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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Lochgelly Iron And Coal Co., Ltd v. Sinclair. Finnie & Son v. Fulton [1909] ScotLR 665 (19 March 1909) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1909/46SLR0665.html Cite as: [1909] ScotLR 665, [1909] SLR 665 |
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Apart from such special cases as that of a workman admitting actual payment of compensation or the receipt of full wages from the same employer, the Court will not suspend a charge, proceeding upon a recorded memorandum of agreement, so far as relating to the period subsequent to the date of the granting of the warrant to record the memorandum; while, so far as relating to the period prior to the granting of the warrant, it will not suspend simpliciter, but as regards that period will allow a
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proof if the complainer relevantly avers that the respondent has acquiesced in either the variation or the discontinuance of compensation, and if the averment is proved, will suspend. Opinion reserved by Lord President as to whether there could be “review,” in the sense of Schedule I, section 12, of an unrecorded agreement. The opinions of Lord Adam and Lord M'Laren in Jamieson v. The Fife Coal Company, Limited, June 20, 1903, 5 F. 958, 40 S.L.R. 704, commented on, and contrasted with the decision in Dunlop v. Rankin & Blackmore, November 27, 1901, 4 F. 203, 39 S.L.R. 146.
Expressions of dissent by the Lord President and Lord Salvesen from the rule laid down in Steel v. Oakbank Oil Company, Limited, December 16, 1902, 5 F. 244,40 S.L.R. 205, and Pumpherston Oil Company Limited v. Cavaney, June 23, 1903, 5 F. 963, 40 S.L.R. 724, and of approval of that in Morton & Company, Limited v. Woodward, [1902] 2 KB 276, as to the date from which payment of compensation “may be ended, diminished, or increased.”
The Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 (60 and 61 Vict. cap. 37) enacts—Section 1 (3)—“If any question arises in any proceedings under this Act as to the liability to pay compensation under this Act … or as to the amount or duration of compensation under this Act, the question, if not settled by agreement, shall, subject to the provisions of the First Schedule to this Act, be settled by arbitration, in accordance with the Second Schedule to this Act.” Schedule I, section 12—“Any weekly payment may be reviewed at the request either of the employer or of the workman, and on such review may be ended, diminished, or increased,… and the amount of payment shall, in default of agreement, be settled by arbitration under this Act.” Schedule II, section 8 (as made applicable to Scotland by section 14 ( a))—“Where the amount of compensation under this Act shall have been ascertained, or any weekly payment varied, or any other matter decided, under this Act, either by a committee or by an arbitrator or by agreement, a memorandum thereof shall be sent, in manner prescribed by [Act of Sederunt], … to the [Sheriff Clerk] for the district in which any person entitled to such compensation resides, who shall, subject to such [Act of Sederunt], on being satisfied as to its genuineness, record such memorandum in a special register without fee, and thereupon the said memorandum shall for all purposes be enforceable as a [Sheriff Court] judgment: Provided that the [Sheriff] may at any time rectify such register.”
Section 14—“In the application of this Schedule to Scotland … ( b) any award or agreement as to compensation under this Act may be competently recorded for execution in the Books of Council and Session or Sheriff Court Books, and shall be enforceable in like manner as a recorded decree arbitral.”
Two cases, actions of suspension of a charge proceeding upon a registered memorandum of agreement under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897, were advised together.
I. The Lochgelly Iron and Coal Company, Limited v. sinclair.—The Lochgelly Iron and Coal Company, Limited, Glasgow, brought a note of suspension of a charge, dated 5th February 1907, at the instance of Daniel Sinclair, miner, Dunfermline, against them. The charge, which was made by virtue of an extract registered memorandum of agreement under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897, and warrant thereon by the Sheriff of the County of Lanark, dated at Glasgow 20th December 1906, was “to make payment of the sum of £87, 18s. 9d. sterling, being 105 weeks' compensation ending 30th January 1907 at the rate of 16s. 9d. per week, agreed to be paid by you …”
Execution having been sisted upon consignation and the note passed, a record was made up.
The following narrative of the circumstances in which the suspension was brought, as set forth in the averments of the complainers, is taken from the opinion of the Lord President:—“The respondent, a workman in the employment of the complainers' company, was injured by an accident in the course of his employment on 12th October 1904. The complainers agreed to pay him, and did pay him, 16s. 9d. per week as compensation. No written agreement was entered into, and no memorandum of the verbal agreement was recorded at the time or soon after. The complainers continued payment to the respondent down to 25th January 1905, when they ceased payment, the respondent having, according to their allegation, completely recovered. The respondent left the mine of the complainers at the time of the accident and has never returned to them. On the compensation ceasing to be paid as agreed, the respondent took no steps to record a memorandum of agreement, but on 27th April 1905 he raised an action against the complainers in the Court of Session concluding for damages at common law. The complainers defended upon the ground that the action was excluded by the fact that the respondent had elected to take and had taken compensation under the Act. A proof was led, and on 8th July 1905 the complainers got decree of absolvitor. Nothing more was done till March 1906, when the respondent applied to the Sheriff-Clerk at Dunfermline for a special warrant to record a memorandum of the agreement, and on 18th May 1906 the Sheriff-Substitute granted warrant to record said memorandum. After a further delay the respondent eventually recorded said memorandum in the register at Dunfermline on 20th November, and in the Sheriff Court Books of the County of Lanark (the county in which the complainers have their registered office) on 20th December 1906. Upon 5th February 1907 he charged the complainers to pay, under the said
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memorandum, 105 weeks' compensation, i.e., from 25th January 1905 up to 31st January 1907.” The complainers pleaded, inter alia—“(3) The charger's incapacity having ceased at 25th January 1905 he is not entitled to charge for any compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Act after that date. (4) Separatim, the charger is not entitled to charge under said recorded memorandum of agreement for any sum of compensation prior to the date of recording said agreement.”
