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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> O'Halloran v Ciba Speciality Chemicals Plc [2007] ScotCS CSOH_19 (02 February 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_19.html
Cite as: [2007] CSOH 19, [2007] ScotCS CSOH_19

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 19

 

PD258/04

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE

 

in the cause

 

DONNA O'HALLORAN

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

CIBA SPECIALITY CHEMICALS plc

 

Defenders:

 

 

ннннннннннннннннн________________

 

 

 

Pursuer: Party

Defenders: Maguire, Q.C.; Simpson & Marwick

 

2 February 2007

[1] Between 1988 and July 2002 the pursuer was employed as an electrician by the defenders. She was aged 16 when she started work for them and 30 when she resigned. In this action she complains that she has suffered injury to her neck, shoulders and back as a result of the work which was allocated to her at certain times during her employment.

[2] Although the pursuer had legal representation at an earlier stage of this action, she has been unrepresented for the last two years or so and she conducted the proof herself. She was obviously suffering from physical discomfort whilst doing so, but despite this she managed to present her case with fortitude and not a little skill. The lack of legal representation at proof clearly puts a litigant at a considerable disadvantage. However I am satisfied that, within the limits of her pleaded case (to which I shall refer) and with some assistance on matters of procedure, she was able to deploy her case effectively.

[3] It is important at the outset to identify what does and does not form part of the pursuer's case on Record. This question arose frequently debated during the course of the proof. The relevant parts of the pursuer's case are those contained in statements 4 and 8 of the Record. In statement 4 she complains that, in June and July 2001, she was required to undertake fault-finding and repair work on an injection moulding machine. Because of the position and configuration of the machine, this work involved her working in cramped conditions "on her knees and derriere" beside the machine; and she was often lying in an awkward position and having to bend and stretch as well as twisting her head sideways. She complains that there was no system of work rotation and that she was required to carry out the work for long stretches at a time on consecutive days. Further, she complains that there was no system of regular breaks to relieve the strain and discomfort of working in those conditions. On completion of the work, she took some time off on sick leave complaining of a migraine. When she returned to work on 27 July, she reported neck, shoulder and back pain and was put on restricted duties until some time in late September or early October. In statement 8 the pursuer refers to a period in May 2002. She woke up one morning with a stiff and painful neck and was again put on restricted duties. She was told to avoid overhead work and, in particular, to avoid raising her arm above her head. Despite this, the work to which she was allocated was that of supervising an apprentice who was working on lights. She says that this work involved her not only looking up at the work which he was carrying out overhead but also physically checking that work. These activities, she says, caused further pain to her neck, shoulders and back. It is said in statement 11 that as a result of these matters, she suffered injury to her neck, shoulders and back and has developed headaches. She avers that she continues to suffer great pain and restriction as a consequence of the injuries; and she describes the help she receives both from social services and from her partner.

[4] During the course of the proof the pursuer sought to lead evidence of a much broader complaint, covering the fourteen years of her employment with the defenders. She sought to justify this by reference to averments in statement 5 that over that period she suffered sexual discrimination and mental abuse as well as physical abuse, involving her working on long fluorescent light fittings (even when pregnant), and resulting in a breakdown due to stress and depression in 1999. She had taken her case of sexual discrimination to an Employment Tribunal and been vindicated in part at least. It did not seem to me that the averments in statement 5 gave notice of any case of fault (other than the sexual discrimination) nor of any case linked to the injuries from which she claims (in statement 11) that she has suffered. I therefore refused to allow this line of evidence. Other averments on Record, such as the pursuer receiving an electric shock whilst working on a fluorescent light fitting; the pursuer being put on to doing lights by herself; a discussion about the wearing of a safety helmet; and the defenders' refusal of help with transport (when the pursuer was told to refrain from driving after having slipped at work and banging her head) all appear to me to be mere narrative. There were no averments suggesting that any of these incidents involved any actionable fault on the part of the defenders. Accordingly, it seemed to me that the pursuer's case on liability was restricted to the complaints made in statements 4 and 8 to which I have referred. I propose, therefore, to restrict my consideration of the evidence to that relating to these two periods.

