[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Atkinson v Geoffrey Robinson Ltd [2015] EWHC 3387 (QB) (24 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/3387.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3387 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Bernard Atkinson |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Geoffrey Robinson Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
William Evans (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Defendant/Appellant
Hearing date: 18 November 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foskett:
"This is defined as a requirement by the court, of its own initiative and usually on a costs in the case basis, for the defendant to identify the evidence and legal arguments that give the defendant a real prospect of success. Applying the test for summary judgment, the burden of showing that the defendant has no real prospect of success remains on the claimant. Further, at a show cause hearing it is for the claimant to adduce credible evidence in support of their case, and it is only if they do so that the defendant becomes subject to an evidential burden to show cause: Silcock v H M Revenue and Customs [2009] EWHC 3025 (QB). The justification for the court imposing this filter rather that requiring a full blown application under Pt 24 to be initiated by the claimant, is the fact that the RCJ experience has shown that in about 95 per cent of claims there is no such defence and a summary judgment application simply duplicates work and increases costs unnecessarily. The requirement to show cause may be imposed at any stage of the interlocutory process and may be imposed on successive occasions, for example, at the first CMC and then at a later show cause hearing if the defendant is able to persuade the court to allow more time. The courts order is to show cause not only as to liability but also as to why the usual standard interim payment should not be made."
"… at a show cause hearing it is for the Claimant to adduce credible evidence in support of his case, and it is only if he does so that the Defendant becomes subject to an evidential burden to show cause. It is further agreed that the correct test is not whether the Defendant's case is likely to succeed at trial, but only whether it has some chance of success, and that the prospects are not fanciful."
"6. There is no issue between the parties as to the applicable legal principles in this case. An appeal will be allowed where the decision of the lower court was wrong and wrong for these purposes means either because the learned senior master erred in law or erred in the exercise of his discretion. I have been referred to the well known decision in Tanfern v Cameron-McDonald as to what constitutes a sufficient error in the exercise of discretion to warrant an interference by the Appeal Court, where Brooke LJ suggested that guidance might be gained from the speech of Lord Fraser in G v G where Lord Fraser said: "...the appellate court should only interfere when they consider that the judge of first instance has not merely preferred an imperfect solution which is different from an alternative imperfect solution which the Court of Appeal might or would have adopted, but has exceeded the generous ambit within which a reasonable disagreement is possible."
7. In addition, I have also been referred to the alternative formulation of Lord Woolf in Phonographic Performance Ltd v AEl Redifussion Music Ltd [1999] I WLR 1507 at 1523:
"Before the court can interfere it must be shown that the judge has either erred in principle in his approach, or has left out of account, or taken into account, some feature that he should, or should not, have considered, or that his decision is wholly wrong because the Court is forced to the conclusion that he has not balanced the various factors fairly in the scale.""
"1. This is the case of a man who worked as a heating engineer employed by the Defendant in the period 1981-1995. It is a case where liability is not admitted and I have been referred to a significant body of evidence that has been prepared and served in this case; two statements from the Claimant supported by further evidence on behalf of the Claimant from Mr Reeve and Mr Prior; and then a further five witnesses whose statements are served on behalf of the Defendant. I have been referred to various passages in a number – not all – of these statements. The Claimant describes his work with the Defendant. He describes being exposed to asbestos dust in work which involved repairs to boilers, replacing them, replacing pipework, and removing asbestos lagging, and indeed in installing new pipework and new boilers. He describes removing old asbestos lagging from boilers and a practice of simply smashing the lagging off and then indeed re-lagging boilers using a paste that was mixed up by tipping asbestos dust and fibres from a bag and into a bucket, obviously causing a good deal of dust. He describes being exposed to asbestos dust during his employment and indeed no precautions to that exposure being taken. That is supported by evidence from Mr Atkinson (sic). He also describes smashing off asbestos lagging in work at Catterick and indeed there is evidence from Mr Reeve, who describes working with the Claimant stripping out boiler houses and the job involved tidying up old asbestos lagging. These descriptions are vivid and graphic and in my estimation not inconsistent, and not unfamiliar in cases like this in this court. These statements on behalf of and from the Claimant describe substantial and prolonged exposure to asbestos on any basis.
2. The medical evidence is also present in the bundle before me and provides the diagnosis that the Claimant is suffering from malignant mesothelioma, a diagnosis that it appears to me is uncontroversial, which has been confirmed as described in the report, a diagnosis which it seems to me there is little prospect of it being challenged and as far as I understand that is not envisaged as matters stand.
3. On balance I am not persuaded that the Defendant has a realistic prospect of success in this case. I am satisfied that the Claimant has adduced sufficient credible evidence of significant exposure and breach of duty on the part of the Defendant. The Claimant in addressing the Defendant's evidence points out that there are instances in which the witnesses in question are unable to state that they knew the Claimant particularly well or that they had worked on particular contracts with the Claimant. They do state however – and this in fact is the evidence I believe from the [witness Mick Cross] who accepts that employees could be exposed to asbestos accidentally. Another, Mr Haywood, accepts that in the period 1981-1995 it is possible that he might have come across asbestos. On balance it seems to me that the Claimant is in a position to prove material exposure whilst employed with this Defendant and indeed a level of exposure of which the Defendant should have taken steps to protect the Claimant having regard to the standards and practices at the time …."
"I am told that Geoffrey Robinson have denied that I was exposed to asbestos dust during the course of my employment with them. Whilst I understand they accept that the work that I did for them would have brought me into contact with insulation, they dispute that it would have contained asbestos and maintain that the insulation that I encountered during my employment with them would have been predominately calcium silicate and Rockwool based. This is incorrect. I was exposed to asbestos dust during my employment with them, as I have indicated above. It was only after I had been employed by the firm for a number of years that we became more aware of the dangers of working with asbestos and alternatives to asbestos based insulation were introduced. In the years during my employment with Geoffrey Robinson, before we became aware of the risks associated with asbestos dust I frequently worked on jobs which involved the stripping and removal of lagging that had been in place for many years and would certainly have contained asbestos. No precaution was taken."
"If we were working in a plant room and we had reason to suspect that the lagging that we saw contained asbestos, our instructors were to notify Geoffrey Robinson Limited and they would investigate. That was the procedure that was laid down and it was the procedure which was followed. I knew that I had to report it."