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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Rice & Anor v Secretary of State for Trade & Industry & Anor [2007] EWCA Civ 289 (04 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/289.html Cite as: [2007] ICR 1469, [2007] EWCA Civ 289 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE (QB)/MANCHESTER DIST. REG.
THE HON. MR. JUSTICE SILBER
OL304927/4OL00141
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
____________________
Winifred Rice (Widow and Executrix of the Estate of Edward Rice Deceased) Robert Francis Thompson |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Trade and Industry Stuntbrand Line Limited |
1st Defendant/ Appellant 2nd Defendant |
____________________
(instructed by John Pickering & Partners LLP) for the Claimant/Respondent
Michael Kent QC and Michael Rawlinson
(instructed by Beachcroft, London) for the 1st Defendant/Appellant
Hearing dates : 30 & 31 January 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice May :
Introduction
The preliminary issue
"Did the National Dock Labour Board owe a duty of care to Edward Rice and/or Robert Thompson to take reasonable steps to protect their health and safety in respect of work carried out by them as registered dock workers, whether for the Second Defendant or any other registered employer to whom they had been allocated by the National Dock Labour Board pursuant to the provisions of the National Dock Labour Board Scheme 1947 or that scheme as subsequently amended?"
"It is never sufficient to ask simply whether A owes B a duty of care. It is always necessary to determine the scope of the duty by reference to the kind of damage from which A must take care to save B harmless."
Lord Oliver of Aylmerton emphasised the same point in Murphy v Brentwood District Council [1991] 1 AC 398, at 486, when he said:
"The essential question which has to be asked in every case, given that damage which is the essential ingredient of the action has occurred, is whether the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant is such that it imposes upon the latter a duty to take care to avoid or prevent that loss which has in fact been sustained."
Accordingly, the bare question whether a defendant owes a claimant a duty of care, without defining the scope of the duty with reference to the injury or loss for which the claimant claims damages, is conceptually questionable. The parties before this court accepted this difficulty, but both urged the court to proceed to hear and determine the appeal upon an agreed reformulation of the preliminary issue as follows:
"Did the NDLB owe a duty at common law to take any positive steps so as to prevent or reduce the exposure of the claimants to asbestos dust following their allocation to or selection by Clan Line?"
a) requested that port employers provide:i) masks and respiratory equipment (whether in accordance with the recommendation of the Regional Medical Officers to the Chief Welfare Officer and hence to the National Dock Labour Board, or otherwise);ii) extraction plant or equipment or arrangements to dampen the asbestos during handling;iii) transport for asbestos in sealed pallets or impermeable packaging;b) warned the registered dock workers of the risks of exposing themselves to asbestos and/or trained them how to avoid or minimise such risks whether or not this led to their unions applying collective pressure;
c) warned the registered port employers of the risks of exposing their employees to asbestos;
d) informed registered dock employers and workers that the workers would not be disciplined for refusing to unload asbestos in an unsafe condition and without sufficient safety measures;
e) otherwise encouraged or persuaded the port employers to take steps to minimise the risk of exposure to asbestos.
Forseeability
"(a) were involved through their medical officers in providing regular advice on a range of health and safety issues to dock workers;
(b) knew or ought reasonably to have known through its medical staff, if not through others, that in Tucker J's words 'exposure to heavy concentrations of asbestos dust could cause asbestosis, and, by 1947 that it was also highly probable that it could also cause lung cancers'; and
(c) knew through the local boards if not through its medical staff, first, that the claimants were coming into contact with asbestos powder, which had not been properly packed, and second, that they were not being given any protective equipment by their employers to deal with the risks caused by them coming into contact with asbestos dust."
As I have said, Mr Kent does not challenge any of this in this Court. He invited us to treat the judge's factual findings about asbestos as established. The relevant facts in the present case are not, he said, borderline.
Relationship
The National Dock Labour Board Scheme
" for making satisfactory provision for the training and welfare of dock workers, in so far as such provision does not exist apart from the Scheme."
"(a) ensuring the full and proper utilisation of dock labour for the purpose of facilitating the rapid and economic turnaround of vessels and the speedy transit of goods through the port;
(b) regulating the recruitment and entry into and the discharge from the Scheme of dock workers, and the allocation of registered dock workers to registered employers;
(d) keeping, adjusting and maintaining the employers' registers, entering or re-entering therein the name of any person by whom dock workers are or are to be employed and where occasion requires it, removing from the register the name of any employer either at his own request or in accordance with the Scheme;
(e) keeping, adjusting and maintaining the registers or records of dock workers
(g) making satisfactory provision for the training and welfare of dock workers, including port medical services, in so far as such provision does not exist apart from the Scheme."
The function of making satisfactory provision for the training and welfare of dock workers, including port medical services, was expressed in the regulations as obligatory, whereas in the statute it was expressed permissively.
"(c) the employment and control of registered dock workers available for work when they are not otherwise employed in accordance with the Scheme;
(e) the allocation of registered dock workers who are available for work to registered employers, in doing which the local board shall
(i) use every endeavour to supply men accustomed to the employer, and his operations and cargoes,
(ii) be deemed to act as agent for the employer except when by arrangement with the local board, the employer or his representative attends to call and make his own selection of men,
(iii) make the fullest possible use of registered dock workers in the reserve pool
(f) (i) the payment as agent of the registered employer to each daily worker of all earnings properly due to the daily worker from the employer, and the payment to such daily workers of all monies payable by the National Board to those workers in accordance with the provisions of the Scheme."
Regulation 6(2) provided that all dock workers other than weekly workers who were in the employment of an employer to whom the Scheme applied should be deemed to have been allocated to that employer. Regulation 8(2) provided that a registered dock worker in the reserve pool who was available for work was to be in the employment of the National Board. By regulation 8(4), such a dock worker was required to accept work for which he was considered to be suitable. By regulation 8(5) a registered dock worker who was available for work was required to carry out his duties in accordance with the rules of the port or place where he was working when he was allocated by the local board to employment by a registered employer. By regulation 9(5), registered employers were required to submit all information about their current and future labour requirements.
The claimants' case
The judge's decision
"(a) the NDLB had no power to inspect cargoes or working practices although [they were, in practice, permitted entry];
(b) the NDLB did not become involved in working practices with the dock workers, which were the responsibility of the registered employers;
(c) the NDLB had the duties set out in paragraph 49 above;
(d) the NDLB had the expertise to train workers and they employed doctors, who were concerned with the welfare of dock workers and the reduction of illnesses, such as chest infections;
(e) the NDLB did give training to dock workers by organising training schools and training programmes, which covered training on handling hazardous cargoes; and
(f) the NDLB carried out enquiries into illnesses affecting dock workers."
Paragraph 49 was where the judge gave an extended account of his analysis of the effect of the regulations.
Grounds of appeal
"Speaking for myself, I find it difficult to imagine a case in which a common law duty can be founded simply upon the failure (however irrational) to provide some benefit which a public authority has power (or a public law duty) to provide"
But he said at paragraph 38:
"My Lords, I must make it clear that this appeal is concerned only with an attempt to impose upon a local authority a common law duty to act based solely on the existence of a broad public law duty. We are not concerned with cases in which public authorities have actually done acts or entered into relationships or undertaken responsibilities which give rise to a common law duty of care. In such cases the fact that the public authority acted pursuant to a statutory power or public duty does not necessarily negative the existence of a duty."
Lord Hoffmann then gave examples from decided cases of circumstances in which a common law duty of care can arise.
Keene LJ:
Smith LJ: