Tag Archives: SYDNEY LAWYERS

Australian Safeway Stores Pty Ltd v Zaluzna [1987] HCA 7 | 10 March 1987

NEGLIGENCE. OCCUPIER’S LIABILITY. INJURY. ON THIS DAY IN 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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Australian Communist Party v Commonwealth (“Communist Party case”) [1951] HCA 5 | 9 March 1951

ON THIS DAY IN 1951, the High Court of Australia delivered Australian Communist Party v Commonwealth (“Communist Party case”) [1951] HCA 5; (1951) 83 CLR 1 (9 March 1951).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1951/5.html

The Commonwealth Parliament enacted the Communist Party Dissolution Act 1950 (Cth) to dissolve the Australian Communist Party of Australia and also empower the Government to dissolve other associations. The High Court held that the legislation was invalid because it was beyond the power of the Commonwealth Parliament under the Constitution and the rule of law.

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Re Taco Company of Australia Inc; Taco Bell v Taco Bell Pty Limited; Denbrad Management Pty Limited; Robert Francis; Eric Baillie Francis [1982] FCA 136

ON 22 JULY 1982, the Federal Court of Australia delivered Re Taco Company of Australia Inc; Taco Bell v Taco Bell Pty Limited; Denbrad Management Pty Limited; Robert Francis; Eric Baillie Francis [1982] FCA 136 (22 July 1982).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/1982/136.html

Taco Bell Pty Ltd (the first respondent) was incorporated in NSW, Australia and had for several years operated a business in Bondi called Taco Bell’s Casa and in 1974 registered the business names of Taco Bell and Taco Casa. Taco Company of Australia Inc (the appellant) was incorporated in the United States with the intention to establish Taco Bell restaurants in Australia and from 1981 operated a Taco Bell restaurant in Sydney.

The respondents sued the appellant for misleading and deceptive conduce under s52 and s53 of the Commonwealth Trade Practices Act 1975 and for passing off. The appellant made similar counter-claims.

At trial, the first respondent was successful in establishing a breach of s52 and passing off.

An appeal was dismissed and injunctions were granted in favour of the respondents restraining the appellant from, within the Sydney metropolitan area (1) using the name Taco Bell or (2) passing off goods and services as being that of the respondents.

A number of observations and principles come from this case.

Representation

At 202, Deane and Fitzgerald JJ observed that a finding on whether or not conduct is a representation is “a question of fact to be decided by considering what [was] said and done against the background of all surrounding circumstances”.

and

“In some cases, such as an express untrue representation made only to identified individuals, the process of deciding that question of fact may be direct and uncomplicated. In other cases, the process will be more complicated and call for the assistance of certain guidelines upon the path to decision.”

The doctrine of erroneous assumption

At 200, Deane and Fitzgerald JJ held:

“no conduct can mislead or deceive unless the representee labours under some erroneous assumption”.

and

“Such an assumption can range from the obvious, such as a simple assumption that an express representation is worthy of credence, through the predictable, such as the common assumption in a passing-off case that goods marketed under a trade name which corresponds to the well-known trade name of goods of the same type have their origins in the manufacturer of the well-known goods, to the fanciful, such as an assumption that the mere fact that a person sells goods means that he is the manufacturer of them.”

When determining whether conduct should be categorised as misleading or deceptive or as likely to mislead or deceive, the nature of the erroneous assumption “will be a relevant, and sometimes decisive, factor”

Misconception

There must be a misrepresentation, not mere tendency to cause confusion or uncertainty.  At 201, Deane and Fitzgerald JJ accepted that the “question whether particular conduct causes confusion or wonderment cannot be substituted for the question whether the conduct answers the statutory description contained in s 52”.

Injunctions

At 207, Deane and Fitzgerald JJ said “Injunctive relief granted to restrain contravention of s52 of the [TP Act] should plainly be limited to what is necessary in the circumstances of the particular case.”

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Sydney Solicitors

ON 20 AUGUST 1984, the High Court of Australia delivered Jaensch v Coffey [1984] HCA 52; (1984) 155 CLR 549 (20 August 1984).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1984/52.html

A plaintiff suffered nervous shock when immediately after an accident she saw her injured husband in hospital and was told of the seriousness of his injuries.

The High Court extended the class of persons to whom a duty of care is owed to those who, although not present at the scene of an accident, are at risk of suffering psychiatric injury by personally perceiving the direct and immediate aftermath of the accident in which a person with whom they are in a “close or intimate relationship” with is negligently injured or killed.

The duty of care was characterised as arising from the injury being reasonably foreseeable and sufficient proximity between the plaintiff and the defendant.

