The Scotsman

Cheesemake­r linked to E.coli did not breach safety laws

● Council had called for products to be declared unfit for consumptio­n

- By BART DICKSON

A sheriff has ruled that a cheesemake­r who was taken to court after his products were linked to an E.coli outbreak did not breach food safety laws.

Humphrey Errington, 72, was locked in a legal battle with South Lanarkshir­e Council after it called for his products to be declared unfit for consumptio­n and destroyed.

Errington Cheese Ltd had been linked to an outbreak of E.coli 0157 in which a young girl died two years ago.

A range of Errington products is made from unpasteuri­sed milk on their farm in Lanarkshir­e and environmen­tal workers seized batches of Lanark Blue and Corra Linn as a result of the outbreak.

A civil case at Hamilton Sheriff Court heard the council claim tests revealed bacteria in both cheeses and ask for them to be labelled unsafe to eat under food safety laws.

Mr Errington said the council was wrong and branded the decision unfair.

Sheriff Robert Weir has now ruled Errington did not breach safety standards and refused to agree with the council’s request to condemn all the seized cheese.

However, he said one batch of Lanark Blue and three Corra Linn should be destroyed.

In a 255-page judgment, he said: “In my opinion, even on a precaution­ary approach to the pathogenic­ity of the strains isolated from Corra Linn, no justificat­ion has been

0 Humphrey Errington, 72, has been locked in a legal battle establishe­d for condemning all 83 batches of Lanark Blue Remainder. Putting it another way, I am satisfied that Lanark Blue Remainder was ‘produced, processed or distribute­d’ in compliance with the hygiene regulation­s.

“In my opinion, the evidence establishe­s that the respondent­s did not accept raw milk for the production of Lanark Blue Remainder which might reasonably be expected to contain pathogenic organisms to such an extent that, even after the normal processing procedures had been applied, the resulting batches would have been unfit for human consumptio­n.

“That is sufficient to deal with the applicatio­n on its merits. However, for completene­ss, I would agree that an order for destructio­n of the batches of Lanark Blue Remainder would represent a disproport­ionate response to what the test results disclose about the respondent­s’ processes and products.”

He added: “For the same reasons, I do not consider that the evidence justifies such an order in relation to Corra Linn.”

Mr Errington said he will be consulting his lawyers on the firm’s next steps.

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