[5] Before doing so, I should note that the pursuer called as witnesses a number of the defenders' employees who had either worked with her, instructed her in her work or were part of the Occupational Health Department to whom she reported her complaints. At the close of the pursuer's case, the defenders elected not to call evidence. It did not seem to me that any adverse inference should be drawn from this, since I was not made aware of any individuals who were not called by the pursuer who might have been able to offer assistance.

 

Stat. 4 - June/July 2001 - working on the Injection Moulder
[6] It was not in dispute that the pursuer was put to work on the injection moulder in June and July 2001. It was apparent that the injection moulder had been causing trouble for some time and there had been a number of earlier attempts at repair. The pursuer gave evidence that the machine was important and was urgently needed, and in this she was supported by a number of witnesses, including Mr Davidson who instructed her to carry out this work. I am satisfied that the job was important and required to be carried out expeditiously. I am also satisfied on the evidence that the job was very awkward, particularly if carried out by one person rather than two. The job involved fault-finding and then re-wiring. The fault-finding involved the pursuer in checking a large number of connections on the machine. This involved working between two panels, one situated less than a foot above floor level and the other, perhaps three or four foot away, at a height of about three feet off the floor. Working on connections between these two panels involved the pursuer in sitting or lying in awkward positions, stretching awkwardly and twisting her neck and shoulders. The work of re-wiring was similarly awkward. I accept the pursuer's evidence that she was left to carry out this work by herself for by far the greater part of the time spent on it. Insofar as Mr Davidson sought to suggest that he spent any significant amount of time helping the pursuer, I reject his evidence. I did not find him to be an impressive witness. Where his evidence differed from that of the pursuer I did not accept it. Had the defenders put two people on the job it would clearly have saved time and reduced some of the awkwardness. In particular, tasks could have been rotated between the two people working on the machine; and the requirement to stretch between the two panels would have been reduced.

[7] There was some controversy as to the time involved in the work. Work such as this was recorded in advance in a Permit to Work Book. The defenders produced copies of pages from that book showing work on 25, 26, 29 June and on 3, 4, 9, 10, 11 and 12 July 2001. The work covered by those permits was re-wiring. On the evidence, I was satisfied that that work was also carried out over a weekend and would not necessarily have been recorded on the same permit or in the same book. I find that the pursuer was involved in re-wiring the machine for about 11 days between 25 June and 12 July 2001. There were no permits produced by the defenders for the earlier fault-finding. When the defenders produced the original Permit to Work Book at the end of the proof, it was apparent that two or three pages covering the period of the fault-finding had been torn out of the book. Miss Maguire, Q.C., for the defenders, explained to me that, if an error was made on a page, that page would be torn out. I do not need to decide why the pages were missing. It was accepted by the defenders and by witnesses (including Mr Davidson) that the pursuer had spent some considerable time in fault-finding. In the absence of any written record to contradict her evidence, I accept the pursuer's evidence that she spent about 10 days fault-finding on the machine. This was followed by a short break and then, as I have found, a further 11 days re-wiring the machine. Most of the time she was working by herself.

[8] At the end of that period the pursuer took two weeks sick leave. The reason she gave was that she had a severe headache or a migraine. When she reported back for work on 27 July 2001 she complained of pain in her neck (on the right side), her shoulder and the middle or her back. The Treatment Record from the Occupational Health Department stated that muscle spasm was evident on examination. It records that the pursuer felt that the headache was related to the muscle strain and that she associated this with the work she had carried out in an awkward position on the injection moulder. A "Fitness for Work Assessment" was issued by the Occupational Health Department advising that the pursuer be given restricted work avoiding a number of activities such as stretching overhead or across the body on the right side. The pursuer attended the Occupational Health Department on a number of occasions. Although the records are not entirely clear, it appears that she was on restricted work until, at the earliest, some time in late September 2001.

