On 6 November 2010, the plaintiff was admitted to the Coffs Harbour Hospital administered by the defendant, having taken an overdose of diazepam. She was observed overnight and released the following day. Various steps were taken by way of follow up; on 9 November she was visited at home by a mental health caseworker. The following day, 10 November 2010, she jumped from a six metre balcony and sustained serious and permanent injuries.
More than six years later, on 28 November 2016 she commenced proceedings against the defendant alleging a negligent failure to take reasonable steps for her care and supervision to protect her from self-harm. The proceedings were thus commenced more than three years after the expiry of the three year limitation period for personal injury claims provided in s 18A of the Limitation Act 1969 (NSW). However, such a cause of action is maintainable if brought within a period of three years running from the date on which the cause of action was first discoverable by the plaintiff: s 50C(1)(a). Discoverability is relevantly defined in the following provision:
50D Date cause of action is discoverable
(1) For the purposes of this Division, a cause of action is discoverable by a person on the first date that the person knows or ought to know of each of the following facts:
(a) the fact that the injury or death concerned has occurred,
(b) the fact that the injury or death was caused by the fault of the defendant,
(c) in the case of injury, the fact that the injury was sufficiently serious to justify the bringing of an action on the cause of action.
(2) A person ought to know of a fact at a particular time if the fact would have been ascertained by the person had the person taken all reasonable steps before that time to ascertain the fact.
(3) In determining what a person knows or ought to have known, a court may have regard to the conduct and statements, oral or in writing, of the person.
It is common ground that where a proceeding is apparently brought out of time, it is for the defendant to plead and prove such facts as may establish the defence. [2] In the present case the critical issue for the defendant was when the plaintiff first knew, or ought to have known, that the injury was caused by the fault of the applicant.
The defendant wishes to raise a limitation defence, but says it cannot properly do so without information as to what steps the plaintiff took to ascertain whether she had a cause of action and when those steps were taken. [3] By notice of motion dated 11 April 2018, it sought a direction that the plaintiff provide verified answers to a set of proposed interrogatories.
Such an order is required pursuant to Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) (UCPR), r 22.1:
22.1 Interrogatories
(1) At any stage of the proceedings, the court may order any party to answer specified interrogatories.
(2) An application for such an order must be accompanied by a copy of the proposed interrogatories.
(3) In the case of proceedings on:
(a) a claim for damages arising out of the death of, or bodily injury to, any person, or
(b) a claim for contribution in relation to damages so arising,
such an order is not to be made unless the court is satisfied that special reasons exist that justify the making of the order.
(4) In any case, such an order is not to be made unless the court is satisfied that the order is necessary at the time it is made.
Thus there is a general requirement that the order be "necessary at the time it is made", and, in a claim for damages arising out of bodily injury, an additional requirement that there are "special reasons" that justify the making of the order. Satisfaction of the latter requirement will usually entail satisfaction of the general requirement.
The origin of the rule may be seen in Griebart v Morris, [4] in which the English Court of Appeal rejected the proposition that there was a general rule of practice not to allow interrogatories in running-down cases except for special reasons or special circumstances. The relevant rule required only that interrogatories must be "necessary either for disposing fairly of the cause or matter or for saving costs." [5] The wording of r 22.1(3) was clearly intended to reverse the decision in Griebart v Morris and impose such a requirement. There is no material difference between the phrases "special circumstances" and "special reasons" (the phrases tend to be used interchangeably in the cases).
[2]
Decision of Registrar
The Registrar approached the question by reference to two considerations. The first was whether it was "necessary" to direct answers to interrogatories in circumstances where the "issue" had not been identified in a pleading. The second was whether there were "special reasons" to make an order where the plaintiff was the only source of the information needed to establish the limitation defence.
In substance, the Registrar was satisfied that there was a potential issue between the parties as to the limitation period, which the defendant could not properly plead absent further information. He concluded that the absence of a pleaded defence was not an answer to the question whether the order was then necessary; he was satisfied that it was necessary for the orderly disposal of the litigation. That conclusion was reached on the basis of the likely complexity of the issues going to the cause of action and that the material relevant to the limitation issue was separate and independent from that which would go to establishing the cause of action.
With respect to the question of special reasons, the Registrar was satisfied that the requisite factual material was otherwise unavailable to the defendant and that the complexity of the subject matter would give rise to real prejudice to the defendant (in having to defend the substantive proceedings) without the possibility of reliance on the limitation defence. The specific requirement was therefore satisfied.
