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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ab & Ors v Small Mines - and - UK Coal [2007] EWHC 1939 (QB) (13 August 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2007/1939.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1939 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AB & Others |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Small Mines - and - UK Coal |
Defendants |
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Mr Timothy Smith (instructed by Halliwells) for Small Mines
Mr Michael Rawlinson (instructed by Halliwells) for UK Coal
Hearing dates: 23 July 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mrs Justice Swift :
The background
"In a co-defended claim involving the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (the Department) and UK Coal and/or Small Mines, once a claimant has accepted a payment under LOROS/DOROS, is he still entitled to maintain a claim against UK Coal and/or Small Mines under the CHA pursuant to the respective terms of accession by UK Coal and Small Mines to the CHA and the terms of the CHA?"
I heard submissions in relation to this issue on Monday, 23 July 2007.
The involvement of UK Coal and Small Mines
The accession agreements
The UK Coal agreement
"UK Coal shall join the BCRDL Claims Handling Agreement, dated 31 October 2003, as defined and amended by previous orders, from the date of this Order as a Defendant in accordance with the terms of the said Memorandum of Agreement as set out in Schedule 1 herein."
"…for the purpose of disposing of claims by Claimants whose employment history included a period or periods of employment in a mine occupied by/operated by UK Coal".
The Small Mines agreement
"Small Mines shall join the BCRDL Claims Handling Agreement, as defined and amended by previous orders, with effect from 13th July 2004 as Defendants in accordance with the terms of the said Memorandum of Agreement as set out Schedule 1 herein".
"For the avoidance of doubt Small Mines agree to dispose of …claims in accordance with the terms of the CHA as it applied on 13 July 2004 and this memorandum of agreement does not relate to Fast Track offers in relation to both Live Risk Offers and Deceased Risk Offers".
Provision for administrative costs
Events following the accession agreements
"The COPD Handling Agreement ("the Agreement") has been the subject of a significant amendment between yourselves and the DTI. The said amendment, as we understand it, is intended to accelerate payments to Claimants, but unfortunately such a system will remove the robust medical assessment process that was originally put in place for the purposes of the Agreement….
We have considered this newly negotiated LOROS-DOROS scheme with our clients and we are instructed to inform you that UK Coal will not accept any claims under the Agreement that have been the subject of the LOROS-DOROS scheme. Should any of those Claimants that have opted for payments under the LOROS-DOROS scheme wish to pursue UK Coal for an apportionment, they will have to do so, at common law. UK Coal will continue to operate the terms of the Agreement for those Claimants who do not pursue the LOROS-DOROS scheme."
"The last point I was going to refer to at this stage is the case where a man has British Coal employment and either Small Mines employment or UK Coal employment. I made the legal position clear to your Lordship some months ago that, as is apparently now accepted by all parties, his claim against Small Mines and UK Coal is a separate claim, a separate tort, and the compromise of his claim against British Coal does not extinguish the separate claim against Small Mines and UK Coal."
"But the anxiety expressed by those other parties is that they might be faced with lengthy and expensive investigation, a common law action, dealing with the residual part of his claim when he has already accepted DOROS and opted out of the MAP process. That is their position."
"The position of the claimants' group is that they would wish to resolve the outstanding claims against Small Mines and UK Coal, and for men who accepted a LOROS payment they would wish to resolve them within the CHA but that would obviously require the agreement of the three parties involved. If the DTI take the position that they will not countenance the use of the CHA to resolve these outstanding claims then that leaves the alternative of pursuing a common law claim…"
"The accession of both our clients to this COPD scheme necessitated years of negotiation and considerable expense. Almost immediately upon our clients' accession you have negotiated and determined an entirely different scheme to that which both of our clients acceded.
As matters stand, neither of our clients is interested in the new scheme. Any Claimant accepting LOROS/DOROS payments take themselves entirely outside the scheme negotiated by our clients…"
That remains the position of UK Coal and Small Mines today.
The parties' cases
The case for UK Coal
The procedural approach
The contractual position
The case for Small Mines
The CG's case
Conclusions
The contractual approach
The procedural approach