Media Release
5 MAY 2015
Company to pay contractor $80,000 after tree trunk fractures skull
Gardening business Hao & Liu Union Limited has been ordered to pay reparation of $80,000 after a contractor suffered a severe brain injury and a
depressed skull fracture when a tree trunk struck him on the head and back. He underwent two surgeries as a result and
has since returned to China where he will continue to receive rehabilitation.
Hao & Liu Union Limited was sentenced in the Auckland District Court under the Health and Safety in Employment Act for
failing to take all practicable steps to ensure the contractor’s safety.
The man had only been contracting for Hao & Liu Union Limited for a few weeks when he was contracted, along with others, to remove two trees from the Avondale
Motor Park on 14 July 2014. His job was to remove falling tree branches and put them through a wood chipper.
Later in the day, the arborist was cutting off the top section of the tree trunk not realising that the man was under
the tree. The arborist pushed off the cut section of the truck and then heard a shout. As he looked down he saw the tree
trunk hitting the contractor.
“Hao & Liu Union Limited had not adequately trained and supervised the contractor,” says Keith Stewart, Chief Inspector at
WorkSafe New Zealand.
“They should have ensured there was clear communication between the arborist and other workers, and marked out unsafe
areas under and around the tree. This simple step would have ensured that the ground crew knew to keep out of those
areas.
“The man was also not wearing his safety helmet or his high-visibility clothing in the areas where they were cutting
down the tree.
“These were all practicable steps that the company should have taken to keep people safe.”
[Ends]