Category Archives: Personal Injury

Brisbane South Regional Health Authority v Taylor [1996] HCA 25

Brisbane South Regional Health Authority v Taylor [1996] HCA 25; (1996) 186 CLR 541; (1996) 139 ALR 1; (1996) 70 ALJR 866 (2 October 1996).

“LIMITATION OF ACTIONS – Personal injury – Extension of limitation period – Exercise of discretion to grant extension – Whether fulfilment of statutory conditions gives rise to presumptive right to an order extending limitation period – Rationales for existence of limitation periods – Presumption of prejudice where long delay – Whether justice of the case required granting of extension – Actual prejudice – Limitation of Actions Act 1974 (Q) s 31.”

http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/sinodisp/au/cases/cth/HCA/1996/25.html

An application for an extension of a time limitation should be refused if an extension would result in significant prejudice to a defendant.

Per Toohey and Gummow JJ at p547:

“There is an evidentiary onus on the prospective defendant to raise any consideration telling against the exercise of the discretion. But the ultimate onus of satisfying the court that time should be extended remains on the applicant. Where prejudice is alleged by reason of the effluxion of time, the position is as stated by Gowans J in Cowie v State Electricity Commission (Vict) [1964] VicRp 103; [1964] VR 788 at 793 in a passage which was endorsed by Gibbs J in Campbell v United Pacific Transport Pty Ltd [1966] Qd R 465 at 474:

`It is for the respondent to place in evidence sufficient facts to lead the Court to the view that prejudice would be occasioned and it is then for the applicant to show that these facts do not amount to material prejudice.'”

Per Toohey and Gummow J at 548-9:

“The material consideration (the most important consideration in many cases) is whether, by reason of the time that has elapsed, a fair trial is possible. Whether prejudice to the prospective defendant is likely to thwart a fair trial is to be answered by reference to the situation at the time of the application. It is no sufficient answer to a claim of prejudice to say that, in any event, the defendant might have suffered some prejudice if the applicant had not begun proceedings until just before the limitation period had expired.”

Per Toohey and Gummow JJ at p550:

“The real question is whether the delay has made the chances of a fair trial unlikely. If it has not there is no reason why the discretion should not be exercised in favour of the respondent.”

Per McHugh J at p551:

“An applicant for an extension of time who satisfies those conditions is entitled to ask the court to exercise its discretion in his or her favour. But the applicant still bears the onus of showing that the justice of the case requires the exercise of the discretion in his or her favour.”

Per McHugh J at p552-3:

“The effect of delay on the quality of justice is no doubt one of the most important influences motivating a legislature to enact limitation periods for commencing actions. But it is not the only one. Courts and commentators have perceived four broad rationales for the enactment of limitation periods. First, as time goes by, relevant evidence is likely to be lost[16]. Second, it is oppressive, even “cruel”, to a defendant to allow an action to be brought long after the circumstances which gave rise to it have passed[17]. Third, people should be able to arrange their affairs and utilise their resources on the basis that claims can no longer be made against them[18]. Insurers, public institutions and businesses, particularly limited liability companies, have a significant interest in knowing that they have no liabilities beyond a definite period[19]. As the New South Wales Law Reform Commission has pointed out[20]:

‘The potential defendant is thus able to make the most productive use of his or her resources[21] and the disruptive effect of unsettled claims on commercial intercourse is thereby avoided.[22] To that extent the public interest is also served.’

Even where the cause of action relates to personal injuries [23], it will be often just as unfair to make the shareholders, ratepayers or taxpayers of today ultimately liable for a wrong of the distant past, as it is to refuse a plaintiff the right to reinstate a spent action arising from that wrong. The final rationale for limitation periods is that the public interest requires that disputes be settled as quickly as possible[24].”

Per McHugh J at p555:

“To subject a defendant once again to a potential liability that has expired may often be a lesser evil than to deprive the plaintiff of the right to reinstate the lost action. This will often be the case where the plaintiff is without fault and no actual prejudice to the defendant is readily apparent. But the justice of a plaintiff’s claim is seldom likely to be strong enough to warrant a court reinstating a right of action against a defendant who, by reason of delay in commencing the action, is unable to fairly defend itself or is otherwise prejudiced in fact and who is not guilty of fraud, deception or concealment in respect of the existence of the action.”

Per McHugh J at p555:

“When a defendant is able to prove that he or she will not now be able to fairly defend him or herself or that there is a significant chance that this is so, the case is no longer one of presumptive prejudice. The defendant has then proved what the legislature merely presumed would be the case. Even on the hypothesis of presumptive prejudice, the legislature perceives that society is best served by barring the plaintiff’s action. When actual prejudice of a significant kind is shown, it is hard to conclude that the legislature intended that the extension provision should trump the limitation period. The general rule that actions must be commenced within the limitation period should therefore prevail once the defendant has proved the fact or the real possibility of significant prejudice. In such a situation, actual injustice to one party must occur. It seems more in accord with the legislative policy underling limitation periods that the plaintiff’s lost right should not be revived than that the defendant should have a spent liability reimposed upon it. This is so irrespective of whether the limitation period extinguishes or merely bars the cause of action.”

