52 If applicable to any of the defendants, regs 73(1) and (3) were not complied with, given the absence of any scaffolding or fencing for securing the safety of the plaintiff when working in an obviously dangerous location. Nor was reg 74(1)(a) in that none of the specified items of equipment were provided by any of the defendants. The primary judge considered both regulations to have been invoked by the plaintiff in his claim against all defendants, except Raftarail (see J 162-5). This view was open on the pleadings as between the plaintiff and the defendants. It was made explicit in Gutter Shop's Cross-Claim.
53 It is accepted that contributory negligence is not a defence to a cause of action for breach of statutory duty arising, as here, before the commencement of the Civil Liability Act 2002 in a non-employment context (see Booksan Pty Ltd v Wehbe [2006] NSWCA 3 at [160]-[173]).
54 The live issues are the application of the regulations to any of the defendants and the question of causation.
55 Cooper ADCJ referred to H C Buckman & Son Pty Ltd v Flanagan (1974) 133 CLR 422 at 428. He held that the particular construction work being carried out on 18 May 2000 was the installation of guttering and that it was Gutter Shop and not Mr or Mrs Ekonomou or Jemm who were carrying out that work: "Consequently the obligations under the Regulations lay upon the first defendant" (ie Gutter Shop) (J 165).
56 The learned judge had earlier held (J 91):
The plaintiff did have an appropriate safety harness but it was useless and did not comply with the Regulation unless it could be securely anchored. The plaintiff told Mr Pike why it could not be so anchored and Mr Pike did not demur from those reasons in the 14:27 telephone conversation.
57 In Lenz v Trustees of the Catholic Church & Anor [2005] NSWCA 446 I explained my understanding of the application of the two regulations. My reasons were concurred in by Santow JA and Basten JA. I said:
[49] The leading cases in this Court on the latest form of the Regulations are Almeida v Universal Dye Works Pty Ltd [2000] NSWCA 264, Maggiotto Building Concepts Pty Ltd v Gordon [2001] NSWCA 65; (2001) Aust Torts Reports 81-603; Kolodziejczyk v Grandview Pty Ltd [2002] NSWCA 267; Bhambra v Roet [2003] NSWCA 393; Multiplex Constructions (NSW) Pty Ltd v Lopez [2004] NSWCA 319 and Todorovic v Moussa [2005] NSWCA 100.
…
[51] Building (and therefore, relevantly, construction) work does not necessarily refer to the total work to be performed in a building. Each section of work performed (for example, painting, cleaning, sign-writing, dismantling or demolishing: see s3(1)(a) of the Act for the definition of "building work" ) is regarded as building work so that the obligation to take specific safety measures in the sub-pars of reg 73 may be imposed on the person who is carrying out that particular work ( H C Buckman and Son Pty Ltd v Flanagan (1974) 133 CLR 422 at 428).
…
[54] Regulation 73 speaks to "any person who directly or by his servants or agents carries out any construction work". Reg 74 addresses "the person in charge of the construction work". The terms are not synonymous in expression or identical in application. Neither are they mutually exclusive.
[55] Merely to establish that a person is the owner or occupier of a building site will not prove that he or she was also carrying out the construction work (cf reg 73) or in charge of the construction work (cf reg 74) (see Almeida at [143]).
[56] Prior to its amendment in 1987, reg 74 contained the words "the contractor or" before "person in charge of the building work". In 1987 the reference to "contractor" was removed and "construction work" substituted for "building work" . In Almeida , Santow AJA (with whom, in this regard, Priestley JA agreed (see at [8])) held that the removal of "contractor" did not have the effect of excluding the class of head contractors. Rather, the amendment was effected because "contractors" were already subsumed in the reference to "person in charge of the construction work" (see at [126]-[136]).
[57] Regulation 73's class of persons who "directly or by servants and agents carry out any construction work" is capable of embracing persons involved at different layers of responsibility or particularity of work. The reference to agency is expansive. Regulation 73 does not restrict itself to imposing an obligation on an employer as such, or limiting its safety measures to employees as such. "By imposing obligations on such persons in respect of the several sections of the total building enterprise the safety of all will be secured". ( Buckman at 427-428 per Barwick CJ (McTiernan and Stephen JJ agreeing), Maggiotto at [16]-[17]).