The respondent pleaded, inter alia—“(1) The complainers' averments are irrelevant and insufficient to support the prayer of the note. (2) The complainers' averments if and in so far as material being unfounded in fact the prayer of the note should be refused.”
On 15th November 1907 the Lord Ordinary ( Guthrie) pronounced this interlocutor—“Finds that the respondent was not entitled to charge the complainers to make payment to him of any weekly payments as compensation in terms of the statutory agreement entered into between them, for any period prior to 18th May 1906; to that extent sustains the reasons of suspension and suspends the charge accordingly: Quoad ultra repels said reasons; recals the sist of execution formerly granted, and decerns; and finds no expenses due to or by either party.”
Opinion.—In connection with an accident on 12th October 1904 the respondent was paid compensation for total incapacity by the complainers, in accordance with an unrecorded agreemententered into between them under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897. Warrant to record the agreement was granted on 18th May 1906. No application for review has been made by the complainers under section 12 of the First Schedule of the Act of 1897.
The complainers have been charged by the respondent to pay £87, 18s. 9d., being one hundred and five weeks' compensation from 25th January 1905, the last date of payment, to 30th January 1907. The respondent was not in the complainers' service after the accident.
The complainers maintain that they are not liable in payment of any part of the sum charged for, or otherwise that there can be no claim against them for the period prior to 18th May 1906, the date of the heriff-Substitute's warrant to record the agreement. The respondent's case is that even if wholly or partially recovered after 25th January 1905, the complainers remained, and remain, liable under the statutory agreement for the weekly payments, until review, under section 12 of the First Statutory Schedule. Or otherwise he maintains that he acquired a right from the date of the warrant to record, which endures till statutory review.
In my opinion the respondent's alternative contention is well founded.
By section 8 of the Second Schedule of the 1897 Act provision is made for recording a memorandum of agreement. The section proceeds-‘thereupon the said memorandum shall, for all purposes, be enforceable as a Sheriff-Court judgment.' I see no warrant for holding that a charge can be given on an agreement prior to the date of the warrant to record— Steel v. Oakbank Oil Company, 5 F. 244; Cavaney v. Pumpherston Oil Company, 5 F. 963; Nimmo v. Fisher, 1907 S.C. 890.
After recording, or warrant to record, it appears to me that the right to payment continues till review under section 12 of the First Schedule, except in three cases—( first) where the same employer has actually paid a sum equal to the amount of the weekly payment, whether that payment be made in name of statutory compensation or as wages. If paid as wages it will be held, so far as it goes, to include the statutory compensation— Beath & Keay v. Ness, 6 F. 168; ( second) where it is proved that there was an agreement, express or implied, between the employers and the workman that the weekly payments should cease; or ( third) where it is proved that the workman admitted that the incapacity has wholly ceased.
“In any case, no payment of any kind was made by the complainers to the respondent subsequent to 25th January 1905, and I do not find any averment of agreement, express or implied, between the complainers and respondent that the weekly payments should cease, or any relevant averment of admission that the incapacity had wholly ceased. The authorities do not seem to me to establish the proposition, which I cannot find in the statute, that an employer's liability would terminate on proof that if the workman had chosen he might have earned the same wages as before the accident, or even on proof that in point of fact he did earn such wages from other employers, unless in the latter case it might be held that such conduct on the part of the workman involved what Lord Stormonth Darling called a ‘practical admission’ by the workman that his incapacity had totally ceased. [See Nimmo & Company, Limited v. Fisher, 1907 S.C. p. 890.]”
The complainers reclaimed, and the respondent took advantage of their note to reclaim also.
