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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Fallens v. William Dixon, Ltd [1923] ScotLR 8 (01 March 1923) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1923/61SLR0008.html Cite as: [1923] SLR 8, [1923] ScotLR 8 |
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[Sheriff Court at Hamilton.
A miner sustained injuries owing to an accident in the course of his employment, and was awarded compensation in respect of partial incapacity. Being unable to continue his former work, he obtained employment as a clerk under an Education Authority. About a year later a reduction was made in the rate of wages payable to the officials of that Authority, but no change occurred in the rate of wages which he would have earned had he been able to remain in his former employment as a miner. In an application at his instance for review of the amount of compensation, held that the facts stated constituted a change of circumstances entitling the applicant to have the weekly payment reviewed.
Edward Fallens, miner, 237 Glasgow Road, Blantyre, appellant, being dissatisfied with a decision of the Sheriff-Substitute at Hamilton ( Hay Shennan) in an arbitration under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 between him and William Dixon, Limited, respondents, appealed by way of Stated Case.
The Case stated, inter alia—“This is an arbitration on an application by the appellant presented on 4th December 1922 asking for an increase in the weekly rate of compepsation payable to him.… I heard parties
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on 19th December 1922, when the following facts were admitted 1. On 19th May 1920 the appellant sustained injuries by accident arising out of and in the course of his employment as a miner in the respondents' No. 4 Dixon's Colliery. The respondents admitted liability and satisfied his claim for compensation to 15th August 1921. 2. Thereafter the parties disagreed on the question whether in the circumstances the appellant was for the time being entitled to any compensation in respect of partial incapacity, and on 30th March 1922 arbitration proceedings were initiated before me. The appellant besides working as a miner had acted as part-time deputy check-weigher. I held that these were concurrent contracts of service, and on 29th May 1922 I issued my award finding the appellant entitled to compensation of 2s. per week in respect of partial incapacity. I found (1) that his average weekly earnings prior to the accident were £3, 10s. 4d.; (2) that if he had completely recovered from his accident on 15th August 1921 he could have earned at his two former occupations about £2, 12s. during the period between August 1921 and May 1922, although in May 1922 the amount would have been slightly smaller; and (3) that during that period he was actually earning £2, 8s. per week as clerk under the Blantyre School Management Committee of the Education Authority for the County of Lanark. 3. On 16th June 1922 there came into force a general reduction in the rate of wages paid by the said Education Authority to officials such as the appellant, and his weekly remuneration was reduced to £2, 3s., and has since remained at that figure. From June 1922 to December 1922 there was no change in the rate of wages payable to a man who worked as the appellant had done before his accident, viz., as miner and part-time deputy check-weigher, the rate being between £2, 10s. and £2, 12s. per week. 4. The only change in circumstances since the award of 29th May 1922 has been the lowering of the appellant's weekly income through the reduction of wages which affected generally the officials of the Lanarkshire Education Authority. The reduction in the appellant's earnings as an official of the Education Authority was not due to any cause personal to himself. His efficiency remained the same as before.” The Case further stated—“The appellant claimed that he was entitled to an increase in the weekly rate of his compensation because of his decreased remuneration as clerk to the Education Authority. He argued that this was a special form of employment, and that his compensation should be assessed on the footing that he was fit only for light surface work at a mine, the rate for which is about 25s. per week. On 27th December 1922 I issued my award dismissing the application for review on the ground that the appellant had not set forth relevant grounds for asking that the rate of his weekly compensation should be reviewed. I found that the work at which he is engaged is the ‘suitable employment or business’ with reference to which the rate of compensation in respect of his partial incapacity falls to be assessed, aud that the general fall of wages in that employment is not in itself a good ground for demanding review of compensation, there having been no change of circumstances personal to him.”
The question of law for the opinion of the Court was—“On the foregoing averments and admissions was the appellant entitled to ask for review of the weekly rate of compensation payable to him?”
