Welsh v Carnival PLC trading as Carnival Australia
[2014] NSWCA 430
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2014-12-02
Before
McColl JA, Adamson J, As Adamson J, Coll JA
Catchwords
- TORTS - damages - plaintiff injured when ceiling panel fell on his head while on a cruise ship - whether primary judge's reasons engaged with the plaintiff's medical case - whether reasons sufficient
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (15 paragraphs)
Judgment 1McCOLL JA: I have had the benefit of reading Adamson J's reasons in draft. I agree generally with her Honour's reasons and the orders her Honour proposes. I would add the following observations. 2As Adamson J's account of the primary judgment reveals, the primary judgment largely consisted of lengthy passages extracted from the evidence of the respective parties' medical experts, but made little, or no, attempt to explain if, or why, he accepted any part or the whole of that person's evidence. For example, his Honour did not explain why he apparently rejected Professor Dennerstein's evidence, even though it was, as Adamson J has said (at [37]), "the principal basis on which the appellant's claim for substantial damages rested". 3The primary judge also did not explain why, with one limited exception insofar as Mr McMahon was concerned, he did not mention, or in any way deal with, the evidence of the appellant's work colleagues and his son as to their observations of changes in his ability and personality after the accident. Rather, his Honour preferred to rely upon his own observation of the appellant in the witness box, that "[t]here did not appear to me...to be any loss of sharpness of thought or concentration": primary judgment (at [49]). In my view that approach was not open to his Honour. The evidence with which he was dealing entailed a comparison between the appellant's pre and post-accident abilities. The primary judge had no pre-accident experience of the appellant. Accordingly, his Honour was in no position to judge whether he had changed in the manner to which these witnesses deposed. The appellant was clearly a person who had functioned at a high level pre-accident and the fact that, on his case, the accident had diminished his capacity, albeit that, relatively speaking it remained high as his Honour apparently concluded, did not mean the evidence of those witnesses could be dismissed without a cogent explanation. 4By the time the reader reached the end of the judgment he or she was effectively left in ignorance as to why the primary judge had resolved the case in the manner he did. His Honour manifestly failed to discharge the judicial obligation to give reasons. 5As has frequently and long been said, adequacy of reasons lies at the heart of the judicial process. There is no optimal template as to how to discharge the judicial obligation to give reasons: Lu v Heinrich [2014] NSWCA 349 per McColl JA (at [79]), Sackville AJA agreeing). However a judge is bound to expose his or her reasoning in sufficient detail to enable a losing party to understand why he or she lost, or as in the present case, substantially lost. 6Whilst it is unnecessary to refer to the relevant evidence in detail, especially in circumstances where it is clear that the evidence has been considered, where such evidence is not referred to by the trial judge in a manner demonstrating a considered analysis of how it supports or otherwise a party's case then, contrary to Mr McCulloch's submission (see Adamson J (at [68])), an appellate court may infer that the trial judge overlooked the evidence or failed to give consideration to it: see generally Beale v Government Insurance Office (NSW) (1997) 48 NSWLR 430 (at 443) per Meagher JA. 7Failure to provide sufficient reasons denies "both the fact and the appearance of justice having been done", thus working a miscarriage of justice. For a judge "to ignore evidence critical to an issue in a case and contrary to an assertion of fact made by one party and accepted by the judge ... may promote a sense of grievance in the adversary and create a litigant who is not only 'disappointed' but 'disturbed'": Mifsud v Campbell (1991) 21 NSWLR 725 (at 728). 8Mr McCulloch of Senior Counsel who appeared for the respondent at trial and on appeal, struggled valiantly, but unsuccessfully, to explain how the primary judge had reached his conclusions. He emphasised that the primary judge had delivered his reasons within three weeks of the trial. While alacrity of decision making is to be encouraged and admired especially for those presiding over trials in the high volume environment of the District Court, nevertheless "[t]he requirement to provide reasons can operate prophylactically on the judicial mind, guarding against the birth of an unconsidered or impulsive decision [and hence] ... enhances judicial accountability": Beale v Government Insurance Office (NSW) (at 442) per Meagher JA. 9In this respect, I would repeat what I said in Pollard v RRR Corporation Pty Ltd [2009] NSWCA 110 with Ipp JA and Bryson AJA's agreement: "[56] The court is conscious of not picking over an ex tempore judgment and, too, of giving due allowance for the pressures under which judges of the District Court are placed by the volume of cases coming before them (Maviglia v Maviglia [1999] NSWCA 188 (at [1]) per Mason P). However a trial judge's reasons must, 'as a minimum ... be adequate for the exercise of a facility of appeal': Soulemezis v Dudley (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1987) 10 NSWLR 247 (at 260) per Kirby P; (at 268-269) per Mahoney JA; Beale v Government Insurance Office (NSW) (1997) 48 NSWLR 430 (at 444) per Meagher JA. A superior court, 'considering the decision of an inferior tribunal, should not be left to speculate from collateral observations as to the basis of a particular finding': Soulemezis (at 280) per McHugh JA applying Wright v Australian Broadcasting Commission [1977] 1 NSWLR 697 (at 701, 713)." 10Finally, "provision of adequate reasons will save time for appeal courts both in reducing the number of appeals and in reducing the time taken in considering any appeals": Beale v Government Insurance Office (NSW) (at 442). The desirability of this outcome is self-evident. The parties are now in the invidious position of facing a new trial and the attendant costs which, despite costs orders in favour of the appellant and access for the respondent to the Suitors' Fund, can never completely be recovered. 11SACKVILLE AJA: I agree with the orders proposed by Adamson J and with her Honour's reasons. I also agree with the additional observations of McColl JA. The outcome of this appeal is unsatisfactory and was avoidable had the primary Judge provided adequate reasons for his decision. 12ADAMSON J: The appellant, Graham Welsh, was injured when part of the ceiling fell on top of his head on a cruise ship operated by the respondent. He sustained a head injury that led to concussion. He also cut his hand where he had raised it to protect his head. He commenced proceedings against the respondent in the District Court in which he claimed damages for negligence alleged to have been suffered as a result of the accident. His case, as opened at trial, was that he had sustained a serious head injury which had resulted in depression consequent on his loss of functioning which caused a substantial loss of earning capacity and led to the loss of his position at Simonds Homes Melbourne Pty Limited (Simonds), the construction company of which he was then building manager for Victoria. 13As the respondent admitted liability, the matter proceeded as an assessment of damages. After a five-day trial conducted before Sorby DCJ, his Honour delivered reasons for decision and assessed damages as follows: Head of damage Amount Non-economic loss (20%) $18,500 Past out of pocket expenses (agreed) $2,130.14 Future out of pocket expenses $1,000 Economic loss Nil Total $21,630.14