(d) the Plaintiff condones NRL players having sex with underage girls in a very organised fashion (18)"
4. A Defence was filed on 12 November 2009. Insofar as paragraph 3(a) of the Statement of Claim is concerned, the defendant pleaded truth, and contextual truth and honest opinion; in relation to paragraph 3(b)(i) the defendant pleaded honest opinion.
5. The defendant's case on the present application is that one of the primary means by which the plaintiff communicated with footballers and others was by mobile telephone; and that by that medium the plaintiff regularly engaged in sending and receiving quasi pornographic text and images as well as allegedly arranging such liaisons for herself and for others. The content of the plaintiff's mobile phone communications therefore is at the core of the defendant's case insofar as imputations 3(a) and 3(b)(i) are concerned.
6. On 4 September 2009 the matter was listed for a second directions hearing at which time it was provisionally fixed for hearing on 13 September 2010. On 13 November 2009 the matter was listed for a directions hearing (the fourth) at which a general order for discovery was made. The plaintiff has denied being told of that order specifically on that day. However, in the absence of any evidence from the plaintiff or her solicitors to the contrary, it is highly likely that within a very short period of time of the order for discovery being made the plaintiff's solicitors did inform their client precisely of what was involved in such an order - particularly as the court's order required discovery to be given by 21 December 2009. I therefore find that on or about 13 November 2009 the plaintiff had been fully and properly advised as to her obligations for discovery. I also find that, absent any evidence to the contrary, she was similarly fully and properly advised on the many subsequent occasions to which I refer below when further discovery orders were made.
7. A list of documents is to contain not only documents in the possession of a party at the time discovery is given (Part 1 of the list), but also is to contain a list of documents that are not in the possession of that party at the time discovery is given but were within its possession within the last six months prior to the commencement of the proceedings (Part 2 of the list) (in the present case in the possession of the plaintiff as and from 27 January 2009). In relation to both Parts 1 and 2, the list, inter alia, must include a brief description (by reference to nature and date or period) of each document or group of documents. See generally UCPR Part 21.
8. On the day the discovery order was first made, the solicitors for the defendant wrote to the plaintiff's solicitors in the following terms:
"You have now been served with our client's defence which contains extensive particulars in support of the defences of truth and contextual truth.
It will be apparent from those particulars that a large portion of the material that we will be relying upon in order to make out our defences comprises material on your client's mobile phone and/or Facebook and/or Myspace pages. All of that material is clearly discoverable by your client, and we write to put you on notice that we will be pressing for discovery of it. In the circumstances, we ask you to make it clear to your client that she is not to delete or destroy any of this material. At the appropriate time, we will engage consultants to examine relevant material stored on your client's mobile phone and her computer."
9. At no stage in the voluminous correspondence which followed did the plaintiff's solicitors dispute the appropriateness of what was contained in that letter.
10. In opposing the defendant's Notice of Motion the plaintiff has submitted:
(1) The defendant has not proved the plaintiff has failed to comply with the orders for discovery.
(2) Alternatively if the defendant has proved a non-compliance, such non-compliance has not resulted in any prejudice to the defendant receiving a fair trial.
(3) Further the issue of any alleged non-discovery effectively relates only to one of the plaintiff's imputations - and therefore the plaintiff should not have her entire case dismissed if it be the circumstance (which the plaintiff does not concede) that there has been a failure to discover on a limited issue.
Background: