(2) Dr Barr
133The applicant, as noted above, was referred to Dr Barr by Dr Quittner and he saw the applicant on one occasion only, 6 November 2001. Dr Barr wrote to Dr Quittner on that same date advising that, by reason of the applicant's emotional disposition, he did not feel that the time was right to introduce anti-viral therapy, in particular, the drug Interferon for the Hepatitis C, as the drug was capable of causing emotional lability and depression.
134The alleged breach of duty of care and breach of contract (the alleged failure being by Dr Barr to exercise reasonable skill and care) is said to have occurred on or about 6 November 2001. It is the applicant's contention that Dr Barr's failure to investigate and/or treat the Hepatitis C condition and matters relevant to such treatment, such as procuring a liver biopsy etc, involved a breach of duty of care by Dr Barr.
135Similar to the claim against Dr Waugh, the applicant relies upon the fact that no treatment or further investigation of the Hepatitis C was undertaken by or at the behest of Dr Barr. The subsequent medical conditions (including the lymphoma) are, so the applicant contends, at least in part, the result of the alleged breaches of duty of care by Dr Barr (and by Dr Waugh). One matter in this respect, as discussed above, is the evidence that the lymphoma existed as at March 2001.
136In the written submissions (at [21]), it was stated for the applicant "Depending upon the evidence (the plaintiff's cause of action) accrued some time between 6 November 2001 and August 2004 ", that is, after the successful treatment of the Hepatitis C in August 2004. At [24] it was submitted:-
"That limitation period [ 3 years] necessarily expired by the end of August 2007 being three years after the Plaintiff had finally received appropriate treatment for his Hepatitis C."
137Proceedings were commenced in this Court against Dr Barr, as earlier noted, on 5 November 2009.
138The submission for the applicant was that, prior to receipt of Dr Vickers' report of 26 August 2008, the plaintiff could not have commenced proceedings against Dr Barr before that date. Reliance was placed upon the applicant's evidence in his affidavit in which he stated that until he had read Dr Vickers' report, "... I had not realised that Dr Barr may have been negligent in not immediately referring me for treatment for Hepatitis C" . For reasons discussed below, I have formed the view that Dr Vickers' opinion expressed in that report did not establish or form the basis for an allegation of negligence against Dr Barr.
139Counsel for Dr Barr relied upon the fact that the applicant had already raised the same "failure to treat" contention against Dr Quittner for not having commenced treatment for the Hepatitis C well before August 2001. The same line of argument, it was submitted, would logically apply to other treating specialists who successfully managed the applicant's case from 2002, including in particular, Dr Penny.
140As discussed below, after the applicant saw Dr Barr on 6 November 2001, he did not attend on him again for review as Dr Barr had anticipated. The applicant soon after seeing Dr Barr, went overseas and following his return he decided he did not want Dr Barr to manage his condition. He decided to seek treatment at St Vincent's Hospital. This was his position by April 2002.
141The applicant was cross-examined on his affidavit. He agreed that following his consultation with Dr Barr in 2001, he went overseas in November 2001 (transcript, at p.27). He said that he thought that he went overseas in "... the latter part of November" , for approximately two to three weeks.
142He also said in cross-examination that he went to Los Angeles in late 2001, he thought on two occasions, but could not remember the exact dates.
143His evidence was that, in respect of the period January 2002 to July 2002, he was overseas several times (transcript, p.28):-
"Q. Were you overseas at all in the period January 2002 to July 2002?
A. I, specifically, can't pinpoint an answer to that question because I was overseas twenty-eight times possibly, or that that many times between 2001 and 2003. So, probably, yes. Probably yes."
144The applicant subsequently clarified his evidence and said that he had made numerous trips overseas in the 18 month period from about June 2001 to December 2002.
145Exhibit 1 is a copy of a letter from Dr Waugh to the applicant in which he stated "I've tried to contact you on a couple of occasions since May, but you have been overseas ..." .
146Exhibit 3 is a copy of a letter dated 11 December 2001 from the applicant to Dr Waugh stating "I will come to see you in the new year as I am off to Los Angeles tomorrow" .
147In cross-examination, it was put to the applicant that, although he said he would see Dr Waugh in the new year (2002), he did not have any further contact with Dr Waugh (transcript, p.32). He subsequently agreed that he decided to leave Dr Waugh's care and seek treatment from doctors at St Vincent's Hospital.
148He said that in the period 1 January to 31 March 2002, he travelled overseas. When asked how long he had been overseas in that period, he replied "four or five weeks of that period, intermittently" (transcript, p.32).
149In relation to the period 1 April to 20 July 2002, he said that he was probably intermittently overseas.
150The applicant agreed, in cross-examination, that the effect of the renal biopsy (in March 2001) was to make him reluctant to have any biopsy subsequent to that procedure (transcript, p.34). He agreed that, when he saw Dr Penny in 2003, Dr Penny wanted him to have a renal biopsy but that he refused (transcript, p.34). He agreed that Dr Penny recommended on a second occasion that he have a renal biopsy and, again, he refused (transcript, p.34).