The arbitrator appended the following note to his award:—“… The only change in circumstances that is averred is that his [the applicant's] salary as clerk has been reduced to £2, 3s. per week. It was admitted at the debate that this reduction was one which affected him in common with all the similar officials of the County Education Authority. His wage was not reduced because of anything personal to himself.
The argument was that I ought to assess the workman's compensation on the footing that if he had remained in work connected with a mine he would have been able to earn only £1, 5s. per week, that it was a merely adventitious circumstance that he had secured the position of clerk to the Blantyre Management Committee, and that as soon as his wages as clerk were reduced he was entitled to be treated as if he were a miner fit for light work. But the statute does not warrant this argument. What it refers to is ‘some suitable employment or business.’ It contemplates that a man may change his employment, and in fact cases have occurred in which an injured man was able to earn in a new occupation much higher wages than before the accident. Fallens is a man of more than usual intelligence and capacity, as was indicated by the fact that when he was a miner he also acted as deputy check-weigher. His qualifications fitted him for a better-paid job than surface labouring, and thus his suitable employment’ provided him with a better wage. If he was thrown out of this job and could not secure one as well paid, the opinion of the Judges in the House of Lords in M'Alinden v. James Nimmo & Company, Limited (1919 S.C. (H.L.) 84) would have effect. It would be a case where more light had been thrown on his capacity to obtain suitable employment. But here the occupation remains the same. The only change is that there has been a general reduction in the rate of wages paid to such officials as Fallens.
I appreciate his grievance. Through no fault of his own his weekly income is reduced by 5s. If his earnings in May bad been £2, 3s. he would have received a substantially larger award of compensation then. But in my opinion the Act does not contemplate review of compensation in every case where the workman's position is worsened by a general fall in wages. If review is competent in this case the consequences are far-reaching. Suppose the rate of miner plus check-weigher's wages fell to £2, 3s., would the employers be entitled to ask that the workman's compensation be suspended? Suppose Fallens’ wage had
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been increased, would the employers be entitled to ask for review. An endless vista of litigation seems to be opened up if the claimant is right. After all it is impossible to be meticulously accurate in assessing compensation. All that can be done is to make a fair estimate according to the circumstances of the moment, and I think the trend of judicial opinion is towards holding that an award can be reviewed only where there is some change of circumstances personal to the workman.” Argued for the appellant—The arbitrator was in error in failing to keep in view the fact that the appellant was a clerk only because he was an injured man. The comparison fell to be made, not between the appellant's wages as a clerk and those earned by other clerks, but between what he was actually earning as a clerk and what he might have earned but for the accident as a miner. The workman's title to compensation was found in section 1 of the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906, and the amount of that compensation was determined by reference to the provisions contained in the First Schedule to that Act. The schedule provided that a weekly payment not exceeding 50 per cent of the average weekly earnings, nor £1 in all, might be awarded. The amount, however, could not exceed the difference between the pre-accident and the post-accident earnings. Counsel referred to Ball v. Hunt, 1912 S.C. (H.L.) 77, 49 S.L.R. 711; Duris v. Wilsons and Clyde Coal Company, Limited, 1912 S.C. (H.L.) 74, 49 S.L.R. 708; M'Neill v. Woodilee Coal and Coke Company, 1918 S.C. (H.L.) 1, 55 S.L.R. 15; Bevan v. Energlyn Colliery Company, [1912] 1 KB 63. The case of Tarr v. Cory Brothers & Company, [1917] 2 K.B. 774, established the proposition that where there was a change, whether increase or decrease, in the wages the workman was earning after the accident, that change in circumstances entitled either party to ask for a review—see judgment of Swinfen Eady, L.J., at p. 777. Here there had been such a change since the date when the weekly payment was fixed, and accordingly the appellant was entitled to a review— Radcliffe v. Pacific Steam Navigation Company, [1910] 1 KB 685, per Fletcher Moulton, L.J., at p. 690; Murray v. Portland Colliery Company, Limited, 60 S.L R. 56; John Watson, Limited v. Quinn, 1922, 60 S.L.R. 1; Quilter v. Kepplehill Coal Company, 1921 S.C. 905, 58 S.L.R. 588; M'Alinden v. James Nimmo & Company, 1919 S.C. (H.L.) 84, 56 S.L.R. 522.
