[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Davis v Secretary Of State For Social Security [2001] EWCA Civ 105 (12 January 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/105.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 105 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
The Strand London WC2A Friday 12 January 2001 |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN
____________________
JOHN JOSEPH DAVIS | ||
Appellant/Respondent | ||
and: | ||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR SOCIAL SECURITY | ||
Respondent/Appellant |
____________________
MR C MAKEY (instructed by Pattinson & Brewer, 30 Great James Street, London WC1N) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Friday 12 January 2001
"In this matter there was no dispute as to the facts only as to the definition of the word 'forestry' referred to in CI/362/1994.
The claimant's [representative] indicated that the claimant had been employed as a forestry employee by the council since 1969. In 1980 his job title was changed to that of an arborealist. This did not involve a change in the job itself. It was contended that he fitted in the definition of 'forestry' as in the aforementioned Commissioners decision. He worked in large wooded areas of local parks in the main. Sometimes he worked in urban areas. He was involved in planting as well as management for ie during Dutch Elm disease in the 1970's he not only cut down dead trees but planted new ones. Only a portion of his job involved cutting down dead trees or dangerous ones.
The presenting officer contended 'forestry' implied the production of a crop. The Claimant's representative contended that the definition. . . was so narrow that it could only ever include some of the people employed by the Forestry Commission.
In allowing the Appeal, the Tribunal accepted that the Claimant worked in 'forestry'. He had been employed many years working in large wood areas and public parks. He not only managed trees but was also involved in the planting of them and not merely cutting down and clearing trees. He, therefore, promoted the interests of forestry, its development and management."
". . . to the employment of workmen in agriculture by any employer who habitually employs one or more workmen in such employment."
". . . horticulture, forestry, and the use of land for any purpose of husbandry. . . "
"Forestry meant planting and cultivation of trees and management of growing timber. The appellant was not the owner of a forest or a cultivator of timber, but merely a buyer of wood. The fact that he had to cut down the wood was merely an accident of his contract."
"The science and art of forming and cultivating forests, management of growing timber."
"I accept Miss Churaman's submission and reject the submission of Miss Ryde. In the context of paragraph A10, Part 1 of Schedule 1 of the Regulations the words 'in forestry' in sub-paragraph (i) mean 'in the occupation of forestry'. I cannot accept that 'forestry' was intended to include all occupations connected with forests which required the use of a chain saw however frequently. The claimant's occupation involved the destruction of a forest not the preservation of it."
"Was, during the relevant period, the claimant a forester? In his claim, the claimant stated that he worked as a craftsman/arborist for Liverpool City Council, and in a reply to an enquiry the Liverpool City Council advised that the claimant was employed by them from 4 February 1980 as an 'arborist-tree surgeon'. The claimant's employer did also add that the industry in which he was engaged was 'forestry'. An arborist is defined in the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary as 'a scientific student or cultivator of trees'. A slightly different definition is contain in the Chambers Concise Dictionary where an arborist is described as'a person who studies trees'. I can find no definition of 'tree surgeon' in the Oxford English Dictionary, but I have no doubt that it describes someone who cuts, trims or otherwise prunes trees. What is clear is that someone who studies or cultivates trees or prunes them, or for that matter cuts them down, is not necessarily a forester. He may be concerned as an arborist/tree surgeon with trees which form no part of a forest and do not qualify as growing timber. They may, for instance, simply be ornamental trees designed to improve the appearance of a city such as Liverpool. Where they are grown merely to enhance the scenery eg along the roadways or in strategic parts of the city centre or in parks, they clearly do not form any part of the forest, nor are they normally 'growing timber' cultivated as a crop for eventual sale for commercial use. Of course, when an ornamental tree reaches maturity, it may well be sold off for such a use, but that is not the primary purpose for which it was cultivated. It is merely an incidental consequence of the decorative purpose for which it was initially planted and nurtured."
". . . with the deliberate purpose of producing commercial timber, as distinct from merely creating an aesthetically pleasing environment . . ."
"In my judgment the words 'in forestry' in paragraph (a) mean 'in the occupation of forestry'. Like the Commissioner in R(I) 5/96 I cannot accept that 'forestry' was intended to include all occupations connected with the management of trees. Any fair reading of the Tribunal's findings of fact would not suggest that the claimant was at any time engaged 'in forestry' or was a 'forester' but rather that he was a gardener or a park keeper whose occupation involved the incidental use of a hand-held chainsaw. The management of parkland or garden trees, grown for the purposes of ornamentation, is not, in my judgment, the management of growing timber within the dictionary definition of forestry. The trees are not grown for their timber but as decoration."
"We accept the evidence we have heard as sufficient for a causal link to be presumed when a worker develops VWF of the severity prescribed whilst working in one of the occupations we have specified or shortly thereafter. We therefore recommend that in such cases the VWF should be presumed to be due to the nature of the employment, in accordance with the normal provisions of the prescribed diseases regulations."
"The Industrial Injuries Disablement Benefits Scheme was designed to compensate workers for industrial injuries and for contracting prescribed diseases, and the definitions of prescribed occupations should not be artificially narrowed. I do not see why a person doing essentially the same job in a city as is being done by a person in a forest should be denied that compensation. This appeal by the adjudication officer does not succeed."