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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2001] UKSSCSC CSI_987_2000 (16 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2001/CSI_987_2000.html Cite as: [2001] UKSSCSC CSI_987_2000 |
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[2001] UKSSCSC CSI_987_2000 (16 March 2001)
THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONERS
Commissioner's Case No: CSI/987/00
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT 1998
APPEAL FROM THE GLASGOW APPEAL TRIBUNAL UPON A QUESTION OF LAW
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER: SIR CRISPIN AGNEW OF LOCHNAW BT QC
DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Decision
Reasons
"I also worked as a labourer to electricians, which involved cutting raggles in concrete walls with a grinder and then hammering and chiselling them out."
"His employment as a gratebuilder using Kango Hammers, hammers and chisels for 20 years and with J Laing Construction using hand-held grinders and Kango Hammers to raggle channels in concrete blocks does not fall within mining, quarrying, demolition or works on road or footpaths, including road construction"
"4. … in turn he worked for approximately 3 years as a builder's labourer, his job in that occupation entailed cutting raggles out of concrete walls to allow electricians to put in conduits. Occasionally in the course of that job he hit reinforcing bars. He used various tools including an electrical grinder, a chisel and a hammer. However he also used a kanga hammer which was air powered nearly every day.
5. For a period of about 13-14 years before the above occupation the appellant worked as a grate builder's labourer, fitting fireplaces. His job involved pulling fireplaces out and then putting them back in again. He used a kanga hammer on a very regular basis in that job."
"The only possible way for the appellant to satisfy the prescription for disease A11, in our view, is if he can be brought within the terms of (d) of he said prescription. That reads as follows "The use of hand held powered percussive drills or handheld powered percussive hammers in mining, quarrying, demolition or on roads, footpaths, including road construction"
"Mistake in Law; Tribunal accepted appellant's evidence which included use of an electric grinder (rotary tool); client may satisfy (b) of the prescription. The Tribunal also erred in it's definition of "demolition".
"6. It would, in my view be a travesty to equate the occasional knocking of holes through walls and floors with 'demolition'. Demolition essentially involves a destruction of, in this context, the whole or a substantial part of a building, such as might ordinarily be done by builders clearing a site or demolition workers; jobs of a plumber is essentially not to destroy but to improve."
I agree with that reasoning. I do not accept the claimant's submission that demolition can apply to the pulling down or ruining of something small, because the prescription is a verb and not a noun. I consider that the "in … demolition" is relevant as it suggests the wider definition of a trade or business.
"(b) the use of hand-held rotary tools in grinding or in the sanding or polishing of metal, or the holding of material being ground, or metal being sanded or polished, by rotary tools"
"… the occupation relates to work on metal of a frictional or abrasive nature, and does not cover the occasional action of cutting metal reinforcing rods with a grinder. … I submit that the claimant has never been employed to grind, sand or polish metal."
(signed)
Sir Crispin Agnew of Lochnaw Bt QC
Deputy Commissioner
Date: 16 March 2001