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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> HIS MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE AGAINST TIGH-NA-MUIRN LTD [2023] ScotHC HCJAC_30 (18 August 2023)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2023/2023_HCJAC_30.html
Cite as: [2023] HCJAC 30, [2023] ScotHC HCJAC_30, 2023 SLT 900, 2023 GWD 32-268

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
[2023] HCJAC 30
HCA/2023/269/XC
Lord Matthews
Lord Boyd of Duncansby
Lady Wise
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LADY WISE
in
Crown Appeal against Sentence
by
HIS MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Appellant
against
TIGH-NA-MUIRN LTD
Respondent
Appellant: Cameron, AD; Crown Agent
Respondent: B Smith KC; Faculty Services Limited
18 August 2023
Introduction
[1]
On 2 May 2023 the respondent company pled guilty to an indictment served under
section 76 of the 1995 Act libelling a charge in the following terms:
"between 20 March 2020 and 1 June 2020, both dates inclusive, at Tigh-Na-Muirn
Residential Home at 4 Victoria Street, Monifieth, Dundee, DD5 4HL you
TIGH-NA-MUIRN LTD being an employer within the meaning of the
aftermentioned Act, did fail to conduct your undertaking in such a way as to ensure,
2
so far as was reasonably practicable, that persons not in your employment, namely
residents of said Tigh-Na-Muirn Residential Home, in particular David Fyfe, now
deceased, who may have been affected thereby, were not exposed to risks to their
health and safety in that you did:
(a)
fail to make suitable and sufficient assessment of the risks associated
with the storage of cleaning products within resident's rooms; and
(b)
fail to ensure that the exposure of your residents to hazardous
cleaning chemicals was prevented or, where this was not reasonably
practicable, adequately controlled;
and in consequence thereof, on 6 May 2020 a bottle of ammonium - based cleaning
liquid was placed beside toiletries on top of a cabinet above the sink in the bathroom
of said David Fyfe and on 27 May 2020 David Fyfe ingested a quantity of the liquid
and in consequence he developed acute severe inflammation in his airway and
pneumonia from which he died on 31 May 2020: CONTRARY to section 3(1)
and 33(1)(a) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974."
[2]
At an adjourned diet on 10 May 2023 the sheriff imposed a financial penalty
of £30,000, which she discounted by one third to £20,000 in light of the company's guilty
plea at the first opportunity. A victim surcharge of £1,500 was payable. The Crown appeals
against the level of fine as unduly lenient.
The facts
[3]
Tigh-Na-Muirn Ltd (TNM) operates a privately owned residential care home,
registered for a maximum of 59 service users. The company has two directors, a married
couple, although only the husband is involved actively in the business. The company has no
previous convictions.
[4]
David Fyfe was admitted to TNM residential home on 24 November 2019 for
emergency respite. He was 90 years old and suffered from various underlying health
conditions, including Alzheimer's disease. From January 2020 his wife consented to him
residing at the home permanently. His room was located in the garden wing of the
3
property. A care plan for Mr Fyfe indicated that he walked with the assistance of a walking
frame/walking stick. He became easily distracted, was at low risk of falls and of leaving the
home unnoticed. He had no difficulties eating, drinking, swallowing or chewing. The care
plan indicated that due to his dementia he was unable to administer his own medication and
this was managed by staff daily.
[5]
By February 2020 the coronavirus pandemic was creating a public health emergency.
COVID-19 care procedures for TNM were outlined in the COVID-19 resilience plan made in
February 2020 by a full team of 18 managers. The resilience plan was updated regularly,
following advice from HSE, Public Health Scotland, Health Protection Scotland, Care
Inspectorate, Social Work and Angus Council. TNM staff found that advice was changing
daily and official information was sometimes confusing or conflicting. TNM employ health
and safety consultants whose remit at the relevant time was to be advisors. They were not
approached by TNM in relation to the resilience plan, which was based on the availability of
supplies at any given time. In terms of cleaning materials to be used for Covid positive
residents' rooms, clinical wipes would have been the staff's preferred option but supply
issues associated with the pandemic made this unfeasible. The resilience plan was
accordingly altered to include Sterigerm cleaning sanitiser. The plan stipulated that isolated
rooms would have their own cleaning kits, which would be kept in each room and not
removed. Sterigerm was stored for use in a screw top spray dispenser. The decision to use
Sterigerm and store it within Covid positive residents' rooms was taken by those operating
the care home as a team.
[6]
The COVID-19 resilience plan was used in tandem with resident specific Covid care
plans. Mr Fyfe had presented with a cough on 6 May 2020 and thereafter returned a positive
COVID-19 test result. He was placed in temporary isolation within his room to prevent the
4
spread of COVID-19 amongst residents and staff in accordance with the protocols in place at
the time. The final day of his isolation was to be 27 May 2020. According to the mental
health manager, during his isolation period Mr Fyfe was more confused than normal and
she had contact with him daily to help him understand what was going on. She assisted
with his personal care, laundry and room cleaning. She last cleaned his room on
the morning of 26 May. She stored the cleaning products towards the back of the top of the
bathroom cabinet as per the instruction.
[7]
On 27 May 2020 a carer checked on Mr Fyfe at around 7.40am. He appeared content,
and asked when breakfast would be served. The carer advised him that it would not be long
and did not enter the room. The carer did not see any cleaning chemical visible in the room.
At around 8.30am, Mr Fyfe came to his door and was observed by a staff member to be
sweating profusely, having breathing difficulties, and speaking with a hoarse voice. He was
clutching his chest and stated that he had chest pain. A registered nurse on shift was
immediately notified. His blood oxygen saturation level was 94 and an ambulance was
requested using the 999 system.
[8]
Mr Fyfe was moved to the open patio door to assist him with his breathing. Staff
then observed a plate of food, a china cup and a paper cup with green residue on the table
next to an unlabelled screw top spray bottle of cleaning sanitiser, still with the lid on. The
paper cup had a green residue in the bottom which was the same colour as the cleaning
sanitiser. Mr Fyfe was unable to clarify whether he had consumed any of the liquid. By the
time paramedics arrived about 15 minutes after they were called, Mr Fyfe's blood oxygen
saturation had dropped to 88 and he had fluctuating chest pain and breathing difficulties.
He was admitted to Ninewells Hospital and gradually deteriorated over the following few
5
days. Clinical staff ultimately determined that he be given palliative treatment and he died
on 31 May 2020 at midnight.
[9]
A post-mortem examination revealed the primary cause of death to be acute
tracheobronchitis and pneumonia, resulting from the ingestion of ammonium based
cleaning product. Ischemic heart disease and Alzheimer's disease were regarded as
contributory factors, due to the detrimental impact that these both would have had on
Mr Fyfe's physiological resilience and ability to tolerate injury to the respiratory system and
metabolic insult.
[10]
A subsequent local authority investigation found that control of substances
hazardous to health (COSHH) risk assessments had been carried out but had not covered
risk to residents from chemicals as these were not usually left in a way exposed to residents.
Cleaning chemicals were never usually kept in residents' rooms and were stored in a locked
cleaning cupboard. Due to the circumstances of the pandemic and in the interest of infection
control, staff had been instructed that cleaning products issued to Covid positive rooms,
including Mr Fyfe's, were to be stored on the en suite bathroom cabinet. Company
procedure for each bottle was to have labels on both sides including instructions for use and
it was not known why the bottle of Sterigerm in Mr Fyfe's room had no label.
[11]
TNM's health and safety policy includes a chapter on risk assessment procedure.
This laid down a five step process for any risk assessment to include the following stages:
1.
Identify the hazards.
2.
Identify who may be harmed and how.
3.
Evaluate and control the risk.
4.
Record the findings.
5.
Monitor and review the assessment.
6
Mr Fyfe had his personalised "My COVID-19 infection control plan" which was classed as a
risk assessment. It did not consider any hazards to him by storing chemicals in his room,
thus omitting step one in the usual risk assessment process. Accordingly there had been a
failure to conduct an adequate risk assessment.