[58] It is, however, clearly established that reg 73 only places the obligation upon "the active person, that is the one who carries out the work in actual fact" ( Davey v Skinner [1961] SR (NSW) 648 at 651; Buckman at 428; Maggiotto at [17], [24]; Multiplex at [56]-[61]. See also Hetherington v Mirvac Pty Ltd [1999] NSWSC 443).
[59] It follows that reg 73 does not apply to a head contractor who has wholly delegated the task in question to a sub-contractor ( Buckman at 428; Almeida at [117] (Santow AJA)). Independent contractors who themselves carry out the work they have contracted to do are not thereby the agents of the head contractor who thereby expose the head contractor to reg 73's obligations with reference to the construction work they are performing ( Buckman at 428; Almeida at [117]; Maggiotto at [16]).
[60] But, as Heydon JA pointed out in Kolodziejczyk at [83] (Ipp AJA agreeing), it is important to remember that the opening words of reg 73 raise a factual question, not a normative question. Heydon JA illustrated this proposition by reference to the facts of that case (at [83]):
The question is not whether in all the circumstances the defendant should have closely examined the question whether the plaintiff was unable to diagnose and solve problems relating to dangerous cladding operations on steep roofs before effecting a full delegation of the cladding construction work and everything connected with it. The question is whether as a matter of fact the defendant effected that delegation. If the defendant had realised that the plaintiff was relevantly unable to work out safe solutions to obvious problems, that might be an evidentiary factor pointing against the likelihood of full delegation. But there is no evidence either of any relevant inability on the part of the plaintiff or of the defendant having perceived that that inability existed.
[61] In some circumstances, a head contractor or building owner who has otherwise delegated the performance of particular construction work to a sub-contractor, may participate in that building work and thereby become one of the persons carrying out the construction work ( Maggiotto at [24]-[25]). This was the basis for liability under reg 73 found against the head contractor in Maggiotto . Ipp AJA, with whom Meagher JA and Stein JA agreed, said at [38]:
Gordon [the sub-contractor] was instructed merely to do the carpentry work at unit 33 and to do so without there being stairs in place. He was not directed to do the specific work necessary to protect himself from the dangers and risks caused by the void. Nor was he supplied with scaffolding or other appropriate material. Additionally, the obligations of co-ordinating and supervising the work remained with Maggiotto, and these obligations had direct relevance to the safety of the work Gordon was instructed to perform. It follows that the performance of Maggiotto's duties under Regulation 73 was not "wholly delegated" to Gordon. Maggiotto still had to do construction work in regard to unit 33. That work involved co-ordinating and supervising the activities to be performed by Gordon and others, and supplying the necessary materials to Gordon.
[62] Similarly, a head contractor fell within reg 73 when it engaged in an activity so "intimately connected" with the construction activity (organising "dewatering" ) as to constitute part of it ( Multiplex ); when an employee of the head contractor actually participated in the building activity in question ( Buckman ); and when the head contractor became involved in coordination and supervision of different trades on the site or the supply of building materials to sub-contractors ( Maggiotto at [36]; Zahner v Andreas Pty Ltd [2001] NSWCA 352 at [33]-[34]; Todorovic at [26]-[27]; F & D Normoyle at [20]-[26]). See also Mason J's reference to participation "by act or approval" in Buckman at 444. The line between delegation and continuing participation on the head contractor's part may be a fine one on the facts (see for example how Maggiotto was distinguished in Kolodziejczyk at [73], [83]).
[63] Furthermore, when a head contractor delegates a particular aspect of building work, circumstances may arise that require preliminary steps or ancillary work to be undertaken to ensure the safety of those who will be working on the delegated task. The task of doing the work necessary to complete the preliminary steps or ancillary work may not be within the work delegated. In such a situation, were the head contractor not to be duty bound to comply with reg 73 in regard to the ancillary work or preliminary steps, there would be a gap in the security net that the regulation is intended to provide. The safety of all involved in the total building enterprise would then not be secured. It is a question of fact in each case as to whether the sub-contractor has been instructed to perform the preliminary steps as well as the work the subject of the express instructions ( Buckman at 446 (Jacobs J); Maggiotto at [26]-[29], Kolodziejczyk at [72]; Todorovic at [27]).