Argued for the complainers (reclaimers)—The agreement was in respect of total incapacity. Not only had total incapacity ceased by 25th January 1905, but the respondent had totally recovered by that date. On the cessation of total incapacity the agreement terminated. Where there was a genuine dispute as to an agreement either ever having existed or being now subsisting, the Court to avoid injustice would give an opportunity of review by a common law process— Colville & Sons, Limited v. Tigue, December 6, 1905, 8 F. 179, 43 S.L.R. 129; Blake v. Midland Railway Company, [1904] 1 KB 503; Hughes v. Thistle Chemical Company, 1907 S.C. 607, 44 S.L.R. 476; Dempster v. William Baird & Company, Limited, 1908 S.C. 722, 45 S.L.R. 432. A suspension was a competent and appropriate method of review, and had been allowed in Beath & Keay v. Ness, November 28, 1903, 6 F. 168,
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41 S.L.R. 113, and James Nimmo & Company, Limited v. Fisher, 1907 S.C. 890, 44 S.L.R. 631. An application to end the weekly payments would not give them relief, as it would only operate from the date of the finding, although it was true that the contrary had been held in England in Morton & Company v. Woodward, [1902] 2 KB 276. The mere fact that formal steps were not taken by an employer to get rid of an agreement, did not necessarily imply that the agreement still subsisted— Colville & Sons, Limited v. Tigue, Dempster v. William Baird & Company, Limited ( cit. sup.) Argued for the respondent—(1) The Lord Ordinary was right in refusing suspension in respect of the period subsequent to 18th May. The memorandum of agreement registered did not specify total incapacity, and was not necessarily in respect of total incapacity—Under Schedule (1) ( b) a workman might be entitled to fifty per cent. of his average weekly earnings even for partial incapacity. A workman was entitled under an agreement to compensation until the machinery of the Act ended or altered the compensation— Steel v. Oakbank Oil Company, December 16, 1902, 5 F. 244, 40 S.L.R. 205; Pumpherston Oil Company v. Cavaney, June 23, 1903, 5 F. 963, 40 S.L.R. 724. A suspension was only competent in exceptional circumstances as the receipt of full wages from the same employer, as in Beath & Keay v. Ness and Fisher v. Nimmo ( cit. sup.) It was incompetent in a suspension to inquire into the capacity of a workman— Fife Coal Company, Limited v. Lindsay, 1908 S.C. 431, 45 S.L.R. 317. [The Lord President referred to Fife Coal Company, Limited v. Davidson, 1907, S.C. 90, 44 S.L.R. 108.] (2) The Lord Ordinary was wrong in granting suspension in respect of the period prior to 18th May 1906. “There upon” in section 8 of the second schedule did not mean “as regards payments subsequently becoming due,” which was the sense in which the Lord Ordinary had interpreted it, but merely “on this being done.” The section drew no distinction between sums due prior to the date of recording and sums subsequently due, and no distinction could properly be drawn— Finnie & Son v. Fulton (opinion of Lord Mackenzie in Outer House), the report of which immediately follows. Reference was also made to Mackay v. Rosie, 1908 S.C. 174, 45 S.L.R. 178.
II. Finnie & Son v. Fulton.—The facts of the case are given in the opinion ( infra) of the Lord Ordinary ( Mackenzie), who on 28th May 1908 refused suspension.
Opinion—This is a suspension of a charge to pay compensation under a Memorandum of Agreement under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897.
The material dates are as follows:—The accident happened on 23rd March 1906 and totally incapacitated the respondent for work. The complainers agreed to pay him during his total incapacity a sum of 9s. per week. They paid this sum down to 21st June 1907. Having obtained a doctor's report the complainers on 28th June 1907 refused to pay further compensation on the ground that the respondent was fit for work. On 26th July 1907 intimation was made to the complainers that respondent proposed to record a memorandum of the original agreement of March 1906. On 20th August 1907 the memorandum was recorded in the special register. The memorandum was recorded in the Sheriff Court Books for execution on 18th October 1907. On 27th November 1907 the complainers were charged to make payment.
The charge sought to be suspended was to make payment of the sum of £9, 18s., being twenty-two weeks' compensation from 28th June to 22nd November 1907 at the rate of 9s. a-week.
