As the trial judge noted, Dr Macarounas was not required for cross-examination.
19 His Honour also noted evidence that the plaintiff had applied for a catering job at a club prior to his fall and referred to contemporaneous evidence which tended to support that claim.
20 With respect to the painting work, his Honour stated that there was "no evidence that the Plaintiff would be likely to have obtained any painting work but for the accident": at [99]. In relation to the catering work, his Honour stated at [99]:
"It seems remarkable that the plaintiff would move from no work at all for five years (at least) to two jobs at once at precisely the time of the accident, and at a time when his doctor had certified him unfit for work, and according to Katsaounis he was in no fit state to work."
21 With respect, these findings tend to elide the distinction between the plaintiff's ability to work and the likelihood of him obtaining work. The fact that he claimed to have sought work in two areas is supportive of Dr Macarounas' statement that he was now fit to work, rather than the contrary. The fact that the doctor had certified him "unfit" was explained in the doctor's report, quoted above. The comments by Mr Katsaounis that he would not employ the plaintiff because he did not think him fit for work presumably relate to work in the building trade, Mr Katsaounis being a builder, which was not work which he claimed to be seeking.
22 The fact that the plaintiff had not worked for approximately five years from 1992 to 1997 was not unexplained. In 1993 he suffered a back injury, at a time when a daughter, who died in 1995, was also suffering deteriorating health. There was evidence that the death of his daughter in 1995 continued to affect him for some time. It was hardly remarkable that he was seeking work in 1997, but had not worked for five years, if there were explanations for his absence from the workplace, which had, by April 1997, resolved themselves.
23 His Honour found that the plaintiff had exaggerated his injuries, and in particular his state of depression, following the accident, but it does not follow from that finding that he had no earning capacity prior to the accident. Indeed, since the accident clearly increased his disabilities, the proper inference which might have been drawn from post-accident exaggeration was that he had residual earning capacity, but was unwilling or, for other reasons unrelated to the accident, unable to utilise it.
24 As Rothman J has demonstrated, he clearly had some level of earning capacity prior to the accident which has been permanently diminished as a result of the injuries suffered.
25 The real question, in my view, is whether the diminution in earning capacity has had and will continue to have an adverse effect on his actual earnings, and thus be productive of economic loss: see Medlin v State Government Insurance Commission (1995) 182 CLR 1 at 4 (Deane, Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ) and at 16 (McHugh J), referring to Graham v Baker (1961) 106 CLR 340 at 347.
26 The likelihood that the plaintiff might have obtained some painting work but for the accident, appears to have depended upon his relationship with Mr Curtis. His Honour appears to have accepted that Mr Curtis, who was not a professional painter but a general maintenance person, may well have expected to obtain painting work at the defendant's premises. There was evidence to support the conclusion, that had he done so, the plaintiff may have assisted him on a remunerative basis. Mr Curtis was not cross-examined to demonstrate that that was fanciful or unlikely. Accordingly, there was evidence to support the view that the plaintiff might have obtained work assisting Mr Curtis, but for the accident. Beyond that, the likelihood of on-going work was largely speculative. Nevertheless, the evidence of the plaintiff and of Dr Macarounas was that he was fit for and was seeking work. No precise calculation of the loss suffered is possible, but Rothman J's conclusion that a cushion of $80,000 for future economic loss should be allowed should be accepted.
27 The second major challenge with respect to damages was in relation to the allowance for domestic assistance, in accordance with the principles set out in Griffiths v Kerkemeyer (1977) 139 CLR 161. The trial judge allowed an amount of $9,828 for a period of six months after the accident. That allowed in full the plaintiff's claim for that period. However, in his schedule of damages, the plaintiff claimed further assistance at the rate of two hours per day, up to the trial, being a period of approximately seven years. For the future, he claimed an amount calculated at seven hours per week for a period of 21 years, until he reached the age of 70. Presumably other contingencies were accepted as likely to intervene by that stage, so that the causal connection between the injury and the necessary domestic assistance would by then have dissipated.
28 Despite his finding with respect to liability, the trial judge gave careful attention to both medical and lay evidence as to the consequences of the accident in relation to the plaintiff's health and likely prognosis: Judgment at [52]-[98]. For the reasons given by Rothman J, his Honour's finding as to the absence of future economic loss should not be allowed to stand. Nevertheless, his Honour identified a number of respects in which he held that the plaintiff "was not a reliable historian in relation to his health, work history, and the difference between his pre-accident condition and activities and his post-accident condition and activities": at [96]. Whilst the Appellant complained that the trial judge rejected the evidence of two women who provided considerable domestic assistance to the plaintiff, namely Ms Vicki Spathis and Ms Theodora Terzis, without criticism of their evidence, his Honour was entitled at least to discount the effect of their evidence. They spoke, no doubt accurately, of the assistance they provided to the plaintiff: it was nevertheless a matter for judgment as to how much of that assistance was a relevant consequence of the disabilities caused by the accident. Ms Terzis gave evidence that the plaintiff had assisted her hanging out the clothes on a few occasions and had "noticed" that he got "sore shoulders" in undertaking that activity: Tcpt, 21 September 2004, p 176. In cross-examination she agreed that she did his washing and hung it out for him but continued, perhaps somewhat obscurely, "but he can, though sometimes where he can put the washing in it": Tcpt, p 181. More important were the medical reports tendered at the trial which dealt with the physical restrictions caused by the injuries and an assessment of the extent to which, on that evidence, the plaintiff required domestic assistance.
29 Unfortunately, the trial judge did not expressly address the question of future domestic assistance. His Honour's finding in that respect was rolled up in his refusal to allow any amount for past or future economic loss: at [101]. Once it is accepted that there has been a diminution of earning capacity, at least for a person whose earning capacity required physical labour, it is likely, on the probabilities, that there has been some diminution in his ability to care for himself, and thus a need for domestic assistance. Making allowance for his Honour's finding of exaggeration in the plaintiff's complaints, I would nevertheless allow assistance for a period of one hour per day for the period from six months after the accident until approximately the judgment in the District Court, being a period of seven years. The appropriate figure would be $45,864.
30 An allowance for future domestic assistance must be an imprecise calculation. The plaintiff's schedule of damages allowed a period of 21 years, adopting an on-going allowance of one hour per day for that period. Applying the relevant multiplier, the amount claimed was $102,866.
31 I would allow continued domestic assistance for that period, but calculated on the basis of 5 hours per week. Applying the same multiplier, this would give a figure of $73,476.
32 No other challenge was made in the notice of appeal to the assessment of damages and the other findings made by his Honour should stand, including the proposed amount of $100,000 for non-economic loss, to which should be added the agreed interest on one-half of that amount at 2% for 7.5 years. Accordingly, I would allow the following amounts:
General damages $100,000
Interest $7,500
Economic loss (past and future) $80,000
Past domestic assistance (for six months post-accident) $9,828
Past domestic assistance (seven years to date of trial) $45,864
Future domestic assistance (post-trial date) $73,476
Past out-of-pocket expenses $25,000
Future expenses $ 7,000
Total $348,668
70% $244,067