On appeal to the
Court of Appeal, this judgment was reversed, with
Lord Denning making the leading speech. It was established that, as in the case of
Limpus v London General Omnibus Company the employee was merely acting in an unauthorised way, whilst still going about his duties of delivering milk: Whilst the majority of Lord Denning and
Scarman LJ agreed upon this interpretation,
Lawton LJ dissented, arguing that precedents set in two earlier cases, ''Twine v Bean's Express Ltd
and Conway v George Wimpey & Co Ltd'', could not be distinguished from the instant case. In these cases, no liability was found on the part of the employer where passengers taken by employees - against specific instructions - were injured. The leading judgment on appeal distinguished these on the grounds that the passenger (Leslie Rose) had been furthering (advancing) the employee's duties, this kept Mr Plenty within the course of his employment. A consequence is the close or sporadic audit of all an employee's inherently risky activities becomes strongly advisable in the English employment system. The benefit is that third parties are less likely to suffer business-caused loss than before due to an employee's foolhardiness. ==See also==