Lafarge-Cement-PLC-Vs-Patrick-Mandona 12-4
Lafarge-Cement-PLC-Vs-Patrick-Mandona 12-4
Lafarge-Cement-PLC-Vs-Patrick-Mandona 12-4
P.494
SELECTED JUDGMENT NO. 15 OF 2017
BETWEEN:
AND
JUDGMENT
MUSONDA, JS, delivered the Judgment of the Court
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P.495
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P.496
The parties also agreed to have the Respondent withdraw all
but the claim numbered 'E' above, that is, the claim for Medical
Compensation.
further claim against the Appellant other than his claim for medical
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P.497
inclined the Health and Safety Bureau against issuing a certificate of fitness
in favour of the Respondent. The Health and Safety Bureau also determined that
Arising from the pneumoconiosis results by the Health and Safety Bureau,
the Ministry of Health which revealed that the Respondent had been afflicted with
the Respondent be retired. This recommendation by the Medical Board was made
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P.498
on 20th April, 2011. However, by the time the Medical Board was making its
effluxion of time.
On 23rd May, 2011, the Appellant lodged a claim with the Workers'
declined to compensate the Respondent on the basis that the certification on the
December, 2010 carried a classification which was known as "B5" and which was
pneumoconiosis.
As we noted earlier in this Judgment, the Respondent did institute the court
action in the Court below which was subsequently escalated to this Court. In that
court action, the Respondent was seeking a variety of reliefs most of which were
subsequently consensually resolved via a Consent Order. The only relief which
survived that Consent Order was the Respondent's search for medical
the Court below that at the time when he was employed by the Appellant, that is,
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P.499
on 4th April, 2005, he had been medically certified free from both tuberculosis
before an examiner at the Health and Safety Bureau in accordance with the
Compensation Act No. 10 of 1999 after working for the Appellant for three years,
the examiner discovered that the Respondent had a suspected lung disease.
Following this discovery, the examiner notified the Appellant to take the
the Appellant was required to write back to the examiner in question who was to
be advised within 14 days about the hospital findings as well as any measures that
at the Health and Safety Bureau with a Report within 14 days and only did so after
750 days. This failure, according to the Respondent, resulted in the examiner
variety of legal prescriptions and requirements and that it was these transgressions
or lapses on the part of the Appellant which had culminated in the refusal by the
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P.500
Respondent.
On the basis of the above narrative, the Respondent submitted before the
trial Court that he had suffered loss and damage, primarily in the form of a life
pension from the Workers' Compensation Fund Control Board, for which he
urged the Court below to order the Appellant to pay the Respondent fill medical
For its part, the Appellant strenuously resisted the Respondent's search for
medical compensation against it. In taking this position, the Appellant contended
that the refusal by the Workers' Compensation Fund Control Board to compensate
the Respondent was not founded on the alleged 'lapses' or breaches on the part of
the Appellant but, rather, was founded on the basis that the Respondent had been
afflicted with a chronic lung disease. According to the Appellant, the diagnosis
which we momentarily highlighted above was not done by the Appellant but by
the Health and Safety Bureau, adding that the Appellant could not be made to
medically compensate the Respondent merely because of the variance which had
arisen between the outcome of the diagnosis which the Health and Safety Bureau
had undertaken and what the diagnosis by the Ndola Central Hospital Medical
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P.501
with Part X1 of the Workers' Compensation Act instead of directing his grievance
to the Appellant.
In its judgment, the trial Court did not consider that the Appellant had been
Respondent. At any rate, the Court below took the view that even if the Appellant
had been guilty of any wrong-doing of whatever kind, such wrong-doing could
not have been legitimately tied to the refusal by the Workers' Compensation Fund
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P.502
The trial Court further observed that the nature of the work which the
Respondent had been involved in was such that he could have been inhaling dust
particles which could have resulted in the lung disease which had afflicted him.