Argued for the respondents—The arbitrator had found that the appellant's total loss of wages (9s.) was due partly to his injury (this he assessed at 4s., of which he awarded him 2s.) and partly to economic circumstances with which he as arbitrator was not concerned. Consequently the appellant must lose the 5s. attributable to the latter— Murray v. Forfar Coal Company, 1922 S.L.T. 620; Gaffney v. Chorley Colliery Company, [1922] 15 Butterworth 158, per Sterndale, M.R., at p. 163. These cases recognised that a workman's incapacity might be due to two different causes, and the arbitrator was perfectly justified in splitting up the total loss of 9s., and taking into account only that part which was due to the accident. It was not relevant in asking for a review of weekly payments to aver a change of economic circumstances— Quilter v. Kepplehill Coal Company (cit. sup.). Accordingly the appellant had failed to state a relevant case, and the question of law should be answered in the negative.
At advising—
An application was made by a workman for review of an arbitrator's award pronounced under the Workmen's Compensation Act. The award, which was dated 23rd May 1922, was an award in the course of which the arbitrator held that the workman, if he were a fit man, would at that time have been earning £2, 12s. a-week as a miner; that in point of fact he was earning £2, 8s. a-week as a clerk; and the learned arbitrator awarded compensation at the rate of 2s. a-week as at that date. Now the sum of £2, 8s. which the appellant was earning was earned by him as an employee of the Educational Authority of Lanarkshire. His salary as such employee has since been reduced to £2, 3s. a-week, following upon an all-round reduction of salaries affecting all the officials of that Authority. In these circumstances ths appellant re-approached the arbitrator and asked for a review of the award which he had already made on 23rd May and asked him to award him 9s. a-week. He maintained that a change of circumstances had occurred, and that his diminished earnings were due to the injury which he had sustained in the employment of the respondents. In that contention I think that the appellant was right.
The present position is that there has, in the meantime, been no diminution in the wages of the miners. They remain the same as they were before. As an uninjured miner the appellant would be earning at the present moment £2, 12s. a-week. As an injured man he can now only earn as a clerk £2, 3s. a week as compared with £2, 8s. a-week when the case was formerly before the arbitrator. That change of circumstances occurred in June 1922. Why should the learned arbitrator not have regard to that obvious change of circumstances? Prima facie it appears to be a material change, and in that view I am fortified by the opinion, to which Mr Fenton referred, of Lord Dunedin in M'Neill's case ( 1918 S.C. (H.L.) 1, [1918] A.C. 43) where his Lordship said (at p. 4)—“Supposing there had been no provisions as to cutting down by prescribing the maximum, the compensation would obviously have been a payment which should make up to the man for the fact that he is an injured man instead of a whole man, and when you put into money what is the difference
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These passages prima facie would appear to be conclusive in favour of the appellant's argument. But the learned arbitrator has proceeded upon the view that he was precluded from considering the new situation. And why? “Because,” he says, “the change in circumstances which affects the appellant has affected the other clerks also in the employment of the Education Authority. There has been a general fall in the wages of the clerks of that Authority, and therefore I am disabled from taking that into account inasmuch as it is due to economic circumstances and not to the original accident which the appellant suffered.” That view, in my judgment, would be conclusive if the appellant in this case had always been a clerk. The case of Quilter ( 1921 S.C. 905) and the case of Quinn ( 1923 S.C. 6) appear to be direct authorities to that effect. And the reason why these decisions were pronounced was, I apprehend, that in the circumstances with which they dealt the workman's worsened position was due to economic causes and not to incapacity resulting from the accident. The arbitrator in this case has treated the appellant as if he had always been a clerk, and—as I think Mr Fenton truly said—failed to remember that the appellant is only a clerk because he is an injured man. In other words, the learned arbitrator has omitted to pay any heed to the history of the appellant as a miner, and that fallacy, in my humble judgment, vitiates the opinion he has pronounced.
