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 Β£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 >> Bhatt v Fontain Motors Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 863 (27 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/863.html Cite as: [2010] PIQR P17, [2010] EWCA Civ 863 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM
THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Collins CBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
____________________
Harsukhray Bhatt |
Respondent/Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Fontain Motors Limited |
Appellant /Defendant |
____________________
Ian Little (instructed by Pannone) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 29 June 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The facts
"12. The means of access was one which, if followed carefully in all respects, could and should have avoided accidents. It involved the following: firstly, any vehicle or vehicles which were in the showroom and positioned underneath the access point had to be moved. Secondly, an ordinary A-frame stepladder had to be obtained from the workshop to gain access to the removable polystyrene panel in the ceiling of the showroom.
13. Either at that stage or after the next stage, a light, which was on a long lead and which was stored in the loft space, apparently having been left there by a plumber some years previously, had to be brought down and plugged in so as to give light in the loft space. Then the A-frame had to be exchanged for a long aluminium ladder with rubber non-slip feet, as to which nobody can give satisfactory evidence about the provenance, and prop that up against the lip of the hatchway into the loft area.
14. Then, according to the proposed procedure, somebody would secure the foot of the ladder while somebody got up it; use the light to look around in the loft area for the spoilers which were arranged on three sides of the hatchway; choose the right one, the sizes being clearly marked; manoeuvre it, it was extremely light, but about five foot long and therefore a little awkward, through the hatchway and through the space vacated by the removal of the polystyrene roof tile, obstructed a little by the fact that there is a person on the ladder in the way; then either hand it to a third person at the bottom of the ladder or because it was so light just toss it onto a leather sofa in the showroom not far away. Then the person would presumably, although it was not discussed in the evidence, remove the long ladder, go back and get the A-frame ladder, go back to put the light up and the put the polystyrene back in."
"18. Mr Robinson's evidence is that the three of them were there when he gave a practical demonstration of how it should be done and thereafter, in the small number of months which elapsed before the accident took place, there was access once or twice a month by one of the three of them and that on all occasions prior to the accident the essential feature was that when the long ladder was in use it was footed, in the sense that there was a person securing the foot ."
"37. He told me in evidence that he had not been up the ladder before. He had not been told to have the ladder footed. He trusted Mr Robinson. He told me it did not occur to him that the ladder might be unsafe to use if it had not been footed. He told me he had not had to use that type of ladder before at work. He told me he had not been given clear instructions or told that the ladder should not be climbed unless it was footed and he told me that he had not told Mr Sugden, for example, that it was important to have it footed."
"Having checked the stability of the ladder, I climbed up and pushed the loft cover up and slid it open. I was then able to reach the loft light . I came back down the ladder with the lead and plugged it into the main socket located in the customer waiting area. I checked that the light was switched on and working and checked once again that the ladder was stable and secure before climbing up once again in order to get into the loft space. As I was nearing the top of the ladder and was about to climb into the loft space, I fell. The ladder fell beneath me and it must either have slipped or become dislodged. My recollection of events at this point is hazy, but I remember trying to hold onto something and grabbing for the ladder. I fell from the top of the ladder onto the ceramic floor beneath me and the ladder also fell down onto the floor below."
"In any event, following a risk assessment by the Directors, all staff members have been advised both verbally and in writing that they must not use ladders on the premises at all. We have come to the conclusion that we must manage storage in other areas not involving access to heights and the only person in future to use a ladder will be Marcus Robinson."
The remainder of the spoilers were brought down from the loft and were stored in an area previously used for the storage of wheels and tyres, which by then the company had managed to sell off.
The Regulations
"(a) work in any place, including a place at or below ground level;
(b) obtaining access to or egress from such place while at work, except by a staircase in a permanent workplace,
where, if measures required by these Regulations were not taken, a person could fall a distance liable to cause personal injury."
The same paragraph defines "work equipment" in broad terms, as "any machinery, appliance, apparatus, tool or installation for use at work ".
"Organisation and planning
4.(1) Every employer shall ensure that work at height is
(a) properly planned;
(b) appropriately supervised; and
(c) carried out in a manner which is so far as is reasonably practicable safe,
and that its planning includes the selection of work equipment in accordance with regulation 7.