The complainers’ case is that the respondent's total incapacity ceased not later than 28th June 1907; that the basis of the agreement was the total incapacity of the respondent; that when this ceased the agreement expired and that the respondent could not two months after its expiry record it in the special register. They therefore want a proof in this Court to determine the question of fact, viz., whether the respondent's total incapacity has ceased, and if so, at what date. This appears to me to be contrary to the provisions of the Act and also to what was decided in this Court in the case of the Fife Coal Company v. Lindsay, 1908 S.C. 431 The Act provides, sec. 1 (3), that ‘if any question arises in any proceedings under this Act as to the liability to pay compensation under this Act, or as to the amount or duration of compensation under this Act, the question if not settled by agreement shall, subject to the provisions of the first schedule to this Act, be settled by arbitration in accordance with the second schedule to this Act.’ The Act provides that all questions as to a workman's capacity or incapacity can be determined in the summary method provided by the statute. The Court accordingly in Lindsay's case held that it was not open to the employer to resort to procedure by way of suspension. The complainers here sought to distinguish the present from Lindsay's case because they say that the respondent was certiorated by the fact of his complete recovery before the memorandum of agreement was recorded, and that in Lindsay's case the memorandum was put on record before the workman was certiorated of this fact. In putting their point in this way, however, the complainers appear to me to assume in their favour the fact which they ask a proof to enable them to establish. This in my opinion they cannot do. Various considerations were urged on behalf of the complainers as reasons why the present proceedings should be allowed to go on, and, amongst others, as is not unusual in these cases, the injustice that would be worked in consequence of the decisions in Steel, 5 F. 244, and Cavaney, 5 F. 963. Even if it were the case that the complainers are obliged to pay to the respondent more than the amount which if everything had been done in terms of the statute he would have been entitled to
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demand, that is just what happened in Lindsay's case. As Lord Low there pointed out, the Court was powerless to prevent the result because the question is not one of common law or of equity but of statutory enactments. Reference was made to a recent decision of the First Division in the South Hook Fire Clay Company case, and I have been furnished with a copy of the opinions delivered. That case, however, only decided that in a case where no memorandum of agreement was ever recorded the arbitrator was not right in holding that he could only terminate the compensation as from the date of his interlocutor. It is not an authority for the complainers’ argument that it is this Court and not the arbitrator that should review the compensation. Nor do I think that such cases as Beath & Keay v. Ness, 6 F. 168, and Nimmo & Company v. Fisher, 1907 S.C. 890, are sufficient to support the complainers’ contention. I may say that I am unable in a suspension of a charge to draw a distinction between the sums due for the period prior to the date of the warrant for recording the memorandum of agreement and those for the period subsequent thereto. The agreement which was recorded was one by which the employers agreed to pay the workman compensation at the rate of 9s. a week in respect of bodily injury caused to him by an accident which happened on the 23rd day of March 1906. They were therefore bound to pay that sum as from that date. The memorandum of agreement was not recorded until 20th August 1907 in the special register, nor was it recorded in the Sheriff Court Books for execution till 18th October 1907. When, however, it was recorded it appears to me to be a warrant for recovering the sums unpaid prior to the date of recording as well as the sums falling due subsequent thereto.
“I am accordingly of opinion that the suspension is incompetent and that the note should be refused with expenses.”
The complainers reclaimed, and argued— (1) As regards the sums alleged to be due subsequent to the date of recording the memorandum.—The agreement had expired before it was put on record owing to change of circumstances, and the charge therefore fell. The agreement was to pay during total incapacity, and that had ceased. If there was no subsisting agreement at the date of recording, suspension was competent at common law— Hughes v. Thistle Chemical Company, 1907 S.C. 607, 44 S L.R. 476; Binning v. Easton & Sons, January 18, 1906, 8 F. 407, 43 S.L.R. 312. The complainers were entitled to prove that the respondent's incapacity had ceased, and the mere fact that an agreement had been recorded would not exclude inquiry— Blake v. Midland Railway,Company [1904], 1 K.B. 503; Strannigan v. Baird & Company, Limited, June 7, 1904, 6 F. 784, 41 S.L.R. 609. The ordinary common law remedies had only been excluded in so far as the Act had substituted a statutory procedure. There were four stages of that procedure, viz. ( a) arbitration, ( b) recording, ( c) revision, and ( d) determination of the compensation. If the statutory procedure failed to do substantial justice at any of these stages the ordinary common law remedies were available. The present case was one not provided for by the Act, and the complainers therefore were entitled to the ordinary common law remedy of suspension. The case of the Fife Coal Company, Limited v. Lindsay, 1908 S.C. 431, 45 S.L.R. 317, relied on by the respondent, was distinguishable, for the respondent here had been certiorated of the fact of his recovery before he recorded the memorandum. Reference was also made to Johnston v. Mew, Langton & Company, June 11 1907, 23 T.L.R. 607. (2) As to sums alleged to be due prior to the date of recording—This question was not dealt with in Lindsay's case, and the complainers were therefore entitled to suspend at common law. To hold otherwise would operate injustice which the Act could not have intended. A workman was bound to register his agreement at once, and so long as he refrained from recording it he must be presumed to be satisfied. Sums prior to the date of recording could not be recovered, for an arbiter had no power to decern for arrears due under an agreement— Colville & Sons, Limited v. Tigue, December 6 1905, 8 F. 179, 43 S.L.R. 129.
Argued for the respondent—The Lord Ordinary was right. The case was governed by that of Lindsay ( cit.), which decided that an employer could not stop payment at his own hand and then prove that the workman had recovered. There was no relevant averment for suspension here as there was in William Baird & Company, Limited v. M'Whinnie, 1908 S.C. 440, 45 S.L.R. 338. The agreement was still binding, for no proper steps had been taken to set it aside, and having been recorded it operated as a Sheriff Court decree enforceable in like manner—Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 (60 and 61 Viet. cap. 37), Second Schedule, secs. 8 and 14 ( b). The complainers had a special remedy under the statute, and could not avail themselves of the ordinary common law remedies—Workmen's Compensation Act 1897, sec. 1 (3), and First Schedule, sec. 12. That being so, the present suspension was incompetent and should be refused— Cochrane v. Traill & Sons, March 16, 1900, 2 F. 794, 37 S.L.R. 662.
