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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Walsh v TNT UK Ltd [2006] ScotCS CSOH_149 (22 September 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_149.html
Cite as: [2006] CSOH 149, [2006] ScotCS CSOH_149

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 149

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD HODGE

 

in the cause

 

JAMES WALSH

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

TNT UK LIMITED

 

Defender:

 

 

ннннннннннннннннн________________

 

Pursuer: Mr Christine, Advocate; Thompsons

Defenders: Mr Bowie, Advocate; Simpson & Marwick

 

 

22 September 2006

 

Introduction

[1] This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained in the course of employment. Although the pursuer pleaded a case at common law, after proof he insisted only in his case under Regulation 4 of the Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 as amended ("the 1992 Regulations"). Regulation 4 (so far as relevant) provides:

"Each employer shall -

(a) so far as is reasonably practicable, avoid the need for his employees to undertake any manual handling operations at work which involve a risk of their being injured; or

(b) where it is not reasonably practicable to avoid the need for his employees to undertake any manual operations at work which involve a risk of their being injured -

... (ii) take appropriate steps to reduce the risk of injury to those employees arising out of their undertaking any such manual handling operations to the lowest level reasonably practicable ..."

[2] Parties agreed damages by joint minute in the sum of г6,650 inclusive of interest to 13 June 2006. Accordingly the only issues for determination are whether the defenders were in breach of their statutory duties under Regulation 4 of the 1992 Regulations and if so whether that breach caused the pursuer the injuries for which he claims damages.

 

The facts

[3] The pursuer is aged thirty-six. He has been employed by the defenders or an associated company since late 1996 principally as a collection and delivery driver. In March 2004, when the accident occurred, he was employed by the defenders. On 29 March 2004, he was instructed to take a consignment of goods by Mercedes Sprinter van from the defenders' Glasgow depot to the offices of the Department for International Development in East Kilbride. The consignment, which was numbered 39150691 in the defenders' consignment system, comprised five items which had a total weight of about 59 kilograms. The consignment consisted of two packages and three green tote boxes, which measured approximately 60 cm by 30 cm by 30 cm. When he was manoeuvring the second or third of the boxes out of the van at the premises of the Department for International Affairs the pursuer injured his back. He described the accident in the following way.

[4] He said that when standing in the back of the van he had had to bend as the roof height would not allow him to stand up straight. The boxes were located at the wheel arch in the back of the van and the second or third one was stacked on top of another so that when he started lifting the box its top was located approximately at knee level. He explained that he lifted the boxes by placing his fingers in hand-holds located under the lids. He stood close to the box and, when he lifted it upwards and towards himself, he was surprised by its weight which he estimated at 40 kg. He felt that the contents inside the box moved when he had raised it about six inches and he felt a sharp pain on the right hand side of his back. He then told an official from the Department for International Development who was receiving the goods that he had hurt his back. The official slid the box to the rear of the van and removed it.

[5] There was a dispute between the parties as to the weight of the box which the pursuer was lifting when he suffered injury. The pursuer gave evidence that the weight of the box was approximately 40 kg. He derived some support for the existence of an unusually heavy box at the defenders' depot on the day in question as Mr Robert Smith, who was a foreman employed by the defenders, gave evidence of having had difficulty in manoeuvring a very heavy tote box near the pursuer's van on the day of the accident before the pursuer made his deliveries. However I am persuaded that the box, which the pursuer was lifting when he was injured, weighed approximately 22 kg. Ms Julie Whitehead, a manager of the post room in the Department for International Development in London, gave evidence of their system of noting the weight of the packages which they dispatched using the defenders' services. She spoke to a manuscript note, which was taken from the consignment log which her staff completed, dated 26 March 2004 and marked with the consignment number 3915096910. It was thought that the last zero in the number was an error and that the consignment note referred to the consignment that the pursuer delivered to the Department's East Kilbride office on 29 March 2004. The consignment comprised five items and its total weight was noted as 60 kg, which may have reflected a rounding up of the aggregate of the weights of the packages. The heaviest box was recorded as being 22 kg. I accept her evidence and am satisfied on balance of probabilities that the manuscript consignment note accurately recorded the weight of the packages and that the package which the pursuer lifted when he injured himself weighed about 22 kg. Ms Whitehead also explained that she had been informed that the Department's contract with the defenders stipulated that individual packages were not to exceed 25 kg.

