BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Jakto Transport Ltd. v Derek Hall [2005] EWCA Civ 1327 (09 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1327.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1327 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Sheffield County Court
His Honour Judge Robinson
BY 303698
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
____________________
Jakto Transport Limited |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Derek Hall |
Respondent |
____________________
Christopher Williams (instructed by Messrs L A Steel) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : Thursday, 13 October 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE SMITH :
Introduction
"Every employer shall ensure that work equipment is maintained in an efficient state, in efficient working order and in good repair."
The Evidence - Common Ground
Evidence - The Respondent's Account
Evidence - The Appellant's Witnesses
The Expert Evidence
"There is another possible explanation for the failure, but even that possibility seems to me to be unlikely."
He then discussed the respondent's suggested explanation for the accident, which was that the ratchet had malfunctioned due to the presence of dust. He confirmed that, if used in a dusty atmosphere, dust can accumulate in the ratchet mechanism and can hold one or more of the teeth out of engagement. He said that the shock of a sudden movement might disturb some of the dust so that the cause of the failure would not be apparent immediately afterwards. In other words, the sudden movement might correct the defect and allow the tooth or teeth to re-engage. It is not disputed that Mr Glenn was here accepting that there was a possible explanation in engineering terms for the way in which the respondent said the wrench had behaved. However, Mr Glenn went on to express the view that dust in the ratchet was not a 'reasonable' explanation for the accident. Torque wrenches of this type are commonly used in garages and engineering workshops and he was not aware of problems caused by dust in such places. In any event, he said, the kind of routine lubrication that Mr Ramsden had told him was carried out on this wrench should be sufficient to keep the ratchet clean and in good order. Moreover, if the working environment was very dusty, this problem might be expected to occur on more than one occasion. There was no history that it had.
"In my opinion there are two possible causes of the accident if the wrench remained on the nut. My view is that either there was a defect in the wrench causing an unexpected and uncontrolled movement or the wrench acted as it ought to and Mr Hall simply misjudged the point at which the wrench would operate.
The use of the torque wrench is to limit the torque applied to the nut. This is achieved by the use of the spring within the tool. When the set torque is applied, the handle will move relative to the head of the tool, indicating to the operator that the nut is correctly tightened. The movement is in the direction of the applied force, so the operator's hands will inevitably move with the handle in the direction in which the operator is pushing. My understanding is that the movement that occurred at the material time was similar to the correct operation of the tool when the required torque is achieved. The handle moved downwards in accordance with the force applied by Mr Hall.
I understand that Mr Hall was an experienced fitter and that he was familiar with the use of the torque wrench. He told me that the movement of the wrench at the time of his accident was not like the movement that normally occurred. It was more sudden and involved a more substantial release under the applied force. His impression at the time was that the bolt had broken. My experience of using a torque wrench is that there is a difference between normal operation and the movement that will occur when a bolt breaks.
If it is accepted that there was a different type of movement at the material time to that normally expected when the required torque is achieved then, in my view, the only explanation is that there was a defect in the torque wrench. Such circumstances could be a breach of statutory duty as discussed in my report. However, if the torque wrench seen at the inspection is the same as was used at the material time, then I have difficulty in explaining what the defect might have been.
If there was no defect in the torque wrench at the material time then, in my view, the balance of probabilities is that Mr Hall misjudged the effort applied to the wrench and the stage at which the wrench would operate. Under those circumstances, Mr Hall's description that the movement was as though a bolt had broken must be mistaken.
The description by Mr Hall is not consistent with my understanding of the Defendants' evidence. If the wrench failed as described by Mr Hall, then I would expect the type of investigation described by Mr Ramsden to indicate a fault, even if there was insufficient means to accurately diagnose the fault. I find it difficult to see how a wrench that behaved as described by Mr Hall could remain in regular use for a period of several months without repair.
In my opinion, this case depends on whose evidence is accepted."
In answer to yet further questions, Mr Glenn wrote:
"Normal operation of a torque wrench does not require the operator to judge the point at which the wrench will operate. An inexperienced man or a man carrying out unfamiliar work will have no indication that the torque is approaching the preset limit and so cannot prepare himself for operation. Such circumstances are not normally considered to be unsafe. However, over- enthusiastic use of any hand tool can lead to a loss of control. Providing Mr Hall operated the torque wrench in a calm and controlled manner, he should not have encountered any difficulty whether or not he expected the wrench to operate when it did.
I understand that Mr Hall was experienced in his work and familiar with the use of a torque wrench in the manner that it was used at the material time. Under such circumstances, Mr Hall may have been able to anticipate roughly when the torque wrench would operate. If he misjudged the operation, then he may have continued to apply force to the wrench with more enthusiasm than was appropriate, losing control of his movements when the wrench operated."
The Judgment.
The Appeal
"It seems to me to be axiomatic that a fact-finder must not reach his or her conclusion before surveying all the evidence relevant thereto. …. Mr Tam, for the Secretary of State, argues that decisions as to the credibility of an account are to be taken by the judicial fact-finder and that, in their reports, experts, whether in relation to medical matters or to in-country circumstances, cannot usurp the fact-finder's function in assessing credibility. I agree. What, however, they can offer, is a factual context in which it may be necessary for the fact-finder to survey the allegations placed before him; and such context may prove a crucial aid to the decision whether to not to accept the truth of them. What the fact-finder does at his peril is to reach a conclusion by reference only to the appellant's evidence and then, if it be negative, to ask whether the conclusion should be shifted by the expert evidence."
"Right lower leg injury at work today. Using a torque wrench something hit him at force just above the boot."
The second note records:
"Something flew out of torque wrench 1hr ago hit Right lower leg Too painful to weight bear since."
The third note, written by a senior house officer records that he had been tightening wheel nuts on a lorry using a torque wrench. The doctor has then written:
"?what happened. Wrench exploded something hit him on right leg."
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH:
LORD JUSTICE PILL:
(a) On the basis of Mr Glenn's evidence and that of the chargehand fitter, whom the judge found to be truthful and convincing, that the wrench operated satisfactorily immediately after the accident, and for months afterwards, the possibility of a defective function when the accident happened is very small.
(b) Quite apart from his credibility, the reliability of the respondent's account is suspect. He himself, in cross-examination as to how the accident happened, agreed that he thought he "fell over handle or whatever" rather than the account he had given and, as Smith LJ has stated, it seems that the judge thought it likely that the respondent had stumbled into the handle rather than the handle striking his leg. This must cast doubt on the reliability of his recollection.
(c) While I would be slow to decide a case on the basis of what a claimant tells doctors after the accident, it is surprising in this case that the respondent did not refer to a fault in the wrench when asked the questions he was.
(d) The claim he made in evidence that he said at the time that there was a fault was not made even in his witness statement.
(e) I can place no reliance in the respondent's favour on the acceptance by Mr Ramsden that somebody at the scene of the accident mentioned the possibility of a fault in the wrench. Given the respondent's experience, it would be surprising if his workmates who arrived at the scene did not consider that possibility. Mr Ramsden found no fault or problem with the wrench.
(f) I would accept Mr Murphy's submission on behalf of the appellants that the position in which the judge found the wrench to have been after the accident is as consistent with over-enthusiastic use by the operator as with a defect.
(g) The judge's reservations about other evidence given by the appellants' witnesses does not appear to me to affect the issue.