[64] If no more can be said than that the building is for and at the expense of a person, then reg 73 does not impose obligations on that person ( Castellan v Electric Power Transmission Pty Ltd (1966) 84 WN (NSW) 502 at 504). The activities of owner-builders who engage in rudimentary coordination of various trades or who occasionally act in the capacity of builder's labourer are not generally sufficient to bring such persons within the ambit of reg 73 ( Bhambra at [41]-[48]).
[65] In contrast to reg 73, reg 74 is directed at "the person in charge of the construction work" . It is always necessary to identify the relevant construction work. However, a head contractor, with or without an interposed sub-contractor, is usually "the person in charge of the construction work". This is borne out by the language of reg 74 and is consistent with the relatively passive obligation to "provide" items of safety equipment that forms the main content of the regulation.
[66] The case law establishes that the "person in charge of construction work" includes the head contractor (without an interposed subcontractor) or the person with overall responsibility for the construction work, that person being the person responsible for the work to the proprietor, co-ordinating the various trades and making the site under its control available to those doing the work ( Almeida at [130]-[131] per Santow AJA; Kolodziejczyk at [88] per Heydon JA). Because the head contractor remains responsible to the proprietor for the work done, it could not discharge that responsibility if not in overall charge of the work and the site ( Almeida at [130] per Santow AJA).
58 The Buckman line requires close attention to be paid to the tasks actually performed on the worksite. However, the regulations do not require that only one person in the chain may be liable if injury occurs (Darke v El Debal [2006] NSWCA 86 at [48]).
59 The trial judge held the relevant construction work to have been the installation of guttering (J 165). This finding was supported by all parties to the appeal except Gutter Shop that contended for a wider characterisation, namely that the construction of the house was the relevant activity. Gutter Shop placed emphasis on the interconnectedness of the guttering and other tasks, especially as regards the roof. The very fact that Mr Ekonomou became involved in coordinating the roofing, roofing safety and guttering subcontracts was prayed in aid.
60 Cooper ADCJ found that Gutter Shop was the person that directly or by its agents was carrying out the guttering installation (J 87).
61 This finding was challenged from both angles. Gutter Shop submitted that his Honour ought to have concluded that the work was in fact being carried out by the plaintiff as an independent contractor to whom Gutter Shop had wholly delegated the task. This outcome was said to be dictated by the majority reasons in Buckman. Alternatively, Gutter Shop and the plaintiff (defensively) submitted that one or more of the "builders" and Mrs Ekonomou were also liable under the regulations.
62 Mr Maconachie QC, representing Mrs Ekonomou, politely but firmly submitted that this Court clearly had erred in misconstruing Buckman in the recent stream of cases starting with Maggiotto and including Almeida, Kolodziejczyk and Todorovic. Leave was sought to reargue the correctness of these decisions which had, it was submitted, failed to recognise that the reasoning of Barwick CJ (with whom McTiernan and Stephen JJ agreed) could not be reconciled with that of Mason J and Jacobs J. Mr Maconachie said nothing about Lenz, but I am prepared to assume that it too was in his sights.
63 I would refuse the leave sought. For one thing, the matter was raised far too late, on the second day of the hearing. Furthermore, the recent cases in this Court have been consistent in their reading of Buckman. If that means that they have been consistently wrong then it is for the High Court to say so, in my respectful opinion. The High Court refused special leave to appeal in Maggiotto.
64 In my view, there is no incongruity between the recent cases in this Court and the majority judgments in Buckman. I say this, whether or not it is correct to hold that the majority and minority judgments in Buckman are capable of being reconciled (Maggiotto at [23]). In Lenz (at [58]) I acknowledged that reg 73 imposes its obligations only upon "the active person, that is the one who carries out the work in actual fact". However, as I pointed out in the later paragraphs in Lenz set out above: