Corporate Manslaughter and
Corporate Homicide Act 2007
The Corporate Manslaughter and
Corporate Homicide Act 2007 is a landmark in law.
For the first time, companies and organisations can
be found guilty of corporate manslaughter as a
result of serious management failures resulting in a
gross breach of a duty of care.
The Act, which came into force on
6 April 2008, clarifies the criminal liabilities of
companies including large organisations where
serious failures in the management of health and
safety result in a fatality.
HSE welcomes and supports the Act.
Although the new offence is not part of health and
safety law, it will introduce an important new
element in the corporate management of health and
safety.
Prosecutions will be of the
corporate body and not individuals, but the
liability of directors, board members or other
individuals under health and safety law or general
criminal law, will be unaffected. And the corporate
body itself and individuals can still be prosecuted
for separate health and safety offences.
The Act also largely removes the
Crown immunity that applied to the previous common
law corporate manslaughter offence. This is welcome,
and consistent with Government and HSE policy to
secure the eventual removal of Crown immunity for
health and safety offences. The Act provides a
number of specific exemptions that cover public
policy decisions and the exercise of core public
functions.
Companies and organisations should
keep their health and safety management systems
under review, in particular, the way in which their
activities are managed and organised by senior
management. The Institute of Directors and HSE have
published guidance for directors on their
responsibilities for health and safety entitled
‘Leading health and safety at work: leadership
actions for directors and board members’.
Source: Health &
Safety Executive