Faoud Taouk v Richard Tahana
[2015] NSWDC 55
At a glance
Source factsCourt
District Court of NSW
Decision date
2015-04-13
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (13 paragraphs)
Introduction
- The plaintiff in the principal matter sued the defendant for damages for personal injuries suffered by him on 7 August 2008, when an articulated semi‑trailer driven by the defendant collided with his vehicle at the intersection of Cumberland Road and The Crescent at Auburn. Both plaintiff and defendant were employed as drivers by HDG Logistics Limited ("HDG"), the second cross defendant to the second cross claim.
- The premises of HDG were located nearby. The plaintiff was on his way home from work at approximately 3pm in the afternoon and the defendant was returning to the depot. As the defendant proceeded in a westerly direction along The Crescent, in wet weather conditions where the roadway was wet, he saw a film of what was described as a "rainbow-type appearance" on the wet road surface ahead of him, approximately 30 metres before he reached the corner where The Crescent intersected with and became Cumberland Road. The defendant was travelling at 30-40 kph as he approached the corner, and slowed to 20-30 kph. When he reached the corner and commenced to steer around the corner, the prime mover he was steering and trailer jack‑knifed across onto the incorrect side of Cumberland Road, colliding with the plaintiff's vehicle which was travelling in the opposite direction, about to turn the corner from Cumberland Road onto The Crescent. The offside edge of the trailer of the defendant's vehicle crushed the cabin of the plaintiff's oncoming truck, causing serious injuries to the plaintiff.
- The defendant/first cross-claimant ("Mr Tahana") claims that the film on the roadway was caused by a spillage of diesel from an unidentified vehicle which had passed along the roadway a short time before this incident, without its fuel cap attached at all, or with its fuel cap poorly attached so that a spillage of diesel fuel occurred along the roadway. It is in those circumstances that the defendant/cross-claimant claims that the Nominal Defendant is liable for the plaintiff's damages.
- By a Second Cross-Claim, the Nominal Defendant sues Mr Tahana and his employer, HDG, claiming that the defendant was negligent and seeking indemnity and/or contribution from the first and/or second cross-defendants.