Injuries at work – a view from the civil courtroom Niazi Fetto Barrister 15 June 2015.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Forensic Victimology 2nd Edition Chapter Fifteen: Forensic Victimology and Civil Remedy in Premises Liability Cases.
Advertisements

The New Safety Laws – Are you being Harassed? Jamie McPherson Partner MVM Legal.
What You’ll Learn How to define negligence (p. 88)
4Chapter SECTION OPENER / CLOSER: INSERT BOOK COVER ART Negligence and Strict Liability Section 4.2.
Q UINCY COLLEGE Paralegal Studies Program Paralegal Studies Program Litigation and Procedure Negligence and Strict Liability Litigation and Procedure Negligence.
Alison Standfast 31 January EMPLOYERS’ LIABILITY AND PUBLIC LIABILITY CLAIMS.
District 1220 Assembly 2006 Health and Safety HEALTH AND SAFETY For Rotary District 1220 and its Member Clubs.
Chapter 3 Tort Law.
BELL QUIZ ON CHAPTER 3 1. List two felony crimes. 2
Mediation and the Trial Civil Procedure Reforms practice direction Law Society of the Northern Territory Steve Walsh QC Alistair Wyvill SC.
Private Wrongs: Torts Negligence and Strict Liability Chapter 14.
Hazards Liability and Tort Lecture 8. Outline Another economic role for the government is regulating hazards and risks Factory producing explosives (location.
Employers Responsibilities for Employees Working Abroad A Gentle Reminder.
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRE SAFETY ORDER PHIL THOMPSON MIFireE FIRE SAFETY ADVISOR UNIVERSITY OF BRIGHTON.
Health and safety at work
WORK HEALTH AND SAFETY ACT IMPLICATIONS FOR SMALL BUSINESS
Strict Liability and Torts and Public Policy Mrs. Weigl.
 A body of rights, obligations, and remedies that is applied by courts in civil proceedings to provide relief for persons who have suffered harm from.
Negligence and Unintentional Torts
By Monika, Max, Vanja, Nicole KEY PRINCIPLES OF NEGLIGENCE.
Managing Fire Safety Arguments For Fire Management MoralMoral: ethical and responsible behaviour FinancialFinancial: costs of injuries and ill- health.
Chapter 18.  Criminal Law: crime against the state  Civil Law: person commits a wrong, not always a violation of law  Plaintiff-the harmed individual,
4Chapter SECTION OPENER / CLOSER: INSERT BOOK COVER ART Intentional Torts Section 4.1.
Associate Professor Dr Michael Eburn ANU College of Law The Australian National University CANBERRA Legal implication of legislation, the Rural fire.
ICPHSO: U.S. and Canadian Product Liability and Safety Regulatory Risks Kenneth Ross Bowman and Brooke LLP October 27, 2009.
NEBOSH LEVEL 6 NATIONAL DIPLOMA MODULE A: MANAGEMENT OF HS LESSON 9 : CRIMINAL LAW Part One: HASAWA 1974.
HEALTH & SAFETY – LONE WORKING
NEGLIGENCE (Unintentional Torts). The elements of negligence: * Negligence * Duty of Care * Standard of Care * Foreseeability * “reasonable person” *
2007- Jonathan Andrew A Evans LIFEGUARD & THE LAW WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THE RESCUE?
Part 2 – The Law of Torts Chapter 5 – Negligence and Unintentional Torts Prepared by Michael Bozzo, Mohawk College © 2015 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited 5-1.
Exploring Business © 2009 FlatWorld Knowledge 16-1 The Legal and Regulatory Environment of Business.
Fifty Shades of Grayling IER Liverpool 3 July 2013.
Tort Law Summary. Entitles you to sue for damages in a civil court of law Entitles you to sue for damages in a civil court of law It is a “wrong” which.
PE 254. Negligence The legal claim that a person failed to act as a reasonable and prudent person should, thereby resulting in injury to another person.
OHS Seminar DO THE TIME – avoid the crime! Miles Crawley 8 June 2007.
Negligence. Homework 20.1 and 20.2 – read Chapter and 20.2 – read Chapter 20.
Chapter 20 Negligence. The failure to exercise a reasonable amount of care in either doing or not doing something resulting in harm or injury.
American Public School Law Torts n Definition of a tort – Intentional interference – Strict Liability – Negligence – Elements of Negligence – Defenses.
Chapter 09 Negligence and Strict Liability Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
July 051 LIABILITY ISSUES FOR COAL MINE SURVEYORS Australian Institute of Mine Surveyors Seminar Catherine Bolger Association of Professional Engineers,
The Role of the Courts.
Copyright  2003 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PPTs t/a Fundamentals of Business Law 4e by Barron & Fletcher. Slides prepared by Kay Fanning. Copyright.
By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts
Civil Aviation Authority Slide 1 Risk Taking & Rule Breaking October 2005 THE LEGAL CONSEQUENCES OF BREAKING THE RULES ROBIN ALLAN Deputy Legal Adviser.
Chapter 9: Introduction to Torts
Tort Law Summary. Entitles you to sue for damages in a civil court of law Entitles you to sue for damages in a civil court of law It is a “wrong” which.
CHAPTER 12: NEGLIGENCE THE BASICS Emond Montgomery Publications 1.
Lunchtime Lecture Enterprise & Regulatory Reform Act 2013 Myth or Legend? 18 August 2015 Martyn Gabbitass ACII ACILA Technical Director.
TOOL BOX TALKS Harmonisation of OHS Legislation Note: this is preliminary info with more being available later in the year or early next year including.
Be Prepared For Change Are you Prepared?. Be Prepared For Change Are you Prepared?
Objectives By the end of this presentation you will know: What risk assessment is; Where the need for risk assessment comes from; and The principles behind.
4Chapter SECTION OPENER / CLOSER: INSERT BOOK COVER ART Intentional Torts Section 4.1.
Corporate and Business Law (ENG). 2 Designed to give you knowledge and application of: Section B: The Law of Obligations B1. Formation of contract B2.
The Tort of Negligence. A. DEFINITION OF TORT 1. Torts are civil wrongs, other than a breach of contract, for which the law will provide a remedy.
TORTS: A CIVIL WRONG Chapter 18. TORTS: A CIVIL WRONG Under criminal law, wrongs committed are called crimes. Under civil law, wrongs committed are called.
Every employer must ensure, as far as is reasonable practicable, the health, safety and welfare of all his employees More specifically, employers must.
4Chapter SECTION OPENER / CLOSER: INSERT BOOK COVER ART Negligence and Strict Liability Section 4.2.
Negligence Tort law establishes standards for the care that people must show to one another. Negligence is the conduct that falls below this standard.
Legal Liability Issues
Elements of a Crime Chapter 2.
Jamie McPherson Partner – MVM Legal
Tort and negligence.
Risk Based Thinking in Health & Safety
Health & Safety Law: Recent Developments
Liability in negligence
Negligence.
Claim liability – H&S breaches
Defences and shared liability
Negligence Ms. Weigl.
CIVIL LAW Unintentional Torts.
Presentation transcript:

