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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 >> Greenway & Ors v Johnson Matthey Plc [2014] EWHC 3957 (QB) (26 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/3957.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3957 (QB), [2014] CN 2094, [2015] PIQR P10 |
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HQ13X05158, HQ13X00560 and HQ13X00189 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) Daniel Greenway (2) Waynsworth Dryden (3) Dean White (4) Simon York (5) Tony Cipullo |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Johnson Matthey PLC |
Defendant |
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Michael Kent QC (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 12th November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JAY:
Introduction
i) whether the Claimants have a completed cause of action in tort; andii) whether the Claimants may recover more than nominal damages in respect of their contractual claims.
The Evidence
The Medical Evidence
"7. Platinum sensitisation may occur in response to complex halogenated platinum salts, and not to platinum or platinum compounds generally. Sensitisation to platinum salts may be present in an individual before they develop any physical symptoms of that sensitisation. The fact of sensitisation, though, may be demonstrated by skin prick testing.
8. If exposure continues after sensitisation has occurred (as demonstrated by positive skin prick test) then most (but not all) individuals thus exposed will develop physical symptoms relating to one or more of the eyes, nose, chest and skin.
9. Occasionally, these symptoms may occur in exposed individuals in the absence of positive skin prick tests. This may mean that the observed symptoms are in actual fact unrelated to the platinum salt exposure. They may, though, be thus related and such a circumstance reflects the fact that skin prick tests are not a totally reliable means of demonstrating sensitisation.
10. If exposure ceases (or at the least is very markedly reduced) when skin prick tests are positive, but before there are any symptoms of sensitisation, then the degree of sensitisation often reduces.
11. Those who are sensitised to platinum salts as demonstrated by the presence of positive skin tests, but do not have any symptoms, will not develop such symptoms unless there is further exposure.
12. Accordingly, the fact of sensitisation cannot be perceived by the sensitised individual unless he or she is exposed again to platinum salts. Thus, exposure by skin prick testing will give rise to an itchy weal of skin. If (and only if) the sensitisation has proceeded to the point where there are eye, nose, chest or skin manifestations then exposure by these routes will give rise to the associated symptoms.
13. An individual who has been sensitised, as demonstrated by positive skin prick tests, but who has no eye, nose or respiratory symptoms is not limited in way in the course of their life except they must avoid circumstances in which they are exposed to platinum salts.
14. For those who have already developed symptoms, cessation of exposure may lead to abolition of the symptoms, although this is not invariable.
15. Sensitisation to platinum salts is a specific matter. An individual who is sensitised in this way is not at greater risk of becoming sensitised in other substances, either in the work-place or in the environment generally. A platinum salt-sensitised individual who has no further exposure is not at greater risk of developing asthma or rhinitis in later life than is an individual who has not become platinum sensitised."
"I would suggest that the important distinctions between pleural plaques and platinum sensitisation are:
1) Slight further exposure to asbestos will not materially worsen pleural plaques whereas slight further exposure to platinum salts is likely to increase the degree of sensitisation and may result in asymptomatic sensitisation becoming symptomatic.
2) Pleural plaques do not themselves turn into any other asbestos attributable injury whereas asymptomatic sensitisation may turn into symptomatic sensitisation i.e. allergy.
3) The presence of pleural plaques does not place any restriction on the type of work that an individual may undertake other than avoidance of further significant asbestos exposure which current legislation requires be avoided by all individuals whether they have pleural plaques or not, i.e. the individual with pleural plaques is not more restricted in the jobs that he can do than a person without pleural plaques. In contrast, the presence of asymptomatic sensitisation to platinum salt does give rise to restrictions on working capacity which do not apply to persons who do not have platinum sensitisation."
Actionable Injury and the Claim in Tort
"The disease was caused by the inhalation of invisible and infinitesimal particles of fragmented silica which entered the lymphatic vessels forming part of the lung tissue. Either by their sharpness or by some toxic action they damaged the tissue and caused minute scars. The scarred tissue was inelastic and could not perform the functions of the unscarred tissue. As the amount of scarred tissue increased with continued inhalation of the particles, so the efficiency of the lung tissue was reduced. "The ordinary man in normal health," said the judge, "has when young a substantial surplus of lung capacity upon which he need never call save in the exceptional case of severe illness or extraordinary exertion; and until the damage is sufficiently material to diminish this surplus capacity there may be no indication of shortness of breath or other clinical sign or symptom of lung disease; and if during this stage a patient is removed from exposure to these fine particles of silica, no more damage will be done, and his condition should not further deteriorate in the absence of some complication, and it may well be that he will never become aware or have any reason to suspect that any damage has been done to his lungs." No treatment, however, could repair the damage that had already been done to the lung. The disease might make a patient more vulnerable to tuberculosis, and when it got to a more advanced state it might increase of itself without the further inhalation of particles. In any serious case there was a reduction of the expectation of life."
"Both theories have in common this point, which is indeed obvious, that damage has occurred and the cause of action is complete when the plaintiff concerned has suffered serious harm. In the end that must be the test. Had these plaintiffs suffered serious harm by the critical date, October 1, 1950? The injured condition of the lungs has to be advanced the scarring has to be extensive before signs of the disease will appear in an X-ray examination. The judge made findings which Mr Waller was on the evidence unable to challenge, that, in the case of each of the plaintiffs except South, X-ray examination in October, 1950, would have revealed the existence of the disease. It appears from the judgment below (unless there was some misunderstanding) that in the court below, Mr Waller, after some discussion, conceded that he could not maintain the contention that a man who was shown by X-ray examination to have pneumoconiosis had not suffered damage. In this court, Mr Waller was not held bound by this concession and argued to the contrary. But without any concession, the point is clear from the evidence and the contrary argument cannot succeed."