[12]
Following Mr Fyfe's death, the company provided locked boxes in which cleaning
materials such as Sterigerm could be stored. These were named "Covid response boxes" and
were kept locked outside resident's rooms. The home also now has access to wipes so that
the use of Sterigerm is no longer required. The locked boxes were in place by 7 July 2020.
The sheriff's report on sentence
[13]
The sheriff states in her report that she began by considering the seriousness of the
offence in terms of harm and culpability. Applying the first of the principles set out in
Scottish Sea Farms Ltd v HM Advocate 2012 SLT 299 at paragraphs 18-19 she considered that
given that death resulted from the incident, the harm was extremely high and could only
have been greater had multiple deaths occurred. The sheriff then considered if any
aggravating factors applied. The company's submission that this was not a breach with a
view to profit was accepted. No financial gain was made, nor intended to be made. The
breach was not deliberate but occurred by omission. However, the sheriff considered that
an aggravating factor was that Mr Fyfe was a vulnerable individual as a result of his
Alzheimer's disease and the company were entrusted with his care.
[14]
In considering the degree of risk and extent of danger in terms of culpability, the
sheriff concluded that culpability was low for the following reasons:
The management team did not have any cause to imagine that Mr Fyfe might
deliberately or accidentally ingest the cleaning agent;
7
Genuine efforts were being made in extremely challenges circumstances to
respond to and react to a rapidly changing situation and to keep residents
and staff safe, although they were inadequate on this occasion; and
The incident was an isolated one.
[15]
So far as mitigation was concerned the sheriff recorded that a guilty plea had been
tendered at the earliest opportunity avoiding the need for a trial. The company had taken
effective steps to remedy the deficiency and the local authority documents indicated efforts
had been made by all concerned to comply with health and safety duties. It was accepted
that the company had a responsible attitude to health and safety and an excellent safety
record. Finally, regard was had to the resources of the company and the effect of a fine on
its business. The accounts indicated that turnover was consistent at around £3 million per
year. Net profit was over £400,000 in 2018 but had reduced to around £366,000 in 2021. It
was noted also that the company currently faced financial challenges caused by significantly
increasing energy costs, food costs, staffing costs and post Covid infection control measures.
[16]
Having regard to the Scottish Sentencing Council's principles and purposes on
sentencing guideline requiring a sentence to be imposed which was no more severe than
was necessary, the sheriff ultimately came to the view that a fine at the lower end of the
range of possible sentences was appropriate. The Definitive Sentencing Guideline on health
and safety offences issued by the Sentencing Council for England and Wales was used as a
crosscheck and again the conclusion was reached that culpability was low. The harm fell
into Level A in terms of seriousness with a medium likelihood of harm (Harm Category 2)
but given that other residents had also been at risk the harm felt to be assessed towards the
upper end of Category 2. This was a small company and in a category in which the English
Guideline would indicate a fine ranging from £3,000-£40,000 for Category 2 offences with a
8
starting point of £9,000. On that basis the sheriff considered that a starting point of £30,000
fell within the upper end of Category 2 offences.
Submissions for the appellant
[17]
On behalf of the Crown it was accepted that for the appeal to succeed it must be
shown that the sentence imposed fell out with the range of sentences which a sheriff at first
instance, applying her mind to all the relevant factors, could reasonably have considered
appropriate ­ HM Advocate v Bell 1995 SCCR 244 at 250D. It was submitted that the sheriff
had erred in her assessment of the respondent's culpability and in categorising it as low.
There had been a failure to give due weight to the seriousness of the offence and the
exposure of risk presented to the residents of the care home and in particular to a
vulnerable, confused and isolated resident such as Mr Fyfe. The exposure to risk arose
directly because the respondent failed to make any risk assessment and to prevent or
adequately control exposure to hazardous chemicals. Those failings had caused Mr Fyfe's
death. The fact that genuine efforts had been made to keep residents and staff safe during
the pandemic could not be regarded as a factor relevant to the degree of risk and to the
extent of danger. The sheriff had conflated the risks presented by COVID-19 with the
failures to which the respondent had pled guilty.