On the basis of this reasoning, the trial Court could not understand why the
Respondent.
had been laid bare before the Court below, the trial Court then went on to cite
Section 6 of the Workers' Compensation Act and interpreted the same as entitling
statutory duty or other wrongful act or omission and seek damages. The Court
then went on to observe that there was a probability that the Respondent had
contracted the chronic lung disease which had afflicted him in the course of his
Fund Control Board had declined to compensate him. According to the trial
revealed by this matter would redress the mischief which would otherwise arise
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P.503
months' salary based on his last drawn salary together with interest at the then
prevailing average bank lending rate with effect from 90 September, 2011 to the
The Appellant has now appealed to this Court on the basis of the four
grounds which were set out in the Memorandum of Appeal and which were
"1. The Learned Honourable Court in the Court below erred in law and in fact
when it ordered the Appellant to compensate the Respondent notwithstanding
the fact that the Appellant had not breached its obligations towards the
Respondent and the fact that it was not the obligation of the Appellant to
compensate the Respondent, if at all, but the obligation of the Workers
Compensation Fund Control Board.
2. The Learned Honourable Court below erred in law and fact when it held that
the Respondent was entitled to compensation merely on the basis that the
Respondent had rendered a service to the Appellant and had lost a life pension
from the Workers' Compensation Fund Control Board.
3. The Learned Honourable Court below erred in law and fact when it
invoked Section 6 of the Workers' Compensation Act when it did not apply to
the case at hand."
Counsel for the Appellant filed Heads of Argument to buttress the above
grounds of appeal.
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P.504
In relation to the first ground of appeal, Counsel for the Appellant accepted
the trial Court's findings of fact, including the finding that on 30th December,
2010, the Respondent was diagnosed with a chronic lung disease in consequence
of which he was issued with a 935' certificate which signified that he was not fit
to work as a miner.
The Appellant's Counsel further observed that the trial Court was spot on
the absence of any wrong-doing on the part of the Appellant, it was erroneous for
the trial Court to have ordered the Appellant to compensate the Respondent.
The Appellant's Counsel further complained that it was distinctly odd that
the trial Court could have pronounced the Appellant free from any wrong-doing
in relation to the Appellant while, in the same breath, ordering the Appellant to
compensate the Respondent and, along the way, expressing surprise that the
Counsel for the Appellant also complained that the trial Court's apparent
anxiety to do substantial justice in relation to the Respondent had exposed the trial
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P.505
Court to the error of inflicting injustice on the Appellant which was also equally
entitled to the same justice which the Respondent was seeking in the Court below.
repeated the gist of the arguments which she had canvassed under the first ground
of appeal and added that there was nothing in the Workers' Compensation Act
No. 10 of 1999 which entitled the Workers' Compensation Fund Control Board
to decline to compensate the Respondent given that the Appellant had insured the
Respondent and had been meeting its obligations to the Board in connection with
that insurance. Counsel also complained that the Court below should not have
ordered the Appellant to compensate the Respondent merely because the latter
maintaining that the absence of any wrong-doing on the part of the Appellant
compensate him instead of seeking to have the Appellant redress his grievance.
In relation to the third and last ground of appeal, Counsel for the Appellant
argued that it was an error for the trial Court to have invoked Section 6 of the
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P.506
Workers' Compensation Act No. 10 of 1999 as having formed the basis for having
this regard, Counsel pointed to the trial Court's exoneration of the Appellant as
having disentitled the Court below from ordering the Appellant to compensate the
Respondent in the absence of the Appellant having been guilty of some legally
Counsel for the Appellant accordingly urged us to allow the appeal with
costs.
The Respondent, who is acting in person, contested the appeal by filing his
Heads of Response having been styled as such, the substance thereof represented
what the real or actual contention of the Respondent was relative to each of the
Appellant's arguments.
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•
P.507
At the hearing of the appeal, Ms. Banda-Mutuna, learned Counsel for the
Appellant confirmed that she was relying on the written Heads of Argument as
filed on 22nd November, 2013 and briefly augmented the same by submitting that,
having regard to the purpose of the Workers' Compensation Act, the Court below
clearly erred as it had no legal basis for reaching the conclusion which it did.
appeal.
