DISCERNMENT
25As these principles make clear it is for Karlee to persuade the Court in this case that it is in the interest of justice that, contrary to the usual position, the issues relating to liability ought to be heard and determined in advance of all other issues in the proceedings.
26Senior Counsel for the plaintiff submits that, in reliance on some of the remarks set out in medical reports to which I have earlier made reference, that the Court would be satisfied that those experts agree "that the plaintiff's condition is far from being stabilised in terms of her ultimate capacity to care for herself".
27Senior Counsel in apparent reliance upon some remarks in Ritchie's Uniform Civil Procedure NSW at [26.4.35], submits that orders of the kind sought in this case are a relatively frequent occurrence. This statement in Ritchie's Uniform Civil Procedure NSW is regrettably not based on a large number of examples of decisions of this Court and does not reflect either the authorities or the ordinary course in this Court.
28Only two decisions in this Court are cited in Ritchie's Uniform Civil Procedure NSW. One is of Master Sharpe, as his Honour then was, in February 1980. The other is my decision in Thiering to which I have already made reference. It is difficult to see how a reading of that decision could suggest that it is authority for the proposition cited by the authors of Ritchie's Uniform Civil Procedure NSW as I have set out above. On the contrary, as is apparent from [28]-[30] of Thiering, it was an unusual case which involved a determination in advance of a hearing, of particular identified legal questions which essentially turned on a plain question of statutory interpretation. No issue of liability arose in the case which was concerned with both an assessment of damages and a money claim for the value of services provided to a statutory scheme.
29I reject the proposition advanced by Senior Counsel for the plaintiff that liability and damages issue are separately determined in this Court on many occasions.
30The defendants opposed the plaintiff's submissions. The first defendant put that:
(a)Having regard to the fact that the relevant events took place in 2004, it is in the interests of the first defendant to have the whole proceedings resolved as soon as practicable. The first defendant submits that this approach is consistent with the overriding purpose of the Civil Procedure Act; and
(b)The Court is in a position to assess all of Karlee's damages now and that since the Court in undertaking that task is concerned to make findings as to likely outcomes and not certain outcomes, there is no requirement or necessity for a plaintiff's injuries to be stabilised in the sense that they do not progress or diminish further.
31The second defendant accepted the submissions of the first defendant.
32The defendants submit that since the position on the evidence is that whilst Karlee's final prognosis is not entirely known at present nevertheless her likely outcome is known and can therefore be assessed.
33I am of the view that the plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that there would be any unfairness to her if the entirety of her proceedings were to be heard at one time in the usual way. In other words, she has failed to show that the interest of justice support the orders she is seeking. These are my reasons.
34Firstly, the plaintiff's injuries have been entirely ascertained and have stabilised. She has been assessed as having a mild intellectual disability. Although there will need to be a careful consideration of all of the facts and circumstances in her case, that assessment is a sufficiently sound basis for evidence to be given about Karlee's likely future course and the likely extent of her disabilities. A calculation of damages based on these likelihoods is conventional rather than exceptional.
35Secondly, if the separation of the issues of liability and damages was to occur and the trial of the issues of damages was to await the time which the plaintiff says is appropriate, namely at some time after an assessment is concluded, which is to be made towards the end of her secondary schooling, it is likely that such damages proceedings would be heard when the plaintiff is at least 17 or 18 years old.
36A delay of 16.5 years between the tort occurring and when damages are finally assessed by a court, is a very, very long time which will in my assessment be unfair to all involved. As is well known, the effluxion of time affects memory and recall, it causes the quality of evidence to deteriorate and makes the Court's task of determining the issue much more difficult. It means that the overall quality of justice is adversely affected and to a significant extent.
37Thirdly, by being adjourned for such a length of time, the overriding purpose of the Civil Procedure Act, being the just, quick and cheap resolution of all the real issues in the proceedings, could be not be achieved.
38Fourthly, in the circumstances of this case, a separation of the issues as proposed by the plaintiff would not accord with the legal authorities on the issue or with the principles which apply to applications of this kind.
39It is appropriate to acknowledge that this decision does not permit the medical practitioners to achieve a state of certainty about the plaintiff's prognosis which they feel would be desirable but those opinions are but one of the facts and circumstances to which this Court is obliged to have regard. In the balancing exercise which is necessarily involved in the exercise of the Court's discretion that feature does not carry determinative weight.
40I am persuaded that the interests of justice require that all of the issues in the proceeding be determined at a single hearing. That part of the motion seeking an order for separate hearing is, therefore, dismissed.
41As I have not yet heard full argument on the balance of the motion dealing with venue and because until the evidence is actually complete it is inappropriate to deal with such a motion, it would be appropriate to dismiss the entire motion noting that once the evidence is complete the plaintiff will be at liberty to, if so advised, renew the motion with respect to venue and have it determined on the basis that there has been no previous determination of that question on the merits.
42I make the following orders:
(1)I order that the notice of motion filed on 6 March 2012 is dismissed.
(2)I order the plaintiff to pay the defendant's costs.