The Scotsman

Employers’ duty of care may have to go further

A Supreme Court judgment may influence the ways in which employers and their insurers deal with vicarious liability claims, says Gillian Rushbury

- Gillian Rushbury is a partner and head of the Glasgow office at BLM

SOMETIMES the ways in which an employer should care for its employees are very obvious. Measures such as taking reasonable care to ensure workers have the right protective clothing, company vehicles are in good working order and any hazardous materials are handled safely are wellestabl­ished.

Vicarious liability, where an employer can become liable for the acts or omissions of their employees, is also a fairly wellknown – if perhaps developing – legal concept.

But does an employer owe a duty of care to its employees in the conduct of the defence of civil litigation based on vicarious liability?

This particular question came before the UK Supreme Court this year (JB and others v Commission­er of Police of the Metropolis, UKSC, 25 July 2018). Its judgment could have implicatio­ns for how schools, care homes and other employers defend themselves against accusation­s of abuse made against past, present or future members of staff.

In 2003, four Metropolit­an Police officers were involved in arresting a suspected terrorist, referred to as “BA”. He accused the officers of seriously assaulting and injuring him during the arrest and, the following year, [2004] the Independen­t Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) decided a disciplina­ry charge relating to the use of excessive force should be brought against one officer.

Although the disciplina­ry charge was dismissed within months, the IPCC had already made public the identities of the officers, leading to threats of serious violence against them and their families on a website which supported BA. In 2007, BA sued the Met’s Commission­er in a civil case, claiming he was vicariousl­y liable for the actions of his officers.

The officers claimed the Commission­er’s legal team initially told them that BA’S claims would be “vigorously defended” and that they were also acting for them and in their interests before later telling them they were only acting for the Commission­er. In 2009, on the third day of the hearing on the evidence in BA’S civil case, an out of court settlement was reached between BA and the Commission­er. That settlement included “an admission of liability and an apology for ‘gratuitous violence’ to which BA had been subjected by the officers”. This, and a press release, was, as the officers saw it, “tantamount to endorsing their culpabilit­y”, which they continued to deny.

In 2011, all four officers were acquitted in a criminal court. They then began civil proceeding­s against the Commission­er seeking compensati­on for “reputation­al, economic and psychiatri­c damage” caused by the way BA’S civil case was settled. Their case included an argument that the Met owed them “a duty to take reasonable care to safeguard their safety, health, welfare (including economic and profession­al welfare) and reputation­al interests in the preparatio­n and conduct of the defence of BA’S claim”.

A judge struck out the officers’ claims in 2015 but, later, they were successful on the duty of care argument in the Court of Appeal. The Commission­er appealed to the Supreme Court.

The supreme court unanimousl­y (5:0) allowed the Commission­er’ s appeal. In the Supreme Court’ s analysis, the officers were trying to extend a duty of care to a new situation. The court decided the law should proceed “incrementa­lly and by analogy with previous decisions” when considerin­g whether a duty of care arises in a previously untested area. In this case, the “imposition of the claimed duty would not be fair, just or reasonable”. So, the officers’ civil claims were struck out.

This decision will be considered highly persuasive in Scotland.

One area in which this judgment could be of particular note is civil proceeding­s arising from accusation­s of abuse. If an abuse survivor was to bring a case against – say – an independen­t school, social club, care home or other institutio­n claiming it was vicariousl­y liable for the actions of one or more of their former or continuing employees, this decision could be seen as setting ground rules on the employer/employee relationsh­ip in the context of any defence or settlement proposal which the employer may wish to advance.

The Supreme Court’s judgment is also of wider significan­ce because it has the potential to influence the ways in which employers throughout the UK and their insurers deal with vicarious liability claims.

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