Amosu & others - v - The Financial Times
Plaintiff | Paul Hannon |
---|---|
Job title | Sub-editor (SOC 2000: 3431) |
Task description | DSE use: sub-editing |
Injury | Tenosynovitis, Bilateral Tendonitis, Bilateral Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, Medial and Lateral Epicondylitis |
Defendant(s) | The Financial Times (SIC 2007: J58.13) |
Court(s) | London High |
Case No. | 96/NJ/2116 |
Date | 31 Jul 1998 |
Judge(s) | His Honour Judge Ian Kennedy |
For Plaintiff | |
All Plaintiffs | Akwemajhovi Amosu Paul Hannon Philip Little Patrick Stiles |
Solicitor | Stephens Innocent (EC4A 1AP) |
Counsel | Mr Brian Langstaff QC |
Non-Medical expert(s) | |
Medical expert(s) | Mr Alexander Benjamin (Orthopaedic Surgery) Prof J Edelmann (Clinical Psychology) Dr Anthony White (Rheumatology) |
For Defendant | |
Solicitor | Birketts (IP1 1HZ) |
Counsel | Mr Andrew Collender QC Mr Jonathan Waite |
Non-Medical expert(s) | |
Medical expert(s) | Dr Paul A Reilly (Rheumatology) Mr John Varian (Hand Surgery) Prof Simon Wessely (Psychiatry) |
Outcome | |
Judgment for: | Defendant |
Injury found: | No |
Work related: | No |
Breach of Statutory Duty: | No |
Defendant negligent: | No |
Damages | |
General: | |
Special: | |
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 there are no references in the Judgment to those Regulations. 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. Financial Times journalist failed to establish that the use of a VDU was dangerous and that, on the balance of probabilities, they were suffering from various musculo-skeletal problems as a result of using a computerised writing and editing system. In an action brought by the five plaintiffs the case turned on the examination of an apparent outbreak of upper limb disorders among journalists of the Financial Times during, in particular, the later months of 1988. The trial was occasioned by the claims of former sub-editors for damages for personal injuries because of the paper's alleged negligence and breach of statutory duty under s.14 Offices Shops and Railway Premises Act 1963. The plaintiffs complained of the working conditions at the paper's Bracken House premises following the commissioning of EDWIN, a computerised system for the writing, editing and printing of the paper. The plaintiffs accepted that the paper was a good and caring employer and that the breaches alleged were not representative of its normal high standards of employment. The paper, for its part, whilst denying liability, accepted that the plaintiffs had experienced pain albeit maintaining that this was not the result of any personal injury and certainly nothing for which the paper was liable. The plaintiffs did not seek to prove a repetitive strain injury ('RSI') but complained of specific musculo-skeletal disorders which were familiar in everyday medical practice. The plaintiffs claimed that their disorders were the result of inadequate research before EDWIN was introduced, of a failure to provide proper training in the health and safety implications of work at VDUs, of bad work stations, and of the pressure of work when the paper had moved to "front end" production. That move had been viewed with apprehension by the journalists and others but had been broadly successful. The paper denied that there was anything physically or ergonomically wrong with the EDWIN system. |
Click below for other cases in similar categories
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome | Epicondylitis | Lateral Epicondylitis | Medial Epicondylitis | Tendonitis | Tenosynovitis | DSE use: | SOC Major Group 3 | SIC Major Classification J
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Last updated: 16/10/2009