CI_5408_1995
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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1997] UKSSCSC CI_5408_1995 (03 January 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1997/CI_5408_1995.html Cite as: [1997] UKSSCSC CI_5408_1995 |
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[1997] UKSSCSC CI_5408_1995 (03 January 1997)
R(I) 6/98
Mr. J. M. Henty CI/5408/1995
3.1.97
Prescribed disease A12 (carpal tunnel syndrome) - industrial buffing machine - whether a hand-held vibrating tool must be portable
The claimant worked as a cleaner using an industrial buffing machine. The machine was not easily portable, but could be moved by firmly gripping its handles and pushing and pulling it across the floor. On 24 October 1994, she made a claim for disablement benefit on the basis that she was suffering from carpal tunnel syndrome, prescribed disease A12.
An adjudication officer refused the claim on the grounds that the claimant had not worked in an occupation prescribed for this disease, as her employment had not involved the use of a hand-held vibrating tool. On appeal, the adjudication officer's decision was upheld by a tribunal on the grounds that an industrial buffing machine could not be described as hand-held: although it was moved and controlled by hand, it was not portable. The claimant appealed to the Commissioner.
Held, allowing the appeal, that:
- an industrial buffing machine is a hand-held vibrating tool, as described in the occupation prescribed for disease A12;
- a hand-held tool does not have to be portable. It is sufficient that an industrial buffing machine has to be moved, guided and manoeuvred by the operator, whilst maintaining a firm grip. The Commissioner followed CI/696/1994 and CI/514/1995 in preference to CI/160/1964 (para. 14);
- a fixed, static tool cannot be a hand-held tool;
- there was no dispute that an industrial buffing machine was a powered tool which produced its own internal vibration. The decision of the Commissioner was therefore unaffected by the amendments to the occupation prescribed for disease A12, which took effect from 24 March 1996.
The Commissioner substituted his own decision, that the claimant had been employed in an occupation involving the use of hand-held vibrating tools .
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"In his decisions [CI/696/1994 and CI/514/1995] the Commissioner decided that a buffing machine did satisfy the prescription test where there was a considerable and constant grip needed to hold the clutch and to steer a heavy machine. Having re-considered the case in the light of this decision the adjudication officer now wishes to withdraw the appeal against the tribunal decision of 24 February 1995."
It was not, of course, the AO's appeal so there could be no question of the AO withdrawing it. By the AO's reference to withdrawal, however, I take it to mean that the AO now supports the appeal. But even if it had been a case of withdrawal of an appeal, such would have required leave under regulation 20(2) of the Commissioners Procedure Regulations and, in the circumstances of this case, where there is a substantive issue for decision, I would have refused leave.
"Buffing machine is large and heavy and is portable although it rests on floor. User needs to grip firmly the handles and push and pull it across the floor. Handle has to be held firmly and started with button and "dead man's handle"."
And then the representative submitted:
"Distinguishable with sewing machining in CI/160/1994 which was static and hands merely rested on it. Just because it cannot be lifted up does not make it not portable."
This is not as comprehensive a description of the machine as might have been desired, but, from that, I take it to mean that the machine is heavy, and that it is not easily or readily portable, probably requiring more than one person actually to lift it. Indeed it was probably not designed to be portable in the sense of being easily carried around, since its weight may well be a significant factor in its efficiency in buffing. It is not an essential part of its actual operation that it has to be lifted at all. The tribunal found:
"As a matter of fact, the tribunal found that the buffing machine is a hand controlled machine which works by rotary motion which may have some incidental vibration, but no more than that."
However, the tribunal did not base their decision on the fact that the level of vibration emitted by the machine was negligible and could be disregarded under the de minimis rule, for in their reasons they said:
"[The definition] does not extend to the use of tools of any kind in which some parts of the operation may involve hand steadying or control. The description of the machine by the appellant clearly indicates that it revolves freely on the floor whilst merely guided by hand."
(i) CI/160/1994 concerned a fixed sewing machine. The Commissioner rejected an argument that any vibrating tool fell within the terms of PD A12 if it could be shown that any part of it was supported or held by the hand of the operator. In para. 14, she said:
"The expression, is however susceptible to the narrower interpretation that the expression "hand-held" is descriptive of the actual tool in function and not of the use made of the tool by the claimant. On this construction as submitted by Mr. Jones it therefore applies only to the particular kind of vibrating tool which is portable and held manually. It does not extend to the use of tools of any kind in which some part of the operation may involve hand steadying or control."
Thus, it appears to me that the Commissioner was making two points:
(a) The description of the tool in column 2 of Part I of Schedule 1 of the regulations is a description of the actual tool in function and not of the use made of the tool. I would not disagree with that statement. Nevertheless, it is, in my view, important to keep in mind that under the regulations it is the occupation which is prescribed, and, that means that the reason why an occupation is prescribed is closely and intimately tied in with the tool concerned, and the effect that the use of that tool has on its operator.