[3]
Reasoning of primary judge
The primary judge identified three issues for consideration, namely (i) the approach to be taken on an application for review of a decision of the Registrar; (ii) whether the absence of a pleaded defence based on the Limitation Act should have led to refusal of the application and (iii) whether there were special reasons for the administration of interrogatories in this case. It is convenient to address these issues in turn.
[4]
Approach to an application for review
The plaintiff sought a review of the orders made by the Registrar pursuant to UCPR, r 49.20. That rule does not set out the approach that the Court should undertake in conducting a review. The primary judge derived the relevant principles from the judgment of Button J in Horsnell by his tutor Horsnell v Allworth Constructions Pty Ltd. [6] Those principles were stated as follows:
"[44] Turning to my determination about the administration of interrogatories, I accept, in accordance with what was said in Tomko v Palasty (No 2) [2007] NSWCA 369; (2007) 71 NSWLR 61; The Estate of Arthur Michael Falco; Falco v Lambert (No 3) [2015] NSWSC 1343; and Noble Earth Technologies Pty Ltd v Hampic Pty Ltd t/as Cyndan Chemicals [2012] NSWSC 935, that the following principles apply to the review of a decision of a Registrar by a judge of this Court.
[45] First, a review is not an appeal in the strict sense of requiring identification of error on the part of the Registrar, or of the reviewing judge being limited to the evidence that was placed before the Registrar some time ago.
[46] Secondly, having said that, the process is not entirely de novo.
[47] Thirdly, I should have regard to the decision of the Registrar and reflect upon it carefully before disturbing it.
[48] Fourthly, I would be slower to intervene where, as here, the decision of the Registrar was interlocutory rather than determinative."
In Tomko v Palasty (No 2) [7] Hodgson JA (with whom Ipp JA agreed) stated:
"[5] I agree that the view expressed by Basten JA in Pioneer Park Pty Ltd (In Liq) v Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd (2007) 25 ACLC 1707, on the basis of limited argument, that the review of a registrar's decision with respect to an order for security for costs is constrained by the principles stated in House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499, is not strictly correct.
[6] I agree that a review of a decision of a registrar is not an appeal, subject to s 75A of the Supreme Court Act; and that in such a review a court must exercise its own discretion.
[7] In my opinion, this discretion extends to a discretion as to whether, and if so how, to intervene; and in my opinion, there is an onus on a person seeking to have a court set aside or vary a registrar's decision to make out a case that the court, in the interests of justice, should exercise its discretion to do so.
[8] In the case of a decision on practice or procedure, this will normally require at least demonstration of an error of law, or a House v The King error, or a material change of circumstances, or evidence satisfying the strict requirements for fresh evidence. Even then, a court may not think that the interests of justice require intervention. This could be so, for example, if the error of law is a deficiency of reasons and the result is on its face not an unreasonable one.
[9] In the case of a decision which finally determines a party's rights, or which (albeit one of practice or procedure) has a decisive impact on those rights, a court may be more willing to intervene. It may permit further evidence to be led which does not satisfy the strict requirements for fresh evidence, if it is satisfied that the interests of justice require this. It may decide to substitute its own discretionary decision for that of the registrar, even though no House v The King error is shown, again if it is satisfied that the interests of justice require this. To that extent, the review may be considered a de novo hearing.
[10] In my opinion, this approach is consistent with the position that such reviews are not appeals and involve the exercise of discretion by the reviewing body; and with the policy considerations referred to by Jordan CJ in In [re] the Will of Gilbert (1946) 46 SR (NSW) 318 at 323; 63 WN (NSW) 176 at 179. It is also consistent with the general principles concerning interlocutory applications: they do not finally decide matters, and successive applications can be brought for the same orders; but generally, a later application for orders that have previously been refused will be summarily dismissed unless a change of circumstances is shown or there is evidence satisfying the strict requirements for fresh evidence."
Although a review is not confined in precisely the same manner as an appeal, the principles of constraint identified in Will of Gilbert, approved in Adam P Brown Male Fashions Pty Ltd v Philip Morris Inc, [8] are apposite. Because they did not receive adequate reflection in the statement of principles in Horsnell, it is convenient to set out the well-known passage from Will of Gilbert: [9]
"… I am of opinion that … there is a material difference between an exercise of discretion on a point of practice or procedure and an exercise of discretion which determines substantive rights. In the former class of case, if a tight rein were not kept upon interference with the orders of judges at first instance, the result would be disastrous to the proper administration of justice. The disposal of cases could be delayed interminably, and costs heaped up indefinitely, if a litigant with a long purse or a litigious disposition could, at will, in effect transfer all exercises of discretion in interlocutory applications from a Judge in Chambers to a Court of Appeal."
This principle of constraint with respect to challenges to rulings on practice and procedure, whether by appeal or review, was not reflected in the principles set out in Horsnell which were adopted and applied by the primary judge in undertaking afresh the exercise of discretion.
The importance of the principle of constraint identified in Will of Gilbert may be illustrated by reference to the approach taken to the two substantive issues, discussed below.
[5]
Absence of a pleaded defence
With respect to the need for a pleading, the primary judge identified the limitation issue as one which "obviously arises": at [6]. Further, she noted that the defendant had written to the plaintiff requesting details as to when she first sought legal advice on 26 June 2017: at [12]. The defendant wrote again on 30 January 2018 stating that it would be preferable to deal with the limitation issue prior to dealing with the amended defence: at [14].
The judge rejected the proposition that the limitation defence was "an issue", as not strictly correct: at [15]. She then stated:
"[21] Further, I accept, as submitted by Mr Daley, that in the present case the fact that the Limitation Act defence has not been pleaded is more than a mere technicality. The chronology I have recited makes plain that the defendants have on more than one occasion made inquiries of the plaintiff directed to the limitation issue; had time to reflect upon the responses to those inquiries; and have to date not made the decision to plead the Limitation Act defence. For my part, I would regard the fact that no such defence has been pleaded as a strong factor against allowing interrogatories to be administered, if it is not determinative."
With respect to the defendant's contention that it was necessary to obtain information from the plaintiff in order to properly raise a defence, the judge stated:
"[25] It is not clear to me that that is necessarily the case. It certainly may be accepted that the time at which she knew certain matters may be exclusively within her knowledge, but I do not think it follows that the defendant could not have made an assessment as to the appropriateness of pleading a limitation defence based on the information available to it to date.
…
[30] Those statements indicate that the question of discoverability turns on more than just the facts known to the plaintiff and turns rather more importantly on advice available to a plaintiff.
[31] As noted by Mr Daley in the present argument, the letter dated 9 January 2017 informed the defendant that it was her contention that she could not have known of all the matters required to commence a cause of action until receipt of the report of Dr Phillips, a consultant psychiatrist. That is unsurprising in circumstances where the incident of the plaintiff's jumping off the balcony is alleged to have occurred following her release from psychiatric treatment at the hospital conducted by the defendant. The defendant did not put Dr Phillips' report before me on the present application and did not make any argument based on the content of that report as it may or may not reveal the discoverability of the cause of action on the part of the plaintiff."
The Registrar dealt with the matter somewhat differently. He noted that the plaintiff opposed interrogatories "as being unnecessary because there is no issue before the Court (there being no pleaded issue)." [10] He then noted that in Horsnell Button J had stated that "interrogatories must be relevant to the issues between the parties as revealed by the pleadings". [11] He continued:
"I do not understand Button J as stating … as a general proposition that interrogatories are always restricted to where there is a joinder of issue. If it does purport to do so, I am of the view that it must that it must yield to what the Court of Appeal said in Schutt v Queenan [2000] NSWCA 341."
The plaintiff in Schutt, then a six year old child, was injured when hit by a car on a public street in Bundeena. She sought to administer interrogatories to the driver of the car. At that time, the relevant District Court rules had no "special reasons" requirement for personal injury claims. Nevertheless, a request for interrogatories had been rejected as "unnecessary" because the plaintiff already had access to the defendant's police statement. [12] However, Mason P noted that the police statement "is mainly if not wholly exculpatory" and offered "very little comfort to the plaintiff and it does not address a number of potentially relevant issues."
Mason P continued:
"[12] In this area, the accepted test of necessity is what is reasonably necessary for the disposing fairly of the matter or necessary in the interests of a fair trial (Boyle v Downs [1979] 1 NSWLR 192 at 205, Yamazaki v Mustaca [1999] NSWSC 1083). The answers which are sought are material in the sense that they may enable the claimant either to maintain her own case or to destroy the case put against her (see Griebart v Morris [1920] 1 KB 659 at 664).
