Mace v Justice and Forensic Health Network; The Geo Group Australia Pty Ltd v AAI Limited t/as Vero Insurance
[2016] NSWSC 803
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Supreme Court of NSW
Decision date
2016-05-23
Before
Schmidt J, Harrison J, Health J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (9 paragraphs)
Judgment
- By his tutor, his mother Ms Kathy Mace, Mr Shayne Mace brought claims in negligence against Justice and Forensic Health Network, the State and The Geo Group Australia Pty Ltd, for injuries which he had suffered in March 2010, while an inmate at Parklea Correctional Centre. Mr Mace's claims were settled on terms approved by Harrison J on 17 December 2015. Geo now pursues a cross-claim against its insurer, AAI Limited trading as Vero Insurance with whom it had entered a "Medical Malpractice Civil Liability Insurance Policy", under which it made a claim in May 2012, in respect of Mr Mace's claim.
- In issue is whether Geo's claim falls within the terms of the policy, Vero contending that the insuring clause of the policy had not been triggered by its claim.
- There was no issue as to the circumstances in which Mr Mace came to be in custody, on remand, in March 2010 at Parklea, which Geo then operated, or how he came to injure himself there on 7 March 2010. Geo operated the Centre under an agreement it had entered with the Commissioner of Corrective Services whereby, amongst other things, it had contracted to provide the services of psychologists, counsellors and custodial staff at the Centre. It was Justice Health which provided medical services for inmates held in custody there, through the medical and nursing staff which it employed.
- While at the Centre, Mr Mace received such nursing services, initially upon arrival and subsequently, when he received doses of methadone. Whether the evidence established that he had, or ought to have received, the services of either the counsellors or the psychologists Geo employed there, was in issue.
- Vero's case was that Mr Mace had been medically assessed by Justice Health staff and that he had not requested any healthcare services from Geo, nor had he been provided with such services. The only interactions between Mr Mace and Geo having been on an operational/correctional basis, Geo's claim could not trigger the insuring clause of the policy. His claim was, in the result, concerned with the quality of the non-medical correctional services he had been provided. To the extent it had any liability to him, it was for Geo's failure, in its capacity as operator of the facility, to refer him to Justice Health for medical intervention, or otherwise to take measures to prevent him from coming to self harm.