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Nominal Defendant v Gardikiotis [1996] HCA 53

ON THIS DAY in 1996, the High Court of Australia delivered Nominal Defendant v Gardikiotis [1996] HCA 53; (1996) 186 CLR 49 (24 April 1996).

McHugh J set out the principles for assessing compensatory damages for negligence:

“Principles

4. When a defendant has negligently injured a plaintiff, the common law requires the defendant to pay a money sum to the plaintiff to compensate that person for any damage that is causally connected to the defendant’s negligence and that ought to have been reasonably foreseen by the defendant when the negligence occurred(5). The sum of money to be paid to the plaintiff is that sum which will put the plaintiff, so far as is possible, “in the same position as he would have been in if he had not sustained the wrong for which he is now getting his compensation”(6). Consequently, when a plaintiff asserts that, but for the defendant’s negligence, he or she would not have incurred a particular expense, questions of causation and reasonable foreseeability arise. Is the particular expense causally connected to the defendant’s negligence? If so, ought the defendant to have reasonably foreseen that an expense of that kind might be incurred? Those questions arise in the present case. Is the expense of fund management causally connected to the negligence of the defendant? If so, was the incurring of the expense a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the defendant’s negligence? If either of those questions is answered in the negative, the expense cannot be recovered from the defendant.
5. If a defendant’s negligence results in the plaintiff being so mentally or physically incapacitated that she is unable to manage day-to-day tasks, the basic principles of compensation for tortious conduct entitle the plaintiff to damages both for the disability and the expense of managing those tasks. The expense is just as much a product of the defendant’s negligence as is the disability. It is compensable therefore unless it is damage of a kind that a defendant could not reasonably foresee. Similarly, if a plaintiff can no longer manage her affairs with the same skill as before the accident, both the reduction in skill and any expense reasonably incurred in bringing the management of those affairs to the pre-accident level are compensable in damages. Likewise, if the defendant’s negligence has aggravated a pre-existing incapacity, the plaintiff is entitled to be compensated to the extent that the aggravation has increased the incapacity and caused expense to the plaintiff.
6. Damages may therefore be awarded for the expense of managing a plaintiff’s verdict moneys when the plaintiff’s disabilities prevent him or her from managing those moneys and the disabilities are the foreseeable consequence of the defendant’s negligence. Damages may also be awarded for the expense of investment advice where, as the result of the defendant’s negligence, the plaintiff is no longer able to make adequate decisions concerning his or her own financial affairs. In both cases, damages are payable by the defendant because the expense is the necessary product of the defendant’s negligence and is not the result of the free, informed and voluntary act of the plaintiff. The expenses have been brought about by the loss of the plaintiff’s ability to do what that person was capable of doing before the occurrence of the tort which gives rise to the claim for compensation.
7. But a different area is reached when the plaintiff seeks damages, not for expense necessarily incurred as the result of a disability caused by the defendant’s negligence, but for an expense arising merely from the size of an award of damages and the exercise of a choice by the plaintiff as to how to invest those damages. The expense of exercising that choice is not the consequence of the plaintiff’s injury. It is the result of the plaintiff’s decision to invest his or her money (usually in a professionally managed fund) rather than to spend it or to invest it in a fixed asset or some other form of investment. It is true that such an expense would not have been incurred but for the defendant’s negligence. But the common law of Australia has rejected the “but for” test as the legal test of causation although, “applied as negative criterion of causation, (that test) has an important role to play in the resolution of the question”(7).
8. Under the common law theory of common sense causation, a free, informed and voluntary act of the plaintiff or a third party, which builds on a situation resulting from the defendant’s tort and causes loss or damage to the plaintiff, negatives any causal connection between that tort and the loss or damage(8). That is so even though the act of the plaintiff or third party would not have occurred but for the defendant’s tort. Consequently, unless a defendant’s wrong has caused a disability that requires the plaintiff to obtain assistance in managing his or her verdict moneys, the cost of such assistance is not caused by the defendant’s negligence and is not recoverable as damages from the defendant. Nor, as we shall see, is it a factor such as income tax(9) which must be taken into account if the plaintiff is to receive a full indemnity.”

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1996/53.html

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Health and Other Servcices (Compensation) Act 1995 (Cth)

ON THIS DAY in 1996, the Commonwealth Health and Other Services (Compensation) Act 1995 commenced.

