Further Proposed Ground - Failure to Account for Loss of Use of Funds
56I have already described how his Honour calculated the verdict in favour of Mr Wood by deducting the net proceeds received from the District Court judgment in late 2009 from the net amount that Mr Wood would have received had he accepted the CARS award in 2006. During the hearing of the appeal I raised with the parties whether this calculation was erroneous because there was no allowance for the benefit that Mr Wood would have derived from having the proceeds of the CARS assessment three years earlier than proceeds of the District Court judgment, i.e. the lost value of the "use" of the money that he would have received had he accepted the CARS award.
57Mr Wood embraced this contention and further argued that this was a matter that he raised in the Local Court. This was disputed by counsel for Mr Firth. At the conclusion of the hearing, I directed the parties to provide further written submissions on this issue and any notice of contention or cross appeal that Mr Firth wished to agitate if I allowed Mr Wood to pursue this point. Further submissions were filed. Mr Wood took the opportunity in those submissions to attempt to re-agitate various other issues and attached documents which presumably he sought to tender. I have ignored those further submissions and documents, except for those that relate directly to the subject matter of the grant of leave.
58I have treated the submissions as directed to both an application to amend Mr Wood's summons to raise this ground and the substance of the argument in support of the ground of appeal if leave was granted.
59The proper characterisation of a claim for lost use of funds is not for pre-judgment interest, but instead it is part of a claim for damages. It requires that there be a factual investigation into the loss suffered from being held out of the use of money for a period of time (see Hobartville Stud Pty Ltd v Union Insurance Co Ltd (1991) 25 NSWLR 358 at 363 to 364 per Giles J; Dumitrov v SC Johnson & Son Superannuation Pty Ltd (No 2) [2007] NSWSC 42 at [22] to [25] per Gzell J). It follows that, for any question of law or of mixed fact and law to arguably arise in relation to this matter, there needed to be either a clearly articulated claim for such a head of damage or, perhaps, it had to at least be a necessary component of any such claim that Mr Wood made.
60I have already summarised the amended statement of claim. It did not make any claim for general damages as a result of Mr Firth's alleged negligence. Nor did it make any specific claim for any head of damage referable to the lack of the use of the money between September 2006 and September 2009. Instead it contained a very specific calculation of the amount of damages claimed in respect of the failure to advise of the date for acceptance of the CARS award. The structure and findings in the Liability Judgment coincided with the points made in the amended statement of claim. On its face this suggests that, quite properly, his Honour addressed himself to the pleaded case. His Honour stated that a number of times during the hearing.
61Nevertheless, Mr Wood submitted that he articulated a claim for this amount before the Court. He relied on the following material in support of that claim.
62First he referred me to a passage in his own evidence and a passage in the cross examination of Mr Firth, in which reference was made to the calculation undertaken by Mr Firth in his letter of 20 November 2009 of the value of the lost use of the money that I have noted in [15] above. My reading of those exchanges reveals that they occurred when Mr Wood was making some generalised complaint about Mr Firth not complying with the terms of an agreement he claimed they reached in the latter part of 2006. At most, these passages indicate that somewhere in the milieu of facts raised in the case was an allegation that Mr Firth made a promise to pay interest. However that falls a long way short of what is necessary to support the suggestion that a contention that Mr Wood was entitled to interest for the loss of the use of the money he would have received in 2006 was clearly put to his Honour.
63Second, at the hearing of this appeal Mr Wood submitted a document which he initially asserted was his written submissions in the Local Court. This document was tendered (and marked exhibit C2) and states, inter alia:
"Moneys for interest agreed by the defendant to pay the plaintiff in letter dated 31 October 2006 but did not pay claiming Centrelink's payments to the plaintiff compensated for this. Centrelink not being mentioned at the time of the agreement, which formed our contract, which included an interest payment. The interest payment was to be made on the, 'amount in question' which was the figure I would have received back in 2006 if accepted on time. The defendant did understand this and calculated the interest on that figure being $179,029.87 as agreed at bank interest totalling $32,933.90 up to 20 November 2009. Firth did the calculations but refused to pay. (Loss $32,933.90 see document TWO below.)"