For his part, the Respondent also confirmed having filed his Heads in
Response on 19`h April, 2016 which he augmented with oral arguments. The gist
of the Respondent's oral arguments was that the Appellant had breached the law
with regard to the manner in which it had observed the requirements of the
the condition on which the Workers' Compensation Fund Board could have
medically compensated him and that, consequently, the Appellant was liable to
which were deployed before us by or on behalf of the two parties to the appeal in
relation to the judgment of the Court below which is now being assailed.
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P.508
The first ground of appeal attacks the judgment of the Court below on the
basis that the same ordered the Appellant to compensate the Respondent
notwithstanding the trial Court's own finding that the Appellant had not
committed any legal wrong relative to the Respondent or breached any legal duty
The Appellant also complained in the first ground of appeal that it was a
patent misdirection for the trial Court to have inflicted the obligation to
surrounding this matter suggested that the obligation rested on the Workers'
The narrow issue which had confronted the Court below was whether or
not in the circumstances which had arisen the Respondent was, firstly, entitled to
the compensation he was seeking in the light of the medical condition which had
afflicted him and, secondly, whether or not the Appellant was liable to avail such
Board to do so.
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P.509
It can scarcely be doubted that given the nature of its business, the
Appellant was alive to the exposure of its employees to diseases such as had
afflicted the Respondent and the necessity of taking measures such as those
contemplated under the Workers' Compensation Act No. 10 of 1999 for the
Thus, it is quite apparent from the record that at all material times, the
surprisingly, when the issue of the Respondent's health challenge arose, the
Appellant took steps to have the Respondent avail himself of the compensation
Fund Control Board could not allow the Respondent to access that
claim for compensation which the appellant had lodged with the
.116
P.510
We have noted both from the judgment under appeal and the
on 8th August, 2011. However, by the time the Medical Board was
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P.511
the court below find that any connection existed between the
reason as follows:
"We have ...noted that under Section 6 of the Act, an employee can
bring an action in respect of the negligence, breach of statutory
duty or other wrongful act or omission of the employer and a court
may award damages. We have stated the probability that the
(Respondent) contracted the chronic lung disease (pneumoconiosis
superadded, pulmonary TB) in the course of his employment with
the (Appellant). We bear in mind also that the essence of the
Workers Compensation Act is to provide some form of insurance to
workers who sustain injury or contract disease which may lead or
may not lead to incapacity. It is also clear that, under the (said)
Act, pneumoconiosis and tuberculosis are compensable
proportionately according to the degree of the disease. The
(Respondent) had rendered a service to the (Appellant). This cannot
be denied.
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P.512
Given that this Section had ultimately resolved the fate of the
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P.513
Was the complaint, which was instituted in the court below and
subsequently escalated to this court founded on negligence or a
breach of a statutory duty or some other wrongful act or
omission on the part of the Appellant as Section 6 clearly
envisages?
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P.514
before the trial court, one can easily deduce or infer - to varying
court did not make or suggest findings of fact pointing to any of the
found nothing which the Appellant had done which could have
(Respondent for) the chronic lung disease ..." which had afflicted
him.
terms.
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P.515
In the context of the matter at hand, the trial court had
that, in both these Statutes, the court which is/was clothed with
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••
P.516
ground of appeal.
the appellant's contention under this ground that the court below
erred in law and in fact when it took the position that the
service to the Appellant and had 'lost' a life pension from the
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0.
P.517
Compensation Act.
afflicted him was one which was firmly anchored in the law,
under that law for the benefit of its employees, such as the
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a•
P.518
observations arising from the suggestion by the trial court that the
the court below was that no breach of the kind that would have
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P.519
Appellant.
that, contrary to the impression which the trial court had created,
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P.520
10 of 1999 announces that this statute had been enacted for the
purpose of:-
trial court fell into grave error when it volunteered a remedy which
was not warranted by the case which it had been called upon to
adjudicate.
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P.521
With regard to the issue of costs, we note that the trial court
Respondent, meaning that each party will bear its own costs.
C. KAJI ANGA
SUPREME COURT JUDGE
M. MUSONDA
SUPREME COURT JUDGE
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