[13] Griebart was remarkably similar to the present case. The plaintiff in a running-down case was concussed and left with a defective memory of her accident. No eye witnesses could be found. The plaintiff sought to administer interrogatories asking in substance what were the positions of the bus from which the plaintiff had alighted and the defendant's motor car at the time of the accident, and how far the plaintiff was from the bus and from the curb on either side of the road. Leave to administer these interrogatories was refused in the lower courts on the basis of a rule of practice not to allow interrogatories in running-down cases except for special reasons. The English Court of Appeal held that there was no such rule of practice and that in the circumstances the interrogatories were necessary for disposing fairly of the action. ….
[14] Griebart is referred to by Jordan CJ in the Commissioner for Railways v Small (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 564 at 575 as authority for the proposition that there may be special circumstances in which a party is entitled to use a subpoena or a summons for interrogatories for the purpose of 'fishing' in the sense of endeavouring, not to obtain evidence to support his case, but to discover whether he has a case at all. In Newcastle City Council v Kern Land Pty Ltd & Anor (No 1) unreported, 9 December 1996, McLelland CJ in Eq said (at pp 3-4):
'The case of Griebart v Morris referred to by Jordan CJ and cases which have followed that case, both in New South Wales and elsewhere, illustrate that in particular circumstances it may be legitimate to use a subpoena for what would in other circumstances be characterised as for fishing purposes, where the relevant area of factual inquiry is one concerning which the plaintiff can, in the nature of things, have no knowledge, where for instance the area of factual inquiry is wholly or at least substantially within the knowledge of the defendants to the proceedings.'"
The proposition to be derived from this reasoning is that it may be appropriate to interrogate another party "not to obtain evidence to support his case, but to discover whether he has a case at all." It would be a strange conclusion that a party which believed it could not properly plead a case until it had received and considered answers to interrogatories could not obtain interrogatories without pleading the case which it could not support. The plaintiff in the present case took the view that it was not proper to plead a limitation defence on the material available to it. The Registrar thought that such a position was not fatal to a claim for interrogatories. He considered himself bound by Schutt to take that view. He was correct to do so.
In this Court, the plaintiff did not contend that the Registrar was wrong in his view as to the effect of Schutt. She did submit that this was a "classic case of fishing" but, as noted by McLelland CJ in Eq, in the passage cited by Mason P in Schutt, there are cases in which what may otherwise be characterised as fishing will be legitimate.
Referring to the order made by the Registrar, the primary judge concluded that it "also puts the limitation issue on the table prematurely in the absence of it being pleaded in any defence." [13] That conclusion was inconsistent with Schutt.
[6]
Special reasons
Schutt is also relevant to the question of special reasons, although the present rule was not then in force. As the discussion in Griebart illustrated, while there was no general rule of practice against interrogatories in personal injury cases except for special reasons, in many such cases interrogatories would not be allowed because they were not "necessary". Fishing was not permissible under the general rule. In effect, however, there was a special circumstances exception to what may otherwise be described as a fishing expedition. Thus, in Commissioner for Railways v Small, [14] Jordan CJ stated: [15]
"In the absence of special circumstances, … a party is no more entitled to use a subpoena duces tecum than he is a summons for interrogatories, for the purpose of 'fishing,' ie, endeavouring, not to obtain evidence to support his case, but to discover whether he has a case at all…, or to discover the nature of the other side's evidence…."
The opening words recognise that there may be circumstances where fishing is acceptable. As explained by McLelland CJ in Eq, in the passage cited in Schutt, interrogation may be allowed where the area of factual inquiry is one concerning which the party seeking to interrogate can, in the nature of things, have no knowledge, but which is wholly, or at least substantially, within the knowledge of the other party. If such a case represents special circumstances to avoid the prohibition on fishing, logic would suggest that such a case may well constitute special reasons, for the purposes of interrogation in personal injury cases.
The form of r 22.1(3) is not that of an absolute prohibition, but of a qualified prohibition. The criterion of "special reasons" is imprecise as to its scope and effect. It should be construed according to general principles governing the conduct of civil litigation. That means, that in giving effect to the overriding purpose of facilitating the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues in the proceedings, [16] the general rule should be followed that personal injury proceedings can usually be justly and fairly disposed of without the need for interlocutory steps, such as interrogation. On the other hand, the phrase "special reasons" should not be construed as so restrictive that it will prevent interrogation where the effect would be to render a claim or defence unavailable due to the inability to obtain information from the other party, in the circumstances identified in Schutt. That would tend to disadvantage the most seriously injured and allow a procedural hurdle to eviscerate a substantive right.
It is not necessary for present purposes to consider the circumstances in which, for example, a plaintiff in a personal injury proceeding may be able to interrogate the defendant as to the matters relevant to the claim in negligence. It is sufficient that the interrogation sought to be undertaken by the defendant went to a defence which was independent of the factual inquiries relevant to maintaining or resisting allegations of negligence on the part of the defendant. The area of inquiring was limited to that relevant to the limitation defence and the factors required to be established by the defendant, bearing the onus of proof on the issues relevant to s 50D(1)(b).
The primary judge accepted that there were things known to the plaintiff which were not known to the defendant, but concluded that the defendant knew sufficient to determine whether or not to plead a limitation defence. [17] Her rejection of the existence of special reasons turned on that finding as to the lack of a pleaded defence. That negative finding rendered unnecessary consideration of whether the Registrar should not have been affirmatively satisfied that there were special reasons warranting interrogation.
The Registrar concluded that the special reasons criterion was made out in the following circumstances:
"[7] Whether the plaintiff's cause of action falls within the '3 year post discoverability period' must be based substantially on the plaintiff's knowledge, or what the plaintiff ought to have known. The latter may involve evidence of the conduct or statements of the plaintiff. Evidence may have to be given by the plaintiff and probably her legal advisers or former legal advisers. There is a significant evidentiary exercise that a defendant must surmount in order to avail itself of the defence. The parties accept that the burden is on the defendant. The defendant is at an obvious disadvantage in respect of this.
[8] The nature of the plaintiff's claim is complex. On the plaintiff's own admission, in her lawyer's letter of 9 January 2017, this is accepted. It will be the basis of asserting that the discovery period does not start until 10 October 2016. Even without the letter, the pleadings show that this will be a difficult matter to prosecute and defend."
The plaintiff's solicitor's letter of 9 January 2017 responded to a letter sent by the defendant's solicitor little more than a week after the statement of claim was filed seeking advice as to why the claim was not statute barred. The response was to dismiss the request as not "a proper request." Nevertheless, the response attached a report by a consultant psychiatrist dated 10 October 2016, said to identify the time from which the three year limitation period commenced to run. That is, a date some six weeks prior to the filing of a detailed statement of claim.
As the defendant submitted on the appeal, provision of the psychiatric report of 10 October 2016 could not, and did not purport to, provide the factual material sought in the proposed interrogatories. That there was other material of potential relevance may be inferred from subsequent claims for legal professional privilege which the plaintiff's solicitor said she would not waive "until such time as the defendant establishes a prima facie case as to when the defendant alleges the plaintiff's cause of action was discoverable". [18]
It was open to the Registrar to accept that special reasons were established to his satisfaction in accordance with r 22.1(3).
[7]
Conclusions
With respect to the absence of a pleaded defence, there was no reason to conclude that the defendant was acting inappropriately in declining to raise a defence in the absence of supporting material, in circumstances where it bore the burden of proof. The issue was not one which would arise in the course of a trial of the substantive issues. If interrogatories were appropriate and reasonably necessary for the disclosure of information which might support a defence, the Registrar's view that the circumstances demonstrated special reasons for requiring interrogation was open.
The primary question on this application for leave to appeal is not whether the Registrar or the primary judge was correct, or adopted a preferable approach, but whether there was sufficient material to warrant intervention on a review of an interlocutory judgment dealing with practice and procedure.
There are, of course, cases in which a court is more likely to intervene even though the decision below is an interlocutory decision involving a question of practice or procedure. That may arise where the challenged decision effectively determines a substantive issue adversely to the interests of that party, whereas the alternative position would have allowed further steps to be taken, at limited cost and inconvenience to the other party. In this case the Registrar's decision did not prevent the limitation issue being pursued; nor did it impose a prejudicial burden on the plaintiff. The primary judge should have taken that into account before reaching a decision which may have effectively foreclosed the limitation defence being raised.
In seeking leave to appeal, the defendant recorded an undertaking that it would pay the plaintiff's costs of the proceedings in this Court in any event. That undertaking was appropriate and should be given effect.
