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10 December 2013, 08:55 | Updated: 30 March 2016, 13:50
A tree surgeon from Chichester, paralysed after falling 50 feet from an ancient horse chestnut he was trying to take down, has brought a damages claim against the National Trust.
Jamie Yates was injured while working on Trust land at Morden Hall Park in south west London in December 2009.
His counsel, Christopher Wilson-Smith QC, told Mr Justice Nicol at the High Court that Mr Yates, 26, of Carleton Road, Chichester had no memory of the "catastrophic'' accident which has left him in a wheelchair.
He was using a chainsaw on the decayed and infected 80 feet high tree which was nearing the end of its life and it was probable that a branch he was using as an anchor point for his safety rope snapped.
Mr Wilson-Smith said that Mr Yates, who was self-employed and working for an independent contractor, had never dismantled a tree of such height before and did not have the certificate that would have qualified him to carry out sectional felling.
The issue for the court, over a five day contested hearing on liability, is whether it was reasonable for the Trust to instruct the contractors, none of whom had the appropriate certification.
"It is our case that these are important qualifications and were regarded as the industry standard.''
National Trust denies negligence or breach of duty.