[Note: The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court otherwise orders, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is recorded in the Court's computerised court record system. Setting aside and variation of judgments or orders is dealt with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18. Parties should in particular note the time limit of fourteen days in Rule 36.16.]
HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
In the early hours of one Monday morning in April 2012, the first respondent, Dustin Thornbury, slipped and fell into a hole in the rear yard of the residential premises he was renting at Corindi Beach on the north coast of New South Wales. He was rushing across the yard in the dark to break up a fight involving his two dogs and a third dog that had entered the property. As a consequence of the fall, Mr Thornbury claimed to have suffered injuries, including to his neck and lower back. The hole into which Mr Thornbury fell was one of several dug in the week prior to the incident for the purpose of resolving a drainage problem. Present when the hole was dug were Mr Thornbury, local plumber Jeffrey Treur, and the owner of the premises, Mr Gerard Lloyd.
In 2013, Mr Thornbury brought negligence proceedings in the District Court seeking damages for his injuries from the second respondent being the partnership through which Mr Treur conducted his plumbing business ("the Treurs"), and from the appellant, Mr Lloyd, who was joined subsequently as a defendant. The Treurs and Mr Lloyd filed cross-claims against each other. The trial was heard in August 2015. The evidence was that Mr Lloyd had sought to erect barriers around the holes on the Friday prior to the incident but he had run out of materials to complete the work. An issue at trial was whether Mr Lloyd had instructed Mr Treur or another party to fence or fill the holes either on the Friday evening, or on the Sunday following a telephone call from Mr Thornbury advising that the holes remained open.
The primary judge delivered an oral judgment in June 2018 almost three years after the hearing, giving judgment for Mr Thornbury against Mr Lloyd but finding 40 per cent contributory negligence on the part of Mr Thornbury. On the cross-claims, his Honour gave judgment for the Treurs against Mr Lloyd. The parties were ordered to make calculations according to his Honour's reasons, and the parties agreed an award of $345,043.17 to Mr Thornbury, for which judgment was subsequently entered.
Mr Lloyd appealed against the whole of the decision. Mr Thornbury cross-appealed primarily challenging the finding of contributory negligence. The Treurs sought to uphold the finding of liability against Mr Lloyd.
The principal issues raised on the appeal and cross-appeal were:
(1) Whether the primary judge's reasons were inadequate;
(2) With respect to liability:
i. whether the primary judge erred in failing to identify the content of the duty of care owed by Mr Lloyd to Mr Thornbury,
ii. whether the primary judge erred in failing to identify the relevant risk of harm,
iii. whether the primary judge erred in failing to determine under s 5B(2) of the Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW) the precautions which a reasonable person in Mr Lloyd's position would have taken against the identified risk of harm,
iv. whether the primary judge erred in failing to make a finding that Mr Lloyd requested Mr Treur to backfill the holes prior to Mr Thornbury's fall,
v. whether the primary judge's finding of factual causation under the Civil Liability Act, s 5D(1) was erroneous,
vi. Mr Treur's alleged liability to Mr Thornbury in negligence in the event that Mr Lloyd's appeal on liability was successful.
(3) With respect to damages:
i. whether the primary judge failed to make findings concerning Mr Thornbury's most likely future circumstances but for the injury with the consequence that he erred in his assessments of non-economic loss, past and future economic loss and future medical expenses,
ii. whether the primary judge misdirected himself as to the evidence concerning Mr Thornbury's residual earning capacity and failed to provide sufficient reasons for his findings with respect to non-economic loss, economic loss and medical expenses,
iii. whether a retrial should be ordered on the question of damages.
The Court (Gleeson JA, Meagher and White JJA agreeing) allowed the appeal in part and held:
(1) As to the complaint of an asserted deficiency of reasons, on an appeal to this Court by way of rehearing, s 75A(10) of the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW) grants power to make all findings necessary to sustain the order that ought to have been given or made at first instance. This power ought to be used where possible to avoid the need for a retrial: [8]-[10].
Officeworks Ltd v Christopher [2019] NSWCA 96 at [10]; Nobarani v Mariconte [2018] HCA 36; 92 ALJR 806 at [36]-[38]; Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), r 51.53 applied.
(2) As to the issue of liability:
i. It is implicit from his Honour's finding of liability on the part of Mr Lloyd as owner, that the content of Mr Lloyd's duty was to take reasonable care to avoid foreseeable risk of harm to the tenants and other members of the tenant's household from their slipping or falling into the holes: [44].
Jones v Bartlett (2000) 205 CLR 166; [2000] HCA 56 at [57] (Gleeson CJ), [84] (Gaudron J), [100] (McHugh J) and [168], [171] (Gummow and Hayne JJ) applied.
ii. Although his Honour did not make an express finding as to the relevant risk of harm, he correctly identified the "true source of potential injury" as the open holes and the absence of any barricading, and the "general causal mechanism of the injury sustained" as slipping or falling into the open holes: [51].
Avopiling Pty Ltd v Bosevski; Avopiling Pty Ltd v The Workers Compensation Nominal Insurer [2018] NSWCA 146 at [43] applied.
iii. A reasonable person in Mr Lloyd's position on the Sunday prior to the incident, having identified on the Friday that the required response to the risk of harm was to backfill or barricade the holes, would have taken this precaution on the Sunday when Mr Thornbury advised him that the holes remained open. As such, there is no error in his Honour's finding that Mr Lloyd breached his duty: [70]-[71].