There remain two subsidiary issues which should be noted. First, the plaintiff raised by way of notice of contention a complaint that interrogatory 3 sought an admission on a question of law, "namely when the requested matters were discoverable." The question actually asked the plaintiff "when did [you] first discover" the matters identified in s 50D(1). The raising of this challenge to the orders made by the Registrar is a little curious, as there was no direct challenge to the wording of specific interrogatories in the plaintiff's notice of motion seeking review. In submissions before the Registrar, however, the plaintiff had taken various specific objections to the form of particular interrogatories. She took objection to the use of the term "discover" because it is said to deal not merely with what the plaintiff knew, but with what she ought to have known.
The objection could readily have been met by using the term "knew" or "first knew". If the plaintiff had answered an interrogatory on that basis, it would be a matter for the defendant to determine whether it treated the answer as incomplete and, if so, for the Registrar to rule on the point. It is not an issue which this Court need determine.
Secondly, the plaintiff complained that the Registrar was wrong to order written statements addressing the issues, rather than written answers to the questions, as the defendant sought. She submitted that neither party invited him to take that step. In fact, the Registrar stated that he did so in response to a submission by the plaintiff with respect to the filing of witness statements. [19] In any event, if the parties are in agreement as to how the interrogatories should be addressed, no doubt some common ground will be achieved.
More importantly, the two issues now raised by the plaintiff demonstrate to perfection the wisdom of the statements by Jordan CJ in Will of Gilbert. It is also apt to repeat the observations of the High Court in the context of a mistaken disclosure of privileged documents as to the responsibility of parties to litigation in this Court: [20]
"It could hardly be suggested that the pursuit of satellite interlocutory proceedings of the kind here in question in any way fulfils the overriding purpose of the [Civil Procedure Act]. To the contrary, it is the very kind of conduct which should be avoided if those purposes are to be achieved."
It is, on occasion, necessary to allow applications for leave to appeal in respect of interlocutory judgments involving matters of practice and procedure, in order to emphasise the obligations of parties and solicitors, as well as the Court, in dealing with such matters.
[8]
Orders
The Court should make the following orders:
1. Grant the applicant leave to appeal from the judgment in the Common Law Division of 22 November 2018.
2. Allow the appeal and set aside the orders made in the Common Law Division setting aside the orders of the Registrar made on 6 July 2018.
3. In place of those orders, order that the plaintiff's notice of motion of 2 August 2018 seeking review of the decision of the Registrar be dismissed with costs.
4. By consent, order that the applicant pay the respondent's costs of the proceeding in this Court.
PAYNE JA: I agree with Basten JA.
SIMPSON AJA: I agree that leave to appeal ought to be granted and the appeal allowed. I can state my reasons briefly.
The relevant factual background is stated in the judgment of Basten JA which I have had the advantage of reading in draft. In these reasons, it will be convenient to refer to the parties as "the plaintiff" and "the defendant".
The plaintiff filed a statement of claim in November 2016, alleging that she had suffered personal injury (caused by the negligence of the defendant) six years earlier, in November 2010. In respect of claims for damages for personal injury, s 50C of the Limitation Act 1969 (NSW) prescribes a limitation period of three years "running from and including the date on which the action was first discoverable by the plaintiff". What is meant by that is explained in s 50D. A cause of action is discoverable by a plaintiff when the plaintiff knows or ought to know of each of the following facts:
(a) the fact that the injury or death concerned has occurred,
(b) the fact that the injury or death was caused by the fault of the defendant,
(c) in the case of injury, the fact that the injury was sufficiently serious to justify the bringing of an action on the cause of action.
Given the seriousness of the injury alleged by the plaintiff, it must be supposed that she had long known of the fact that the injury occurred, and that it was sufficiently serious to justify the bringing of an action. So much must also have been obvious to the defendant. What the defendant did not know, and had no means of knowing, was when the plaintiff knew or ought to have known that the injury was caused by the defendant's fault.
The limitation period provides a defence, the onus of proving which lies on the defendant. Since the availability of the defence depends upon information that is within the knowledge of the plaintiff, and ordinarily not within the knowledge of the defendant, more information will be required by the defendant before a defence invoking the Limitation Act can responsibly be pleaded. Clauses 2 and 4 of Sch 2 of the Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014 (NSW) ("the Uniform Law") expressly impose on legal practitioners obligations that preclude pleading a defence unless the legal practitioner:
"… reasonably believes on the basis of provable facts and a reasonably arguable view of the law that the claim or the defence (as appropriate) has reasonable prospects of success."