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Sydney Lawyers

ON 20 AUGUST 1984, the High Court of Australia delivered Jaensch v Coffey [1984] HCA 52; (1984) 155 CLR 549 (20 August 1984).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1984/52.html

A plaintiff suffered nervous shock when immediately after an accident she saw her injured husband in hospital and was told of the seriousness of his injuries.

The High Court extended the class of persons to whom a duty of care is owed to those who, although not present at the scene of an accident, are at risk of suffering psychiatric injury by personally perceiving the direct and immediate aftermath of the accident in which a person with whom they are in a “close or intimate relationship” with is negligently injured or killed.

The duty of care was characterised as arising from the injury being reasonably foreseeable and sufficient proximity between the plaintiff and the defendant.

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Nguyen v Nguyen [1990] HCA 9 | 8 March 1990

COMPENSATION TO RELATIVES. ON THIS DAY in 1990, the High Court of Australia delivered Nguyen v Nguyen [1990] HCA 9; (1990) 169 CLR 245 (8 March 1990).

In this matter, a widower was able to claim the loss of unpaid domestic services of his late wife.

In a Lord Campbell’s Act claim, a loss may include the value of services the deceased would have provided around the home.

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Dred Scott v Sandford (“Dred Scott case”) 60 US 393 (1857) | 5 March 1857

ON THIS DAY IN 1857, the US Supreme Court delivered Dred Scott v Sandford 60 US 393 (1857).

https://supreme.justia.com/us/60/393/case.html

The US Supreme Court ruled that slaves African ancestry were not citizens under the US Constitution.

The decision caused outrage and was a significant event leading up to the election of Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War from 1861 to 1865.

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Yerkey v Jones [1939] HCA 3

ON THIS DAY in 1939, the High Court of Australia delivered Yerkey v Jones [1939] HCA 3; (1939) 63 CLR 649 (6 March 1939).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1939/3.html

Yerkey v Jones provides that: (1) a wife may have a guarantee set aside if the consent was obtained by undue influence, unless she received independent advice (at 649, per Dixon J); and (2) a wife has a prima facie right to have a guarantee set aside if she failed to understand the effect of the guarantee or its significance, unless steps were taken by the lender to inform the wife of such matters (at 683, per Dixon J).

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Australian Communications and Media Authority v Today FM (Sydney) Pty Ltd [2015] HCA 7

ON 4 MARCH 2015, the High Court of Australia delivered Australian Communications and Media Authority v Today FM (Sydney) Pty Ltd [2015] HCA 7 (4 March 2015).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2015/7.html

The High Court allowed an appeal by the Australian Communications Media Authority (ACMA) against a decision of the Federal Court of Australia regarding the investigation of a broadcast in December 2012 by Today FM (Sydney) Pty Ltd, a licensee under the Broadcasting Services Act 1992 (Cth).

The broadcast contained a recorded telephone conversation between two radio presenters and two of the staff of the King Edward VII Hospital in London, where the Duchess of Cambridge was an inpatient. The conversation was recorded and broadcast without the consent of either of the hospital staff.

ACMA investigated the matter and determined that Today FM breached a licence condition of breaching a law of the Commonwealth or State or Territory by communicating a private conversation without the consent of the principal parties in breach of the Surveillance Devices Act 2007 (NSW).

Today FM brought proceedings in the Federal Court of Australia seeking declarations and injunctions against ACMA. They argued (1) that ACMA was not authorised to determine the breach of the licence condition issue until a competent court had determined that Today FM had committed the Surveillance Devices Act offices and (2) in the alternative, that if ACMA was so authorised, the legislation was invalid because of its inconsistency with the separation of judicial and executive powers in the Constitution.

The Federal Court dismissed the matter but on appeal the Full Court of the Federal Court allowed an appeal on the grounds of the first argument.

Special leave was granted for ACMA to appeal to the High Court of Australia. The High Court allowed the appeal, holding that ACMA has the power to make an administrative determination that a licensee has committed a criminal offence (under the Surveillance Devices Act), notwithstanding there being no court determination of the offence as the tribunal is not exercising judicial power not adjudging or punishing criminal guilt.

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Korda v Australian Executor Trustees (SA) Limited [2015] HCA 6

ON 4 MARCH 2015, the High Court of Australia delivered Korda v Australian Executor Trustees (SA) Limited [2015] HCA 6 (4 March 2015).

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2015/6.html

The High Court allowed an appeal against a decision of the Victorian Court of Appeal, declaring that the respondent was not entitled to certain monies that were payable to a forest company (“the third appellant”) under Land Sale Contracts and a milling company (“the fourth appellant”) pursuant to a tree Sale Agreement. The Court held that the proceeds of the sale of at the timber and land scheme payable to the third and fourth respondent were not subject to an express trust in favour of the scheme of investors.

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Sydney, Australia

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