Category Archives: Torts

Makita (Australia) Pty Ltd v Sprowles [2001] NSWCA 305

ON 14 September 2001, the NSW Court of Appeal delivered Makita (Australia) Pty Ltd v Sprowles [2001] NSWCA 305 (14 September 2001).

The common law rules regarding the admissibility of opinion evidence were summarised by Heydon JA as follows:

  • An expert has a duty to provide the trial court with criteria to allow the evaluation of the validity of the expert’s conclusions (at [59]).
  • The trial court is to decide whether or not to accept the conclusions.
  • The intellectual basis or essential integers of the expert opinion must be explained to the trial court to allow it to arrived at an independent assessment of the opinions and their values (at [68], [71] and [79]).
  • The trial court must give weight to the opinions in the same way as for the evidence of non-expert witnesses (at [82]).
  • The expert’s opinion is to be based on facts, either proved by the expert or disclosed as assumptions of fact that form the basis of the opinion [at 64].
  • the opinion will be admissible and material if other admissible evidence establishes that the assumptions are sufficiently likely even though not completely precise.
  • The expert witness is not an advocate. The paramount is to be impartial to the court. This duty overrides its obligation to the engaging party. The expert witness is not an advocate (at [77]).
  • The expert witness is to assist the trial court in determining a matter in issue, but the court must weigh and determine the probabilities of the fact on the whole of the evidence (at [67]).
  • The expert’s particular expertise is to be applied to the assumed or proven facts in order to come to his or her opinion (at[59]).

Per Heydon JA (at [85]):

“In short, if evidence tendered as expert opinion evidence is to be admissible, it must be agreed or demonstrated that there is a field of “specialised knowledge”; there must be an identified aspect of that field in which the witness demonstrates that by reason of specified training, study or experience, the witness has become an expert; the opinion proffered must be “wholly or substantially based on the witness’s expert knowledge”; so far as the opinion is based on facts “observed” by the expert, they must be identified and admissibly proved by the expert, and so far as the opinion is based on “assumed” or “accepted” facts, they must be identified and proved in some other way; it must be established that the facts on which the opinion is based form a proper foundation for it; and the opinion of an expert requires demonstration or examination of the scientific or other intellectual basis of the conclusions reached: that is, the expert’s evidence must explain how the field of “specialised knowledge” in which the witness is expert by reason of “training, study or experience”, and on which the opinion is “wholly or substantially based”, applies to the facts assumed or observed so as to produce the opinion propounded. If all these matters are not made explicit, it is not possible to be sure whether the opinion is based wholly or substantially on the expert’s specialised knowledge. If the court cannot be sure of that, the evidence is strictly speaking not admissible, and, so far as it is admissible, of diminished weight. And an attempt to make the basis of the opinion explicit may reveal that it is not based on specialised expert knowledge, but, to use Gleeson CJ’s characterisation of the evidence in HG v R [1999] HCA 2; (1999) 197 CLR 414 (at 428), on “a combination of speculation, inference, personal and second-hand views as to the credibility of the complainant, and a process of reasoning which went well beyond the field of expertise.”

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Kenny & Good Pty Ltd v MGICA [1999] HCA 25

Kenny & Good Pty Ltd v MGICA [1999] HCA 25; 199 CLR 413; 163 ALR 611; 73 ALJR 901 (17 June 1999).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1999/25.html

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Denzin and Ors v Nutrasweet and Ors [1999] NSWSC 106

Denzin and Ors v Nutrasweet and Ors [1999] NSWSC 106 (22 February 1999).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWSC/1999/106.html

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Romeo v Conservation Commission of the Northern Territory [1998] HCA 5

ON 2 FEBRUARY 1998, the High Court of Australia delivered Romeo v Conservation Commission of the Northern Territory [1998] HCA 5; 192 CLR 431; 151 ALR 263; 72 ALJR 208 (2 February 1998) .

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1998/5.html

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Pyrenees Shire Council v Day [1998] HCA 3

ON 23 January 1998, the High Court of Australia delivered Pyrenees Shire Council v Day [1998] HCA 3; 192 CLR 330; 151 ALR 147; 72 ALJR 152 (23 January 1998).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1998/3.html

The High Court rejected the “doctrine of general reliance” of Sutherland Shire Council v Heyman (1985) 157 CLR 424 (1985) 157 CLR 424.

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CES and Anor v Superclinics (Australia) Pty Ltd and Ors (1995) 38 NSWLR 47

ON 27 OCTOBER 1995, the NSW Court of Appeal delivered CES and Anor v Superclinics (Australia) Pty Ltd and Ors (1995) 38 NSWLR 47.