At advising—
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On the other hand, if the judgment of Lord Mackenzie (Lord Ordinary) in the case of Finnie, which follows this case, is correct, there would be no alternative but to find the letters orderly proceeded for the whole period. His Lordship says in that case—“I am unable to draw a distinction between the sum due for the period prior to the date of the warrant for recording the memorandum of agreement and those for the period subsequent thereto.” It is obvious that the case thus raises a point of great general importance, and I have given the matter my most careful consideration from the point of view of the general working of the Act.
I think it advisable that I should first consider precisely the steps of procedure contemplated by the Act, and indicate thereafter the points which have been clearly settled by decision. This seems the more necessary as most of the points have arisen under the Act of 1897, under which no appeal to the House of Lords was competent. These decisions, though binding on me, are not binding on the Higher Court. But the actual case before us, though under the older Act, yet being a suspension at common law, is appealable; and further, the rule we lay down in this case will regulate cases under the Act of 1906, under which appeal to the House of Lords is competent.
It is clear that one of the studied objects of the framers of the Workmen's Compensation Act was to avoid litigation as far as possible. Accordingly, section 1 (3), which provides for the settlement of questions as to liability for compensation, only makes arrangement for arbitration “if not settled by agreement.” In other words, agreement is, if possible, favoured by the Act. And in practice it is well known that hundreds of cases are settled by agreement and do not come to arbitration at all. If there is not agreement, then there is arbitration, which results, if favourable to the workman, in a finding of the compensation due. It was, however, necessary to provide some means of execution short of raising an ordinary action which the Act, as I have said, sought to avoid. Accordingly, in the 2nd schedule, section 8, provision is made for the registration of a memorandum. In this matter the amount of compensation determined is equally dealt with whether its original ascertainment depended on agreement or on decision by a committee or on arbitration. Now section 8 is framed with a view to English procedure, and provides that the memorandum when registered by the registrar of the County Court should be enforceable as a County Court judgment.
Now I have very great doubts as to whether the framers of this clause ever contemplated that agreements, of which memoranda should be registered, should ever be anything except agreements in writing signed or otherwise authenticated by the parties thereto or their accredited agents. The use of the word genuineness in the section points all this way; and further, the permitting of the registration of a verbal agreement by a memorandum, necessarily composed ex parte, opens the door to exactly what the Act wanted to avoid, namely, litigation. For if one party, namely, the workman, arrives with a memorandum which the other, the employer, says sets forth an agreement which he never made, there must then be an inquiry as to which is right. This in England has been held to be an inquiry at law; from the decision of the County Court judge there is an appeal to the Divisional Court; then to the Court of Appeal; and then, if you like, to the House of Lords; whereas all this litigation might be rendered impossible, without any prejudice to the workman, by holding that if there was a signed agreement then it would be registered, but that if not and parties were not at one, then there would be no registration, but the workman must proceed at once to arbitration, under which, be it observed, he would be entitled to get a finding for compensation as from the date of the accident, a memorandum of which finding would then be registered.
That this was the view of the framer of the Scottish application clause is quite clear, had it not been defeated by a curious Parliamentary accident, which if I were using it for interpretation I should have no right to mention, but which, as for reasons presently to be given I am not using it, may be interesting to mention. The Scottish application clause is section 14, and says, after substituting Sheriff Court for County Court and sheriff clerk for registrar—“Any award or agreement as to compensation under this Act may be competently recorded for execution in the Books of Council and Session or Sheriff Court Books, and shall be enforceable in like manner as a recorded decree-arbitral.”
Now had this section stood alone there could have been no doubt. Your Lordships will observe there is no mention of memorandum; it is an agreement which is to be recorded, and that would only be a written agreement. Standing, therefore, by itself that section would have carried out for Scotland the intention of the framers of the Act. And originally it did stand alone. For section 15 provides that sections 4 and 7 of the Schedule shall not apply to Scotland, and the section I have quoted as section 8 was section 7 as the Bill left the Commons. But in the Lords at the last moment a new section was interpolated dealing with another matter and was numbered 7. This made the old section 7 into section 8, and it was never noticed that section 15 needed a corresponding alteration.
Now this long explanation leads to this. Not long after the Act passed the question was raised as to whether a memorandum
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The next vital point decided was that such a memorandum could be registered at any time, i.e., no matter how long after the accident, and incidentally that it was an irrelevant objection to registration that the workman had long ago completely recovered ( Cammick v. Glasgow Iron and Steel Company, 4 F. 198; Dunlop v. Renton, 4 F. 203; and Baird v. Stevenson, 1907 S.C. 1259).
And lastly, it was decided that a finding in an arbitration varying or putting an end to weekly payments operated only as from the date of the finding pronounced, and not as from the date of application ( Steel v. Oakbank Oil Company, 5 F. 244; and Pumpherston Oil Company v. Cavaney, 5 F. 963); though here there were two dissentient judges, and the English Court of Appeal have decided the other way ( Johnston & Company v. Woodward, [1902], 2 K.B. 276).
