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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 >> Needle v Swallowfield Plc [2020] EWHC 2759 (QB) (16 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/2759.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2759 (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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Stephen Needle |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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Swallowfield Plc |
Defendant |
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Mr Macpherson (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 22 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE LAMBERT :
Background
a) Training and Experience
b) The Accident
The Judgment
"4(1) Each employer shall –
(a) so far as 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 to 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…..
(2)…
(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 –
…
(c) his knowledge and training"
i) the task of rolling the pump on to its back had not been the subject of a specific risk assessment;
ii) the manoeuvring or rolling of the pump could be undertaken in a number of different ways. He recorded that he had watched a video depicting Mr Lang rolling the pump on to its back using a different method than that adopted by the Appellant;
iii) the Appellant had been trained and instructed to undertake a dynamic risk assessment;
iv) the Appellant had accepted that he had to assess the risk of manual handling of each job which he undertook because each job was different: this reflected that, in the engineering workshop, every task and most pieces of equipment were different, so that the challenge to the engineer was to assess each unique task;
v) the Appellant had agreed that it was his job to assess whether the manual handling in question was within his capabilities and for him to then assess how to do it in the safest way. He accepted that he had to think about these things and then do the job.
vi) the Appellant had accepted that the task in hand had not been "significantly more heavy, awkward or unusual than many other tasks he had to undertake as a trouble shooter"; that he had never intended (nor did he) lift the pump completely off the workbench; that it was a task which he thought was within his capabilities and that he could do safely.
i) [55] that: "there was no real or sufficient possibility of risk of injury of some sort to hands or wrists when turning or pushing this piece of equipment as long as employees are warned of the need to apply their experience and skill dynamically to assessing the risk and then to take appropriate care when undertaking an ordinary everyday task by keeping fingers out of the way."
ii) At [56] he found that: "this was a unique task being undertaken by an experienced skilled employee, trained in the need to undertake an assessment of what was or was not within his capability and what could or could not be undertaken by him safely, and that in the context where he had been serially trained to undertake such assessment each time he undertook a task."
iii) At [57] he found that there was "nothing inherently or uniquely dangerous to the degree that such an employee either required further warning or the benefit of a risk assessment of the specific task."
The Appeal
i) First, he submits that, on the facts, the conclusion that the handling did not carry a risk of personal injury was irrational and wrong. Although put in various ways, both in his grounds and skeleton argument, Mr Grice's submission amounts to a challenge to the common sense of the ruling made by the Judge given the accepted size, weight and unwieldy nature of the pump and the fact that the handling was being performed on a work bench at waist height.
ii) Second, that the Judge was wrong to bring into his analysis of the assessment of risk the fact that the Appellant was trained and experienced in dynamic risk assessment and that by doing so he conflated proof by the Appellant of risk with proof by the Respondent of the fact and sufficiency of the steps taken under Regulation 4(1)(a) and (b). Mr Grice submits that by including in his analysis of risk of injury the Appellant's training and experience in dynamic risk assessment and that the risk assessment was to be undertaken by the Appellant himself, the Judge failed to ensure that he followed the sequence of decisions required under the Regulation. Under Regulation 4 there is, submits Mr Grice, a clear hierarchy or sequence of questions which the Court should consider. First, whether the handling involves a foreseeable risk of injury; second, if so, whether the Respondent had established that the handling could not be avoided; third, if so, whether a suitable and sufficient assessment of the handling operation had been performed. Mr Grice's point is that consideration of the dynamic risk assessment and training in response to question one (the existence of risk) conflated risk of injury with the later assessment of how the risk might be reduced or eliminated.
i) The Judge did not fail to take into account the evidence of the Respondent's witnesses that there were risks of injury if the handling had been done incorrectly. He made clear that given that neither Mr Portt nor Mr Lang were experts, albeit that both had a background in engineering, he was proposing to place little weight on their evidence. This approach cannot be criticised.
ii) Nor am I persuaded that the Judge was wrong to place little or no weight on the modest changes and emphasis in working instructions in the light of the accident. The question for the Court was whether, taking into account the occupational context of this handling, the risk was such as to engage the manual handling requirements. As the Judge concluded "the fact that with the benefit of hindsight steps were taken to, in effect, reaffirm the requirements of dynamic risk assessment are nothing more than confirmation of the need for realism." I see no merit in this submission.
iii) I do not accept that the Judge placed weight upon the Appellant's own assessment that he could perform the handling safely. As Mr MacPherson submits, that evidence does not feature in the part of the judgment whether the Judge sets out his analysis and conclusions. However, even if he had placed some weight on that evidence, I have difficulty in accepting that it would be wholly irrelevant given the Appellant's training and undoubted skill, particularly in circumstances in which the mechanics of the injury remain in doubt.
iv) Finally, I note in passing that Mr Grice submits that the Judge failed to appreciate that, in Koonjul, Hale LJ had found that the moving of the bed did give rise to a foreseeable risk of injury. Nothing turns on the point, but I should record that it is not clear whether the Judge was indeed wrong in reading the judgment of the Court of Appeal as he did and I note that Staughton LJ (with whom Hale LJ sat) considered that she had "left that point open."