64In relation to this document, the following exchange occurred at the hearing of the appeal:
"HIS HONOUR: The document I think Mr Bleasel we are talking about is the one that starts at page 11 [of exhibit C2]. I think Mr Wood says that's the document that was sent to the Local Court.
PLAINTIFF: Correct.
HIS HONOUR: I think Mr Wood tenders that. What I am inclined to do Mr Bleasel, subject to any further episodes, is accept it as an exhibit but reserving to your client an opportunity to make some enquiries about it because you weren't there and your instructor wasn't there and you may need to go and check. Why we don't get the Local Court file sent up to us is a mystery to, me anyway.
PLAINTIFF: Your Honour may I say something? From page 11 to 12, 13 and 14 was in a bound document.
HIS HONOUR: You talked about that.
PLAINTIFF: That's the document that was in the bound document.
HIS HONOUR: Do you say that document [was filed] not via Mr Goodridge.
PLAINTIFF: No, it went to Mr Goodridge initially and after that it was filed.
HIS HONOUR: By you?
PLAINTIFF: Yes."
65Thus, Mr Wood explained that exhibit C2 was not an exact copy of the document that he said was tendered in the Local Court. However, included in the material sent after the hearing was a document which was bound, which was similar to exhibit C2 and which included the passage set out above in [63]. I understand Mr Wood to assert that that is the document that he "filed in the Local Court". I have marked that document "exhibit E" and placed it with the papers. However, that does not assist him for two reasons.
66First, I have perused the transcript of the oral submissions made by Mr Wood to the Local Court on 12 October 2012. It is clear that the document Mr Wood was reading from on that day was not the document that has now been marked exhibit E. I can find no reference to Mr Wood ever referring the magistrate to the submissions in exhibit E, including the submission set out above. I am not satisfied that he did so.
67Second, in any event, throughout the hearing in the Local Court his Honour was at pains to stress that the issues he was deciding were those identified in the amended statement of claim. At no stage was any real attempt made to amend the pleading. The submissions made on behalf of Mr Firth also addressed the claims made in the amended statement of claim.
68The end result is that Mr Wood did not clearly articulate a separate claim for the loss of the use of the monies that he would have received had he accepted the CARS award in 2006. Further, such a claim was not a necessary component of the claims he did make. The proper discharge of the presiding magistrate's function of determining Mr Wood's claim did not require his Honour to undertake some assessment of the value of the lost use of the proceeds of the CARS assessment, whether using prevailing interest rates or otherwise, in the absence of such a claim being made and supported by evidence.
69Accordingly and notwithstanding my initial misgivings about the failure of his Honour to take account of the benefit that Mr Wood would have derived from the earlier receipt of the proceeds of the CARS assessment, I do not consider that it is arguable that any wrongly decided question of law or question of mixed fact and law arises from his Honour not accounting for that matter in determining the amount of damages to be awarded to Mr Wood. It follows that I reject Mr Wood's application for leave to rely on this ground.
70This conclusion makes it unnecessary for me to consider an alternative submission made on behalf of Mr Firth that, should the appeal have been allowed on this ground, he should have been granted leave to file a cross appeal or notice of contention concerning his Honour's failure to assess the damages to be awarded to Mr Wood on the basis of the percentage probability that Mr Wood would have accepted the CARS award if he had been advised of the time of its expiry (citing Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL [1994] HCA 4; 179 CLR 332 at 335). I have considerable doubt as to whether that contention is correct given that a finding on the balance of probabilities that he would have accepted the CARS award was necessary to be made before it could be concluded that Mr Wood suffered some damage (as opposed to determining the quantum of damages): see Pritchard v DJZ Constructions Pty Ltd & Ors [2012] NSWCA 196 at [322] to [323] (per Whealy JA with whom Bathurst CJ and Barrett JA agreed on this point).