Receives damages after sawing off the tree branch that he had leaned his ladder against
London: As DIY disasters go, they don't come much dafter than sawing off a tree branch that you've just leaned your ladder against.
But when he was asked to prune a sycamore tree in the grounds of a luxury hotel, handyman Peter Aspinall propped his ladder against the branch he was removing instead of the tree trunk.
He sawed through the branch and it plummeted 14 feet to the ground. The ladder and Aspinall quickly followed. The 64-year-old broke his heel, damaged ligaments and spent 10 days in hospital after the fall.
On Wednesday it emerged that Aspinall, who has been off sick since the accident 18 months ago, is suing Egerton House Hotel, near Bolton, for his injuries.A court ordered the hotel to pay £2,015 (Dh11,425) after a health and safety investigation concluded that the owners had failed to carry out a "risk assessment" on the dangers of sawing a tree branch with a ladder against it and should have trained Aspinall and a colleague on where to place the ladder.
The hotel's solicitor, David Walton, told magistrates: "It is an unusual accident. Laurel and Hardy do that sort of thing."
Speaking after the hearing, he added: "The hotel was very disappointed that common sense did not prevail and that the case was brought against them.
"The prosecution case was that had there been a routine risk assessment for the gardening activity of pruning trees then it's unlikely that this accident would have happened. But, even if there had been a risk assessment done, no one would expect two experienced men to do such a thing."
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The court heard the accident happened on July 18, 2008, after Aspinall, who had worked at the hotel for only two weeks, was asked by gardener Alan Ashworth to help him prune a tree.
The two placed a ladder against the branch which was to be cut but, as Ashworth was lefthanded, he felt it was too awkward for him to saw, so asked Aspinall to cut it.
While Ashworth held the bottom of the ladder, Aspinall climbed up and began using a bow saw to remove the branch. When the branch broke, Aspinall fell to the ground.
Walton said hotel owner Janet Hampton was not on the premises at the time and, if she had been, would have ensured the task was carried out by specialist tree surgeons.
In a statement, Hampton, who has run the 29-bedroomed, 200-year-old hotel for four years, said: "Naturally the hotel is concerned that the systems it had in place did not prevent the employees involved in this incident from attempting to cut the branch and that one of those employees should then fall and sustain injury."