[18]
Further, the sheriff had specifically categorised this as an isolated incident when both
the libel and the narrative illustrated that the failures had continued over a period of
2 months. It was clear from the Scottish Sea Farms case that a failure or failures continuing
over a period were to be contrasted with an isolated incident. A submission was also
advanced initially that there was no proper basis for the sheriff's view that the company had
"no cause to imagine" that Mr Fyfe would ingest the cleaning fluid. This was later
9
withdrawn as the procurator fiscal depute who appeared at the sentencing diet had
apparently not taken issue with that contention being made on behalf of the company.
[19]
Further, it was contended that the sheriff's approach had been to minimise the
existence of aggravating factors and emphasise the mitigatory factors. She relied on the
absence of failure to put in place industry standards, the fact that the company had not
allowed breaches to subsist over a long period of time, that there were no serious or
systemic failures within the organisation to address health and safety and that significant
efforts had been made to address the risk although they were inadequate. The sheriff
accordingly misdirected herself in relying on those factors as they were inconsistent with the
charge to which the company had tendered a plea of guilty and inconsistent with the
narrative presented to the court. The advocate depute submitted that the correct category of
culpability in the circumstances of the case was in the range of medium to high. The
company had been responsible for a clear failure to put in place industry standards in
relation to the control of substances hazardous to health for the period of the libel (20 March
2020 - 1 June 2020). Such a failure could be said to constitute a serious or systemic failure to
address health and safety. The absence of a relevant risk assessment meant the company fell
short of the appropriate standard and they had failed to ensure that vulnerable residents
such as Mr Fyfe were not exposed to hazardous chemicals. The sheriff had also erred in her
approach to the issue of harm as set down in the English Definitive Guideline. Assessing
harm required consideration of both the seriousness of harm risked and the likelihood of
harm arising. Once those were identified consideration had to be given to whether the
offence exposed a number of workers or members of the public to the risk of harm and
whether the cause of the offence was a significant cause of actual harm. In the present case
10
the company had occupied a position of trust and responsibility to vulnerable residents.
Their breach of statutory duty risked a high level of harm and the likelihood was also high.
[20]
In relation to the appropriate level of fine the policy underpinning the health and
safety at work legislation had to be borne in mind as should the requirement to punish
companies for such breaches ­ HM Advocate v Munro & Sons 2009 SLT 223 at paragraph 34.
In selecting a headline sentence of £30,000 the sheriff had chosen an unduly lenient penalty.
It was far too low and failed adequately to reflect the seriousness of the offence to which the
respondent had pled guilty. There was no indication in the sheriff's report as to how she
had arrived at the figure of £30,000 or how it met the sentencing aims. The level of fine
required to be meaningful and send a message to those with health and safety duties. It was
accepted that the sheriff had to ensure that the effect on the company would not be
catastrophic but that had to be balanced against the need for it to be meaningful - Scottish
Power Generation Ltd v HM Advocate 2017 JC 85 at paragraph 44. In that case, the court had
indicated support for using the English Guideline as a crosscheck. However in the present
case even using the guidelines, the sheriff had arrived at an unduly lenient level of fine
because of her failure to assess culpability correctly by giving insufficient weight to the
nature and extent of the breach and by giving too much credit to mitigatory factors. In
essence the company did not have a system for storing this particular hazardous substance
that had been risk assessed and was appropriate. The failings were neither minor nor
isolated.
[21]
It was submitted that as the risk continued for over a period of 2 months and was
posed to nearly every resident in the home the harm category should have been assessed
as 1 and not 2. The sheriff had failed to move up a harm category despite the existence of
both of the factors justifying her doing so. It was consistent with both Scottish authorities
11
and the English guidelines that the consequences of the breach had to be taken into account.
The final stage of the exercise had to be to step back, renew and adjust the sentence to fulfil
the objectives of sentencing. Had the correct approach been taken the figure would have
been a very substantially in excessive of that selected.
Submissions for the respondent
[22]
Senior counsel for the respondent, who had appeared at the sentencing diet before
the sheriff, emphasised that he had tendered detailed written submissions in advance of the
diet and that the sheriff had taken time to consider those and reach her decision.
