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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 >> Yates v National Trust [2014] EWHC 222 (QB) (10 February 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/222.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 222 (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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Jamie Alexander Yates |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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National Trust |
Defendant |
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William Norris QC and Judith Ayling (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mawer) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 9th December 13th December 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Nicol :
Evidence
Relationship between the Defendant and Joe Jackman
Relationship between the Claimant and Joe Jackman
The events leading up to the Claimant's fall
How the Claimant fell from the tree
Did the NT owe the claimant a relevant duty of care?
The Claimant's case that the NT did owe him a relevant duty of care
Whether the NT owed the Claimant a duty of care in the choice of Joe Jackman as contractor: discussion
If the NT did owe the Claimant a duty of care in its choice of contractor, was it negligent in that regard?
The Claimant's case in relation to negligence in the choice of Joe Jackman as contractor
"Implementing a prioritised work programme: Remedial tree work will often involve tree climbing. This work is normally contracted out for reasons of cost and safety. If the work is to be undertaken by staff, they should be trained and competent, holding relevant NPTC certificates. Work should be carried out in accordance with industry and HSE guidance and NT model risk assessments. Contractors should be Arboricultural Association approved (see list of Aboricultrual Association approved contractors), or judged to be competent and safe as a result of previous work for the Trust and having appropriate certificates of competence and insurance. Useful guidance is provided by the leaflet 'Choosing an Arborist' available from the Arboricultural Association or from Forestry Advisers. Work must be carefully specified and will be subject to: NT Conservation Directorate document General Requirements and Conditions for Countryside and Garden Work; NT Conservation Department Directorate document Special Requirements and Conditions for Arboricultural Work British Standard BS3998 (1989) Recommendations for tree work (revised edition expected in 2007). It is important that provision is made in property budgets for inspection and remedial work. Once priorities have been determined for remedial work, lack of available funding would not be accepted by external enforcing authorities as a valid reason for non-completion."
Was the NT negligent in its choice of Joe Jackman?
"'Q. At the time of the accident it was our belief that Joe Jackman only held personal public liability that did not cover the other three men in the team and he did not hold employers liability insurance. Would the National Trust have demanded this information for the others working under him? Was there any system to ask for supplementary information for the other working under him?
A. I viewed the situation that we were contracting Joe Jackman and the person used I considered they were not subcontractors and was a matter between them.
.
Q. As they [Jackman's men] were working on their own were any checks made as to the insurance they held?
A. I knew that Joe Jackman had public liability, as for other insurance for the people that worked for him, it was a matter between he and them."
Had Joe Jackman given Mr Heels the express assurance that his men were also covered by his PLI, I would have expected Mr Heels to mention it during or after this exchange. In his second witness statement he says that he assumed Joe Jackman's PLI cover extended to those working for him. Again, he did not refer to a conversation in which Mr Jackman expressly said this was so. I do not consider that Mr Heels was being deliberately misleading, but so far as he said there was such an express assurance, I did not find his evidence reliable. Nonetheless, if it was only an assumption on Mr Heels's part that the PLI cover extended to Joe Jackman's men, the point remains that there is no evidence to show that assumption was incorrect.
Any other relevant duty of care owed to the Claimant by the NT?
"It would not ordinarily be reasonable to expect an occupier of premises having engaged a contractor whom he has reasonable grounds for regarding as competent, to supervise the contractor's activities in order to ensure that he was discharging his duty to his employees to observe a safe system of work. In special circumstances, on the other hand, where the occupier knows or has reason to suspect that the contractor is using an unsafe system of work, it might well be reasonable for the occupier to see that the system was made safe. The crux of the present case, therefore, is whether the council knew or had reason to suspect that Mr Spence, in contravention of the terms of his contract was bringing in cowboy operators who would proceed to demolish the building in thoroughly unsafe way."
"The CEGB hired highly reputable contractors, and we can see no reason why in the circumstances of that case the law should impose any liability on them, in their capacity as (virtually) absentee occupiers, when it was Babcock's duty to look after the health and safety of their employees. To impose such a liability would in effect require an occupier to owe an employee an employer's duty of care to somebody else's employees; indeed it could be argued that it would impose on an occupier an even more rigorous duty of care than it would require him to ensure that the employer was carrying out his own duty of care. We can see no principled reason for imposing such a duty [151] So far as the other two appeals are concerned, there is no finding that any of the occupiers before the court knew of the risks which Mr Twohey and Mr Fairchild were running Ignorance of risks cannot excuse an employer, because it is an employer's duty to find out about well known risks which may imperil his workforce, but we were not shown any authority which suggested that such a duty rested on a mere occupier who had engaged competent contractors."
Conclusion