Thus, if the cross-claim alleging battery and assault falls within section 18A, a three-year limitation period will apply to it, notwithstanding section 14(1)(b). If the cross-claim does not fall within section 18A, it will have a six-year limitation period pursuant to section 14(1)(b).
Limitation Period for Actions of Battery and Assault
8 An argument put by Mr Cullen, for the appellant, is that the cause of action for battery and assault is an action for damages for personal injury, is also an action for trespass to the person (Williams v Milotin (1957) 97 CLR 465 at 471), hence is an action for "breach of duty" in the extended sense required by section 11(1) Limitation Act 1969, hence falls within section 18A of that Act, and hence has a three-year limitation period. In my view that simple submission is right. It is right as a matter of construing and applying the words of the statute, on its face.
9 The arguments of Counsel went wider than this, however. In deference to those arguments, I shall set out some additional reasons why it is correct to say that a three-year limitation period applies to actions for battery and assault.
Limitation Act 1969 as Originally Enacted - Source of the Wording of Section 18A
10 Before the enactment of the Limitation Act 1969 the limitation period in New South Wales for torts was (apart from various statutory exceptions which had been made to it) governed by the Limitation Act 1623 of England (21 Jac 1, c 16). Section 3 of that Act provided various limitation periods for torts - a two-year limitation period for slander, a four-year period for trespass to the person, and a six-year period for certain other actions in tort.
11 Following the New South Wales Law Reform Commission's First Report on the Limitation of Actions (LRC 3) in October 1967, the New South Wales Parliament passed the Limitation Act 1969. In its then form, the Limitation Act 1969 did not contain the special three-year limitation period now provided for by section 18A. Thus, those causes of action which now fall within section 18A were governed by the general six-year limitation period arising under section 14(1)(b).
12 Part III of the 1969 Act set out, in Divisions 2 and 3, a variety of circumstances in which the time bar established by earlier provisions of the Act might be postponed. Division 2 dealt with matters like disability, confirmation, fraud and mistake, which of themselves and as a matter of law, could postpone a limitation period. Division 3 (which ran from section 57 to section 62 inclusive) enabled some limitation periods to be extended by an exercise of the Court's discretion.
13 The circumstances in which the Limitation Act 1969 as originally enacted enabled a limitation period for a cause of action to be extended in exercise of the Court's discretion, related to actions for damages for "personal injury", and actions for damages under the Compensation to Relatives Act 1897. Section 57(1)(a) defined "personal injury" as including "any disease and any impairment of the physical or mental condition of a person". That definition is well able to cover injury to a person resulting from a trespass to the person.
14 Each of sections 58 and 59 empowered the Court to extend the limitation period in relation to certain types of "… cause of action founded on negligence nuisance or breach of duty, for damages for personal injury …". Section 57(2) stated that, for Part III, Division 3 of the Act:
"… the expression "breach of duty" extends to the breach of any duty, whether arising by statute, a contract or otherwise, and includes trespass to the person."
15 One of the conditions for extension of time under Part III, Division 3 of the Act depended on whether material facts of a decisive character relating to the cause of action were not within the means of knowledge of an applicant for extension until after a date which was one year before the limitation period expired. "Material facts" were defined by section 57(1)(b) to include the identity of the person against whom the cause of action lies, the nature and extent of the personal injury so caused, and the extent to which the personal injury is caused by the negligence nuisance or breach of duty. "Material facts" of a "decisive character" were defined, by section 57(1)(c), by reference to criteria which included whether the facts known would show that an action on the cause of action would "… have a reasonable prospect of success and of resulting in an award of damages sufficient to justify the bringing of an action on the cause of action …".
16 Thus, if there were to be circumstances where a person knew that they had suffered injury as a consequence of a trespass to the person, but it was only after one year before the limitation period ended that the plaintiff realised that the injury and its consequences were sufficiently serious to be likely to result in an award of damages large enough to justify the bringing of an action, there could be an extension of the limitation period for an action for trespass to the person. Likewise if a person knew that they had suffered a trespass to the person, but only after one year before the limitation period ended was able to identify the assailant, there was power for the Court to grant an extension.
17 At the time the New South Wales Law Reform Commission wrote its report in 1967 it had before it the example of the reform of the limitations law in Victoria, effected by the Limitation of Actions Act 1958 (Vic). Section 5(6) of that Act provided:
"No action for damages for negligence nuisance or breach of duty (whether the duty exists by virtue of a contract or of provision made by or under a statute or independently of any such provision), where the damages claimed by the plaintiff consist of or include damages in respect of personal injuries to any person, shall be brought after the expiration of three years after the cause of action accrued."
18 In Kruber v Grzesiak [1963] VR 621 Adam J construed that provision. The particular factual context was a claim by a plaintiff who alleged she had been injured when either she or her bicycle was stuck by a motor vehicle driven by the defendant. Her action, founded on negligence was brought more than three years, but less than six years, after the date of her injury. When a limitation defence was pleaded, she sought leave to amend her Statement of Claim to allege that the incident involved a trespass to the person. Adam J refused her leave to make that amendment.
19 That decision was arrived at on two distinct grounds. The first was that, while negligence and trespass to the person were separate causes of action, the particular kind of trespass to the person which was there alleged was one in which proof of negligence was an essential ingredient, and that in section 5(6) the expression "action for damages for negligence":
"should be construed to include not only actions on the case for negligence, but also actions of trespass to the person in which, because the trespass is not intentional, proof of negligence is an essential ingredient". (at 623)