Roads and Traffic Authority (NSW) v Dederer (2007) 234 CLR 330; [2007] HCA 42 at [18]; Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), ss 5B(1)(c), 5B(2)(a), 5B(2)(b) & 5B(2)(c) applied.
Civil Liability Act, ss 5B(1)(a) & 5B(1)(b) cited.
iv. No substantial wrong or miscarriage was occasioned by the primary judge's failure to make a finding as to whether Mr Lloyd phoned Mr Treur on the Friday and instructed him to backfill or barricade the holes in light of the finding that Mr Lloyd breached his duty of care by failing to take reasonable precautions on the Sunday to barricade or backfill the holes when Mr Thornbury advised him that the holes remained open: [74].
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules, r 51.53(1) considered.
v. The primary judge's finding that Mr Lloyd's breach caused Mr Thornbury's injuries should be upheld because:
a. the breach did not depend upon the absent finding as to whether Mr Lloyd had phoned Mr Treur on the Friday evening and instructed him to cover or fence the holes: [83],
b. it is appropriate that the scope of Mr Lloyd's liability for the delay in remedying the open holes extends to the injury suffered by Mr Thornbury as there was evidence before the primary judge that there sufficient time for this to be done before the incident occurred: [84]-[85],
vi. the primary judge's finding that Mr Thornbury was contributorily negligent as to 40 per cent was neither manifestly inadequate or excessive: [101]-[104].
Boral Bricks Pty Ltd v Cosmidis (No 2) (2014) 86 NSWLR 393; [2014] NSWCA 139 at [54] (McColl JA), [94] Basten JA, Emmett JA agreeing; Gordon v Truong; Truong v Gordon [2014] NSWCA 97; (2014) 66 MVR 241 at [14]-[15] (Basten JA) cited.
vii. Given Mr Lloyd's liability to Mr Thornbury is upheld on appeal, it is unnecessary to determine Mr Thornbury's contingent challenge to the primary judge's dismissal of his claim against the Treurs: [172].
(3) With respect to damages:
i. In relation to past economic loss, the primary judge's finding of a diminution in Mr Thornbury's earning capacity of 20 hours per week on average since the incident in April 2012 is inconsistent with the evidence of the number of hours worked by Mr Thornbury leading up to trial: [138]-[141].
ii. In relation to future economic loss, the award ordered by the primary judge is unsupportable based upon his Honour's erroneous finding as to Mr Thornbury's future earning capacity and the absence of a finding as to his most likely future circumstances but for the injury, and his Honour's findings are infected by a failure to analyse the expert medical evidence to determine the effect of Mr Thornbury's pre-injury medical conditions on his most likely future circumstances but for the injury: [146]-[150], [155].
Taupau v HVAC Constructions (Queensland) Pty Limited [2012] NSWCA 293 at [132], [135] (Beazley JA, Basten and Macfarlan JA agreeing); HSH Hotels v Multiplex [2004] NSWCA 302 at [87] (Tobias JA, Mason P and Hodgson JA agreeing); Hull v Thompson [2001] NSWCA 359 at [21] (Rolfe AJA, Sheller JA and Davies AJA agreeing); Mifsud v Campbell (1991) 21 NSWLR 725 at 728; Beale v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales (1997) 48 NSWLR 430 at 442 (Meagher JA); Pollard v RRR Corporation Pty Ltd [2009] NSWCA 110 at [67] applied.
Amoud v Al Batat [2009] NSWCA 333 at [28] (Basten JA, Allsop P and Ipp JA agreeing) citing Watts v Rake (1960) 108 CLR 158; [1960] HCA 58; Purkess v Crittenden (1965) 114 CLR 164; [1965 HCA 34 cited.
iii. In relation to future medical expenses, the award of $20,000 should be set aside as it was not supported by the evidence available at trial: [160].
iv. In relation to non-economic loss, whichever approach to the correct standard of appellate review is taken, the primary judge's assessment of the degree of severity of non-economic loss under the Civil Liability Act, s 16 cannot stand due to an absence of findings or any reasoning process identifying the precise nature of Mr Thornbury's injury or grappling with the significance of his pre-existing medical conditions: [173].
Dell v Dalton (1991) 23 NSWLR 528 at 533-534 (Handley JA, Kirby P and Priestley JA agreeing); Hornsby Shire Council v Viscardi [2015] NSWCA 417 at [67]; Warren v Coombes (1979) 142 CLR 531; [1979] HCA 9; House v King (1936) 55 CLR 499; [1936] HCA 40; Berkeley Challenge Pty Ltd v Howarth [2013] NSWCA 370 at [13]; Hall v New South Wales [2014] NSWCA 154 at [28]-[32]; McKenzie v Wood [2015] NSWCA 142 at [21] considered.
v. A retrial on damages is required given that the reliability of the evidence is in issue and to resolve the competing possible conclusions available on the lay and medical evidence: [142], [157], [174].
Graham v Baker (1961) 106 CLR 340 at 347 (Dixon CJ, Kitto and Taylor JJ); [1961] HCA 48; Sretenovic v Reed [2009] NSWCA 280 at [80] (McColl JA, Beazley JA agreeing) cited.