However, he held that the evidence did not establish that the level of illumination contributed to her fall.
48 The evidence as to the degree of illumination on the night in question was extremely slight. The trial judge relied on the fact that the plaintiff had said that the area was "dark" when she fell. However, she also gave evidence that "the new lighting had not been installed when she fell", a belief which his Honour stated was "clearly incorrect": Judgment, pp 16-17. Having reached that conclusion, the basis upon which his Honour concluded that the lighting was inadequate was that one of the fluorescent tubes must have failed and not been replaced. The only real support for that in the evidence was the statement by Ms Michelle Cullen, a former employee of the Club who gave evidence about the lighting in the following terms (Tcpt, p 57):
"Q. Were you aware of the lighting around the outside of the Club during that period of time back in around 1999?
A. In one word crap.
Q. Which lighting are you talking about in particular and what precisely do you mean by that?
A. Well, the outside lighting was always bad as far as I can remember. The inside lighting was more my thing, if I couldn't see inside I get somebody on to the job to hurry it on. No, bad, very bad lighting.
Q. In particular I am talking about the veranda around the edge where the step ramp it [sic], how was that lighting?
A. That's worse because of the fact that it's not used all that often, the lighting inside is a lot dimmer. …"
49 In cross-examination Ms Cullen gave evidence that the lighting had never changed, and particularly that the lights in place at the date of the accident had not been changed in May 1998, as other evidence indicated. The cross-examination included the following passages (Tcpt, pp 62-63):
"Q. Do you recall that when you first started working there [in 1994], … there were different lights, old lights?
A. To my knowledge the lights have never been changed.
…
They look the same as far as I know, it's only the tubes that ever got changed.
Q. I want to suggest to you that those lights in fact went in in May 1998?
A. Well, they've obviously been put in the same place as the ones that were there before that.
Q. Yes, but they replaced lights that looked … nothing like it. Totally different size, shape and appearance?
A. As I said, I don't - didn't sort of go to work to check out the lights. …
Q. I suggest to you that before May 1998 the lights that were there did not work at all and hadn't worked for some time. What do you say to that?
A. I just remember it always being dark out there."
50 His Honour summarised this evidence, but did not expressly indicate how much of it he accepted, if any. He noted that Ms Cullen had ceased employment with the Club in late 2003 for reasons about which she was vague and that her membership had been rejected for reasons of which she said she was unaware. After referring to the evidence on lighting generally, his Honour stated (p 17):
"There was no direct evidence that on the night in question the lights were on or off or that either one of the lights was not working. I accept … the evidence that the tubes were replaced on an ad hoc basis. One tube was out when [the plaintiff's expert] did his inspection."
51 The conclusion set out at [47] above involved a significant degree of speculation. I do not see in the reasoning of the trial judge any basis for preferring one view as to the state of the lighting over another. I would conclude that the facts fall squarely within the principle explained in Luxton v Vines (1952) 85 CLR 352: the plaintiff did not establish on the probabilities that the lighting was inadequate on the night in question.
52 On the other hand, this conclusion may not matter because the trial judge's conclusion that inadequate lighting had no relevant causal connection with the injury, was not seriously disputed.
53 The second basis was that the gradient of the ramp was in excess of that provided for under the current Building Code of Australia, although it appears to have been common ground that it did not breach any regulatory requirement at the time of its construction in about 1964. The gradient of a ramp usually gives rise to safety issues because, if too steep, pedestrians may slip on it. There was no suggestion that the Appellant slipped in the present case and this does not appear to have been the basis upon which his Honour found breach of duty.
54 The third element in the complaint of breach was that the combination of the ramp and the step down onto the ramp involved a "hazardous construction": Judgment, p 20. He held (at p 14), accepting an opinion expressed by a consulting engineer, "that there was a risk associated with the configuration in view of the sharp discontinuities of the upper surfaces and that, without making any allowance for poor lighting, the addition of the step creates a situation in which a fall is likely to occur when descending". The phrase 'sharp discontinuities' appears to have been a reference to the edge of the veranda.
55 If his Honour's finding with respect to causation was, in relation to the construction of the ramp, in error, it becomes necessary to consider the Respondent's contention that there was no breach of duty in the configuration of the step and ramp. It is necessary to commence with the Appellant's best evidence in support of this finding. Two passages were relied upon in the report of the Appellant's expert, which read as follows:
"This accident could have been prevented by ensuring adequate lighting was available and constructing the ramp in such a manner that the top finished flush with the main slab."