The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Angus bricklayer who injured hand in saw awarded £70,000

Man was sacked when he returned to work after four months off

- EMMA CRICHTON ecrichton@thecourier.co.uk

A bricklayer whose fingers were mangled in a chop saw and was then sacked has been awarded £70,000 in damages.

Connor Penman from Kirriemuir needed a seven-hour operation for tendon damage and was off work for four months, only to be dismissed by his boss when he did return.

The 29-year-old said his middle finger and forefinger were hanging off after an accident chopping wood while working for Mike Watt Constructi­on in May 2018.

Business was quiet so tradesmen were tasked with different duties around the Northmuir site and Mr Penman was told to cut up pieces of wood to be sold as firewood.

But he had never operated the chop saw, which spins up to 50,000 revolution­s per minute.

He said: “My boss just told me to get on with it and left me to it, I was on my own so there was no one else around to ask for help.

“I was left to guess how to use this machine and there was an issue with the guard that protected the blade.

“It was all a blur but I think the guard pinged back after the blade jammed while it hit a nail in the wood, this then caused the whole machine to kind of lurch and it caught my hand.

Mr Penman was then taken to Ninewells Hospital in Dundee for an emergency operation. He had significan­t tendon and neurovascu­lar damage and needed a vein transplant.

When he returned to work in August 2018, he was laid off on the spot but has now won a personal injury claim for £70,000.

“I couldn’t believe the cheek of it when he let me go as my injuries were his fault,” he said.

Mike Watt Constructi­on did not respond to a request for comment.

 ??  ?? Connor Penman needed a seven-hour operation to save his fingers and he was off work for four months.
Connor Penman needed a seven-hour operation to save his fingers and he was off work for four months.

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