Observations of the appellant
45 The appellant was almost eight years old. He did not give evidence and was not otherwise presented before the judge. However, it appears that at least for some periods he was in court.
46 The judge's reasons included, after reference to evidence of the appellant's father to the effect that the appellant got upset easily, and got agitated and screamed and could not control himself -
"I pause to reflect upon that evidence. The plaintiff has from time to time been seated in this courtroom, I have watched him come and go, in fact he is sitting down now next to his mother as I am delivering this oral judgment. He has been extremely well behaved, he has been extremely courteous in the court and I must say it has been a pleasure having him here in this courtroom. He is certainly a well behaved young person from my observations here in this courtroom, so I am a little surprised at the overall tenor of the evidence of his father having regard to the number of times that the young plaintiff has been sitting in this courtroom. I am entitled to take that into account."
47 Considerably later in the reasons the judge said, as part of an overall assessment of the evidence -
"I agree with Mr Cleary's [counsel for the respondent] submission when he says that he was a well behaved boy in court, he was bright, healthy and a happy little boy. I agree with that and that has been my observation and indeed in many respects supported by other evidence."
48 The appellant submitted that the judge's observations of the appellant and his surprise at the tenor of his father's evidence had not been put to the father. It was said that the judge's observations of the appellant were limited, and that it was unfair to use the limited observations in the manner the judge did when the intended use had not been brought to the attention of his lawyers. Although it was not clear, I take the submissions to refer to use beyond comparison with the father's evidence - the judge went further in the later passage.
49 There had been reference to the judge's observations of the appellant in the course of addresses.
50 Counsel for the respondent addressed first. He placed considerable emphasis on the favourable school reports, arguing that they diminished the force of Dr Teychenné's opinion. His submissions included that although the appellant was shortly to turn eight, "one might have thought that this Court would have been given the opportunity of making its own assessment of the plaintiff … allowing the court the opportunity of engaging directly with the plaintiff". This brought the exchange, initiated by the judge -
"HIS HONOUR: It has to be said that I saw him in court on a number of occasions.
CLEARY: Well your Honour I was going to move on to that.
HIS HONOUR: He has appeared to me to be very well behaved. I think he even bowed a few times as he left the court, so I was impressed with him.
CLEARY: Your Honour, my advice is, because he's obviously behind me at all relevant times, is that he was meticulous in his courtesy to the court. Whenever he came through that door in either direction he stopped and respectfully bowed to the court. He was at all times a very well behaved boy, he wasn't making a noise, he wasn't being disruptive. Your Honour, consistent with the school reports. This is a bright, healthy, happy, little boy. And your Honour in the absence of the opportunity to ask questions directly, your Honour is entitled to take into account the observations of the plaintiff in the court room."
51 When counsel for the appellant thereafter addressed, the only submission was -
"My friend made a somewhat unusual suggestion that the plaintiff could have been called. Assumedly so that he could make his own assessment. That's not something that this court would entertain."
52 Nothing was said about the judge's observations of the appellant, volunteered by the judge and taken up by counsel for the respondent, or about the asserted entitlement to take them into account.
53 Regard to observations of the demeanour of parties or witnesses is well travelled territory. From a line of South Australian authority, Minigall v Ayres (1966) SASR 151; Jobst v Inglis (1986) 41 SASR 339; and Angaston & District Hospital v Thamm (1987) 47 SASR 177, the consideration in this state has included Government Insurance Office of New South Wales v Bailey (1992) 27 NSWLR 304; Kassem v Crossley [2000] NSWCA 276; (2000) MVR 179; Vukmirica v Betyounan [2008] NSWCA 16; and more recently Lindsay v Health Care Complaints Commission [2010] NSWCA 194.
54 A judge's observations of a party or witness in court, but out of the witness box, can be taken into account. But this is subject to procedural fairness, succinctly stated in Minigall v Ayres at 156 in the terms that "the parties should know or be informed of what [the judge] has noticed, and have an opportunity of answering or dealing with it".
