(a) The evidence of the other witnesses
18 Mr Cameron lived on the property at the corner of Summerland Way and Gurranang Road. He heard the sound of the accident, and went to the scene. He said he noticed the condition of the road surface, and that the roadway was gravel where the car came to rest and for about 200 metres to the north. But he also said that shoulder widening had taken place and the old bitumen had been torn up and replaced with new bitumen, indeed that at the time tar and gravel was being laid to the north of where the accident occurred. Mr Cameron was incorrect in his recollection of the extent to which the roadworks had progressed. The judge said that he was not assisted by Mr Cameron's evidence in determining the state of the roadway at the northern end of the skid marks.
19 Ms Mitchell, Mr Cameron's partner, also attended the scene of the accident. She described the roadway as "like dirt and they put road base on the top of that and then like loose gravel, gravelly stuff which was mixed in the road base I suppose" across the whole of its width. She was uncertain whether the bitumen had been torn up, but thought the material looked as if it had been placed prior to something else happening to it; she also said that the old bitumen surface was not there on the day of the accident. Ms Mitchell said that she walked 150 metres to the north from where the respondent's car came to rest, and saw skid marks starting on the correct side of the road for a south-bound vehicle and crossing to the western shoulder, along the shoulder for 100 to 130 metres, and then back across the roadway to the embankment. She said that a covering of "gravelly stuff" extended to the north at least as far as to the point where the skid marks began. The judge thought that Ms Mitchell was wrong in her perception that the dirt, road base and gravel had been deliberately deposited prior to further work, but took her to be describing a surface comprising a mixture of dirt, road base and gravel.
20 Mr Wesslink was an ambulance officer who attended the accident. He said that where he parked the ambulance half off the roadway close to the respondent's car there was gravel, which extended right across to the western side of the road. It appeared to him that the old bitumen surface had been ripped up. He came from Grafton, and said that the bitumen colour of the roadway seemed to have ended 100 metres south of the bend at the Gurranang Road turnoff. (This was not further identified; from one of the plans, it would have been well towards but not necessarily as far south as the southern end of the 30 kilometre job.) He travelled further north from where the car came to rest only 30 to 40 metres, to turn the ambulance, and could not say what the surface of the roadway was like further to the north. The judge said that Mr Wesslink was wrong in thinking that the road was ready for bitumen to be laid, but that he was particularly impressed by Mr Wesslink's evidence, and that it was "in the context of his general impression about the appearance of the road surface" and was reliable evidence of the condition of the road surface in the immediate vicinity of the respondent's car.
21 Mr Watt, the respondent's grandfather, went to the scene on the day after the accident. He identified from debris the point where the respondent's car had hit the embankment. He said that there was a light level of white gravel right across the road, with signs of bitumen showing through it. The gravel extended for about 200 yards in each direction and appeared to be about an inch thick; bitumen could be seen in small areas as if disturbed by traffic. It appeared to him that the material had been deliberately placed. The road from 200 yards south was a "good bitumen road", and there was not a clean line indicating a change from a bitumen surface to the light gravel. Mr Watt returned to the scene on 9 April 1998 and took a video, but by then more work had been done and the roadway was in a different condition, with newly laid bitumen over the gravel surface he had earlier seen. The judge said that Mr Watt was wrong in his perception that the gravel had been deliberately laid, but that his evidence was "consistent with that of Ms Mitchell in tending to establish a substantial deposit of gravel in the vicinity where the plaintiff lost control of his vehicle".
22 Mr Ingram was driving north from Grafton and stopped when he saw the respondent's damaged car. He said that the roadway near the car had a bitumen surface with patches of dirt on the road and at that point deeper gravel, possibly 20 millimetres deep, extending right across the road; it was "mostly gravel". The gravel was the same colour as the shoulders of the road. He estimated that the patches of dirt and gravel extended at least 100 metres in either direction from the car. He did not walk to the north of the car, but saw tyre marks from the western side of the road to where the car stood. The judge said he was impressed by the evidence given by Mr Ingram also, in particular the specific evidence that when he walked across the road from his car to the respondent's car he did not walk across any bitumen but rather across brown material which crunched underfoot and was small pieces of rock interspersed with dirt.
23 Mr Perriott was the appellant's supervising engineer for the 30 kilometre job. He went to the accident site on the day. He said that the bitumen surface "looked fairly normal". When it was put to him that there was a light covering of gravel or dirt across it, he said that he did not remember. He accepted that it was possible to get material across the road surface, including from carriage of materials by trucks. He made no contemporaneous note and took no photographs, but at the time was not aware that the accident had been serious. The judge said that while Mr Perriott was honest his evidence of his observations was uncertain and unconvincing, and that he thought the evidence unhelpful on the issue of the condition of the roadway.
24 Mr Ward was the appellant's ganger for the 30 kilometre job. He gave evidence of the progress of work on the 30 kilometre job but, although Mr Perriott gave evidence that he was accompanied by Mr Ward on 24 March 1998, Mr Ward gave no evidence of the condition of the roadway on that occasion. The judge drew a Jones v Dunkel inference that he was unable to give evidence which would have assisted the appellant.
25 In addition to the video, a great many photos were in evidence. None was of the relevant area of the roadway at the time of the accident. Some of the witnesses were asked to relate their recollection to the appearance of the roadway in the video or photographs.
26 Ms Mitchell was shown Ex A, a photo taken on or before 12 March 1998, which showed what appeared to be a graded shoulder with brown gravel intruding into the bitumen but reasonably clean bitumen for most of its width. She said that it was not as the roadway looked on the day of the accident, and that there was brown or road base right across the road. Mr Watt said that Ex A was not as he saw the roadway, and Mr Ingram said that the shoulder as shown in the photo was very close to what he was trying to describe - that is, his description of what extended across the road. Mr Watt was also shown Ex E, a similar photo, and said that there was more gravel on the roadway than in the photo. Mr Ingram was also shown the video, which showed brown material intruding a short way into the bitumen. He said that the brown extending from the shoulder looked like compacted dirt and that he had seen loose gravel as well, extending as he had described by reference to Ex A.