The defendant had no evidence to prove that, at any time more than three years before the statement of claim was filed, the plaintiff knew that her injury was caused by its fault.
Although the date on which the statement of claim was filed relative to the date of the alleged injury gave rise to reasonable grounds for believing that a defence under s 50C might be available, that was not sufficient to satisfy the requirements of cll 2 and 4 of Sch 2 of the Uniform Law. Accordingly, the defendant's legal representatives were unable to file a defence pleading the limitation period. In those circumstances, they sought, by notice of motion, an order under Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) ("UCPR") r 22.1, that the plaintiff answer specified interrogatories designed to elicit evidence of that fact. By sub-r (3) of r 22.1, in the case of proceedings on a claim for damages arising out of personal injury, such an order is not to be made unless the Court is satisfied that special reasons exist that justify the making of the order. The interrogatories were designed to enable the defendant to evaluate the availability of a defence under the Limitation Act.
The Registrar, who dealt with the application, indicated his intention of making an order, not in the terms sought, but requiring the plaintiff to provide written statements "limited to the limitation issue".
Pursuant to UCPR 49.19 the plaintiff sought review of that decision. That rule permits the Court, on the application of any party, to review a direction, certificate, order or decision of a registrar and to make such order by way of confirmation, variation, discharge or otherwise as the Court thinks fit. The plaintiff's application came before the primary judge who made orders setting aside the orders of the Registrar and dismissing the defendant's notice of motion. She did so because, in the absence of a defence pleading s 50C of the Limitation Act, there was no issue joined between the parties to which the proposed interrogatories related.
The defendant now seeks leave to appeal against that decision. The application for leave to appeal and the appeal (if leave were granted) were directed to be heard concurrently.
Plainly, the decision of the Registrar related to a matter of practice and procedure, in respect of which it is generally accepted that appellate restraint should be applied: In re The Will of F B Gilbert (1946) 46 SR (NSW) 318; 63 WN (NSW) 176.
In this case there was no demonstrated reason to depart from that principle of restraint. The order of the Registrar for the provision of statements, limited as it was, was not onerous, and involved the plaintiff providing information that, sooner or later, she would have been obliged to provide. Accordingly, I am of the view that it was erroneous for the primary judge to take the course she did.
Moreover, the approach taken by the primary judge to the issue was, in my opinion, unduly narrow. The defendant could not plead a Limitation Act defence until it had access to the information it sought in the interrogatories; denial of interrogatories foreclosed its access to that information, and, potentially, foreclosed its access to a basis for pleading a defence legitimately open to it. There was no obvious or apparent other way in which the defendant could inform itself sufficiently to enable it to assess its position in relation to the Limitation Act factors, and, if so advised, to plead the defence. Until it had information peculiarly within the knowledge of the plaintiff, the requirements of the Uniform Law precluded a pleading that would be based on that information. The decision of this Court in Schutt v Queenan [2000] NSWCA 341 recognises that there are circumstances in which the processes provided by the Rules by which the parties may obtain necessary information may be used flexibly.
For these reasons I agree with the orders proposed by Basten JA.
[9]
Endnotes
Hickson v Mid North Coast Local Health District [2018] NSWSC 1826.
Baker-Morrison v State of New South Wales (2009) 74 NSWLR 454; [2009] NSWCA 35 at [14].
Baker-Morrison at [57]-[61]; State of New South Wales v Gillett [2012] NSWCA 83 at [104].
[1920] 1 KB 659 (Bankes, Scrutton and Atkin LJJ).
Order XXXI, r 2; Griebart at 663.
[2016] NSWSC 844 at [44]-[48].
(2007) 71 NSWLR 61; [2007] NSWCA 369.
(1981) 148 CLR 170 at 177 (Gibbs CJ, Aickin, Wilson and Brennan JJ), 180 (Murphy J); [1981] HCA 39.
Will of Gilbert at 323 (Jordan CJ).
Registrar's reasons at [10].
Registrar's reasons at [11].
Schutt at [11].
Judgment at [34].
(1938) 38 SR (NSW) 564 at 575.
References omitted.
Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW), s 56(1).
Judgment at [31].
Letter from plaintiff's solicitors, 3 October 2017.
Registrar's reasons at [24].
Expense Reduction Analysts Group Pty Ltd v Armstrong Strategic Management and Marketing Pty Ltd (2013) 250 CLR 303; [2013] HCA 46 at [59].
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Decision last updated: 05 July 2019