DOWN UNDER TRUCKING: Injured Truck Driver Wins US$1.15 Million Compensation

Truck driver Terry Damon will receive a total of A$1.7 million (US$1.15 million) of compensation from his employer, a shipper and a consignee, after they collectively caused him to suffer a severe injury to his back, a court has ruled.

"As I was lifting the tyre I felt a pop in the bottom of me back.," Damon said in evidence.

Damon subsequently had to have surgery and the implantation of electrical nerve-stimulating devices in his back.

Compensation of just under $587,000 has already been paid to Damon.

Background and facts

Trucking company Kokoszko Nominees Pty Ltd employed Damon as a truck driver. Kokoszko was hired by Asixa Logical Outcomes to haul freight from its warehouse in eastern Melbourne to the depot of the consignee Bronzewing Freighters in the small town of Horsham. A straight-line distance of about 205 miles to the northwest-by-west.

Damon was required to pick up the Kokoszko trailer each evening from the Asixa warehouse. He would check the load was secure. He would close the gate and curtains, hook-up the trailer to the tractor and then drive overnight to Bronzewing.

While he did not help with the loading of the trailer at the Asixa warehouse, he would help with the unloading at the Bronzewing depot.

The load hauled was a mixture of palletised and non-palletised freight. From time to time, he would haul large tyres that weighed between 331 pounds to 441 pounds. Sometimes they were even heavier than that.

The tyres were formerly loaded in stacks on a pallet and were unloaded at the Bronzewing depot using a mechanical forklift.

"Unloading the tractor tyres this way involved no manual handling by the worker," the Victorian Supreme Court said.

Tyres were damaged

It transpired that the edges of the pallet were damaging the tyre bead on the bottom tyre in the stack. A tyre bead is the rim of the tyre and it is usually made of sturdy rubber and steel cable. It fits within a groove on the wheel itself. The pressure from the inside of the tyre keeps the bead in the groove. That keeps the tyre on the wheel and also stops the tyre from sliding.

About six months before Damon's injury Asixa changed the method of unloading to prevent damage to the tyre bead of the bottom tyre in the stack.

Experts who testified in the case, an ergonomist (an expert in how humans interact with equipment) and an engineer both separately agreed that "the weight of the tyres meant that they should be moved by mechanical means and without requiring any degree of manual handling".

It was evidently decided that the truck driver would hop onto the trailer and would slide the top tyre off the stack until it would drop to the deck in a vertical position. The Bronzewing forklift driver would come along and use a forklift to pick up and drive away with the tyre.