Ratio Decidendi
Police officers who attended the Hillsborough disaster as employees were not entitled to recover for psychiatric injury as rescuers unless they were in physical danger themselves. There is no special duty owed to rescuers for psychiatric harm where they are not exposed to personal danger.
Facts
Police officers who attended the Hillsborough disaster suffered post-traumatic stress disorder. They claimed as employees (breach of employer's duty) or as rescuers. They had not been in personal physical danger.
Judgment Summary
The House of Lords held (by a 4-1 majority) that the officers could not recover. Rescuers were not a special category — they had to satisfy the normal rules for psychiatric injury claims. As they were not in personal physical danger, they were secondary victims and could not satisfy the Alcock control mechanisms.
Key Quotes
"To allow the claims of the police officers would be to allow them to recover where bereaved relatives could not. This would be unacceptable to the ordinary person."
— Lord Steyn
Subsequent Treatment
Confirmed that rescuers must satisfy normal psychiatric injury rules. No special category of rescuer.