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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> United Collieries, Ltd v. M'Ghie [1910] ScotLR 751 (25 May 1910) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1910/47SLR0751.html Cite as: [1910] SLR 751, [1910] ScotLR 751 |
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Page: 751↓
[Sheriff Court at Airdrie.
Master and Servant — Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 (6 Edw. VII, c. 58), First Schedule, sec. 15 — A.S., 26th June 1907, secs. 9 and 15 (2) — Minute Constituting Process — Review of Compensation — Application, Form of.
Circumstances in which the Court in a Stated Case under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 granted upon conditions an order to transmit the process from the Sheriff Court.
A workman asked to continue to receive compensation from his employers under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906. The parties agreed to refer the question of the pursuer's fitness for work to a medical referee in terms of section 15 of the First Schedule to the Act. A joint minute to that effect was accordingly lodged with the sheriff-clerk, who remitted the matter to one of the medical referees. The referee having reported that the pursuer had recovered, the employers lodged a minute craving the Court to interpone authority to the medical referee's certificate and to end the compensation. There was no memorandum of agreement. The Sheriff-Substitute holding that there was no process before him, and that accordingly he could not act until a separate application to end the compensation was made by the employers, dismissed the minute.
Held on appeal that the application “to end the compensation” was properly before the Sheriff-Substitute as arbitrator, and that accordingly he ought to have entertained it and disposed of the case on its merits.
The Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 (6 Edw. VII, cap. 58), First Schedule, sec. (15), as applied to Scotland, enacts, inter alia, that the sheriff-clerk, “on application being made to the Court by both parties, may… refer the matter” ( i.e., the workman's condition) “to a medical referee.”
The A.S., 26th June 1907, enacts—sec. ix—“Applications under paragraphs … 15 … of the first schedule to the Act … shall be made by a minute, which shall be lodged in the original process, if any, and if there be no process, a copy of the recorded memorandum certified by the sheriff-clerk shall be lodged along with the minute, and shall be held to be the process. Such minute shall be intimated to the other party or parties interested, and thereafter be disposed of summarily, as if it were
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an application for settlement by arbitration under the Act…” Section xv (2) — “The sheriff-clerk shall, if he finds the application” ( i.e., an application to the Court under paragraph (15) of Schedule I) “to be in order, refer the matter to one of the medical referees appointed for the county or district of a county.…” The United Collieries, Limited, being dissatisfied with a decision of the Sheriff-Substitute ( Glegg) at Airdrie, acting as arbiter under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906, between them and John M'Ghie, one of their workmen, who had been injured, appealed by stated case.
The United Collieries Limited had lodged in the Sheriff Court a minute, which the arbiter dismissed, in the following terms:— “Craig for the defenders stated that the parties agreed to remit the question of the pursuer's fitness for employment to a medical referee in terms of paragraph 15 of the first schedule to the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906, and on or about 2nd February 1910 a joint minute to that effect was lodged with the Sheriff Clerk of Lanarkshire at Airdrie, who remitted the case to Dr James Barras, one of the medical referees appointed to Act for Lanarkshire under the Workman's Compensation Act 1906; that on 14th February 1910 the said medical referee gave a certificate certifying that pursuer had recovered from the injury sustained by him on 12th October 1909, a copy of which certificate, together with a copy of the joint minute referred to, are hereto annexed, and therefore craves the Court to interpone authority to said certificate by the medical referee, and to end the pursuer's compensation.”