[6] I therefore do not accept the pursuer's estimate of the weight of the box. There was also a dispute as to whether the height of the roof of the van required the pursuer to crouch when lifting the box. The pursuer's evidence was contradicted by both Mr Grierson and Mr Ferrier (whom I mention in paragraph 8 below). While the pursuer may be correct that he stooped when lifting the box, I am not prepared to accept that it was necessary for him to do so. Nor am I satisfied that the pursuer's evidence, that he felt that something had moved within the box as he lifted, is sufficient to allow me to conclude that he was correct and that something did move. But I am otherwise generally satisfied that his evidence about the occurrence of the accident is reliable. It is supported by a contemporaneous accident report and the occurrence of an accident on that date is supported by the evidence of Mr Robert Smith and Mr Grierson.

[7] The pursuer suffered a sharp pain in his lower back on the right hand side. After the Department had taken delivery of their consignment, the pursuer drove to Hairmyres Hospital. There, doctors advised him to rest and not to lift anything for about four weeks. He was given pain killers and after about fourteen days started a course of physiotherapy. He was absent from work for about fifteen and a half weeks. He suffered some stiffness and pain after he resumed his employment.

[8] As I am satisfied that the weight of the box was about 22 kg, no issue arises about the lifting of weights in excess of the guideline weights set out in the Health and Safety Executive's Guidance on the Regulations ("the HSE Guidance"). Nonetheless, it is clear that manual handling operations are frequently the cause of accidents and employers are required to take steps to train their employees who carry out such operations in safe handling techniques in order to reduce the risk of injury. I accept that, as the defenders' operations manager in Glasgow, Mr Brian Grierson, explained in evidence, the defenders have a good record for health and safety, have achieved a five-star accreditation from the Health and Safety Executive in their Glasgow depot and other depots, and have instituted training courses which include training in manual handling. He emphasised the importance of manual handling training and of refresher courses. The defenders also had driver's handbooks, which among other things described safe lifting practice and which were placed in their lorries and vans. Mr Campbell Ferrier, a general manager at the defenders' Durham and Teesside depots, who formerly worked at the Glasgow depot, also confirmed the importance of manual handling training and refresher courses to the defenders' operations as it was not possible to eliminate manual handling operations in delivering parcels and boxes by van.

[9] The pursuer received training in manual handling on 13 May 1997 when he worked for TNT Newsfast (which appeared to be an associated company of the defenders) and, when he transferred to TNT Express, he received further training in manual handling as part of a regional induction course on 6 August 1997. The pursuer gave evidence that since then he received no further training in manual handling. The defenders' training record summary relating to the pursuer supported the pursuer's evidence as it revealed that he had not attended a refresher course on manual handling and dangerous goods held on 25 September 2003 but that he had attended a refresher course on fire procedures on that date. Thus his signature on a form for attendance at the refresher course on that date, on which the defenders relied, is explained by his taking part in only the fire procedures training which was given by a Mr John Lawless. I accept the pursuer's evidence on this matter.

[10] The lack of refresher training in manual handling is, in my opinion, significant in this case. First, it is clear from the HSE Guidance that manual handling accidents account for more than one-third of the accidents reported to the authorities each year. Secondly, the defenders' own risk assessment carried out at their Glasgow depot in February 2002 on the loading and unloading of vehicles identified that there was a medium risk of injury from the operations and recommended that the way to reduce the risk was to adopt correct manual handling techniques. While I accept that the defenders had a practice of placing driver's handbooks in their lorries and vans and that the handbooks included guidance on safe manual handling, it appears to me that the refresher courses which the defenders had in place were an important conduit of information to their employees on, among other topics, safe manual handling.

 

Submissions
[11] Mr Christine, for the pursuer, submitted that the defenders were in breach of Regulation 4(1)(a) of the 1992 Regulations and, as a fall back, he submitted that they were in breach of Regulation 4(1)(b) of those Regulations. There was no dispute that the pursuer was involved in a manual handling operation. He invited me to accept the pursuer's account of the accident as credible and reliable. There was, he submitted, a risk of injury in the sense that injury was a foreseeable possibility. In this regard he referred me to Anderson v Lothian Health Board 1996 Rep LR 88, paragraph 21-07, Cullen v North Lanarkshire Council 1998 SC 451, 455F-H and Taylor v Glasgow City Council 2002 Rep LR 70, paragraph 13-17. In view of that risk from a manual handling operation, the burden of proof under Regulation 4(1)(a) shifted to the defenders to prove that it was not reasonably practicable to avoid the need for the operation: Hall v City of Edinburgh Council 1999 SLT 744, 747A-C. They had failed to plead and prove that it was not reasonably practicable to avoid a manual handling operation when removing the box for the van. They were therefore, he submitted, in breach of Regulation 4(1)(a). In any event, he submitted that the defenders were in breach of Regulation 4(1)(b). Given the risk of injury the burden of proof shifted to the defenders to show that they had taken appropriate steps to reduce the risk of injury to the lowest level reasonably practicable: Davidson v Lothian and Borders Fire Board 2003 SLT 939, paragraph [22]. The defenders' system of training and refresher courses was designed to reduce the risk of injury but in the pursuer's case he had not received relevant training in seven years. Nor had the defenders demonstrated that it was impracticable to have used a sack barrow in order to minimise the number of manual handling operations in the unloading of the van.