Injuries at work – a view from the civil courtroom Niazi Fetto Barrister 15 June 2015

THE CIVIL COURT – SOME BASICS  Determines claims for damages  Claimant is victim of personal injury, or estate/dependants (if fatal)  Defendant is alleged “tortfeasor” (typically employer)  Also “additional” or “third party” claims for indemnity/contribution  Follows Civil Procedure Rules  Standard of proof is balance of probabilities  Burden of proof is on claimant

IT IS NOT (NECESSARILY) ABOUT THE TRUTH  Questions for the court:  On the evidence before it, what probably happened?  On the law, is the defendant liable?  If so, what is the claim worth?

WHAT THE JUDGE MIGHT BE THINKING  “What is the simplest outcome?”  “Should this claimant receive some money?”  “Is the defendant at fault?” (Could/should the defendant have done anything further/differently?)  “Was there a risk assessment? What does it say?”  “No one is likely to be lying”  “What are the ramifications/extrapolations?”

WHAT THE JUDGE (PROBABLY) WILL NOT BE THINKING  “It all depends on the presence/absence/contents of a risk assessment”  “The claimant is financially interested in the result – treat his evidence with caution”  “It was his own stupid fault”  “Some accidents are no one’s fault”  “Remember the interests of business / the insurance industry”

H&S REGULATIONS IN THE CIVIL COURTS  Accidents before :  Regulations under HSWA 1974 gave direct right of action  Strict/absolute liability available in certain contexts  Negligence liability important but secondary  E.g. Stark v Post Office [2000] ICR 1013  Accidents since :  Enterprise & Regulatory Reform Act 2013, s69

EFFECT OF S69 ERRA 2013  Amended s47 HSWA 1974 (civil liability)  Breach of duty imposed by H&S legislation not actionable save where exceptionally provided  Small exception for claims by new and expectant mothers (Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 (Civil Liability) (Exceptions) Regulations 2013  Reg 22 MHSWR 1999)  Strict/absolute liability for H&S breaches in the civil courts all but abolished (save where defendant is emanation of state)  Liability for negligence remains, plus breach of non-H&S legislation  How courts will respond in practice is still unclear

LEGISLATION NOT COVERED BY THE ERRA 2013  Instruments not made under s15 HSWA 1974  The “existing statutory provisions”, i.e. the various Acts set out in Schedule 1 to the HSWA 1974  Supply of Machinery (Safety) Regulations 1992  Occupiers’ Liability Acts:  1957 (visitors) – “common duty of care” (akin to negligence)  1984 (trespassers) – duty to take such care as reasonable in circumstances where occupier knows or has reasonable grounds to believe danger exists and trespasser is or may be in vicinity

NEGLIGENCE LIABILITY – CORE ASPECTS  Duty  reasonable care in respect of foreseeable harm  Breach  Causation  What difference would compliance have made?  Damage  Has any injury or loss resulted?