151Although in paragraph [21] of his affidavit, the applicant said that he did not hear back from either Dr Waugh or Dr Barr directly or through Dr Quittner following consultations with them, in cross-examination he agreed that he acted upon the basis that any referral back to Dr Waugh and Dr Barr would be made by Dr Quittner (transcript, p.39):-
"Q. The sequence, in which you make plain in the first sentence there, is the referral back to Dr Waugh after the last time you actually saw him would be done by Dr Quittner, isn't it?
A. Yes.
Q. And the same goes for Dr Barr, after you saw him on the one occasion only you would be going back to see him on referral from Dr Quittner?
A. Yes."
152The applicant accepted that Dr Barr's report to Dr Quittner dated 6 November 2001, at its conclusion envisaged that Dr Barr would be seeing him for review. That letter concluded:-
"I shall be in touch again when he returns for review following his tests."
153The applicant accepted that the letter made it plain that Dr Barr expected to see him again, as stated in his letter (transcript, p.40).
154In cross-examination, the applicant agreed that by March 2001, Dr Waugh had not tested him for Hepatitis C. He was also aware, or became aware, that Dr Waugh had written to Dr Quittner (1 March 2001) recommending that the applicant be screened again for Hepatitis B and C (transcript, p.43). He agreed that, on many occasions, blood testing in the past had been conducted by Dr Quittner at his rooms (transcript, p.42). In evidence is a copy of a request signed by Dr Waugh (undated) to Douglass Hanly Moir Pathology requesting a number of tests, including Hepatitis C (Exhibit 4). The explanation as to what happened to the request does not appear from the evidence.
155The applicant agreed that, at some point in the first half of 2002, Dr Quittner sought permission from him to send existing medical reports to Dr Waugh and Dr Barr, but that he refused permission saying (transcript, p.45):-
"I think that's correct. If that was simultaneous with my request to be referred to specialists at St Vincent's."
156He was then asked:-
"Q. In relation to that, why did you not give permission to Dr Quittner to do that, to send those medical reports to doctors Waugh and Barr?
A. I was frustrated by doctors Waugh and Barr and I wanted my reports sent to a new doctor to whom I could consult at St Vincent's."
157On the question as to why the applicant did not return to see Dr Waugh or Dr Barr following the latter's consultation in November 2001, the applicant made it clear in cross-examination that he had decided that he would not return to them (transcript, p.46):-
"Q. After you saw Dr Barr, I think you already agreed you saw Dr Quittner on a number of occasions in November and then in December?
A. Yes.
Q. And you didn't seek from Dr Quittner a referral back to Dr Barr on any of those occasions, did you?
A. No, I didn't.
Q. And you didn't seek from Dr Quittner a referral on any of those occasions back to Dr Waugh, did you?
A. No.
Q. And in April the following year Dr Quittner contacted you, specifically, on the subject matter of going to follow-up consultations with doctors Waugh and Barr, didn't he?
A. Yes.
Q. He contacted you about that, not the other way round, that's correct, isn't it?
A. That's correct.
Q. And you told him that you didn't want to see either of those gentlemen again, you wanted him to refer you to people at St Vincent's Hospital?
A. That is correct."
158As indicated above, the applicant travelled overseas in the period between April to July 2002 and, following his decision not to seek further medical attention from either Dr Waugh or Dr Barr, he attended on Dr Penny on 20 July 2002.
159Following Dr Penny taking over the management of the applicant's medical conditions, Dr Penny urged the applicant to see a specialist, Dr Milliken in relation to the lymphoma. However, he either failed or elected not to follow the advice to see Dr Milliken.
160In cross-examination, he agreed that Dr Penny told him that he wanted him to see Dr Milliken about the lymphoma. It was put to him (transcript, p.61):-
"Q. You did not see Dr Milliken, did you?
A. No.
Q. You did not make an appointment to see him, did you?
A. No, and I didn't elect to be rushed into St Vincent's.
Q. The point of my question, sir, you elected not to take Dr Penny's advice referring you to Dr Milliken?
A. Yes.
Q. And by that stage, by the time you saw Dr Penny in July 2002, you had taken any care, any medical care, any medical advice to you, out of the hands of Dr Waugh or Dr Barr and put it into the hands of Dr Penny, had you not?
A. Yes, with the exception that I had relayed Dr Barr's advice to Dr Penny."
161He was asked in cross-examination why he did not then attend on Dr Milliken between mid-December 2002 and March 2003. The applicant responded (transcript, at p.26):-
"A. The opportunity never arose to go to see Dr Milliken. I was not under the impression that it was urgent. Dr Penny didn't remind me and I certainly intended to go to see Dr Milliken, but by the time I saw him, I was already in hospital."