"In deciding whether a cause of action had accrued at the stage of the pneumoconiotic condition which had been reached by the plaintiffs at the critical date, one has to envisage the possibility of an action being brought at that stage. Suppose that some steel-dresser, having reached that stage of the condition and having become aware of it by X-ray examination or otherwise, prudently decided to give up his well-paid occupation as a steel-dresser for some less lucrative occupation free from dust, and brought an action against his former employer for damages in respect of injury to the plaintiff's lungs and his loss of earning capacity. It is assumed that the employer had committed breaches of statutory or common law duty causing or contributing to the causation of the injury. It would be very remarkable if the plaintiff's action failed on the ground that he had not suffered any damage, because there was not yet any clinical symptom such as shortage of breath and not yet any loss of faculty."
"In my opinion, it is impossible to hold that a man who has no knowledge of the secret onset of pneumoconiosis and suffers no present inconvenience from it cannot have suffered any actionable harm. So to hold might possibly on the wording of the Fatal Accidents Act deprive of all remedy a widow whose husband dies of pneumoconiosis without having had any knowledge or symptom of the disease. And it would be wrong to deny a right of action to a plaintiff who can prove by X-ray photographs that his lungs are damaged but cannot prove any symptom or present physical inconvenience. It would be impossible to hold that while the X-ray photographs are being taken he cannot yet have suffered any damage to his body, but that immediately the result of them is told to him, he has from that moment suffered damage. It is for a judge or jury to decide whether a man has suffered any actionable harm and in borderline cases it is a question of degree
It is a question of fact in each case whether a man has suffered material damage by any physical changes in his body. Evidence that those changes are not felt by him and may never be felt tells in favour of the damage coming within the principle of de minimis non curat lex. On the other hand, evidence that in unusual exertion or at the onslaught of disease he may suffer from his hidden impairment tells in favour of the damage being substantial."
"At a date earlier than the commencement of the limitation period their lungs had suffered damage which would have been visible upon an x-ray examination, reduced their lung capacity in a way which would show itself in cases of unusual exertion, might advance without further inhalation, made them more vulnerable to tuberculosis or bronchitis and reduced their expectation of life. But in normal life the damage produced no symptoms and they were unaware of it."
Overall, I think that Lord Hoffmann was right to say that pneumoconiosis might advance without further inhalation. That is consistent with Pearson LJ's observations referred to under paragraph 16 above. On the other hand, it might be going slightly too far to state that any reduction in lung capacity would show itself in cases of unusual exertion: might is probably more accurate, and that would depend on the state of progression of the disease and the constitution of individual sufferers. The key point was that the scarring of lung disease was not neutral as to its health impacts. This was to be contrasted with the presence of pleural plaques which would never cause symptoms, would not increase the susceptibility of the individual to other diseases or conditions, and did not reduce life expectancy (at 290H).
"47. Whatever its strict meaning may be, the maxim in its less literal sense can be appealed to in the present context as an expression of legal policy. It is well settled in cases where a wrongful act has caused personal injury there is no cause of action if the damage suffered was negligible. In strict legal theory a wrong has been done whenever a breach of the duty of care results in a demonstrable injury, however slight. But the policy of the law is not to entertain a claim for damages where the physical effects of the injury are no more than negligible. Otherwise, the smallest cut, or the lightest bruise, might give rise to litigation the costs of which were out of all proportion to what was in issue. The policy does not provide clear guidance as to where the line is to be drawn between effects which are and are not negligible. But it can at least be said that an injury which is without any symptoms at all because it cannot be seen or felt and which will not lead to some other event that is harmful has no consequences that will attract an award of damages. Damages are given for injuries that cause harm, not for injuries that are harmless.
49. This approach does not seem to me, however, to address the fundamental point that, while the pleural plaques can be said to amount to an injury or a disease, neither the injury nor the disease was in itself harmful. This is not a case where a claim of low value requires the support of other claimants to make it actionable. It is a claim which has no value at all. Pleural plaques are a form of injury. But they are not harmful. They do not give rise to any symptoms, nor do they lead to anything else which constitutes damage. Furthermore it is not possible to bring the risks of developing a harmful disease into account by applying the ordinary rules of causation. The risks are no doubt due to the same exposure to asbestos. But they are not created, or in any way attributable to, by the pleural plaques. That can also be said of anxiety. It is the risk of developing a harmful disease in the future that gives rise to it. So also where the claimant is required to attend for the periodical medical attention and is worried about the results. Pleural plaques themselves do not require periodical medical attention. The need for this is due to what the pleural plaques indicate about the extent of exposure to asbestos."
The Claim in Contract
"How is the scope of the duty determined? In the case of a statutory duty, the question is answered by deducing the purpose of the duty from the language and context of the statute: Gorris v Scott (1874) L.R 9 Ex. 125. In the case of tort, it will similarly depend upon the purpose of the rule imposing the duty. Most of the judgments in the Caparo case are occupied in examining the Companies Act 1985 to ascertain the purpose of the auditor's duty to take care that the statutory accounts comply with the Act. In the case of an implied contractual duty, the nature and extent of the liability is defined by the term which the law implies. As in the case of any implied term, the process is one of construction of the agreement as a whole in its commercial setting. The contractual duty to provide a valuation and the known purpose of that valuation compel the conclusion that the contract includes a duty of care. The scope of the duty, in the sense of the consequences for which the valuer is responsible, is that which the law regards as best giving effect to the express obligations assumed by the valuer: neither cutting them down so that the lender obtains less than he was reasonably entitled to expect, nor extending them so as to impose on the valuer a liability greater than he could reasonably have thought he was undertaking."
Conclusion