Now as regards the period after the warrant to record the memorandum, I do not think there ought to be any difficulty. However long a workman holds back, the employer knows that the moment the agreement is recorded, he is liable to be charged under it, and I see no hardship in holding that he must be held as content with the situation unless he proceeds to put an end to it in the way provided for by the statute—namely, by an application to the Sheriff as arbiter to vary or put an end to the compensation agreed on. To allow a suspension in such a case would, I think, be to defeat the obvious purpose of the statute. It was so held by the other Division in the case of Fife Coal Company v. Lindsay ( 1908 S.C. 431). I respectfully agree with that decision. The only element of hardship consists in the fact that as the decisions of Steel and Pumpherston stand the employer might have to pay for the period which elapsed before the finding in the arbitration. But inasmuch, as I have already mentioned, as there are two dissentients in the decisions, and there is a decision of the English Court of Appeal the other way, and as my own view at present and that of at least one of your
Lordships is with the dissentient judges, that decision, if it is not settled by the House of Lords, will have on the most suitable occasion to be reconsidered by a Court of Seven Judges.
As regards the period anterior to the warrant to record, the argument stands otherwise, and I am not able to agree with either Lord Ordinary. It does not indeed seem to have been argued to them that there was any course open except a suspension simpliciter on the one hand, and to find the letters orderly proceeded on the other. To either of these courses there seem to me insuperable objections. If the first were taken, i.e., if it were laid down that no recorded memorandum could authorise a charge for compensation for a period before the date of the warrant to record, then in every case the employer might defeat the workman's right to compensation from the beginning of the period after the accident until he had time to get his agreement recorded. And indeed, so far as I see, the same result would follow even when the award was made under an arbitration, which in some cases might cut out several weeks, and is obviously not intended by the Act. If, however, the letters must be held orderly proceeded (with a few exceptions such as, e.g., actual payment, or the receipt of full wages by the same employer, and other special cases such as Nimmo, 1907 S.C. 890), then still graver consequences arise. For then it is possible for a workman to lull his employer into security by acquiescing in the payment of modified compensation or in the stopping of compensation altogether; he may go away and earn full wages with another employer, and then after, say, ten years he may suddenly register his memorandum and charge for the whole period. I will assume that there can be shown to be no question of the “genuineness” of the memorandum as registered, i.e., it truly represents the agreement made shortly after the accident to pay compensation at a certain rate while incapacity continued. And to this the employer would have no relevant defence. There would be an obvious and glaring injustice, and I have no hesitation in saying that I agree with Lord Salvesen, whose opinion in this case I have had the advantage of perusing, in saying that if we so found we should open the door to floods of unjust claims.
It was argued that it was the employer's business in all cases when he paid compensation, and when he ascertained the workman had wholly or partially recovered, to make an application for review under section 12 of the 1st schedule. I have grave doubts as to whether there can be “review” in the sense of section 12 of an unrecorded agreement. I am aware that an opinion in favour of the competency was pronounced by Lord Adam and concurred in by Lord M'Laren in Jamieson v. Fife Coal Company ( 5 F. 958). But that case is, I think, hopelessly at variance with the case of Dunlop v. Rankin ( 4 F. 203), and I should wish to reserve my opinion on this point, and as
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For these reasons I am against the view of both Lords Ordinary. But there remains another way which does not seem to have been argued before them, and which seems to me the true solution of the question. It is not to find the letters orderly proceeded, and not to suspend simpliciter, but to allow a proof where the complainer avers that the respondent has acquiesced in either the variation or the discontinuance of compensation, and if that averment is proved to suspend. The averments in the present case are a good instance of such an averment, and illustrate well the injustice of all inquiry being shut out. I am, of course, hoc statu, entitled to assume that the averments are true. The workman after the accident obtained compensation. It was compensation voluntarily paid by the employers for a certain period. He recovered, and they stopped the compensation. His next step is to raise an action at common law, a step absolutely inconsistent on his part with the idea of there being a subsisting agreement to pay compensation. On that action being dismissed he again does nothing for many months, and then, suddenly changing his attitude, he registers a memorandum, and upon registration charges the employers to make payment for a period of over two years under an agreement which he now for the first time alleges to exist. All this, however, is upon the assumption that the complainer's statements are true. They are not admitted by the respondent, and some are denied categorically. It would therefore, I think, be just as unjust to the respondent to suspend simpliciter without ascertainment of facts, just because the sum charged for is for a period anterior to the warrant to recover the memorandum.
I am therefore of opinion that we should sustain the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor so far as it repels the reasons of suspension, i.e., for the period subsequent to 18th May 1906; and that as regards the rest we should recal the interlocutor and remit to him to allow the complainers a proof of their averments and to the respondent a conjunct probation, and thereafter to dispose of the case as accords.
II. Finnie & Son v. Fulton—In this case it only remains for me to apply the principles I have just expressed in the Lochgelly case. I do not find here any relevant averments for suspension of the charge. The facts are that the complainers agreed to pay, and did pay, compensation at a certain rate from 23rd March 1906, the date of the accident, down to 21st June 1907. At the end of the next week, having obtained a doctor's report, they refused to pay any more. On 26th July the respondent intimated he would thereupon record his agreement, and this was done upon 20th August. In this it seems to me there was no undue delay, and far less any such proceeding as to lead the complainers to suppose that the respondent acquiesced in the ceasing of the payment of compensation. The complainers ought to have met the proposal to register with a counter application to be heard at the same time to have the compensation varied or ended.
