Cross-examination and the Plaintiff's Credit
65The plaintiff was asked in cross-examination to demonstrate how high he could raise his left arm without discomfort. He elevated his left arm with his arm parallel to the floor to a height about 10-15cms below shoulder height and with his forearm at right angles to that. When asked whether there had been any period of time since he hurt his shoulder where he had greater movement than demonstrated, he said:
"A: I have had. But I have to rest, yeah, when I start using it. It all depends on what day it is, whether I've slept on it or it does fluctuate. But I still have trouble lifting it above my shoulder, like level shoulder height.
Q: So even on a good day you have trouble getting it over shoulder height. Is that right?
A: Yes, yes."
66He was asked about his ability to lift objects and, whilst he was lefthanded, he said he would use his right hand. In respect of shopping bags he was asked:
"Q: Do you try and lift with both hands or do you only focus on the right hand?
A: I usually try and lift with my right arm if it's got weight in it. I can lift with my left arm. But if it's got weight in it then it starts to become a problem if it's got any sort of weight in it. I can lift it. Carrying or lifting it up is a hard thing to do. "
He agreed that he would have trouble lifting something up to put it in the back of a car. He was asked:
"Q: What sort of things are we talking about that would be light enough for you to do that?
A: I say a couple of loaves of bread in a bag I can lift into the back of the car.
Q: Nothing more than that?
A: No. Once it gets - if it's, say, a bottle of juice or something like that, it's just too much weight to - when I go to lift it, it pulls down on my shoulder, so."
67When asked what sort of weight he was referring to he said:
"A: I can carry out a bag of dog food is 8kgs and I - if I've got to carry that for any distance I struggle with it. I can carry it. But it gets heavy after a short distance."
68The plaintiff conceded that he was capable of doing housework including vacuuming with some restrictions. He said he had trouble getting back up after squatting down and that he only squatted down if he had to.
69Standing was also a problem identified by the plaintiff. He was asked:
"Q: If you had to stand in sort of one position and just move around slightly, how long before you start getting discomfort then?
A: If I stand in the one spot for any longer than 10 minutes, I've got to be moving or I've got discomfort. I've got numbness in my toes and burning and sensation in my back, like I've got to move. I can't stand in the one spot. It feels like I'm getting cramped in the back."
70Prior to his back injury in 1988, the plaintiff used to surf and play football. He was an experienced surfer. He was asked whether he was able to continue surfing after his 2005 injury and he gave the following evidence:
"A: I tried it but I didn't go very often and I didn't last for very long.
Q: After the 2008 accident did you go back to surfing after that?
A: No. I've gone in the water but I don't go surfing any more."
71The plaintiff did give evidence of going to the beach with his children for a swim at the weekend before the trial.
72In regard to the circumstances of the plaintiff's injury, he was crossexamined as follows:
"Q: Once again, if you needed assistance in lifting a roll of plastic bags and putting it up on the hooks, you could ask someone to assist you?
A: I could.
Q: On the day of this accident you didn't?
A: No, we were in a hurry to set up.
Q: You refer to the fact you were setting up, is that right?
A: Yep.
Q: What time did the accident occur?
A: I'm not sure. It was - the stuff had just started coming down the chute so it would have been half past seven or eight o'clock or something like that. I'm not sure."
73In respect of his evidence about not surfing since the 2008 accident, he was further cross-examined as follows:
"Q: So your answer is correct that you do go in the water, but you don't go surfing any more?
A: No, not anymore. No.
Q: That's since 2008?
A: I've tried since 2008. I have tried. But I've since given up.
Q: When was the last time you tried?
A: I reckon it would be two months ago, three months ago.
Q: When you tried where did you go surfing?
A: Minnie Waters, the beach on the north coast.
Q: When you tried, what happened?
A: I got pain in my shoulder and my neck from paddling, pain in my back from lying on my board, just general pain from trying to paddle out and then catch a wave in. Didn't last real long. Came in.
Q: So how long were you able to be out there for?
A: Probably half an hour maximum. Yeah.
Q: You got pain in your - you said your shoulder, your neck and your back?
A: Yeah.
Q: From doing that, is that right?
A: Yes.
Q: Having got that pain in your shoulder, neck and back, you then came back into the beach?
A: Yes.
Q: What did you do then?
A: I sat on the beach with the kids for a while.
Q: Then what did you do?
A: I think we had lunch, waited till the kids had finished, the granddaughter had finished nippers and I think I possibly went for a swim with my daughter or one of the grandkids and went home after that like at the end of the day.
Q: You say you possibly went for a swim?
A: Yeah. I can't remember exactly, but yeah."
74The plaintiff was asked about his previous injuries and medical treatment. He conceded that the pain and discomfort that he suffered following his 2005 injury continued up until the start of 2008 and that he had shoulder pain on and off. To add to his clinical picture in 2008 he was diagnosed with Q fever.
75The plaintiff was cross-examined on a questionnaire he completed in February 2006 at the Big River Health and Sport Clinic in which he indicated that he had been suffering neck, shoulder, arm, upper back, lower back and leg pain for 6-9 months.
76By July 2009 the plaintiff had been certified as fit for modified duties, following which, he attained a truck driver's license and commenced working as a truck driver, transporting livestock. He worked for a period of three weeks but then could not do it any more. In October 2010 the plaintiff had done a work trial at Caringa, a centre for disabled people. That was for a period of six weeks, and was a work trial organised by his workers compensation rehabilitation provider. He was not offered a job at the completion of the work trial. He had looked for work in the Grafton area with the Clarence Valley Council and gave evidence that he could not work as a security guard. He gave evidence that he would be able to work as a taxi driver if he was able to take breaks whenever he liked.
