take steps to eliminate a risk which he knows or ought to know is a real risk and not a mere possibility which would never influence the mind of a reasonable man. What that decision did was to recognise and give effect to the qualification that it is justifiable not to take steps to eliminate a real risk if it is small and if the circumstances are such that a reasonable man, careful of the safety of his neighbour, would think it right to neglect it." (Emphasis added by me).
" it is justifiable not to take steps to eliminate a real risk if it is small and if the circumstances are such that a reasonable man, careful of the safety of his neighbour, would think it right to neglect it."
"Yes, she was pressurised, she feared she might go under, or felt she was going under, the workload was great, but that she feared the repercussions on her health at a point in the future. I didn't have a sense of immediate urgency "
"To find that Mrs Elrick should, in those circumstances, have realised that action had to be taken by the day Miss Pratley returned to work after a three week holiday, would be unreal. It was in my judgment entirely reasonable for Mrs Elrick to see how things were and how Miss Pratley felt on their joint return to work before taking specific action."