21 In oral argument, Mr Menzies QC, who appeared with Mr L Crowley for the respondent, accepted that, before the primary judge the respondent had based its opposition to the application for an extension of time upon ss 60E(1)(e) of the Limitation Act. That subsection entitles the Court in exercising its s 60C discretion, to have regard to "the time at which the plaintiff became aware of a connection between the injury and the defendant's act or omission". As much is apparent from Mr Menzies' cross-examination of the appellant.
22 Mr Menzies said that the respondent had also resisted the extension application on the basis of presumptive prejudice arising in relation to the unavailability of witnesses. He accepted, however, that the respondent could not rely upon such prejudice in relation to the period from March 1995 described in paragraphs [17] - [19] of the judgment below.
23 Significantly, Mr Menzies did not contend that the respondent had argued that the extension application should be rejected on the approach taken by the primary judge. Again, as much was apparent from the transcript which records her Honour putting to Mr Earl, who appeared for the appellant on the extension application, that she did not understand Mr Menzies (who appeared for the respondent below) was challenging the proposition that the appellant had a cause of action, albeit one which was statute barred. In addition her Honour recorded the respondent as conceding that there was "a foreseeable risk … of an injury of the nature of which the … plaintiff alleges". Mr Menzies did not demur to either of her Honour's statements.
Consideration
24 In my view the appellant has demonstrated that the primary judge's exercise of her discretion miscarried.
25 The appellant's claim for an extension of time was based on s 60C of the Limitation Act. That section provides:
"60C Ordinary action (including surviving action)
(1) This section applies to a cause of action, founded on negligence, nuisance or breach of duty, for damages for personal duty, but does not apply to a cause of action arising under the Compensation to Relatives Act 1897.
(2) If an application is made to a court by a person claiming to have a cause of action to which this section applies, the court, after hearing such of the persons likely to be affected by the application as it sees fit, may, if it decides that it is just and reasonable to do so, order that the limitation period for the cause of action be extended for such period, not exceeding 5 years, as it determines."
26 Section 60C applies only to causes of action that accrue on or after 1 September 1990: s 60B.
27 There is no express requirement in s 60C that, in an application to extend time, a plaintiff must establish that "there is evidence to establish the cause of action": cf s 58(2)(b). It has been held, however, that in order to satisfy the requirement in s 60C(2) that it is "just and reasonable" for the Court to order that the limitation period for a cause of action be extended, an applicant must "prove facts from which the Court can be satisfied there is … a reasonable prospect that the plaintiff has sufficient evidence, such that he or she will have a reasonable prospect of success on the ultimate hearing" (emphasis added): Yu v Speirs [2001] NSWCA 373.
28 The appellant's cause of action in negligence was not complete until he suffered measurable loss or damage: Scarcella v Lettice [2000] NSWCA 289; (2000) 51 NSWLR 302 at [13] - [14] per Handley JA; see also Giles JA (at [41]). Time commenced to run under the Limitation Act when such damage accrued even though the appellant (as appeared to be his contention) was not aware of it: ibid (at [15]).
29 The appellant's argument that he suffered damage at the onset of his psychiatric condition in about March 1995 meant he had three years from that date in which to commence proceedings: s 18A(1)(b), Limitation Act. That period expired in March 1998, over 4 years before his Statement of Claim was filed.
30 The burden the appellant was required to discharge in order to establish that he had sufficient evidence that he had reasonable prospects of success was explained by Hunt J (as his Honour then was) in Martin v Abbott Australasia Pty Ltd [1981] 2 NSWLR 430 at 443 as follows:
"… the plaintiff must make it appear that the evidence to establish his cause of action exists and that it is available to be adduced at the trial. The test is thus somewhat less exact than that which is applied by a judge at the conclusion of the evidence at the trial itself in deciding whether there is a case to go to the jury. A certain amount of speculation as to the precise nature of the evidence which will be called at the trial necessarily must be permitted …"
31 His Honour's observations, albeit expressed in relation to s 58(2) of the Limitation Act, have equal application to s 60C. Although they do not address the precise point which arises for resolution in this case, they make it plain that the issue the appellant was required to address was not whether he could prove his cause of action in the sense for which proof would be required at a final trial but, rather, that it would not be futile to extend time because, for example, an element of his cause of action was incapable of being established: cf Salido v Nominal Defendant [1993] 32 NSWLR 524 at 528 per Gleeson CJ.
32 Although her Honour referred to the reports from Dr Klug and Ms Walker, she did not appear to appreciate that their opinions supported the appellant's contention that the onset of his psychiatric condition could be traced to about March 1995. There was, accordingly, evidence which supported the appellant's contention that his psychiatric condition was work-related and, arguably, dated back to at least the time of his investigation of the fatal industrial accident. Thus there was sufficient evidence, in my view, that the appellant had reasonable prospects of establishing at a final trial that he suffered the onset of a psychiatric condition in or around March 1995 and that condition was attributable to the respondent's breach of duty. Whether or not that conclusion would be reached after all the evidence was considered was a matter for the trial.
33 This was not the approach, however, which the primary judge took.
34 Rather, as appears from paragraphs [48] - [51] of the judgment, her Honour determined, on a final basis, whether events, which occurred during the period 1977 to mid-November 1999, had causally affected the appellant's health. Her Honour also determined that to the extent the appellant's police duties had exacerbated symptoms of a pre-existing anxiety state, "the sequelae of those duties were transient" and that she was "not persuaded that any of those duties injured or incapacitated the [appellant] relevantly".
35 In other words, her Honour determined the issue of causation by deciding whether the lay and expert evidence established to the point of final persuasion, that the appellant's police duties had caused his psychiatric injury. It might be accepted, as the respondent submitted, that the primary judge was required to determine a date from which the otherwise expired limitation period ran. However, the appellant was not required to discharge the burden of proving that date as if at final trial. He was merely required to establish that he had reasonable prospects of success in establishing his cause of action dating on and from 13 March 1995. The primary judge misdirected herself as to the test she was required to apply and, accordingly, fell into reviewable error.
36 If it were necessary I would also conclude that the primary judge's exercise of discretion miscarried erred because her Honour misapprehended the facts in failing to accord weight to the opinions from Dr Klug and Ms Walker.
37 Mr Menzies as I understand it, effectively abandoned the respondent's argument below that it would be prejudiced by an extension of time.
38 In the light of that concession, the Court should finally dispose of the application by making orders granting an extension of time rather than remit the matter for further hearing. The cause of action should be taken to have accrued on 12 March 1995, the day before that Mr Gross identified as the date of the industrial accident for abundant caution.
39 The appellant acknowledged that if he succeeded on appeal he should nevertheless bear the costs of the motion below.