77When asked about how much time he spent in the water surfing prior to 2005, he said he could spend a couple of hours or more in the water. He was then asked:
"Q: As far as being in the water now, could you spend a couple of hours?
A: Not a couple of hours. No. It'd be - I wouldn't go any more than probably an hour, hour and a half and I wouldn't be able to do anything. Just lying on the beach."
78As to the incident on 17 June 2008 he was asked as follows:
"Q: If you don't understand any part of this, please let me know. You're in the offal room of the abattoirs and was lifting heavy rolls of plastic above your head when your left shoulder gave way, causing you to lose your balance and fall heavily on your stomach across the track of a conveyer belt, moving beneath your waist height?
A: Yeah. It was a roll - one roll of plastic bags. It wasn't rolls. It was just the one roll.
Q: Sorry I didn't mean to cut you off. It was one roll of plastic bags?
A: Yeah.
Q: But otherwise that description is correct?
A: Pretty much. Yes."
79In respect of surfing, the plaintiff was again cross-examined as follows:
"Q: I just want to go back a little bit to your attempt or when you did, you said, go surfing about two months back?
A: Yep.
Q: Do you specifically recall the incident?
A: Not offhand.
Q: Well, you said about two months back you remember trying to surf?
A: Yeah.
Q: How long prior to that had you attempted to surf?
A: Might have only been a weekend before or two weekends before. I don't know. Whenever we go to the beach I'd have a go and if I couldn't handle doing it, well, I wouldn't do it. I'd come in.
Q: The weekend before or two weekends before, in having a go at surfing, did you do exactly what you did on this period of time about two months back?
A: In what way do you mean? Paddling out and go surfing?
Q: Yes.
A: Well, that's what I try to do, yeah.
Q: That's what you tried to do each time you've tried to go surfing?
A: Yes.
Q: How often do you think over the last 12 months you've tried to go surfing?
A: I don't know. I'll be may be every second weekend, every third weekend, may be two weekends in a row. I don't know. I can't recall.
Q: It's always the same. You get to the beach, you paddle out and see if you can get a wave?
A: Yes.
Q: How long do you stay out there each time? About the same time?
A: It all depends on how I'm feeling on the day. Some days are a little bit longer, Some days are shorter. I might only be out there, like, paddle out there and catch a wave back in. Other days I'll be out there for half an hour to an hour. It just all depends on how I'm feeling on that day."
80I asked the plaintiff as follows:
"Q: Do you regard yourself as an experienced board rider?
A: I was, your Honour. Yeah I would class myself as that."
81The plaintiff had been investigated by the defendant and he was filmed at Minnie Waters beach on 22 March 2013, less than two months before the commencement of the trial. On that day he was filmed at a shopping centre and in the car park of the shopping centre was shown lifting groceries from a trolley into the rear of his vehicle. Some of the bags containing groceries required him to lift them using two hands and two freezer bags appeared in the video to be heavy. He was shown lifting an 8kg bag of dog food in his left arm, but with his right hand beneath it.
82Video footage was also exposed on 24 March 2013 which showed the plaintiff and his extended family at Minnie Waters beach. The film showed the plaintiff in the water on his surfboard for a period of approximately 35 minutes. For the whole of that time, in a rather gentle surf, he was shown to be paddling his board, using both left and right arm, one after the other, and both together, and going over and diving under waves. He eventually caught only one wave back into the beach and carried his board in his left arm along the beach. He was then shown to be in the water with his grandchildren, holding one in each arm and was filmed lifting one child on his left arm to neck height. On another occasion he picked two children up, however, in carrying the children, his left arm was lower than his right, and he appeared to be favouring it. He was shown in the surf with two grandchildren, lifting one small child with his left arm and holding him for some time. He was also shown carrying a small child up the beach in his left arm, having a beach shower and drying himself with both hands, carrying his surfboard to his utility vehicle and lifting it with both hands above shoulder height on to the back of the vehicle. He was also shown pushing a pram over rough beachside terrain to the car and loaded the pram on to the back of the utility, but in doing so, lower the side of the utility before he lifted it. The disks were exhibit 3 in the proceedings.
83The plaintiff was cross-examined about all of those activities. It was put to him that in all of the film he showed no restriction in the doing of any of the activities. His answer was:
"A: I can tell you my back and shoulders were playing up after I did that."
He described the day in question at the beach as a "good day". When asked about his previous evidence "I have gone in the water. But I don't go surfing any more", he said:
"A: No. I didn't mean any more. Yeah.
Q: Well that was your evidence wasn't it?
A: Yeah. Obviously it's written down. Yes."
He agreed that he had told the Court that after his 2005 accident he did not go surfing very often and did not last for very long, and it was put to him that since the 2008 accident he seemed to be going surfing a lot more often. He disagreed with that. He gave the following evidence:
"Q: You're going every second to third week and sometimes two weekends running?
A: Yeah. Sometimes I don't surf. I just go down there and help out with the grand kids.
Q: Yes. But you're certainly surfing more since 2008 than you were before 2005, aren't you?
A: No, I'm not. No. I go to the beach more. But I don't go surfing as much."
84The plaintiff gave evidence that he had pain in his left shoulder all the time but conceded that he had had pain in that shoulder all the time prior to the 2008 accident.
85As to the circumstances in which he was injured, it was again put to the plaintiff that he could have asked for assistance. He gave the following evidence:
"Q: What I want to suggest is that if you needed to lift anything heavy, and I asked you this previously, you could always ask someone to assist you and you agreed with that?
A: Yes.
Q: What I want to suggest to you is you could also, if there was no one available to assist you, you could have spoken to Ms Hindmarsh about it?
A: Yeah. I suppose I could have yes.
Q: If necessary she could have even helped you?
A: If she wasn't flat out in her room, yeah."