So far as argument was based on the speciality of the particular wording of the agreement I agree with the view of the Lord Ordinary and have nothing to add to what he says. On the general result I think his interlocutor is right and must be affirmed, though, as explained, I reach this result on different grounds from his Lordship.
The respondent thereupon raised an action at common law in the Court of Session for damages in respect of his injuries. The summons was signeted on 25th April 1905, and after proof had been led the Lord Ordinary found that the action was excluded by the respondent having elected to take, and having taken, compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Act. This judgment was acquiesced in. It implied an agreement between the complainers and the respondent that the respondent was to receive compensation from them under the Workmen's Compensation Act.
On 17th February 1906 the respondent lodged a memorandum of the agreement between him and the complainers, and presented it for registration in the Sheriff Court Books of Lanarkshire. The complainers objected to the memorandum being recorded, but after sundry proceedings the
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The question is one the general importance of which can scarcely be exaggerated. The argument for the respondent assumes that if a workman has been injured in the course of his employment and has been in receipt of compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Act for any period however short and has then entirely recovered, the employer will nevertheless be liable to continue to pay him weekly the maximum compensation whenever the workman chooses at whatever distance of time to record a memorandum of agreement under which he originally received it. In other words, although the intention of the Act was that the workman should be paid only during incapacity, according to this view the workman would be entitled to receive compensation after incapacity had entirely ceased until it was judicially declared to be ended. The Act has been in operation for eleven years, during which no decision involving this proposition has been pronounced; but it would be a mistake to assume that the fact that a new Act has now come into operation makes the question one of small practical importance. On the contrary, it may be safely affirmed that it would apply to many, if not indeed to a majority, of the cases in which compensation has been paid under the former Act; and if it. were sustained would inevitably create a crop of claims of a dishonest character. Indeed, the extent of the evil which a decision on the lines of the respondent's contention would produce will at once become apparent when regard is had to the ordinary way in which claims for compensation have hitherto been settled.
The object of the Act was to minimise as much aspossible judicial procedure. Accordingly as soon as an accident occurred to which the Act admittedly applied it was, as a rule, in the interests of both parties that the amount of compensation payable should be fixed by agreement. The employer thereby avoided any proceedings at common law or under the Employers' Liability Act, and the workman obtained immediate relief without the necessity of proving fault. The vast majority of small accidents were accordingly settled by the employer paying compensation under the Act and continuing such payments until he had information that the injured man had entirely recovered from its effects. The payments were then stopped, and the stoppage acquiesced in by the workman. The fact of recovery was in the ordinary case capable of instant ascertainment, as, for instance, when the workman had resumed his former employment and was earning the same wages as he had received before the accident. If, however, the contention of the respondent is well founded, a man who was injured in 1898 and received compensation for a few weeks and then resumed his former employment would be entitled now to record the original agreement and charge the employer to pay him half wages during the period of ten years during the whole of which he had been receiving full wages. The only possible answers which the employer could make to such a claim would be (1) that the agreement to pay compensation had been terminated by mutual consent, or (2) that he had himself been paying the workmen his wages; when on the authority of Beath & Keay v. Ness ( 6 F. 168) he would escape on the ground that such payments must be held as including any compensation legally due. Such a defence would only apply to the comparatively rare case of the workman resuming employment with his previous employer and continuing in it. No doubt an agreement to end the compensation would readily be inferred in the case figured owing to the long acquiescence of the workman in the stoppage of the compensation, but it would always be a difficult thing to determine what period of acquiescence would be sufficient, for that might vary infinitely according to circumstances, and might give rise to endless litigation which it was the object of the Act to avoid.
Before dealing with the precise question raised it is desirable to see what has actually been decided. In the first place, it has been held both in Scotland and England that a memorandum of agreement may be recorded at any time, although when the memorandum is presented for registration
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One other matter has been conclusively settled by authority. Where the employer's liability to pay compensation has been judicially ascertained either by an award of the arbitrator or by its equivalent a recorded memorandum of agreement, such liability can only be terminated by the judgment of the arbitrator on an application made to him by the employer. On this matter all the judges who took part in the following three decisions— Steel v. Oak-bank Oil Company, 5 F. 244; Cavaney v. Pumpherston Oil Company, 5 F. 963; and Morton v. Woodward, 1903, 2 K.B. 276—were absolutely agreed. There is no doubt a conflict between the Scotch and English tribunals as to the date on which the cesser of liability takes place, the former holding that it can only operate from the date of the actual decision, while the view taken in England is that the arbitrator has jurisdiction to review the payments as from the date of the application. If the question is to be still open, I should have no difficulty in concurring with the reasoning of the English judges in the case of Woodward, and with the opinions of the dissenting judges in the two Scotch cases. The leading purpose of the Act was to provide for payment of compensation during incapacity only; and while it provided a very summary and inexpensive mode for recovering such compensation and established a tribunal by which alone the amount of compensation could be reviewed or ended, there is nothing in the language of the section which affords any obstacle to the construction put upon it by the dissenting judges in Scotland or the Appeal Court in England. That being so, I should have thought that the ordinary rule which, to adopt the language of the Master of the Rolls, applies to all other legal procedure, would have applied here—namely, that the Court will decide the dispute when it is formulated, and not as at the date when it is able to give its attention to the matter. The other view is open to the manifest objection that for a period, which may be long or short according to the promptitude of the tribunal in dealing with the matter, the workman shall receive as matter of right compensation during a period when he was in fact not incapacitated, the arbitrator being unable to give effect to his own judicial determination. This matter is, however, not of importance in the present case.