The facts giving rise to the case were thus narrated by the Lord President—“The facts are simple enough. A workman, James M'Ghie, was injured in the course of his employment, and his employers, the United Collieries, Ltd., agreed to pay him a certain sum during his incapacity. No memorandum of that agreement was registered, but the payments were de facto made. After some time the employers thought that the workman had entirely recovered and told him so, but the workman did not admit this. As the parties were not disposed to come to an agreement upon this point, they together lodged in the Sheriff Court with the sheriff-clerk a joint minute. This minute, after narrating the occurrence of the accident, the payment of the compensation, the contention of the employers that the workman had recovered, and the workman's contention that he was still incapacitated, went on to state that ‘the parties being at variance, and no agreement being likely to be arrived at, therefore the said James M'Ghie and the said United Collieries, Ltd., crave the Court, in terms of section (15) of the First Schedule of the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906, to refer the matter to the medical referee, including in such reference whether any incapacity from which the said James M'Ghie now suffers is due to said accident.’ Proceeding upon that minute the sheriff-clerk made a remit to one of the medical referees, who examined the man and furnished a report. The report was in these terms:— ‘In accordance with the reference made to me by the sheriff-clerk of the Sheriff Court at Airdrie upon the application of James M'Ghie, late of Aitkenhead Rows, Uddingston v. The United Collieries, coalmasters, Nackerty Collery, Bargeddie, I have, on the 14th day of February 1910, examined the said James M'Ghie, and I hereby certify as follows: (1) The said James M'Ghie, age forty-nine, is at present in good health, and his condition is such that he is, in my opinion, quite fit for his usual employment as a drawer or miner, and that the accident of 12th October 1908 has left no evidence of injury either to his head or back that can be ascertained by examination.’ That report was communicated to the parties, and thereafter the employers lodged a minute in the Sheriff Court. By an interlocutor dated 25th February 1910 the Sheriff appointed copies of that minute, of the minute of reference, of the medical referee's report, and of his deliverances, to be served on the workman, and this was done. Now the minute for the employers narrated the facts that the joint minute had been lodged and that the medical referee had given a certificate, and contained a crave that the Court should “interponeauthority to the said certificate,” and should “end the pursuer's compensation.” Answers were put in to that minute by the workman, and these answers admitted, as of course was inevitable, the accuracy of the history of the proceedings which was given in the employers' minute. These answers, after quoting various sections of the Workmen's Compensation Act and the Act of Sederunt under which the minute was lodged, proceeded—‘Pursuer pleads that the application by minute under section (15) of the First Schedule of the principal Act, and of section 9 of the aforementioned Act of Sederunt, are applications to the sheriff-clerk as registrar of the County Court, and that the sheriff or judge of the County Court have no powers conferred upon them to deal with said minute or any proceedings thereunder, and it is incompetent for the sheriff or arbitrator to deal therewith. The pursuer therefore objects to the crave of the defenders' minute being granted in respect (1) that the said joint minute and the proceedings thereunder are proceedings before the sheriff-clerk as registrar of the County Court, who is the person appointed to attend thereto under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906, and are in no manner subject to the jurisdiction of the sheriff or arbitrator.’ Parties having been heard upon the minute and answers before the Sheriff-Substitute, he pronounced the following interlocutor—‘Having heard parties' procurators and considered the cause, dismisses the application; finds neither party entitled to expenses, and decerns.’ And he adds a note to the effect that he agrees with a decision which is not reported — ‘that the sheriff-clerk has nothing to do with ending compensation, and that an application for that purpose
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must be made to the sheriff, and that I cannot sustain the defences as pleaded in writing.’ A stated case was taken upon that, and is now before your Lordships.” The Case, which in an appendix gave the respondent's answers to the minute, narrated the terms of the minute and stated—“The case was heard before me on this date (18th March 1910), when I dismissed the minute in respect that the report of the medical referee does not of itself entitle the Sheriff-Substitute to end compensation, and does not bar the said James M'Ghie from contesting an application to end compensation.
“The question of law for the opinion of the Court is—‘In the circumstances stated was I right in dismissing the application by the United Collieries, Limited?”
On the case appearing in the Single Bills, on 12th May 1910, counsel for the appellants moved the Court, in terms of section xvii ( f) of the A. S., 26th June 1907, for an order on the Sheriff-Clerk to transmit the process. He stated that in an unreported case such an order had been made—the transmission of the process being in the opinion of the Court necessary for the proper understanding of the case. That was so here, inasmuch as the arbitrator's finding could only be justified, consistently with the facts as stated, if the respondent averred supervening incapacity, seeing that the medical referee's certificate was final—Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 (6 Edw. VII, cap. 58), First Schedule, section (15). Whether the respondent did so or not was not stated in the case, but would appear from the pleadings, and that would enable the Court to dispose of the application forthwith. Otherwise it would be necessary to remit to the arbitrator, and that would involve unnecessary expense. The appellants were prepared to bear all expense connected with the transmission in the event of the Court holding the transmission unnecessary.