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/cth/consol_act/haosa1995370

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Medlin v State Government Insurance Commission [1995] HCA 5

ON 16 FEBRUARY 1995, the High Court of Australia delivered Medlin v State Government Insurance Commission [1995] HCA 5; (1995) 182 CLR 1; (1995) 127 ALR 180 (1995) Aust Torts Reports 81-322 (16 February 1995).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1995/5.html

Per Deane, Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ said at [6]:

“For the purposes of the law of negligence, the question whether the requisite causal connexion exists between a particular breach of duty and particular loss or damage is essentially one of fact to be resolved, on the probabilities, as a matter of commonsense and experience. And that remains so in a case such as the present where the question of the existence of the requisite causal connexion is complicated by the intervention of some act or decision of the plaintiff …which constitutes a more immediate cause of the loss or damage. … If, in such a case, it can be seen that the necessary causal connexion would exist if the intervening act or decision be disregarded, the question of causation may often be conveniently expressed in terms of whether the intrusion of that act or decision has had the effect of breaking the chain of causation which would otherwise have existed between the breach of duty and the particular loss or damage. The ultimate question must, however, always be whether, notwithstanding the intervention of the subsequent decision, the defendant’s wrongful act or omission is, as between the plaintiff and the defendant and as a matter of commonsense and experience, properly to be seen as having caused the relevant loss or damage. Indeed, in some cases, it may be potentially misleading to pose the question of causation in terms of whether an intervening act or decision has interrupted or broken a chain of causation which would otherwise have existed. An example of such a case is where the negligent act or omission was itself a direct or indirect contributing cause of the intervening act or decision.”

Per McHugh J at [20]:

“However, the ultimate question is whether, as a matter of common sense, the financial loss that the plaintiff has suffered was caused by the plaintiff’s act in resigning his office rather than by the defendant’s negligence.”

Per McHugh J at [23]:

“The plaintiff’s complaints of pain and fatigue, his decreasing confidence in his own abilities, his belief that he was no longer teaching as well as he was before the accident and his inability to find time for research combine to make a strong case for concluding that his early retirement was not unreasonable. A defendant cannot reasonably require a plaintiff to remain in employment for the purpose of reducing the damages that the defendant would otherwise have to pay if to do so would interfere with the plaintiff’s reasonable enjoyment of life. The doctrine of mitigation of loss was not intended to turn injured plaintiffs into economic slaves.”

 

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Bugden v Rogers (1993) Aust Tort Reports 81-246

ON 23 NOVEMBER 1993, the NSW Court of Appeal delivered Bugden v Rogers (1993) Aust Tort Reports 81-246.

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Nagle v Rottnest Island Authority [1993] HCA 76

ON 21 APRIL 1993, the High Court of Australia delivered Nagle v Rottnest Island Authority [1993] HCA 76; 177 CLR 423; (1993) Aust Torts Reporter 81-211; (1993) 112 ALR 393; (1993) 67 ALJR 426 (21 April 1993).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1993/76.html

Nagle became a quadriplegic after diving into a swimming hole and striking his head on a submerged rock.  It was known to Rottnest that visitors engaged in this activity.

Rottnest was liable to pay Nagle damages as it had breached its duty of care to Nagle to warn him of the risk of submerged rocks.

The risk was foreseeable: “Whether small or not, the risk was certainly not far-fetched or fanciful.”

The accident was cased by a failure on the part of Rottnest to erect a sign.

The Civil Liability Acts have since altered the obligations and responsibilities of public authorities and occupiers in such situations.

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Rogers v Whitaker [1992] HCA 58

ON 19 NOVEMBER 1992, the High Court of Australia delivered Rogers v Whitaker [1992] HCA 58; (1992) 175 CLR 479 (19 November 1992).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1992/58.html

Dr Rogers had performed surgery on Whitaker’s right eye, which was almost blind. The surgery should have restored her sight, but instead became blind in the left eye when she suffered sympathetic opthalmia. Whilst the risk was remote, Dr Rogers was held to be negligent in failing to warn Whitaker of the risk.

Lawyers

1300 00 2088

March v Stramare (E & M H) Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 12

ON 24 APRIL 1991, the High Court of Australia delivered March v Stramare (E & MH) Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 12; (1991) 171 CLR 506; (1991) 9 BCL 215 (24 April 1991).

Negligence – Causation – Duty of care – Injury reasonably foreseeable – Successive negligent acts by different persons – Whether first negligent actor exonerated by intervening negligent act – Apportionment of liability – Wrongs Act 1936 (S.A.), s. 27a(3).

The “but for” test was considered to be not a definitive test of causation in negligence.  Causation is a question of fact to be determined with reference to common sense and experience.

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1991/12.html

The “but for” test has since been revived by the operation of the Civil Liability Acts: see for instance Adeels Palace Pty Ltd v Moubarak; Adeels Palace Pty Ltd v Bou Najem [2009] HCA 48 (10 November 2009).

.

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Malec v JC Hutton Pty Ltd [1990] HCA 20

ON 26 JUNE 1990, the High Court of Australia delivered Malec v JC Hutton Pty Ltd [1990] HCA 20; (1990) 169 CLR 638 (26 June 1990).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1990/20.html

When assessing damages for events that would or would not have occurred, or might or might not have occurred, the approach is different to that events which have occurred.

A court determines on the balance of probabilities whether or not an event has occurred.  For events that would have or might have occurred, the court is to adjust the award of damages to reflect the degree of probability of that event occurring.

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088

Rogers v Bugden (1993) Aust Torts Reports 81-246

ON 14 FEBRUARY 1990, the NSW Supreme Court delivered Rogers v Bugden (Unreported, 14 February 1990) which went on appeal in Bugden v Rogers (1993) Aust. Torts Reports 81-246.

Lawyers

Sydney, Australia

1300 00 2088