Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

Derek Woodman MINI
Sponsored by
All New MINI One from £184.00 per month
T&C apply
 
 
Saturday, 4th July 2009

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the n/a site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

£100,000 award to cancer man's wife



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 06 August 2008
THE widow of a former golf club handyman who died from asbestos-related lung cancer has been awarded more than £100,000 compensation by a High Court judge.
Anthony Richardson worked as a live-in maintenance man at the Royal Lytham and St Anne's Golf Club from 1987 until 2002, but was to enjoy less than three years of his retirement.
He died, aged just 67, in February 2005 from mesothelioma, an incurabl
e cancer of the lining of the lungs, notorious for its slowness to develop and the agony suffered by its victims.
Left to grieve was his widow, Pauline, who testified at the High Court, along with her son, Paul, and whose evidence was today described as "patently honest" by top judge, Mrs Justice Swift.
Although Mrs Richardson claimed her husband had been exposed to asbestos in the golf club's boiler rooms, and during installation of a new heating system in the 1980s, the judge said experts were agreed that could not have caused the mesothelioma that killed him.
Instead she ruled the disease was the terrible legacy of his work, between 1975 and 1987, as a plumber and heating engineer, for small Lytham-based firm, G F Russell.
Mrs Justice Swift described how Pauline and Paul Richardson had, on February 3 2005, been told by a consultant that Mr Richardson had mesothelioma and had only a very short time to live.
They went to the hospice where he was being cared for to deliver the dreadful news and, when they asked him, he told them that he had been exposed to asbestos whilst working for G F Russell and another firm which had employed him in the early 1970s.
Mr Richardson died on February 24 2005.
G F Russell denied liability during the two-day High Court hearing, but the judge ruled, on the balance of probabilities, that Mr Richardson had "frequently encountered asbestos-based materials" in airing cupboards and bath panels whilst working for the firm.
The firm, which employs six people, was ordered to pay Mr Richardson's widow £118,610 compensation for his death and now also faces substantial legal costs bills.



The full article contains 363 words and appears in n/a newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 06 August 2008 2:41 PM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Blackpool
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.