No you won't, because you're not looking for a separate exemption for the cable by itself, you're looking for an exemption which covers the whole job. In the case of extending to an extra socket in a living room, for example, where we would agree that the conditions in 2(a) & (b) are clearly satisfied, you reach 2(c)(ii) and find the exemption for "work which consists of adding socket outlets." The cable is part of that work, as is the box for the socket, clips, channeling, etc.
Indeed.
It is one job.
It is atomic.
The socket is in the living room, therefore the socket is not notifiable, and neither is any the installation of any other part or component no matter where it is, where it cones form, how it gets there and so on.
Every single feature of every single other item is subordinated to the socket.
If you are spurring from a socket in the kitchen, it's not notifiable because the work, in the context of Schedule 4, is adding the socket, and the socket is not notifiable.
If the socket is not notifiable then none of the work is notifiable.
But that's not what para. 2 says. 2(c) is the exemption for "work which consists of adding socket outlets," but the conditions attached to that exemption in 2(a) & (b) refer to the work as a whole, not just the socket.
That is exactly what Para 2 says.
The work is atomic - nothing else has any existence in the context of Schedule 4 except the socket.
It's not "work consists of adding socket outlets, cables, clips, grommets, flush boxes", it's not "work including adding socket outlets".
It's "work which consists of adding socket outlets"
Where's the socket outlet?
In the living room?
Is a living room a kitchen? Or a special location?
No.
So, as you say
The cable is part of that work, as is the box for the socket, clips, channeling, etc.
It's just a single item of work. It does not have component parts, some of which can be notifiable and some not.
It's a single item of work.
It is atomic.
The only thing that Schedule 4 concerns itself with is the socket. Nothing else is mentioned. Nothing else exists in the context of Schedule 4. Nothing else matters in the context of Schedule 4. Nothing else has a discrete notifiability status.
If the socket is in a living room then the work which consists of adding it is not notifiable.
No, it can be assessed on the basis of being a necessary part of the overall job. It's not a separate job for which you need to find a specific exemption for adding the cable; it doesn't become an integral part of the socket; but it is an integral part of the job of adding the socket.
Exactly.
So if the socket is in the living room then everything, in the context of Schedule 4, is in the living room, because, as you say, everything is an integral part of the job of adding the socket.
Everything is an integral part of work not in a special location etc.
Everything is non-notifiable.
Of course the job can involve work in more than one place. If you extend from a living room socket through a wall to add a socket in the bedroom on the opposite side of the wall, you have to carry out work in both the bedroom and the living room.
No - as you say everything not mentioned, the cables, the boxes etc etc are an integral part of the job of adding the socket.
And the socket is in one location - the bedroom.
So everything which is an integral part of it is also in the bedroom, in the context of Schedule 4.
Exactly.
You don't regard the job as anything other than adding the socket in the garage, and neither does Schedule 4
And if there is no power already in the garage, then the job necessarily involves running the cable. It doesn't make the cable an integral part of the socket, just an integral part of the whole job of adding the socket.
Exactly, and there's only recognition, in Schedule 4, of a single item of work consisting of adding a single explicitly identified thing - the socket.
So if the socket is not outdoors, then it is not notifiable, no matter how the cable gets to it.
But that's precisely it: My interpretation of the conditions in the actual 2(a) & (b) apply to the job as a whole, which I believe is what para. 2 says since those conditions refer to the "work," not just the socket.
The socket is the only item whose existence is recognised, and whose notifiabilty status is defined, by Schedule 4.
Everything else is integral to the work.
The work is atomic.
If the socket is not in a special location etc then, in the context of Schedule 4, the work consisting of adding it is, by definition, not in a special location.
The cable can't be separated from the "work which consists of adding a socket," since it's a necessary part of that work.
Exactly.
So the determination of its status cannot be separated from "work which consists of adding a socket".
Socket is the only item identified. Nothing can be separated from it.
If the socket is not somewhere which makes it notifiable then the work which consists of adding it is not notifiable.
Because I'm not trying to look for ways to "make it work,"
So you don't think it's supposed to work?
You don't think that if there are two ways to operate it, one which allows it to work and one which stops it working that the latter is the wrong way to operate it?
And when it comes to para. 2, the way I read it the conditions in 2(a) & (b) attach to the entire job (i.e. the "work which consists of"), not just the socket.
But earlier on you said
The cable can't be separated from the "work which consists of adding a socket," since it's a necessary part of that work.
So if it can't be separated then neither can its status.
If the socket isn't notifiable then the cable cannot be either.
But you introduce another problem that the wording in para. 2 does not then actually mean what it says.
No I don't - the wording in para 2 still means what it says because that's what it already says.
Would we agree that if the cable were being run to the outbuilding overhead on a catenary wire, then it is most certainly outdoors? Then the argument is limited to the basic issue of the interpretation of para. 2 and whether that outdoor cable is part of an "outdoor electric power installation" or not.
It's what it's serving and where which matters.
If it's serving a socket which is not outdoors then it is not part of an outdoor electric power installation, because,
The cable can't be separated from the "work which consists of adding a socket," since it's a necessary part of that work.
Just as, if the cable is indoors, but the socket is not then the "work which consists of..." is notifiable.
No, I'm just saying that I think this is one thing which has a large gray, subjective area between the two obvious extremes.
Consider again the swimming pool. How shallow would the depth of soil above it have to be before you conceded that the builder might have a point, and that it was a grey area as to whether he had or had not built you an outdoor swimming pool?
They're only supposed to rule on what the written words actually mean.
Exactly.
They look for meaning.
I look for meaning.
I have found meaning.
You are still struggling with meaninglessness because you aren't looking at it properly.
Is any part of the work which consists of adding the socket in a special location? The answer might be yes even the socket itself isn't.
It can't be - nothing else has, in the context of Schedule 4, any separate existence, or any different location.
But we've already agreed that "work consisting of adding" a socket has to include the cable, otherwise the installation of the new cable would not be exempt from notification.
Exactly.
So since the socket is the only item identified, it is the only item we need to consider.
There is no concept, in the context of Schedule 4, of different parts of the work - it's an atomic operation. It has no parts.
If the socket is not in a special location then the work consisting of adding it is not in a special location.
And that includes the cable.
Exactly.
The cable is included.
If the socket is in a bedroom then so is the cable.