Counsel for the respondent did not oppose the motion.
The Court (
On 25th May 1910 the case was heard on the merits.
Argued for appellants — The Sheriff-Substitute was in error in thinking that there was no proper process before him. The minute was a good application to the Court and should therefore have been entertained. Where, as here, there was no written agreement and no memorandum the minute itself was the process. There was no necessity for an initial writ. Moreover, there was evidence before the arbiter in which he could deal with the application, for the medical referee's report was conclusive— M'Avan v. Boase Spinning Company, Limited, July 11, 1901, 3 F. 1048, 38 S.L.R. 772.
Argued for respondents—The Sheriff was right, for there was no proper process before him. “Minute” as used in section ix of the A. S., 26th June 1907, and “application” as used in section xv thereof, implied an existing process, as in the case of King v. United Collieries, Ltd., 1910 S. C. 42, 47 S. L. R. 41. Further, the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1907 (7 Edw. VII, cap. 57), Schedule I, section 1, provided that all actions should be commenced in the forms thereto annexed, i.e., by initial writ, and that was wanting here. The application therefore had been rightly dismissed.
Now obviously the Sheriff has not taken the workman's view that he had no jurisdiction to deal with anything that had been done by the medical referee and any report that had been furnished by him to the sheriff-clerk, but rather he seems to have held that there was no process before him, and that accordingly he could not act at all until a separate application to end the compensation had been presented by the employers. In the argument before your Lordships it was maintained that this view was sound, and that in such cases a separate application must needs be made in the form of what is now known as an initial writ. I think it would be very unfortunate if there were any such necessity. The great object in these matters is to have as little procedure as possible, and I see no end which would be served by insisting on an initial writ. If an initial writ were ordered here, the question would then come up in precisely the same way as it seems to me to come up now.
The only difficulty arises on the terms of the Act of Sederunt of 1907 in regard to the Workmen's Compensation Act, which in section ix deals with applications, under various paragraphs of the schedule of the Act, and, inter alia, paragraph (15). It provides that these applications “shall be made by a minute which shall be lodged in the original process, if any; and if there be no process, a copy of the recorded memorandum certified by the sheriff-clerk shall be lodged along with the minute and shall be held to be the process. Such minute shall be intimated to the other party or parties interested, and thereafter be disposed of summarily as if it were an application for settlement by arbitration under the Act.” Strictly speaking, there is, I think, a lacuna in this section, but I do not think it is beyond our power to read into the Act of Sederunt after the words “recorded memorandum” the words “if any.” Where there is an original application, of course it is a part of the process. Where there has been no original application but a recorded memorandum, it is quite right that a process should be initiated by means of that recorded memorandum,
Page: 754↓
I think, therefore, we ought to recal the Sheriff's interlocutor and remit the case to him to consider whether he is to end the compensation or not. It is quite clear that the parties are entitled to be heard on the one side and the other as to what the true result of the medical certificate is. It is also perfectly clear from the terms of the 15th paragraph of the first schedule of the statute that the medical certificate is conclusive evidence as to the matters certified, and I should have thought that it was equally clear that whether there was or was not room for further evidence would depend upon the contents of the certificate. I do not say anything more, because I do not wish to prejudice any argument on either side, but it is obvious that in some cases there can be no room for other evidence, while in other cases there would be room for further evidence. The Sheriff has to consider what this certificate states, and after considering that, and on further evidence or without such evidence, he will proceed either to end the compensation or to refuse to do so according to what he thinks just.
The Court answered the question of law
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Counsel for Appellants— Horne, K.C.— Strain. Agents— W. & J. Burness, W.S.
Counsel for Respondent—Dean of Faculty ( Scott Dickson, K.C.)— Moncrieff. Agents— Simpson & Marwick, W.S.