The plaintiff (CES) sought civil damages for the loss of opportunity to terminate a pregnancy arising from the defendants’ alleged breach of duty of care by failing to detect a pregnancy . Newman J of the Supreme Court of NSW found in favour of the defendants, not satisfied that the evidence justified a finding that termination of pregnancy would have been legal in accordance with Levine J’s test in R v Wald.

The NSW Court of Appeal upheld an appeal, ordering a new trial. The Court of Appeal held that the evidence did not justify a finding than a termination of pregnancy would have been illegal.

The Wald test, per Levine DCJ (at 29) provides:

“It may be that an honest belief be held that the woman’s mental health was in serious danger as at the very time when she was interviewed by a doctor, or that her mental health, although not then in serious danger, could reasonably be expected to be seriously endangered at some time during the currency of the pregnancy if uninterrupted. In either case such a conscientious belief on reasonable grounds would have to be negatived before an offence under s33 of the Act could be proved.”

Kirby P in CES and Anor v Superclinics (Australia) Pty Ltd and Ors said that the Wald test “allows a consideration of the economic demands on the pregnant woman and the social circumstances affecting her health when considering the necessity and proportionality of a termination.”

Kirby P said that there is “no logical basis for limiting the honest’ and reasonable expectation of such a danger to the mother’s psychological health to the period of the currency of the pregnancy alone.”

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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.

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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.

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Australian Safeway Stores Pty Ltd v Zaluzna [1987] HCA 7

NEGLIGENCE. OCCUPIER’S LIABILITY. INJURY. ON 10 MARCH 1987, the High Court of Australia delivered Australian Safeway Stores Pty Ltd v Zaluzna [1987] HCA 7; (1987) 162 CLR 479 (10 March 1987).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1987/7.html

An occupier of premises owes a duty of care under the ordinary principles of negligence to take reasonable care for the safety of a person who enters the premises, irrespective of whether they are an invitee, trespasser or licensee.

Per Mason, Wilson, Deane and Dawson JJ at 488:

“We think it is wholly consistent with the trend of recent decisions of this Court touching the law of negligence, both in this area of an occupier’s liability towards entrants on his land and in the areas which were the subject of consideration in San Sebastian Pty. Ltd. v. Minister Administering the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 [1986] HCA 68; (1986) 68 ALR 161 and Cook v. Cook [1986] HCA 73; (1986) 61 ALJR 25; 68 ALR 353, to simplify the operation of the law to accord with the statement of Deane J. in Hackshaw, at pp.662-663:

‘… it is not necessary, in an action in
negligence against an occupier, to go through the
procedure of considering whether either one or
other or both of a special duty qua occupier and an
ordinary duty of care was owed. All that is
necessary is to determine whether, in all the
relevant circumstances including the fact of the
defendant’s occupation of premises and the manner
of the plaintiff’s entry upon them, the defendant
owed a duty of care under the ordinary principles
of negligence to the plaintiff. A prerequisite of
any such duty is that there be the necessary degree
of proximity of relationship. The touchstone of
its existence is that there be reasonable
foreseeability of a real risk of injury to the
visitor or to the class of person of which the
visitor is a member. The measure of the discharge
of the duty is what a reasonable man would, in the
circumstances, do by way of response to the
foreseeable risk.'”

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Bankstown Foundry Pty Ltd v Braistina [1986] HCA 20

ON 13 MAY 1986, the High Court of Australia delivered Bankstown Foundry Pty Ltd v Braistina [1986] HCA 20; (1986) 160 CLR 301 (13 May 1986).

Braistina was a metal trades worker employed by Bankstown Foundry. As part of his duties he drilled holes in cast iron pipes weighing about 60 pounds. He was required to lift about 40 pipes an hour from a pallet onto a drilling machine and then onto another pallet after the drilling.

On a particular shift, Braistina injured his neck after drilling about 115 pipes over a three hour period. Medical evidence showed that the lifting and twisting made the risk of injury foreseeable and not far fetched and fanciful.

A hoist was readily available but not used. The use of the hoist was not impracticable, caused no undue expense or nor any difficulty. Had the hoist been used the risk of injury would have been eliminated.

The court held that in the circumstances, a prudent employer would reasonably require that the hoist be used.

An employer must take reasonable steps to enforce a safe system of work, otherwise they are in breach of their duty of care to the employee and will be found negligent and liable for the injury, loss and damage suffered by the employee.

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