In this case I think it is unnecessary to await the new light which might be shed upon the situation if the appellant unhappily lost his job, as happened in the case of M'Alinden v. James Nimmo & Company (1919 S.C. (H.L.) 84, [1920] A.C. 39), to which the arbitrator refers in his note. A new light is shed on the situation here by the change of circumstance to which I have referred. Finally, I would add that the learned arbitrator says—“If” the appellant's “earnings in May had been £2, 3s. he would have received a substantially larger award of compensation then.” In saying that, in my view, the learned arbitrator concedes the appellant's case.
I therefore suggest that the case should be remitted back to the learned arbitrator to assess the amount of compensation due to the appellant on the footing that he is not disabled from considering the new circumstances under which the later application was presented to him.
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The argument presented to us on behalf of the respondents was an argument founded on Black v. Merry & Cuninghame, 1909 S.C. 1150, and the later case of Quilter, 1921 S.C. 905. These two cases are cases illustrative of this principle—and I do not think the principle is really a matter on which there can be doubt or dispute—that if a man is incapacitated and gets an award, and then there is a general slump in the industry in which he was employed, he cannot go before the arbitrator and ask for an increase of the compensation payable to him in consequence of a diminution in his earning capacity not brought about by the accident but brought about by economic causes. These two cases are in my opinion in no way affected by the decision we are giving here to-day. In fact it is because of the proper application of these two decisions that the appellant's earning capacity at the date when the first application came to be made was treated as an earning capacity of £2, 12s. and not an earning capacity in excess of £3. But it seems to me it would be a very peculiar result if because of some alteration in the economic conditions in an industry to which the appellant was not really bred and brought up but in which he accidentally found certain employment, that was held to be a circumstance that the arbirator was entitled to say did not matter and did not affect the question of compensation one way or the other.
In the present case the decision we are giving is no doubt against the employers, but I think if they had succeeded in this case a logical application of the decision we would have had to give would tell against them in a great number of other cases.
I have no doubt that the arbitrator here reached a wrong conclusion, and that the matter should be remitted back to him as your Lordship proposes.
In dismissing the application for review as irrelevant I am of opinion that the arbitrator misdirected himself in law. His mistake was that he confined himself to contrasting the present earning capacity of the appellant with that of other clerks in similar employment. But the appellant is a miner and not a clerk. The comparison which the arbitrator ought to have made was between the present earning capacity of the appellant and his former earnings as a miner. The arbitrator has left out of account one essential factor in the comparison he is bound to make, to wit, £2, 12s., being the weekly sum which a miner could and can earn. The appellant if he had not been injured could as a miner have now earned £2, 12s. a-week. It is with that fact that his present position must be contrasted. Instead of earning this sum of £2, 12s. he is earning only £2, 3s., and this latter sum is 5s. a-week less than what was being paid when the amount of compensation was last considered. The appellant has therefore stated a relevant case for review of the amount of compensation.
It is to be noted that the arbitrator refuses to do now what he did when he awarded compensation in May 1922. He then, as appears from the first sentence in his note appended to the Stated Case, determined the amount of compensation by taking into account the said sum of £2, 12s. and contrasting it with the then earning capacity of the appellant of £2, 8s. per week. In this process of review the arbitrator in my opinion is bound to proceed on the same considerations as fell to be taken into account in making the original award of compensation.
The question of law ought therefore to be answered in the affirmative.
The Court answered the question of law in the affirmative.
Counsel for Appellant—Solicitor-General ( D. P. Fleming, K.C.)— Fenton. Agents— Simpson & Marwick, W.S.
Counsel for Respondents— MacRobert, K.C.— Marshall. Agents— W. & J. Burness, W.S.