[9] The pursuer's case on fault, in respect of this part of her case, fell under two heads: first, that she should not have been assigned to this work by herself for such a prolonged period; and secondly, that she was not permitted or encouraged to take breaks from her work, to get up, walk around and stretch as necessary, to relieve the discomfort and prevent the development of pain in her neck, shoulders and back. Underlying both of these complaints was a criticism of the defenders' failure to have in place any risk assessment for this or indeed any work carried out at their premises. It was the evidence of all the witnesses who spoke to the matter that there were no risk assessments carried out by the defenders in relation to this work at this time. The pursuer put her case both at common law and under statute. With Miss Maguire's assistance, for which I am grateful, the relevant Regulations were identified as the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 (S.I. 1999/3242) and not those referred to by the pursuer on Record. Regulation 3 places an obligation on employers to make suitable and sufficient risk assessments. However, Miss Maguire pointed out that civil liability for breach of the Regulations was excluded by Regulation 22. In those circumstances, the pursuer has to fall back on her common law case, albeit that the requirement for a risk assessment imposed by the Regulations may assist in informing any duty of care owed by the defenders at common law.

[10] The common law duty on an employer to take reasonable care not to cause an employee avoidable injury, and not unnecessarily to expose an employee to the risk of such injury, manifests itself in specific duties which vary according to the particular employment and the circumstances in which the employer and employee are placed. In this case, that duty, so it seems to me, includes the following: a duty not to put the pursuer on work for a prolonged period without having taken steps to make themselves aware of the risks of injury involved in that work; a duty not to instruct or permit the pursuer to carry out that work by herself without have taken steps to ascertain whether any risk of injury inherent in her carrying out the work by herself could be diminished by putting another person on to work with her; subject to the above, a duty to ensure that a job such as this was carried out by two people rather than one; and, subject again to the above, a duty to ensure that persons instructed to carry out this work were fully aware of the need, and of their entitlement, to take breaks whenever necessary to ease the discomfort of working in cramped and awkward conditions. No doubt there are other ways in which the general duty of care would impact upon this work, and other ways in which the particular duties to which I have referred could equally well (or better) be expressed. But nothing turns on the precise expression of the duties.

[11] In the present case, I am satisfied that the defenders were in breach of duty to the pursuer. As I have said, no risk assessments at all were carried out by the defenders. There was, in the course of the evidence, a faint suggestion that the Permits to Work operated as a kind of risk assessment. Such a suggestion is, to my mind, untenable; and it was not relied upon in argument by Miss Maguire. Given the absence of a risk assessment of any sort, the defenders could not show that they even addressed their minds to the sort of injury that someone in the position of the pursuer might suffer if carrying out this work for long periods and without assistance. Further, from the description of the work that was taken from a number of witnesses, it seemed to me to be manifest that putting two people on the job would not only have made the job faster, but would have helped to alleviate the discomfort which the pursuer suffered. There would have been no need for the pursuer to stretch out so as to reach the two panels at the same time. There would have been the opportunity of rotating tasks so that a person working at the panel only a foot or less above the ground would only have been doing this for a part of the time. It was also clear from the evidence before me that there was a need to ensure that someone carrying out this type of work took such breaks as were necessary in addition to the formal tea and dinner break. A number of witnesses said that if they were not comfortable they would stand up, stretch their legs and walk about. They thought it was obvious that they were permitted to do this. I accept that evidence so far as concerned those individuals. But I also accept the pursuer's evidence that she did not feel able to get up, stretch and walk about whenever necessary. She did, on her own evidence, sometimes do this. However, she said that she felt she would be reprimanded if she took breaks of this sort whenever she felt she needed to. I accept that evidence, and do not accept that of Mr Davidson who said that, when working with her, he encouraged her to take breaks. It is clear that there was no written policy upon which the pursuer could rely, and it was also clear from Mr Davidson's evidence that at no time did he make any announcement that in doing the work the pursuer was free to take a break as and when she thought necessary. In those circumstances, it seems to me that the defenders failed in their duties towards the pursuer.

