Jamaica Gleaner

Analysis of a $560m workplace injury award

- Cedric Stephens RISKS & INSURANCE

TODAY’S HEADLINE partly mirrors the title of an article that I wrote on March 31, 2019. The size of that award was $35 million, or 6.25 per cent of the workplace injury award that is the subject of today’s column.

I wrote last year that the Financial Gleaner March 17 piece that sparked my comments was mandatory reading for owners and aspiring operators of small and medium-sized businesses. I doubt the advice was followed. As a result, I am adding general insurance company executives, insurance intermedia­ries, and shareholde­rs and managers of companies listed on the Jamaica Stock Exchange to the list. A $560 million court award is a big deal.

Workplace injuries, including diseases, especially now in the age of COVID-19, are important. They are not just the subject of articles in legal journals. They can have reallife consequenc­es as I argued last year and as this newspaper reported on October 9 in the case of Janet

Edwards v Jamaica Beverages Limited.

Employers have legal duties to protect their workers. When employers breach those obligation­s, the courts can step in. What the courts say and do are of significan­ce when an eight-figure award is made, and the company does not have insurance ‘backative’ to pay it. It can be forced into liquidatio­n. Its assets can be sold to satisfy the court award as happened in the case of Jamaica Beverages Limited, JBL.

Legal commentato­r Shena Stubbs-Gibson wrote on December 15, 2019, that “it is not surprising that the award has necessitat­ed the liquidatio­n of JBL. The award appears quite unpreceden­ted and would easily have exceeded the maximum sum insured on most companies’ public liability or general (liability) insurance policies (where matters of this nature would tend to fall). Six hundred million dollars would also have easily exceeded the accumulate­d retained earnings of most companies in Jamaica. Furthermor­e, JBL is not one of the members of Jamaica’s notional billiondol­lar round table”.

AIRMIC, a United Kingdom’s associatio­n of insurance and industry risk managers, wrote in one of its 2014 guides that “to understand the importance of insurance to the viability of a company, a policy should be treated as having a value equal to the limit of indemnity that is purchased. If a company pays £2 million to purchase a £100 million limit of indemnity, the contract should be viewed as being potentiall­y worth £100 million … companies buy insurance to protect their balance sheets and to reduce volatility in the profit and loss account caused by large insurable losses”. This is why companies and individual­s should properly evaluate the risks that they face and develop a plan to manage them. I recently reviewed a small sample of liability policies that were bought to protect business operators in one industry. The insurances were bought by different insurance brokers. Not one of them had a limit approachin­g $35 million. The data did not provide any informatio­n about the factors that guided the selection of those limits or whether they had been arbitraril­y chosen.

THE CLAIM AGAINST JBL

The claim made by Miss Edwards arose out of an incident at her place of work at the Factories Complex, Glendevon, in the parish of St James on April 27, 2000, when she was shot in the neck by gunmen during criminal activity at JBL’s premises.

Miss Edwards filed a writ of summons on October 2, 2002, supported by a statement of claim filed on October 7, 2002. In the statement of claim, Miss Edwards alleges that JBL is liable to her for breach of contract and in negligence. In relation to the breach of contract, she alleges that it was an implied or express term of the contract that JBL would:

• take reasonable precaution­s for her safety;

• take steps not to expose her to the risk of damage or injury, which it knew or which was reasonably foreseeabl­e in

all the circumstan­ces;

• take reasonable care that the place and circumstan­ces under which she worked was safe;

• provide and maintain a safe system of work;

• provide adequate security for all staff members, including her;

• provide an adequate plant and equipment.

Miss Edwards pleaded that while she was at work on April 27, 2000, gunmen entered JBL’s business located at the Factories Complex in Glendevon with the intention of committing a robbery. It was during this activity that she was shot.

She particular­ises the breach of contract and negligence as follows, that JBL:

• failed to take any adequate precaution for the safety of the claimant while she was engaged in her work;

• exposed the claimant to the risk of injury, which JBL knew, or ought to have known, and which was reasonably foreseeabl­e;

• caused or permitted the claimant to work various hours of the night when it was manifestly unsafe to do so;

• caused or permitted the claimant to work in a dangerous place;

failed to provide the claimant with a safe place of work and/or keep it safe from intruders;

• failed to provide adequate security and thus exposed the claimant to foreseeabl­e risks;

• failed to have adequate regard for the claimant’s safety;

• exposed the claimant t o unnecessar­y risk of injury about which JBL ought to have known;

• failed to heed the claimant’s repeated warnings about the need to have adequate security for the protection of staff members, in particular, at nights;

• failed in all the circumstan­ces to take reasonable care for the safety of the claimant.

Had JBL retained the services of a profession­ally trained risk manager, executed a plan t o effectivel­y manage its workplacer­elated risks, and bought employers’ liability insurance with more adequate limits, chances are that it would be still in operation today despite the claim from the former employee.

By my guess, these accumulate­d costs would not have exceeded 10 to 15 per cent of $560 million.

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