It Shouldn’t Happen… But It Did: The Dye and the Doberman #lawyerlytales

Silvertown is part of the former docklands out east of Canary Wharf and still a poor, tired and industrial area. But as the need for housing grows, those sites, especially with a river frontage, like Silvertown become valuable for residential developments.

I hadn’t thought about this upgrade recently until I was dispatch by the Vet on a collection task lined to her upcoming nuptials. But passing through last weekend brought back a memory from my legal career and one of the oddest cases – what might be called the yellow-faced Doberman.

It started in the late 1980s when an American client spotted an opportunity with the increase in colour printing in our national newspapers. Today, a free daily launched by a chubby entrepreneur called Eddie Shah, had the USP of incorporating colour in its pictures unlike the rest of Fleet Street’s publications. After all the old joke

what’s black and white and red all over?

a newspaper!

would have had no resonance if the papers were coloured.

Said client manufactured industrial dyes at an old site in Silvertown near to the enormous Tate And Lyle sugar factory. It wanted to expand and it happened there was an adjacent site that was a former paint factory. There were however two issues.

First the factory site was heavily polluted; paint had been made there for over 100 years so the ground was saturated with significant amounts of lead and cadmium amongst other heavy metals.

Second, the client’s existing premises were separated from the paint factory by a short passage that gave access to a public Park, a scrabby bit of open space that had seen better days. If the client was to proceed it needed to be sure that the environmental risks were covered off and it could buy the passage so the two sites could be merged into one.

The local authority were very keen on the deal. Employment, bringing a derelict site back into use, business rates – there were all sorts of pluses. They agreed to fund an impervious barrier between the paint factory and the park to ensure there was no additional migration of pollutants from one site to the other – our client would then dig out the paint factory Earth and dispose of the polluted soil. Where? No one asked.

As for the passage, well the nerdy Lawyer in me was very excited. The local authority owned it but, as it was technically part of the public park it was subject to the provisions of the Open Spaces Act of 1906 which, amongst other requirements, stops local authorities selling off public open spaces for some expedient short term gain. There are exceptions where the land is derelict and has been ‘appropriated for planning purposes’, which is all a bit technical and geeky and the sort of stuff that delights lawyers and annoys the pants off clients.

‘Sure, Geoff, but can we buy it?’

‘Yeeeees…’

‘So? You sound unsure.’

‘It may take some time.’

‘How long?’

I didn’t want to say what I really thought so I tried a bit of a joke. ‘Oak trees mature in less time’ but all that did was bring on a depression and some oddly artist hives behind his ears.  He sighed and muttered something about ‘this crazy-assed Limey legal system’.

Eventually we passed through these hoops and the paperwork to buy the strip of land landed on my desk. I rang the client. He sounded nervy.

‘What’s up?’ I thought he’d be pleased.

‘We’ve been talking to the authority. They’ve agreed to extend the barrier (to stop migrating pollution, you will recall) to cover the passage as well as the factory.’

‘Why?’

‘We found crap in the passage – old migration- and we don’t want it going further under our site.’

‘Sure. That’s good, isn’t it?’

‘It was. Not so much today.’

‘Why?’

He took his time. ‘I don’t think this is a good time for the Council to be digging next to our boundary to put in a barrier. We’ve had an incident.’

You see, our client had banged on about environmental protection throughout, boring the pants off the British side that was only just coming to terms with its own Environmental legislation similar to that which had been in place in the US for a couple of decades. At moments of frustration the client had suggested we in the UK were somewhat stone age in this particular area. Smug condescension with a New York accent really settles the stomach. However, the moral high ground rested with the client and he had milked it.

Now it appeared likely to be payback time.

‘The security guard for our facility was called to an incident in the Park yesterday. A local man had started threatening our staff.’

This local man was a well known member of certain right wing groups who used his body to display various less than liberal slogans via tattoos. He sported all the expected paraphernalia of one of such inclinations: the shaved head, the aggressive piercings and the attack dog held in control by a heavy chain and spiked collar.

He was spitting with rage at the security man. ‘What have you done to my dog?’

Dobermann Pinchers are excellent scent dogs. This one had a penchant for sweet smells and, it seemed had picked up some trail when our local jack-the-lad was walking him in the park. He hightailed it to the fence with our clients site, at the junction where it met the passage and where, any time soon, the local authority would be sending in its contractors to build the pollution barrier.

Unbeknownst to anyone – well that’s what I was told – the dog had found an area where a spillage of dye had leeched under the fence. A yellow dye. A strong concentrated yellow dye. The dog – let’s call him Spot – dug furiously in the ground hunting the source of this delectable smell. Spot pressed his face into the hole to lick at the sticky soil before our hero – let’s call him Horacio – could pull him away.

I expect Spot was disappointed. He probably looked at his owner with a long lingering expression. Disappointment was his overriding emotion. But it was nothing to Horacio’s reaction. His dog, his status symbol, his exemplifier of his masculinity had a yellow head. I expect Horacio tried to wipe the offending colour away but it was a forlorn hope. This was industrial strength dye. Spit and a hanky were never going to shift it.

My client had lost his natural ebullience. ‘How can I face the authority if they find we are the polluters? I need you to slow things down until we clean up our site. Can you do that subtly?’

Me subtle? He clearly had no idea. ‘How long will you need?’

‘You know what you said about oak trees….’

 

 

About TanGental

My name is Geoff Le Pard. Once I was a lawyer; now I am a writer. I've published several books: a four book series following Harry Spittle as he grows from hapless student to hapless partner in a London law firm; four others in different genres; a book of poetry; four anthologies of short fiction; and a memoir of my mother. I have several more in the pipeline. I have been blogging regularly since 2014, on topic as diverse as: poetry based on famous poems; memories from my life; my garden; my dog; a whole variety of short fiction; my attempts at baking and food; travel and the consequent disasters; theatre, film and book reviews; and the occasional thought piece. Mostly it is whatever takes my fancy. I avoid politics, mostly, and religion, always. I don't mean to upset anyone but if I do, well, sorry and I suggest you go elsewhere. These are my thoughts and no one else is to blame. If you want to nab anything I post, please acknowledge where it came from.
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29 Responses to It Shouldn’t Happen… But It Did: The Dye and the Doberman #lawyerlytales

  1. I Can just imagine the dog. It would look like an insect.😄

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I like that answer for how long something will take. It’s interesting that we don’t ask the questions to which we don’t want the answers. Everyone always looking for that loophole. Quite the story.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Ritu says:

    Oh wow!

    Did the deal ever materialise!?

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Feeling as I do about right wing idiots right now I rather wish someone would have put his face down where his dog had been digging………..

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Elizabeth says:

    The Vet is getting married? Sounds like a fun family time.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. willowdot21 says:

    I am amazed at the fact that you have survived.

    How much of the organisation of this wedding have you been entrusted with 😖💜🚴

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Widdershins says:

    Poor Horatio, one wonders if his ‘manhood’ survived the incident 🙂 … and everyone who is anyone knows who Alastor Moody is. He’s General Hux’s dad! 😀

    Liked by 1 person

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