55 Being a matter of procedural fairness there is no strict rule, and as was said in Lindsay v Health Care Complaints Commission at [237] -
"237 The authorities have emphasised that the general rule is flexible and based on commonsense. Furthermore, as Kirby P observed in GIO v Bailey , at 314, sometimes there will be a very fine line between conduct that is proper and that which is improper. As his Honour pointed out, where the line is drawn will depend on the circumstances of the case, including the opportunity available to the parties to respond to the Court's observations, the significance of the observations for the decision under challenge and the apparent importance attached by the court to any undisclosed material. Where the observations are of conduct outside the sight of counsel (for example, where the party being observed is at the back of the court), the duty to draw attention to the observations may be more onerous: Stojanovski v Gheiti (NSWCA, unreported, 14 May 1996), per Priestley JA (with whom Sheller and Cole JJA agreed)."
56 In Re Association of Architects of Australia; Ex Parte Municipal Officers Association of Australia (1989) 63 ALJR 298 at 305 Gaudron J said -
"As was pointed out by Deane J in Sullivan v Department of Transport (1978) 20 ALR 323 at 343 procedural fairness requires only that a party be given 'a reasonable opportunity to present his case' and not that the tribunal ensure 'that a party takes the best advantage of the opportunity to which he is entitled'. And it is always relevant to enquire whether the party or his legal representative should reasonably have apprehended that the issue was or might become a live issue."
57 Quite apart from the exchange in addresses, it is unlikely that the appellant's counsel or solicitors were unaware that the appellant was in court and within the judge's observation, or that he was well behaved and would have appeared to be a bright, healthy and happy little boy. His behaviour would have been a matter of interest to them, if only lest he disrupt the proceedings.
58 Albeit in addresses, the judge volunteered and identified his impression of the appellant. He was invited to take his observations of the appellant in the courtroom into account. In my opinion, it would have been obvious to the appellant's counsel that the invitation was likely to be taken up unless a submission to the contrary were made. The judge had initiated the exchange and had not responded negatively to counsel's submission that he could take his observations into account.
59 No submission was made to the contrary. Nor was anything said to seek to deflect that the appellant presented as a well behaved or "a bright, healthy, happy little boy", by submission or by application to call evidence such as that the appellant was under strict parental instruction to be good and was acting abnormally.
60 In Jobst v Inglis the judge's observations of the plaintiff in court in a personal injuries case were drawn to counsel's attention in the course of addresses, as observations which did not coincide with the inferences the plaintiff sought to draw from other evidence. Matheson and Johnston JJ considered that procedural fairness required that the observations be raised earlier. Jacobs J considered that sufficient had been done.
61 In Kassem v Crossley during addresses counsel invited the judge to take account of courtroom behaviour, opposing counsel urged the judge not to do so, and it was held that there had not been the reasonable opportunity of which Gaudron J spoke because (at [28]) "the appellant was denied the opportunity to meet the point by reason of the trial judge's silence as to her intention to rely on her observations until they were disclosed in the reserved final judgment". In Inghams Enterprises Pty Ltd v Timania Pty Ltd [2005] FCAFC 155; (2006) 221 ALR 823 it was said (at [13]) that the majority view in Jobst v Inglis "may be a counsel of perfection" because of current greater flexibility in allowing reopening, but the Court was not satisfied that the judge made it clear that he proposed to take the relevant incident into account in deciding the case, so that counsel could determine whether or not to lead evidence or make submissions concerning it.
62 I respectfully concur that current greater flexibility in allowing re-opening bears upon the difference of opinions in Jobst v Inglis. Had counsel for the appellant sought to re-open to lead evidence concerning the appellant's good behaviour in court, it is scarcely conceivable that the judge would not have acceded to the application. The appellant relied particularly on Kassem v Crossley and Inghams Enterprises Pty Ltd v Timania Pty Ltd, but in my view the facts were materially different. The judge did not expressly say that he would take into account, in coming to his decision, the observations as volunteered and taken up. But, unlike Kassem v Crossley and Inghams Enterprises Pty Ltd v Timania Pty Ltd, that he was likely to do so would have been obvious, giving rise to the reasonable opportunity of which Gaudron J spoke. I do not think the judge had to make it any more clear than he had done by volunteering his observations, in response to a submission to the effect that he should have been given an opportunity to make his own assessment of the appellant and of engaging directly with the appellant.
63 Each case depends on its own facts, and in the present case I consider that the appellant did have the opportunity to respond to what the judge said about his observations and to the submissions concerning the appellant's demeanour proffered by counsel for the respondent.