The cases above referred to justify the Lord Ordinary in sustaining the regularity of the charge for the period subsequent to 18th May 1906. It is true that on the complainer's statement this results in their having to pay a sum of over £50 to which the respondent has no claim. For this, however, they have themselves to blame. When the memorandum of agreement was recorded at the respondent's instance notwithstanding their objections, they ought at once to have presented an application to have the agreement ended. There was then what is equivalent to a decree against them for the sum contained in the memorandum, and that decree they were bound to implement until they took the only available method of having it reviewed or ended. That is the ground of judgment in both the Scotch cases above referred to; and looking to the provisions of the statute it seems to me to be unassailable. On any other view it would be competent to ascertain by evidence in a suspension of the charge not merely whether the workman had completely recovered from his injury, but also whether he had recovered to such an extent that the compensation ought to be materially diminished, questions which I think can only be determined by the statutory tribunal, and in the summary method prescribed.
In the three cases referred to the Courts were dealing either with the effect of a recorded agreement or of an award by the arbitrator, and with compensation due subsequent to the date of recording. There is no decision that when an agreement is recorded it shall operate retrospectively; and, in my opinion, the grounds upon which the cases of Steel and Cavaney were decided are not applicable to such a case. There is no presumption that the employer is in default at all during the period prior to the memorandum of agreement being recorded. Up to that time his liability depends not upon any judgment of the Court but upon an informal agreement between him and his employee. No doubt the employee has the right of converting
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The view that acquiescence in the stoppage of the compensation only affects the workman during the period that it continues must also in many cases have been to the workman's advantage. When the compensation payments ceased the workman may have been earning full wages; and an arbitrator at that time, if applied to, would have ended the liability; but it not infrequently happens that an injury from which a man appears to have recovered perfectly, at least to the effect of enabling him to earn full wages, may subsequently produce at least partial incapacity; and it is much better for the workman that he should not be foreclosed by any premature finding on this subject, but should be permitted to acquiesce in the stoppage without surrendering his claim to future compensation should circumstances emerge entitling him to further payment. The absence of any previous case of this nature makes it highly probable that employers and workmen have throughout acted upon this view of the Act; and it would be most unfortunate if a different rule were now to be established contrary to fairness and good sense.
I would only add that in the only case in which the effect of an unrecorded agreement to pay compensation has been considered— Colville & Sons, Limited v. Tigue, 8 F. 179—Lord Low took a similar view; and although the other judges of the Second Division decided the case upon different grounds, they did not express any dissent from Lord Low's opinion. At page 190 he says—“I can findnothing in the Act which, when there is only a recorded agreement to pay compensation during incapacity, compels the employer to continue payment after the incapacity has in fact ceased. The Act recognises agreements for payment of compensation; and it nowhere provides that such agreements shall, as regards the rights and liabilities of parties, be in a different position from any other agreement.” The logical result in this case would appear to be, as the parties are not agreed on the facts, that there should be a proof, as your Lordship in the chair has held, but I desire to say, speaking for myself, that if the complainers establish the facts alleged by them, and indeed if the respondent fails to show any good reason why he did not avail himself earlier of his statutory remedy,
I should be prepared to hold, whether on the ground of personal bar or acquiescence or both combined, that the respondent's claim for any other compensation than he has obtained under the present judgment would be excluded.
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The Court, in the case of Lochgelly Iron and Coal Company, Limited v. Sinclair, pronounced this interlocutor—“… Adhere to the said interlocutor in so far as it repels the reasons of suspension for the period subsequent to May 18th, 1906; quoad ultra recal the said interlocutor and remit to the Lord Ordinary to allow the complainers a proof of their averments, and to the respondents conjunct probation, and thereafter to proceed as accords; finds no expenses due to or by either party in respect of the reclaiming note”—and in the case of Finnie & Son v. Fulton adhered.
Counsel for the Reclaimers (Complainers) (The Lochgelly Iron and Coal Company, Limited)— Horne— Strain. Agents— W. & J. Burness, W.S.
Counsel for the Respondent (Sinclair)— CrabbWatt, K.C.— A.M. Anderson. Agent— C. Strang Watson, Solicitor.
Counsel for the Reclaimers (Complainers) ( Finnie & Son)— Constable, K.C.— Horne. Agents— Simpson & Marwick, W.S.
Counsel for the Respondent (Fulton)— Munro— Mair. Agents— Macpherson & Mackay, S.S.C.