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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Hunter v. Baird & Co., Ltd [1904] ScotLR 42_245 (17 December 1904) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1904/42SLR0245.html Cite as: [1904] ScotLR 42_245, [1904] SLR 42_245 |
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Page: 245↓
[Sheriff Court of Lanarkshire at Glasgow.
The Workmen's Compensation Act 1897, First Schedule, section 1, enacts—“The amount of compensation under this Act shall be … ( b) Where total or partial incapacity for work results from the injury a weekly payment during the incapacity, after the second week, not exceeding fifty per cent. of his average weekly earnings during the previous twelve months, if he has been so long employed, but if not, then for any less period during which he has been in the employment of the same employer, such weekly payment not to exceed one pound.”
A workman was employed in a coalpit belonging to a firm of coalmasters, by a series of contractors between 12th October 1902 and 7th October 1903 at a daily wage. The contractors were employed by the coalmasters at a contract price per ton of coal brought up by them to the pit-head. On 7th October 1903 the workman was dismissed by the contractor in whose employment he then was. On 8th October he was out of employment. On 9th October he entered the employment of the coalmasters, his earnings being dependent upon his output of coal. On 12th October he was injured in the course of his employment.
Held ( diss Lord Young) that in assessing the compensation to which the workman was entitled under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897, no portion of his earnings prior to 7th October fell to be considered.
In an arbitration under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897, in the Sheriff Court of Lanarkshire at Glasgow, between William Hunter, miner, 50 Newton Street, Kilsyth, and William Baird & Company, Limited, iron and coal masters, West George Street, Glasgow, the Sheriff-Substitute ( Davidson) awarded compensation at the rate of 2s. 10½d. per week.
The claimant appealed.
The case set forth—“(1) That the appellant was employed as a miner in respondents' Dumbreck Pit, Kilsyth, under four different contractors, between 12th October 1902 and 7th October 1903. (2) That the said contractors were employed by the respondents at a contract price per ton for the amount of coal brought by them to the pit-head. (3) That said contractors employed workmen to assist them at a daily wage. (4) A fixed weekly sum was deducted from their wages for the general medical fund at the pit. (5) That on the last-mentioned date the appellant was discharged by Reid, one of said contractors, in whose immediate employment he then was. (6) That he was out of employment on 8th October 1903. (7) That on 9th October 1903 he entered respondents' employment as a miner, his earnings being dependent upon his output of coal. (8) That 10th October 1903 was a Saturday, being the conclusion of the trade week in the works of the respondents; that the appellant worked again on 12th October; that on that date, while in the course of his employment a stone fell upon his right leg, whereby he was injured, and that in consequence of said accident he has been unable to earn wages since. (9) That his total earnings during the period from 9th to 12th October 1903 were 11s. 6d., and that respondents offered appellant compensation at the rate of 2s. 10½d. per week.”
“On these facts I held—(1) That the appellant received injury by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment in a mine of which the respondents were undertakers within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897. (2) That the average weekly earnings of the appellant while in the employment of the respondents were 5s. 9d.”
“I therefore found the appellant entitled to compensation from the respondents at the rate of 2s. 10½d. per week from 26th October 1902 till the further orders of Court.
“I found the appellant liable to the respondents in expenses.”
The questions-of-law for the opinion of the Court were—“(1) Whether the appellant was in the employment of the respondents prior to 7th October 1903? (2) Whether, in assessing the compensation to which the appellant is entitled, any portion of his earnings prior to 7th October 1903 fall to be considered?”
Argued for the appellant—He was continuously in the employment of the respondents from 12th October 1902 until the date of the accident, and his earnings during the whole of that period fell to be taken into account in estimating the amount of compensation under the Act. Employment by the contractors was equivalent to employment by the respondents— Morrison v. Baird & Company, December 2, 1882, 10 R. 271, 20 S.L.R. 185.
Counsel for the respondents were not called upon.
Page: 246↓
The question is whether that was or was not continuous employment under the same employer. I should have thought that it was, and that if the man had been in the employment, say of a father who died in the course of his employment, and the business was taken up by his son, and he kept on the father's workmen, and the miner went on working at the same wages under the son as he had done under the father, I should have regarded that as the same employer. That is the only good sense of the thing, and therefore the meaning of the statute. When a mine-owner has the work done for him by contractors who employ workmen, I should have thought that the employment of anybody by these contractors to do the work in the mine-owner's pit was employment under the same employer, and that the real injury which the man suffered was deprivation of the work which he had continuously been employed to do for a whole year or approaching a whole year. To arrive at the other conclusion may be conforming to the literal interpretation of the statute, but is against the obvious meaning of the Act and the obvious justice of the thing to the sufferer in the very matter which the Act contemplates and provides that he shall have recompense for.
Page: 247↓
The Court pronounced this interlocutor—
“The Lords having heard counsel for the appellant on the stated case, answer the second question of law therein stated in the negative; therefore affirm the award of the arbitrator, and decern.
Counsel for the Appellant— Campbell, K.C.— J. A. Christie. Agents— St Clair Swanson & Manson, W.S.
Counsel for the Respondents— Salvesen, K.C.— Hunter. Agents— W. & J. Burness, W.S.