[23]
It was submitted before the sheriff and reiterated by senior counsel in responding to
the appeal that the circumstances of Mr Fyfe's death took place against the backdrop of the
COVID-19 pandemic. That was relevant context for the sheriff to consider. The advice to
care home businesses such as the respondent was changing daily. In storing a cleaning
agent in Mr Fyfe's en-suite the respondent was following advice that items should not be
taken in and out of rooms and should be either single use or stored in a room if a resident
was isolating. It was not known why the bottle containing the Sterigerm was unlabelled but
it was known that the practice was to transfer the cleaning agent into bottles from a large
storage container. There was a trigger mechanism on top of the bottle. Advice was being
given to the care home sector effectively by government filtered through the local NHS
Trust.
[24]
The staff in the care home were following published advice at all times. The
officially mandated protocol required infected residents to be isolated in their own rooms
and staff entering their rooms to assist with care were required to wear full PPE and adhere
to a strict hygiene regime. Sanitising kits were provided for each infected resident's room
12
and retained within them. The practice in relation to cleaning products required by the
COVID-19 guidance represented a deliberate change from the normal procedure in place at
the home. Before the pandemic cleaning products had been retained in a locked cupboard
by domestic staff and taken on trollies for use whilst cleaning and then returned to the
locked cupboard. That process had been the subject of a full COSHH risk assessment. The
company now accepted that the Sterigerm ought not to have been stored in an accessible
place in Mr Fyfe's room but his personal assessment had not indicated that he might
deliberately or accidentally ingest the cleaning agent.
[25]
The company had pled to a failure to make an adequate risk assessment rather than
no risk assessment at all. However, given that there were more than five employees the
council acknowledged that the relevant regulations required a suitable and sufficient risk
assessment to be reduced to writing and that had not been done in relation to the Covid
resilience plan. Accordingly, there had been no risk assessment in writing of the new
hazard presented by storing an ammonium based cleaning agent in residents' rooms. The
point was that the failure could not be separated from the Covid circumstances and the
necessity to isolate those with positive COVID-19 test results.
[26]
Senior counsel conceded that the plan which had turned out to be inadequate had
been in place throughout the two and a half month period of the libel. However there had
been a number of mitigatory factors including that the company had responded
appropriately, promptly and responsibly to Mr Fyfe's ingestion of the Sterigerm and
consequential death. The new plan of the locked boxes had been devised and the company
had cooperated fully in the health and safety executive investigation. Both prior and
subsequent to the relevant period the company had taken the health and safety of its
13
employees and residents very seriously and had expressed sincere regret for the breach and
its tragic consequences.
[27]
Where the English guidelines were relevant as a crosscheck, both the harm category
and the culpability category required to be utilised. Counsel maintained that the culpability
in this case remained low.
Decision
[28]
The court is grateful for, and has given careful consideration to, the helpful
submissions on behalf of both the appellant and respondent in this sad case. There is no
dispute as to the applicable law. The relevant principles were summarised in Scottish Sea
Farms Ltd v HM Advocate 2012 SLT 299 at paragraph 18 as follows:
(a)
where death occurs as an consequence of the breach, that is an aggravating
feature, multiple deaths being viewed even more seriously than single deaths;
(b)
a breach with a view to profit is a serious aggravation;
(c)
the degree of risk and extent of the danger and in particular whether this was
an isolated incident or one continued over a period;
(d)
mitigation will include (1) a prompt admission of responsibility; (2) steps
taken to remedy deficiencies; and (3) a good safety record; and
(e)
the resources of the offender and the effect of a fine on its business are
important. Any fine should reflect the means of the offender but could not be
said to stand in any specific proportion to turnover or profit. The objective of
the fine should be to achieve a safe environment for the public and bring that
message home, not only to those who manage a corporate offender, but also
to those who own it as shareholders.
14
As this approach is reflected in the English Guideline, it should be used as a cross check on
Scottish precedent, though not applied mechanistically (Scottish Power Generation Ltd 2017
JC 85, at paragraphs 35-37).
