Alexander & others - v - Midland Bank plc
Claimant | Mulholland |
---|---|
Job title | Encoder (SOC 2000: 4136) |
Task description | Keyboard use: encoding cheques with right hand, handling cheques with left hand |
Injury | Regional Fibromyalgia |
Defendant(s) | Midland Bank plc (SIC 2007: K64.19/1) |
Court(s) | Court of Appeal |
Case No. | CCRTF 1998/1014 - 18 |
Date | 22 Jul 1999 |
Judge(s) | Lord Justice Buxton Mr Justice Rattee Lord Justice Stuart-Smith |
For Claimant (Respondent) | |
All Claimants | Alexander Lancaster Mulholland Osler Rolfe |
Solicitor | Lawford & Co (TW9 1UF) |
Counsel | |
Non-Medical expert(s) | Mr Graham J Coleman (Ergonomics) (At First Instance) |
Medical expert(s) | Dr Alastair G Mowat (Rheumatology) (At First Instance) Dr J C Robertson (Rheumatology) (At First Instance) |
For Defendant (Appellant) | |
Solicitor | Kennedys (CM14 4EA) |
Counsel | |
Non-Medical expert(s) | Mr Brian G Pearce (Ergonomics) (At First Instance) |
Medical expert(s) | Mr Colin D P Stone (Orthopaedic & Hand Surgery) (Not called at First Instance) Mr John Varian (Hand Surgery) (At First Instance) |
Outcome | |
Judgment for: | Respondent (Claimant) |
Injury found: | Yes |
Work related: | Yes |
Breach of Statutory Duty: | Yes |
Defendant negligent: | Yes |
Damages | |
General: | £ 7,000.00 |
Special: | £ 4,212.00 |
Other: | |
TOTAL: | |
Observations | |
References | |
References to and/or Interpretations of Regulations and HSE Guidance Documents | |
The Plaintiffs' alleged injuries arose prior to the Health and Safety (Display Screen Equipment) Regulations 1992 coming into force and it is also questionable, had they been in force, whether encoding desks come within the meaning of display screen equipment. There are no references in the Judgments to the Health and Safety (Display Screen Equipment) Regulations and only inconsequential references to HSE guidance documents. V1.01 | |
LAWTEL Case report | |
This case summary is published with the kind permission of Lawtel (www.lawtel.com). Lawtel subscribers can access the full report at www.lawtel.com or for a free trial of the service click here. The trial judge had correctly found that high pressure work on batch processing keyboards for a bank caused physical injuries to the various claimants, the risk of which the bank had ample knowledge. Defendant bank's appeal from a judgment of Judge Byrt QC sitting in Mayor's & City of London Court on 22 May 1998. The issue was whether the judge had properly been satisfied that the five claimants had proved that their injuries were a physiological condition caused by their work for the defendant. The judge had concluded that document processing work in the defendant's encoding room was an intense, tense and high pressure occupation which, depending on the individual's temperament and reaction to pressure, placed some workers (including the claimants) under considerable physical and mental strain. He had found that the managers saw it as their job to get the maximum productivity out of their team using a bracing style of leadership which did push some encoders beyond the limits of their natural capabilities. Poor ergonomics and the intense working regime had led to genuine physical injuries which were not psychogenic in origin. The judge had awarded each claimant £7,000 general damages for pain, suffering and loss of amenity, in addition to special damages. The defendant appealed arguing that: (i) the judge had reversed the burden of proof requiring the defendant to prove that something other than the working conditions had caused the injuries; (ii) the judge ought to have concluded that the claimants had not discharged their burden of proof; and (iii) the judge ought to have rejected the claimants' expert evidence in relation to the nature of the injuries. Full Text of Judgment available on-line to Lawtel subscribers. |
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Fibromyalgia | Keyboard use: (not DSE) | SOC Major Group 4 | SIC Major Classification K
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Last updated: 16/10/2009