[12] I have indicated earlier that the pursuer took a case of sexual discrimination against the defenders to the Employment Tribunal. The Tribunal found that the defenders did discriminate against the claimant unlawfully in a number of respects. The complaint covered a long period through the 1990s and into the years with which the present action is concerned. The decision and findings of the Tribunal are consistent with my finding that the pursuer genuinely felt that she would be picked upon if she took the breaks from her work which she thought necessary.

[13] I have little doubt that the pain to the neck, shoulders and middle back of which the pursuer complained on 27 July 2001 resulted from the pursuer having to carry out the work in the way in which I have described and resulted, therefore, from the defenders' breach of duty. I heard evidence from Mr Foxworthy, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon at whose clinic the pursuer attended after the events of May/June 2002. He was called as a factual witness, to speak to the records of the pursuer's attendance at his clinic and the diagnosis made at that time. He found himself being asked questions by the pursuer on other matters within his expertise, but for which he was unprepared. Nonetheless, he gave evidence about these other matters as best he could; and I am grateful for his assistance. He confirmed that the symptoms of which the pursuer complained on 27 July 2001 could have been caused by her carrying out the work on the injection moulder. He said that he would expect such symptoms to clear up within a period of 2 - 8 weeks. I accept this evidence. It seemed from the pursuer's evidence that by about the end of September she felt fully recovered. Indeed, one of her complaints was that she was not given overtime in October. There was no other suggested cause of the pursuer's symptoms at that time; and I find as a fact that the defenders' breach of duty caused the pursuer to suffer neck, shoulder and back pain for a period of about 8 weeks from late July to late September 2001.

[14] I shall address separately the more substantial question of causation, namely whether the work on the injection moulder to which the pursuer was assigned in June and July 2001 caused or contributed to the long term injury to her neck, shoulder and back of which she complains in statement 11.

 

Stat. 8 - supervision work assigned in May 2002
[15
] On 20 May 2002 the pursuer reported pain in the right side of her neck and to her shoulder and arm. It was not contended that this pain arose from any work-related incident at that time, and although it may have been linked to the pain which the pursuer suffered in July to September 2001, there was no evidence upon which I could find that it was. The Occupational Health Department provided a Fitness for Work Assessment for the pursuer in which it was said that she had suffered this pain for some two to three weeks intermittently, but it had got worse. The assessment continued: "Restricted in working on areas overhead and when raising (R) arm above head as these will aggravate [the pursuer's] condition." Notwithstanding this Assessment by the Occupational Health Department, when the pursuer reported for work she was allocated the job of supervising an apprentice who was doing lighting at the premises. Supervision of that work involved the pursuer looking upwards, whether from the ground or from a stepladder or platform. The pursuer said in evidence that she physically checked all of the work carried out by the apprentice. I formed the impression that this was something of an exaggeration, but I accept that she did physically check a substantial part of the apprentice's work. I also accept that this would have been expected of her. She was, therefore, allocated work of a type which, according to the Fitness for Work Assessment, was unsuitable for her and liable to aggravate her condition. Mr Grieve, who gave her instructions in relation to this work, said in evidence that he would have discussed the work with the pursuer and would not have put her onto this work without her agreement. The pursuer disputed this. I do not accept that there was the sort of discussion that would have left the pursuer in a position where she felt free to decline that work. But even if there had been such discussion, that would not have been adequate. The recommendation from the Occupational Health Department was unambiguous. The pursuer should not have been put on that work. She should not even have been asked whether she was prepared to do it.

