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Nova Scotia

First Nova Scotia prosecution under Westray law begins

Elie Hoyeck is charged with criminal negligence causing death for the September 2013 fire at his car shop in Cole Harbour, N.S., that claimed the life of employee Peter Kempton.

Mechanic shop owner Elie Hoyeck charged with criminal negligence causing death

The owner of Your Mechanic Auto Corner, Elie Hoyeck, is shown in 2014. (CBC)

The trial of the firstNova Scotian charged under the so-called Westray law opened Tuesday in a Halifaxcourtroom, with the prosecution accusing the owner of an auto-repair business of disregarding safety in the lead upto an employee's death.

Elie Hoyeck is charged with criminal negligence causing death for the September 2013 fire at Your Mechanic Auto Cornerin Cole Harbour, N.S., that claimed the life of mechanicPeter Kempton.

Kempton was using a blowtorch to remove the gas tank from a derelict minivan when the vehicle ignited.Crown prosecutor AlexKeaveny said in his opening statement in Nova Scotia Supreme Court that thefire caused second and third-degree burns over 90 per cent of Kempton's body. He died later in hospital.

The Crown told the six-mansix-woman jury that Hoyeck is responsible for Kempton's death because, as his employer, he failed to adequately provide for his safety.

"He operated his garage with little regard for safety," Keaveny told jurors.

TheWestrayBill was introduced after the 1992 Westraymine disaster inPlymouth, N.S., that killed 26 miners. The Crown was unable to successfully prosecute mine managers under the existing legislation.

TheWestrayBill amended the Criminal Code to make it easier for authorities to hold business owners responsible for deaths or injuries to employees hurt on the job.

Peter Kempton was a mechanic at Your Mechanic Auto Corner when he died in September 2013. (CBC)

On Tuesday,Keaveny said at the time of the fireHoyeck was moving and in a rush to process as many vehicles he could at his business.

None of the allegations Keaveny outlined in his opening statement have been proven yet. Hoyeck has pleaded not guilty.

The first Crown witnesses were police and firefighters who initially responded to the fire call. The first officer on the scene, RCMP Const. Peter MacIntyre, said he was driving through Cole Harbour when he saw the smoke.

When he arrived at Hoyeck's business, MacIntyre testified, he saw a minivan fully engulfed in flames. He said he saw two men carrying what appeared to be a body away from the fire. He identified one of the men as Hoyeck.

The men set the body down, he said, and one of them grabbed a garden house to extinguish some flames. He said the man was naked and conscious.

Capt. Matt Parker of the Halifax Regional Fire and Emergency Service testified he was called to Hoyeck's business hours after the fire. He classified the fire as accidental, in that no one intended to set the vehicle ablaze.

Parker, who was certified by the court as an expert indetermining the causes of fires,said the source of the fire was towards the rear of the minivan underneath. Parker said in examining the scene he came across a piece of melted black plastic he believed was all that was left of the van's gas tank.

The Crown plans on calling about a dozen witnesses over the next 12 days.