[29]
In this case, the focus is on the sheriff's assessment of culpability and whether she
failed to reflect the degree of risk and extent of danger, with particular reference to whether
this was an isolated incident or continued over a period. The sheriff seems to have
overlooked, or at least not placed any emphasis on, the period of the libel. For two and a
half months the company breached a standard that they had hitherto adhered to, namely of
ensuring that residents were protected from any risk of ingesting hazardous substances by
keeping these in a locked cupboard. Accordingly, the sheriff was wrong to categorise the
incident as an isolated one as there was a continuing breach. The simple and effective
procedure of keeping locked boxes outside the room of any resident who was isolating
following Mr Fyfe's death illustrates that had the proposal to store the substances in a
resident's en-suite bathroom been risk assessed in any meaningful way, a different result
would have ensued.
[30]
The direction given to the care home required them to consider how best to isolate a
COVID-19 positive resident while minimising any other risks to health and life. They failed
to make any appropriate assessment for the whole period. The sheriff's assessment failed to
take sufficient account of the fact that the failure led directly to Mr Fyfe's death. Further as
he was a vulnerable person with reduced cognitive function with far less staff contact
because of the requirement to isolate, there was a heightened responsibility to assess any
risk arising from his isolation and changed hygiene practices. All of these factors ought to
have been taken into account.
15
[31]
So far as the context is concerned, the respondent company, like so many care home
businesses, was faced with extraordinary circumstances in the first months of the COVID-19
pandemic. The unprecedented circumstances in which care homes were operating and the
genuine efforts TNM were making generally to keep their residents safe was mitigatory, but
the sheriff placed undue emphasis on it in assessing culpability, commenting that they had
fallen short "on this occasion". The repeated references to this being a single breach are
indicative of a flawed approach to culpability assessment. Accordingly, we disagree that
culpability in this case could properly be assessed as low. The sheriff gave inadequate
consideration to the degree of risk and the extent of the danger, and failed to recognise that
the breach was not an isolated incident but continued over a period of time; Scottish Sea
Farms Ltd, paragraph 18(c).
[32]
This flawed approach has led to the imposition of an unduly lenient sentence.
Accordingly, we must consider an appropriate level of fine of new.
[33]
Having regard both to the applicable principles and the English Guideline, we assess
culpability in this case as at least medium. The ongoing failure to assess the obvious risk of
changing a system of locking away a hazardous substance and placing it within reach of
residents was serious. Indisputably significant harm was caused in this case as death
occurred. So far as assessing the risk of harm is concerned, while the sheriff may have been
correct to regard this as no higher than Category 2, it can be seen as rather at the higher end
of that category. It is agreed that the respondent should be categorised as a small company.
Had the sheriff not erred in her assessment of culpability, and using the English Guideline
as a crosscheck, the starting point for a financial penalty in this case would have been
either £54,000 with the range being from £25,000-£230,000 (for Medium Culpability and
16
Harm Category 2) or £100,000 with a range of £50,000-£450,000 (for High Culpability and
Harm Category 2).
[34]
We consider that the level of fine might have been at the higher end of the Medium
Culpability and Harm Category 2 range but for the mitigating factors on which the sheriff
quite properly relied. The offence occurred in a care home when the COVID-19 pandemic
was at its full height and when care homes in particular were operating under enormous
pressure. We also recognise that the offence occurred as a result of staff attempting to
ensure that residents were kept safe by minimising items coming in and out of resident's
rooms and possibly spreading infection. Nevertheless, we consider that the fine imposed by
the sheriff failed to fulfil sufficiently the relevant sentencing objective of punishment and
deterrence. We acknowledge that sufficient account should be taken of the company's
financial position in assessing the correct level of fine. However, the information provided
in relation to turnover and profitability does not cause us concern that the ongoing business
of the care home will be threatened by the fine we intend to impose.
[35]
For these reasons, we shall allow the appeal, quash the sentence and substitute a fine
of £60,000, reduced from a starting point of £90,000 in light of the early plea.


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