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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 >> Cruz v Lancashire Police & Anor [2016] EWCA Civ 402 (26 April 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/402.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 402 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE PRESTON COUNTY COURT
HHJ Butler
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
and
MR JUSTICE MORGAN
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Katie Cruz |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Chief Constable of Lancashire Police & Anr |
Respondent/ Defendant |
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Mr Jonathan Grace (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Respondent/Defendant
Hearing date : 12 April 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"Maintenance of workplace, and of equipment, devices and systems
5.—(1) The workplace and the equipment, devices and systems to which this regulation applies shall be maintained (including cleaned as appropriate) in an efficient state, in efficient working order and in good repair.
(2) Where appropriate, the equipment, devices and systems to which this regulation applies shall be subject to a suitable system of maintenance.
(3) The equipment, devices and systems to which this regulation applies are—
(a) equipment and devices a fault in which is liable to result in a failure to comply with any of these Regulations; and
(b) mechanical ventilation systems provided pursuant to regulation 6 (whether or not they include equipment or devices within sub-paragraph (a) of this paragraph)."
"A. That's, I would say, based purely on operational experience. If we are placing detainees in cells, then it's much more practical for the entrance to be unlocked, open so that we can just gain immediate access."
After agreeing that detainees came in not just all shapes and sizes but in all kinds of demeanour and temperament, and that it is unfortunately in the nature of drunk and disorderly detainees in a police station that their demeanour may undergo sudden shifts, he agreed with the following formulation proffered by Mr Mulholland for the Claimant:
"Q. So any obstruction in a sense to getting a person safely and quickly into a cell is to be avoided if at all possible, it makes sense?
A. Yes, I can't disagree with that, yes."
"Q. In agreeing with your sergeant that he is absolutely right to say that the proper thing, what you would expect is to find that the door be open at 180 degrees, what would be the reason for that in your view?"
To which she replied:
"A. Well, for me it's common sense. If the door is as open as it can be, that reduces the risk of it being a hazard blocking the corridor in some way."
"Q. Would it be right to say that it was never recorded as a problem because it was such a no brainer that the door should be opened flush at 180 degrees?"
To which she replied:
"A. It was just never even an issue about the doors. It was just common sense that that's how they should be, yes."
"63. . . . it is quite clear to me that the claimant and her colleagues saw nothing to criticise in the presence of that open door. They did not stop short with a cry of surprise. They did not stop to discuss what on earth they were to do with this unexpected thing. They simply dealt with that open door in an instinctive way; it was an open door, it needed to be closed. It was their responsibility as the custody officers to assess how when closing that door they kept their detained person (a) safe and (b) under restraint.
64. They did not report it to the custody sergeant as any problem at all. I find as a fact on the claimant's own evidence that no report whatever was made at the time to anyone in a position of responsibility to the effect that this should be regarded as a breach of the system, a breach of some instruction, standing or understood. The claimant and CDO Wilson did not think anything of it. In the context of health and safety as opposed to efficiency of detaining people, in my judgment no unsuitability or insufficiency arises from this risk assessment. On what was known and what could have been foreseen, in my judgment a suitable and sufficient risk assessment was performed and, therefore, logically approaching the question of whether there was a foreseeable risk of injury, following Lady Justice Smith's guidance, I find that there was no foreseeable risk of injury."
i) The absence of evidence, from witnesses or in documents, to the effect that anything had previously occurred to indicate a risk of the nature now alleged by the Appellant – as the judge observed, at [62], "an open door in perfectly good working order might be an inconvenience to be closed but beyond that what is the risk of injury?";ii) The fact that, on the night of the accident, [64] "the claimant and CDO Wilson did not think anything of it";
iii) The totality of the written and oral evidence of Sergeant Rowe and temporary Chief Inspector Crorker, which he was entitled to and did find clearly reflected an assessment that the good sense of leaving doors fully open related to operational efficiency considerations rather than the health and safety of the workforce; and
iv) The detailed analysis of the evidence as to prior risk assessment which informed a finding, [64], that "in the context of health and safety as opposed to efficiency of detaining people . . . no unsuitability or insufficiency arises . . .".
Lord Justice Simon :
Mr Justice Morgan :