Competence
5. Every employer shall ensure that no person engages in any activity, including organisation, planning and supervision, in relation to work at height or work equipment for use in such work unless he is competent to do so or, if being trained, is being supervised by a competent person.
Avoidance of risks from work at height
6.(1) In identifying the measures required by this regulation, every employer shall take account of a risk assessment under regulation 3 of the Management Regulations.
(2) Every employer shall ensure that work is not carried out at height where it is reasonably practicable to carry out the work safely otherwise than at height.
Selection of work equipment for work at height
7.(1) Every employer, in selecting work equipment for use in work at height, shall
(b) take account of
(i) the working conditions and the risks to the safety of persons at the place where the work equipment is to be used;
(ii) in the case of work equipment for access and egress, the distance to be negotiated;
(iii) the distance and consequences of a potential fall;
(iv) the duration and frequency of use;
(2) An employer shall select work equipment for work at height which
(a) has characteristics including dimensions which
(i) are appropriate to the nature of the work to be performed and the foreseeable loadings; and
(ii) allow passage without risk; and
(b) is in other respects the most suitable work equipment, having regard in particular to the purposes specified in regulation 6."
The judgment below
"31. It seems to me in truth that what happened here is that when the defendants moved to these premises, they simply found that they were smaller than they needed for all they had from their two previous premises. I can quite understand from a commercial point of view, having been put to greater expense in the move than he originally anticipated, Mr Robinson was anxious not to incur further losses in selling these bumpers off at a loss, but the fact that he moved into the premises with more goods than he could conveniently store, is a misfortune for the defendants.
32. It seems to me that their real choice was either to redouble their efforts to store them somewhere else or alternatively to sell them off when they moved in, which is what they eventually did anyway. To say that because they had too many goods and that was the only place they could store them and therefore, it was not reasonably practicable to carry out the work safely otherwise than at height, seems to me to be a non-starter."
"These regulations are designed to protect health and safety and are designed to protect employees against decisions which are taken on the basis of keeping costs low as opposed to protecting employees' safety. It seems to me that if a decision was going to be made to use this loft for storage, this makeshift, multi-step way of gaining access should have been regarded for what it was, makeshift and unsatisfactory and the decision should have been boldly taken to install a fixed pull-down ladder which would have been the only obvious way of making it safe."
"49. The fact is that, in my judgment, Mr Bhatt embarked on a manoeuvre which he had undertaken before with somebody footing the ladder for him and he must have appreciated that there was a risk and he was putting himself at risk by going up the ladder without it being footed. Therefore, it seems to me that he did not take reasonable care for his own safety.
50. The question then is to what extent should that reduce the amount of damages to which he should be entitled? There were a number of significant and serious breaches of statutory duty by the defendants. I have little doubt that if a safety assessment had been carried out by a competent and trained person, they would never have approved the method for getting up into the loft which Mr Robinson devised, requiring so many steps as I have already indicated and the failure to get a professional assessment was serious. The breach of regulation 6.2 in storing the items up there at all was a serious one and the failure to have a fixed ladder was one which was dictated simply, in my judgment, by financial convenience without any real regard to questions of safety.
51. On the other hand, the system that was devised, rackety though it was, if it had been properly followed by the claimant would have avoided his injury. In my judgment, the proper approach to the case is to assess contributory negligence on the basis that the defendants have principal responsibility for exposing the claimant to a risk to which he should not have been exposed, but that the claimant bears substantial responsibility for failing to take steps to ensure his own safety. In my judgment, the claimant is one-third to blame for his own injuries."
The appeal
"'Reasonably practicable', as traditionally interpreted, is a narrower term than 'physically possible' and implies that a computation must be made in which the quantum of risk is placed in one scale and the sacrifice, whether in money, time or trouble, involved in the measure necessary to avert the risk is placed in the other; and that, if it be shown that there is a gross disproportion between them, the risk being insignificant in relation to the sacrifice, the person upon whom the duty is laid discharges the burden of proving that compliance was not reasonably practicable."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Sullivan :
Lord Justice Sedley :