[16] However, I am not persuaded on the evidence that this work of supervision either caused or exacerbated her pain. On 31 May 2002 the pursuer was asked by Mr Grieve to change a Castel lock. She declined on the ground that the lock was too heavy for her to deal with. She was, as I understood the evidence, feeling fit by that time. The overheard supervision and the pain resulting therefrom therefore lasted for no more than about 10 or 11 days. In the Occupational Health records (after the entry about the neck, shoulder and arm pain reported on 20 May 2002) there are entries relating to treatment for that pain, but there is no record of a complaint that the work supervising the apprentice was causing any aggravation to it. In the Summons, the pursuer avers that at about the end of May 2002, she slipped at work and fell backwards banging her head on a concrete floor which increased the pain. In her evidence, by reference to a precognition signed by her in January 2004, she said that this slip occurred on 24 May 2002. She there says that this slip aggravated her symptoms. The slip is not attributed to any fault on the part of the defenders. In the Occupational Health records there is an entry of 10 June 2002 recording that the pursuer attended physiotherapy on Friday 7 June 2002 in pain. The entry attributes that pain to what happened about two weeks before. This appears to be a reference to her fall on about 24 May. It is impossible to find any evidence that links her supervision duties during the period from 20 to 30 May 2002 to any aggravation of the pain which she was suffering. It is as likely, if not more likely, that any such aggravation was due to her fall on about 24 May. In addition, Mr Foxworthy thought it unlikely that moving her head up and down to inspect the apprentice's work - a neck movement in a single plane - could have caused any aggravation of her neck pain.

[17] In those circumstances, I do not find it proved that the defenders' conduct in putting the pursuer on supervisory duties contrary to the recommendation of the Occupational Health Department caused or aggravated the pain that the pursuer was suffering to her neck, shoulders and arm.

 

Stat. 11 - the pursuer's long term injury - diagnosis and causation
[18] The pursuer's averments in statement 11 are that she "suffered injury to her neck, shoulders and back" and that "she developed headaches". She recites that she has attended her general practitioner, physiotherapists, an osteopath and a chiropractor, as well as an holistic healer. She goes on to aver that she "continues to suffer great pain and restriction as a consequence of said injuries"; and she recites that she receives help from social services in the form of a carer who supplies her main meals for her and her son, a carer who helps with personal care, and carers who help with shopping, house cleaning, laundry and ironing. She says that her partner has rendered services for her. She describes how she can no longer take part in activities with her son and how the injury has affected all aspects of her home, social and work life.

[19] Seeing the pursuer conduct her case over the course of two weeks, I can readily accept that she is in significant pain and discomfort. But I had no evidence upon which I could form any sensible view as to whether the condition that she has is likely to improve, remain constant or deteriorate over the years. There is a letter from the pursuer's general practitioner dated 8 January 2003 confirming that the pursuer has suffered from severe chronic neck pain for several months and is unable to perform manual work. He did not give evidence. That letter was written to support the pursuer's request for assistance from the Council for her gardening. It stated that the pursuer had a genuine problem and concluded: "I do not anticipate any change in her circumstances in the near future". That was four years ago. The pursuer was x-rayed and had an MRI scan at Mr Foxworthy's clinic at Crosshouse Hospital. The MRI scan confirmed degenerative changes at T1/T2. Mr Foxworthy, in a letter of 13 January 2003, suggested a referral to the pain clinic. The MRI scan did not show any disc pathology in the pursuer's neck. Blood tests and isotope bone scans were carried out in case there was some treatable condition such as discitis or osteitis. The conclusion was negative. A letter of 6 August 2003 from a consultant neurosurgeon, summarising the correspondence from Crosshouse Hospital, said that "no surgically treatable cause for her chronic neck and arm pain has been identified". In a letter of 12 August 2004, written in connection with the pursuer's appeal for Disability Living Allowance, the pursuer's general practitioner confirmed that the pursuer had chronic severe neck pain and limited function which affected her activities of daily living. But as with previous letters and reports, this letter provided no diagnosis. Kirsty Russell, a physiotherapist to whom the pursuer was referred, in a letter of 27 November 2003, stated that neurological examination of C5/6 showed that myotome - which I understood to be the supply of power to the muscles in that area - was reduced on the right side. None of this enables me to form any view on the likely development of the pursuer's condition and symptoms.