[12] Mr Bowie for the defenders submitted that the pursuer was neither credible nor reliable and that he had failed to establish the circumstances of his accident. The pursuer had exaggerated the weight of the box and was simply incorrect in suggesting that he required to stoop in the back of the van. The pursuer's allegations that the contents of the box moved and that he had to stoop to lift it were not made at the time of the accident but emerged only later. There may have been an eye witness to the accident as he had passed the packages out of the van to an employee of the Department for International Development but the pursuer had led no corroborating evidence.

[13] Mr Bowie accepted that the operation on which the pursuer was engaged was a manual handling operation and he accepted Mr Christine's analysis of the case law. He submitted that the defenders had demonstrated that it was not possible to avoid manual handling operations altogether in unloading their vans: their risk assessment and the evidence of Mr Ferrier supported this conclusion. There was therefore no breach of Regulation 4(1)(a). In relation to Regulation 4(1)(b) he submitted that the weight of the box was well within what the defenders accepted as the safe limit of 25 kg. The lifting operation of which the pursuer spoke was a straightforward one for a reasonably fit man to carry out when standing close to the boxes. The pursuer might not have had the refresher training on manual handling in 2003 but he had had two courses in 1997 and he would have known how to carry out a simple lifting exercise where the box was being lifted from a position above his knees. He also had the driver's manual in his van. It was not reasonably practicable to use a sack barrow to move the box from the middle to the back of the van. He referred me to Kelly v Forticrete Limited [1999] EWCA Civ 1202 and sought to distinguish it. He invited me to infer that, from his training, the pursuer knew what to do and either unnecessarily stooped or, acting too hastily, snatched at the box and caused the accident. There were no other practicable ways of reducing the risk of injury from this particular manual handling operation.

 

Decision

[14] I do not accept that the pursuer's suggestion that the contents of the box moved as he lifted it in the absence of further explanation as to how that occurred. Nevertheless, I accept that he was injured when attempting to lift the 22 kg box in the back of his van from near the wheel arch. I am satisfied that the operations which the pursuer required to undertake in loading and unloading his van, on a regular basis and on the date of his accident, involved the risk of his being injured. I am also satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable to avoid the need for such manual handling operations. Regulation 4(1)(b)(ii) of the 1992 Regulations is therefore relevant. It places the burden on the defenders of showing that they have taken appropriate steps to reduce the risk of injury to employees engaged in manual handling operations to the lowest level reasonably practicable. See Davidson v Lothian and Borders Fire Board (above).

[15] I am satisfied that the defenders were in breach of regulation 4(1)(b)(ii) of the 1992 Regulations as the holding of refresher courses was an important part of the steps which they took to reduce the risk of injury from manual handling operations. The pursuer had not attended such a course on manual handling and the defenders' training record summary showed that he had not. Although his job involved lifting packages on a daily basis, he had not received training on safe lifting techniques since 1997. While I accept that the operation which the pursuer carried out was a straightforward one, many injuries from lifting operations occur in straightforward operations. It was and is important that employers should remind their employees of safe lifting techniques and discourage casual practices that cause injury. The defenders, recognising this, had introduced a system of courses. Unfortunately in the pursuer's case the system broke down and so put the defenders in breach of Regulation 4(1)(b)(ii).

[15] It is likely that that failure contributed to the accident. While the pursuer had received training in manual handling in 1997 and appears then to have understood the principles to be applied, I consider it likely that the reinforcement of safe practice at refresher courses would have encouraged him to adopt the appropriate posture and lifting techniques, which in this case he appears not to have adopted.

[16] For completeness, I comment on the possible use of a sack barrow. There was evidence that such barrows were available at the Glasgow depot and could have been used by a driver if he required one. It might have been possible for a driver to use a sack barrow in a van but I think that it is unlikely that a careful driver would have done so in the circumstances of this case in order to move a box which was on top of another box and which was within the weight limit imposed by the defenders. I am not satisfied that under Regulation 4(b) it was incumbent on the defenders to require their drivers to use sack barrows in such circumstances, provided that the employees were trained in and periodically reminded of safe manual handling techniques.

[17] I therefore award the pursuer г6,650 in damages together with interest at the judicial rate from 14 June 2006 until payment.

 


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