(b) The tool must be portable and held manually: a tool which merely involves hand steadying for control is not within the description. "Portable" is defined in the OED as "capable of being carried by hand, capable of being moved from place to place, easily carried or conveyed". However in the context of this case and in the consideration of what is meant by "a hand-held tool", I have little doubt that the Commissioner in CI/160/1994 used the word "portable" in the sense namely "capable of being carried by hand" or "easily carried or conveyed."
(ii) CIS/156/1994. This also concerned a fixed sewing machine. In this case, the Commissioner agreed with CI/160/1994 and thought that a tool is not "hand-held" simply because it required the application of a hand to be used, though at the same time he expressed the view that the criterion of portability might have to be reconsidered.
(iii) Finally, there are CI/696/1994 followed by the same Commissioner in CI/514/1995. The first case involved an industrial rotary scrubbing machine, used for scrubbing concrete floors, and the second, a buffing machine which could not have been significantly dissimilar to the buffing machine in this case. The Commissioner decided that the machine in each case was a hand held vibrating tool. While protesting that he was only "supplementing" the decision in CI/160/1994, clearly the Commissioner thought that a tool qualified if it was moveable and had to be moved to do its job though not necessarily being "portable" in the sense used by the Commissioner in CI/160/1994. He laid stress on the considerable grip of the hand needed to operate the machine. Neither machine in those cases could fairly be termed "portable" and there is therefore, a difference in principle between the dictum of the Commissioner CI/160/1994, where she applied the criterion of portability, and, in these two cases, where the Commissioner did not. That dictum was not strictly speaking, essential to the decision: what was essential to the decision was that the tool in question must not, as it was in that case, to be fixed.
"Only for one condition, carpal tunnel syndrome associated with the use of hand-held vibrating tools is the epidemiological evidence strong enough to satisfy our stringent demands. Consequently, we recommend to you that this should be added to the list."
And so it was. In para. 5, the report states, having set out section 76(2) of the 1975 Act:
"In other words, a disease can only be prescribed if there is a recognised risk to workers in a certain occupation that the link between disease and occupation can be reasonably presumed or established in individual cases."
The report continues:
"25. Biomechanical and anatomical considerations support the hypothesis that repetitive and forceful movements (including vibration) of the wrist and hand could cause or exacerbate carpal tunnel syndrome. Many case theories may have been reported, the majority of which suggest that repetitive or forceful movements are causes of the disorder. However, little weight can be given to these surveys in the absence of data on controls without the disease. Similar reservations apply to uncontrolled cross-sectional surveys or occupational groups. These have suggested high rates of carpal tunnel syndrome in butchers, meat packers, supermarket check-out operators and forestry workers. But the diagnostic criteria have varied from one study to another and without comparable data on other occupations the findings are difficult to interpret.
- Better evidence is available from cross-sectional studies that have compared the prevalence of carpal tunnel syndrome and subjects carrying out a range of jobs ... The findings from such studies tend to indicate associations with tasks that entail forceful or repetitive wrist movement, but estimates of the risk associated with such activities have varied widely and, in the better executed studies, have often been small. The most consistent observations related to work involving the use of vibrating tools. Four studies have indicated a doubling of the risk of carpal tunnel syndrome among people working with hand-held vibrating tools, although it is unclear how far the disorder is a consequence of the vibration and how far of the posture and grip required to use such tools, many of which are heavy or cumbersome.
- We conclude that there is now sufficient evidence to justify the prescription of carpal tunnel syndrome in relation to the use of hand-held vibrating tools. However, the evidence concerning other forceful and repetitive movement of the wrist is not sufficient to prescribe carpal tunnel syndrome in any other occupational categories."
(i) A common factor which causes carpal tunnel syndrome is "forceful and/or repetitive activities involving the wrist and hands"; and
(ii) The risk is doubled when hand-held vibrating tools are used, although it is not clear how far that is the result of the vibration itself or how far "posture and grip required to use such tools is concerned". However, it is only when the risk is thus doubled does it warrant the making of carpal tunnel syndrome a prescribed disease. Forceful or repetitive movements of the wrist and/or hands, which can undoubtedly lead to carpal tunnel syndrome, is not by itself sufficient to warrant the classification as a prescribed disease.
(i) Had I reached the opposite conclusion, I would have been in direct disagreement with the actual decisions in CI/696/1994 and CI/514/1995, whereas I disagree with the Commissioner in CI/160/64 only on the necessity for portability, which was in my view contained in a dictum which, arguably, was, strictly speaking, only obiter, and not essential to her actual decision vis that the fixed machine in that case is not "hand-held". Nevertheless, it is a dictum which has to be treated with great respect.
(ii) The decisions in CI/696/1994 and CI/514/1995 are dated
27 September 1995. The Department took steps generally to re-define "hand-held vibrating tools" following the decision in CI/227/1994, see also CI/474/1995. Had they been dissatisfied with the decisions in CI/696/1994 and CI/514/1995, they could well have taken that opportunity, then and there, to have clarified the position. That they chose not to do so, seems to me to infer that the effect of those cases is accepted.
Date: 3 January 1997 (signed) Mr. J. M. Henty
Commissioner