PRIMARY & VICARIOUS LIABILITY  Primary  Duty to take steps in respect of H&S in your sphere of activity/control  Vicarious  Liability (without fault) for negligence of your employees/agents in course of their work  NB all ingredients of negligence must still be shown, but in respect of person for whose conduct VL is alleged

CONTINUED RELEVANCE OF H&S REGULATIONS ETC  Evidence of negligence may include:  Breaches of applicable provisions of legislation  Failure to comply with statutory or HSE code of practice/guidance  Failure to identify risk ahead of accident  Failure to comply with method statement and/or risk assessment

HOW MUCH DOES THE RISK ASSESSMENT MATTER?  Obligation in Reg 3 MHSWR 1999 (& elsewhere)  “suitable and sufficient” risk assessment  Failure to assess risk is never a direct cause of injury  But NB: “Risk assessments are meant to be an exercise by which the employer examines and evaluates all the risks entailed in his operations and takes steps to remove or minimise those risks. They should be a blueprint for action… (I)nsufficient judicial attention has been given to risk assessments in the years since the duty to conduct them was first introduced… Understandably judicial decisions have tended to focus on the breach of duty which has led directly to the injury.” (Smith LJ, Allison v London Underground [2008] ICR 719 [58])

RISK ASSESSMENTS – PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS  Does the RA cover all risks for which you are responsible?  Activity, Location, Equipment, Personnel  Does the RA correspond with prescribed content & format from:  H&S legislation/COP?  Contract?  Does the RA reflect a sensible, defensible cost/benefit analysis?  (See next slide)

WHAT IS REASONABLE CARE? “(T)he overall test is still the conduct of the reasonable and prudent employer, taking positive thought for the safety of his workers in the light of what he knows or ought to know; where there is a recognised and general practice which has been followed for a substantial period in similar circumstances without mishap, he is entitled to follow it, unless in the light of common sense or newer knowledge it is clearly bad; but, where there is developing knowledge, he must keep reasonably abreast of it and not be too slow to apply it; and where he has in fact greater than average knowledge of the risks, he may be thereby obliged to take more than the average or standard precautions. He must weigh up the risk in terms of the likelihood of injury occurring and the potential consequences if it does; and he must balance against this the probable effectiveness of the precautions that can be taken to meet it and the expense and inconvenience they involve.” Swanwick J, Stokes v Guest, Keen & Nettlefold (Nuts & Bolts) Ltd [1968] 1 WLR 1776)

WORKPLACE CLAIMS – SOME THOUGHTS  Duties under W(HSW)R 1992 now in the background only  E.g. Reg 12(3) W(HSW)R 1992 – strict duty in respect of obstructions/articles/substances on the floor qualified only by the defence of reasonable practicability – burden of proof on defendant  So claimant must show unreasonable conduct caused injury  But caution is advised:  Turner v Arding & Hobbs Ltd [1949] 2 All ER 911 shopkeeper had duty to explain how accident happened, when unusual & unexpected danger was present of which injured person unaware. (see also Ward v Tesco Stores Ltd [1976] 1 WLR 810)

EQUIPMENT CLAIMS – SOME THOUGHTS  PUWER 1998 & PPEWR 1992 of background relevance only  E.g. Reg 5 PUWER – strict duty to ensure work equipment in efficient working order – Stark v Post Office (above)  So again claimant must show work equipment/PPE inadequate or defective due to unreasonableness of defendant (as informed by H&S regulatory regime)  But NB Employers’ Liability (Defective Equipment) Act employer liable in all cases where employee injured by defect in equipment provided by employer, if “the defect is attributable wholly or partly to the fault of a third party (whether identified or not)”

FRAUD AND MALINGERING – A NEW DAWN  S57 Criminal Justice & Courts Act 2015:  “Personal injury claims: cases of fundamental dishonesty In proceedings on a claim for damages in respect of personal injury where the court finds that the claimant is entitled to damages, but on application by the defendant for dismissal of the claim the court is satisfied on the balance of probabilities that the claimant has been fundamentally dishonest in relation to the claim or a related claim, the court must dismiss the claim entirely unless it is satisfied that the claimant would suffer substantial injustice as a result”  In force since 13 April.  NB it is a duty (“must”), and relates to the whole claim.  Supplementary to contempt of court jurisdiction.

WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?  “Fundamentally dishonest” not a term of art.  “Lies are told in litigation every day up and down the country and quite rightly do not lead to a penalty being imposed in respect of them. There is a considerable difference between a concocted claim and an exaggerated claim and judges must be astute to measure how reprehensible the conduct is” (Ward LJ, Widlake v. BAA Ltd [2009] EWCA Civ 1256)  In practice, the evidence must be very clear, and the defendant very confident  Thorough accident investigation/report  Preservation of all relevant records – personnel, OH, etc

COURT WILL NOT HOLD BACK ONCE PERSUADED “For many years the courts have sought to underline how serious false and lying claims are to the administration of justice. False claims undermine the system whereby those who are injured as a result of the fault of their employer or a defendant can receive just compensation. They undermine that system in a number of serious ways…Those who make such false claims if caught should expect to go to prison. There is no other way to deter those who may be tempted to make such claims, and there is no other way to improve the administration of justice” (Moses LJ, South Wales Fire and Rescue Service v Smith [2011] EWHC 1749 (Admin))