[20] The problem for the pursuer is that the cause of her problems has not yet been diagnosed. Most of the observations are of symptoms. All Mr Foxworthy could say with certainty was that there had definitely been degenerative changed to T1/T2. But it was difficult to identify the cause of this. Mr Foxworthy said that it was not caused by the period of work on the injection moulder. He said that degenerative change could not arise from activity of such a limited duration as 2 to 4 weeks. Further, degenerative change such as that was unlikely to be the cause of the pursuer's symptoms. It would be likely to cause symptoms only at the localised level, where the neck joins the upper chest. It might be the cause of neck pain, but he would not have expected shoulder, arm or back pain to result from it. He was unable to ascribe the pain from which the pursuer presently suffers to the work that she was made to do in June and July 2001.

[21] On the basis of the material before me, and in the absence of expert medical evidence providing a diagnosis of the pursuer's present condition and linking it causatively to the events of June and July 2001, I am unable to conclude that her present condition was caused by those events.

 

Quantum
[22] There was no evidence before me which would have enabled me to form a view as to the pursuer's wage loss, either on the assumption that she was unable to work for the rest of her life or on any other assumed duration of her injuries. Nor, in the absence of any diagnosis of how long her injuries would last, and how they were likely to change in terms of severity over the coming years, was I in a position to form any view as to the appropriate measure of damages by way of solatium. Had I found that the pursuer was suffering a long term injury caused by the defenders' fault, I would, in the unusual circumstances of this case, have been minded to put the case out By Order for consideration of whether I should, retrospectively, treat the present proof as one on liability only, allowing further consideration to be given to the question of quantum. The defenders indicated that they would oppose such a course. But in view of my findings that the pursuer has failed to prove any causative link between her present injuries and the defenders' breach of duty, that question does not arise.

[23] I do, however, have to consider what, if any, damages I should award in respect of the period of neck, shoulder and back pain suffered by the pursuer from July to September 2001, which I have found was caused by the defenders' breach of duty in assigning her to work without adequate assistance or breaks for long periods on the injection moulder. There is no evidence that she lost wages during that period. However she suffered pain and discomfort for a period of about 8 weeks. There is no evidence of how this affected her life at home. I was presented by Miss Maguire with an extract from the 8th edition of the Guidelines, published by the Judicial Studies Board in England. The neck pain that I have described would be regarded in their categorisation as minor. Where there is a full recovery between a few weeks and a year, the suggested figure for general damages, or solatium, is between г750 and г2,550. With a recovery, as here, within about 8 weeks, a figure at the lower end of that range would be appropriate. Doing the best I can, I assess the pursuer's damages in the sum of г1,500.

 

Conclusion
[24
] I shall therefore pronounce decree in favour of the pursuer in the sum of г1,500, together with interest at 8% per annum from date of citation until payment.

[25] It gives me no satisfaction that, after a two week proof at the end of which I have held the defenders to have been in breach of duty to the pursuer in respect of an incident in July to September 2001, that I should make an award of such a small amount, particularly when set against the pursuer's amended claim in which she concluded for г800,000. Part of the problem may lie in the pursuer's incorrect assumption that she was coming to court to pursue a claim based on the whole of the work she was instructed to carry out over a fourteen year period. Part of the problem may lie also in the pursuer's failure, resulting no doubt from her lack of legal representation, to bring to court expert medical evidence to support the causative link to the main part of her claim. However, I have to decide the case on the basis of the evidence led in support and the case on Record. It would be unfair to the defenders to imply any assumption that the wider case which the pursuer wanted to advance would have succeeded; or that further expert medical evidence could have proved that the pursuer's current difficulties were caused by their breach.

 

 


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