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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Butler v. Grampian University Hospitals Nhs Trust [2002] ScotCS 142 (22nd May, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2002/142.html Cite as: [2002] ScotCS 142 |
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Butler v. Grampian University Hospitals Nhs Trust [2002] ScotCS 142 (22nd May, 2002)
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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A1556/00
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OPINION OF LORD MACFADYEN in the cause CAROLINE BUTLER Pursuer; against GRAMPIAN UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS NHS TRUST Defenders:
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Pursuer: Ms Smart; Digby Brown, S.SC.,
Defenders: MacSporran; Scottish Health Service Central Legal Office
22 May 2002
Introduction
The Accident
"The patient's carer entered the toilet first, and the pursuer pushed the patient's wheelchair into the cubicle. She pushed the wheelchair back against the door. There was around six inches of clearance between the wheelchair and the toilet bowl. As a result, the pursuer required to approach and lift the patient from the side. Due to the size of the cubicle, and the presence of the wheelchair, the patient and the carer, the pursuer had insufficient room to manoeuvre safely while lifting the patient. The pursuer lifted the patient to a standing position by placing her arms around the patient's waist. The carer supported the patient on the right side. The patient took some of her own weight by placing her right hand on a pull down wall bar. The pursuer started to turn the patient around, to sit her on the toilet. As she did so the patient ... let go of the wall bar. The pursuer required to bear the whole weight of the patient and was unable to turn her further or seat her on the toilet. She required to extend her spine suddenly to remain upright and to support the weight of the patient. She was pinned against the wall bar behind her by the weight of the patient. She was unable to move or to adjust her body position to relieve the strain on her back, due to the limited space between the toilet and the wall bar. As a result, the pursuer immediately felt pain in her back and left leg, and she sustained the loss, injury and damage hereinafter condescended upon."
Later it is averred:
"It was necessary for [the pursuer] to lift the patient from the side ..., as there was insufficient room in the cubicle to lift the patient face to face."
The Cases of Fault
"Separatim, it was the defenders' duty to take reasonable care to provide disabled toilets which could be used safely by outpatient assistants and patients by modifying the cubicles to form one larger cubicle".
The Issues Debated
The Common Law Case
"... the pursuer was never instructed to use the toilets at Clinic C to toilet all wheelchair bound patients".
That involved an implied acknowledgement that there were larger disabled toilets available in Clinic C. Once that was accepted, the absence of an averment that there were no disabled toilets that could be safely used was fatal to the relevancy of the averment of breach of the duty to provide safe disabled toilets by modifying the cubicles in Clinic A to provide one larger cubicle.
The Cases under the Workplace Regulations
"The workplace ... shall be maintained (including cleaned as appropriate) in an efficient state, in efficient working order and in good repair".
The pursuer's case is that the toilet cubicle was the pursuer's workplace within the meaning of regulation 5(1) and that:
"By reason of the inadequate dimensions of the toilet cubicle for the work which the pursuer was carrying out there, the pursuer's workplace was not maintained in an efficient state with regard to safety".
"Whereas the communications from the Commission on its programme concerning safety, hygiene and health at work provide for the adoption of a Directive designed to guarantee the safety and health of workers at the workplace".
In light of that underlying aim, regulation 5(1) could not be construed as concerned only with maintenance, so as to leave the worker with no remedy if the workplace, as provided, was not efficient. On the contrary, it should be construed as requiring the employer to secure that the workplace was in a continuing state of efficiency, with the result that a relevant case of breach of duty could be established by showing that at the relevant time the workplace was not in such a state as to be efficient from the point of view of safety.
"Every room where a person works shall have sufficient floor area, height and unoccupied space for purposes of health, safety and welfare."
The pursuer avers that:
"The floor area within the toilet cubicle was inadequate for the purpose of the pursuer's health, safety and welfare".
"Workrooms must have sufficient surface area, height and airspace to allow workers to perform their work without risk to their safety, health or well-being".
That, she submitted, made it clear that the sufficiency of floor area required to be judged by reference to the work being undertaken there.
"Every workstation shall be so arranged that it is suitable both for any person at work in the workplace who is likely to work at that workstation and for any work of the undertaking which is likely to be done there."
The pursuer's case under regulation 11(1) depends on the averment that the toilet cubicle was a workstation within the meaning of the regulation.
"1. |
A location at which one stage in the manufacture or assembly of a product is carried out before it is moved on to the next stage. |
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2. |
A desk with a computer terminal and keyboard; the terminal itself." |
A broader view was taken in Duncanson v South Ayrshire Council (31 July 1998, Lord Milligan, unreported on this point), where a nursery nurse, kneeling to place items in a cabinet, was conceded to be working at a workstation within the meaning of regulation 11(1). Although the point was conceded, Lord Milligan expressed agreement that the regulation was relevant to the circumstances of the case. Mr MacSporran, however, invited me to take the view that the toilet cubicle could not be regarded as a workstation.
Result