[105] During the trial, there were numerous instances where the defendant made gratuitous disparaging comments to the plaintiff: eg p 61 line 55; p 77, line 40; p 90, line 25.[62] There were repeated assertions, as far as the evidence went utterly without foundation and quite gratuitous, that the plaintiff had been known to embellish his service record: p 83, line 23; p 123, line 38; p 303, line 50; p 311, line 38.[63] Although no evidence was put forward as to what had happened in the AAT, it was asserted that the tribunal had doubted his word about having post traumatic stress disorder (p 89, line 5) and that he had fabricated his claim with the aid of a friendly psychiatrist: p 107, line 10.[64] On the same page at line 25 the defendant stated he did not believe that the plaintiff had post traumatic stress disorder, and on p 121, lines 20 and 27 he asserted the plaintiff had hoodwinked the AAT.[65] He described the plaintiff as a very skilled liar: p 319 line 37. The defendant was also insulting to the plaintiff's counsel: p 63, line 36; p 315, line 12. Although the insults were not entirely one way, in that on one occasion (p 86, line 30) the plaintiff suggested that the defendant might have fabricated documents, this was overall a remarkably nasty and insulting course of conduct towards the plaintiff by the defendant during the trial. It is difficult to see how the defendant could have conducted the trial in a way which would have aggravated the hurt suffered by the plaintiff more.