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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 >> Balogh & Ors v Hick Lane Bedding Ltd [2021] EWHC 1140 (QB) (09 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/1140.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1140 (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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LASLO BALOGH AND OTHERS |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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HICK LANE BEDDING LTD |
Defendant |
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No appearance for the Defendant
Hearing date: 9 March 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
MASTER DAVISON:
Introduction
"Orsos had approached Mr Rafiq, offering to supply cheap labour. The company would pay Orsos £3 per hour for each Hungarian worker supplied. This case relates to five Hungarian victims, although evidence was adduced by way of background in relation to three other individuals. All of those men were under the direction of Orsos.
The five victims were Hungarian nationals who had been deceived and enticed by false representations made by Orsos, leading them to travel to this country after false representations regarding pay and conditions at work had been made to them. This offender had no part in the making of those representations. The Hungarians were unaware that the UK minimum wage at the relevant time was about £6 per hour. The evidence showed that, at the very least, the Hungarian workers were not paid that minimum wage. Some of them said that if they had been paid as little as £3 per hour, they would have considered that to be a good wage. As events transpired, they did not receive even that meagre figure.
The workers were made to work long hours, ranging between 10 and 18 hours per day, and five to seven days a week. The evidence showed that, at the relevant time, many Hungarian nationals were desperate for work in this country because of the dire economic situation in Hungary. Once in the UK, the Hungarian workers faced a very different reality from that promised by Orsos. They found themselves living in very overcrowded, often squalid, accommodation. They did not receive the wages that had been promised to them, which were a little less than £3 per hour. The wages they had earned were not given to them, but were collected and retained by Orsos and/or Illes, who, in turn, would hand on minimal amounts to the worker. For most of the time they worked, the Hungarians would receive about £10 per week, with each household in which they lived being given an additional £20 to £30 per day per household for food.
There was evidence that, over a two-year period, Orsos had transferred almost £60,000 overseas. The Crown's case was that this was just a percentage of the monies he obtained. Matters came to an end in around November 2013 with the arrests of Orsos and Illes. At that point, the police began to investigate the businesses that had employed the trafficked Hungarian nationals. It appears that, by 2011, this offender's business was in serious financial trouble. Although it had good contracts with well-known reputable retailers, its profit margin was extremely low. This financial situation appears to have been the motivation for this offender's involvement.
All payments to Orsos, both in respect of his commission and the wages of the workers, were paid in cash with no invoices issued. These transactions were wholly off the books of Kozesleep, so that, in addition, no tax or national insurance was paid. There had been, from time to time, ethical audits conducted by the retail customers of Kozesleep, but they failed to detect these abuses, in the absence of paperwork. The initial approach had been made to this offender by Orsos and this offender had accepted the arrangement proposed: he contacted Orsos when he required extra staff. There was evidence from more than one victim that, when complaint was made about not receiving wages, these complaints were brushed aside".
Laslo Balogh
"I was also in a state of fear. You would have to live in it to really understand how it felt. I was so angry and upset, but scared about what could happen to me. We would hear stories about workers 'disappearing' or that others had been burnt to death in a car. I was scared something would happen and I would not make it back to Hungary alive. I heard a lot of talk at the factory about Josef, Linda and their relative, Kacsa (Janos Orsos). Generally, everyone was scared about what would happen if the boss reported to Josef or Kacsa that we were complaining about the way we were treated or that we were not being paid properly."
Tibor Benedek
"The situation was unbearable. There was an atmosphere of fear and mistrust. It was the same in the house and at the factory. We were terrorised when we were in the house and at the factory. At the factory, even if I felt like I couldn't move and couldn't face having to haul another mattress onto the lorry, I knew I had to do it anyway. I knew that if I refused and it got back to the bosses, I would be reported to Kacsa. At times, I felt so helpless that there was just no respite from living under a feeling of threat and fear. I could see the fear in other people's faces. When one of the others said that they had found someone who would help us to leave, I was worried, but I thought that my situation could not get much worse."
Norbert Novodomszki
"I thought that this new role would mean that I would be paid properly, but this was not the case. It was worse than the last job I had had. This time I only received £10 per week. We would receive money at the end of the week, either from Kacsa or one of his associates. I was really angry when I realised I was only getting £10 per week, but I did not know what to do. There was a real sense of danger around Kacsa at the bed factory. I was warned that if Kacsa became angry with me then he would take steps to punish me and I heard stories about people being beaten or sacked and thrown onto the streets all the time."
The assessment of damages
i) Because they were subjected to the intentional torts of intimidation and harassment, which deprived them of their personal autonomy in circumstances closely akin to false imprisonment, they are entitled to an award of damages reflecting those circumstances.
ii) They are entitled to awards for pain, suffering and loss of amenity, consequent on their psychiatric injuries.
iii) They are entitled to an award for what I might call "sub-clinical" distress, anxiety and injury to feelings. That falls to be assessed by reference to the well-known Vento guidelines. The guidelines stipulate three bands. Suitably uprated for inflation, the bands are as follows. Interposing the up-to-date figures, I quote from paragraph 65 of the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which is reported at [2003] ICR 318:
"(i) The top band should normally be between £27,000 and £45,000. Sums in this range should be awarded in the most serious cases, such as where there has been a lengthy campaign of discriminatory harassment on the ground of sex or race. This case falls within that band. Only in the most exceptional case should an award of compensation for injury to feelings exceed £45,000.
(ii) The middle band of between £9,000 and £27,000 should be used for serious cases which do not merit an award in the highest band.
(iii) Awards of between £900 and £9,000 are appropriate for less serious cases, such as where the act of discrimination is an isolated or one-off occurrence".
iv) The claimants are, lastly, entitled to an award of exemplary damages, reflecting the fact that the defendant cynically exploited them in order to make a profit, thus falling into the second category of exemplary damages set out by Lord Devlin in Rookes v Barnard [1964] AC 1129.
Laslo Balogh – award
"You see, to be honest with you, I would have preferred to be - you see, I would have preferred if they have done something to me physically because if something is physical, it heals, and it goes quicker, but because this torture, you know, the way we were treated, it was psychological and emotional. That stays with you forever."
A little later, he said this:
"I also must say that this whole situation, emotionally and psychologically, must have affected me because, and this was, to me, the last straw, because after a while I didn't dare to stand up for my rights. I just pulled myself back. I didn't dare to protest anymore. You see, we were starving and I am very ashamed for what I've done, but I had no choice. I went to Asda and I was stealing food."
Tibor Benedek – award
Norbert Novodomszki – award