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High Court of Australia |
NOMINAL DEFENDANT v. ALEX KAY PTY. LTD. [1973] HCA 3; (1973) 130 CLR 34
Insurance
High Court of Australia.
Barwick C.J.(1), McTiernan(2), Menzies(3), Walsh(4) and Stephen(5) JJ.
CATCHWORDS
Insurance - Motor vehicle third party insurance (N.S.W.) - Liability of nominal defendant - "Uninsured motor vehicle" - Whether vehicle "temporarily in New South Wales" - Whether nominal defendant entitled to recover from owner - Whether vehicle driven without the authority of the owner - Hirer of vehicle driving in New South Wales contrary to terms of leasing agreement and after expiry of period of agreement - Motor Vehicle (Third Party Insurance) Act, 1942 (N.S.W.), as amended, ss. 5 "Uninsured motor vehicle", 7 (1), 16, 30 (1), 32 (1)* - Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Regulations, reg. 17.
* Section 32 (1) of the Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Act, 1942
(N.S.W.) provides:
"(1) Any amount properly paid by the nominal defendant in satisfaction of a
claim made or judgment recovered against him and the
amount of any costs and
expenses properly incurred by him in relation to any such claim or to the
proceedings in which the judgment
was obtained may be recovered by the nominal
defendant as a debt from the person who, at the time of the occurrence out of
which
such claim arose or in respect of which such judgment was obtained, was
the owner of the motor vehicle or, where at the time of such
occurrence some
other person was driving the vehicle, from the owner and the driver jointly or
from either of them severally:
Provided that -
(a) it shall be a sufficient defence in any proceedings under this section
establishes to the satisfaction of the Court, that,
at the time of the
occurrence, some other person was driving the motor vehicle without his
authority;
(b) it shall be a sufficient defence in any proceedings under this section
against the driver of an uninsured motor vehicle (whether
severally or jointly
with the owner) if he establishes to the satisfaction of the Court that, at
the time of the occurrence, he was
driving the motor vehicle with the
authority of the owner or had reasonable grounds for believing and did in fact
believe that he
had such authority, and that he had reasonable grounds for
believing and did in fact believe that the motor vehicle was an uninsured
motor vehicle."
HEARING
Sydney, 1972, November 14, 15;DECISION
1973, March 9.The following written judgments were delivered:-prepared in this case by my brother Walsh. I agree entirely in his conclusions and in the reasons he gives for them and desire to add nothing to them. (at p38)
BARWICK C.J. I have had the advantage of reading the reasons for judgment
2. In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed.
McTIERNAN J. I agree in the reasons for judgment of Menzies J. and would
therefore allow the appeal.
MENZIES J. This is an appeal by the nominal defendant arising out of
proceedings wherein one Taylor sued the nominal defendant and
Alex Kay Pty.
Ltd. (the owner) for damages for injuries suffered in a motor car accident. At
the time of the accident, the motor
car was being driven by one Wing who was
found to have been negligent. The nominal defendant was sued on the footing
that Wing was
driving an uninsured motor vehicle ; the owner was sued
alternatively on the footing that it was the owner of an insured vehicle.
A
third party notice was served by the nominal defendant upon the owner seeking
indemnity. At the trial there was judgment in favour
of the plaintiff against
the nominal defendant for $29,000 ; there was judgment in favour of the owner
against the plaintiff ; and
there was judgment in favour of the nominal
defendant against the owner. There were appeals to the Court of Appeal of the
Supreme
Court of New South Wales. The nominal defendant appealed against the
judgment in the action on the basis that the vehicle was "an
exempt vehicle
and so was not uninsured". This appeal failed. The owner appealed against the
judgment against it in favour of the
nominal defendant in the third party
proceedings on the basis that Wing was, at the time of the accident, driving
the motor car without
its authority. This appeal succeeded. The present appeal
by the nominal defendant seeks judgment for $29,000 in favour of the plaintiff
against the owner rather than against the nominal defendant and,
alternatively, that verdict and judgment should be entered for the
plaintiff
against the nominal defendant for $29,000 and that there should also be
verdict and judgment in favour of the nominal defendant
against the owner in a
like sum. (at p39)
2. The argument of the appellant that the judgment against it in favour of
the plaintiff should be set aside was based upon the
contention that the motor
vehicle being driven by Wing was not uninsured because it was an exempt
vehicle. The argument of the appellant
that judgment against it in favour of
the owner upon the third party proceedings which was directed by the Court of
Appeal should
be set aside was based upon the contention that Wing was driving
with the authority of the owner. (at p39)
3. The nominal defendant was liable only if the motor vehicle driven by Wing
was an "uninsured motor vehicle" : Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Act
1942 (N.S.W.), as amended, s. 30. A motor vehicle in respect of which persons
are exempted from the provisions of s. 7 (1) of the Act
is not an "uninsured
motor vehicle". By reg. 17 of the Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance)
Regulations it is provided that persons
are exempted from the provisions of
ss. 7 (1) and 8 (1) of the Act in respect of :
". . . any motor vehicle which is owned by a person ordinarily
resident outside the State of New South Wales and is
temporarily in that State and in relation to which there is and
remains in force -
. . .
(c) a contract of insurance complying with the Motor
Vehicles Insurance Acts, 1936-1961, of the State of
Queensland, or with any Act replacing or amending the
same ;" (at p39)
4. The owner is a company registered in Victoria and carrying on business in
Victoria and in other parts of Australia as a hirer
of motor vehicles. It
hired a motor car registered in Queensland to Wing on 25th July 1963, in
Brisbane for return to it at Brisbane
on 29th July 1963, at 11.15 a.m. The
agreement contained an undertaking to the effect that the hirer would not take
the car into
New South Wales without written consent. It was involved in the
accident in which the plaintiff was injured somewhat to the south
of Tarcutta
near the border of New South Wales and Victoria on the afternoon of 29th July.
(at p39)
5. The appellant's case that the car was an exempt vehicle rested upon three
propositions. The first was that the vehicle was owned
by a person ordinarily
resident outside New South Wales. This was established. It was found that the
owner was resident in Victoria.
The second was that in relation to the motor
vehicle there was a contract of insurance complying with the provisions of the
Motor
Vehicles Insurance Acts 1936-1961 (Q.). This was proved. The third -
which was not so found - was that the motor vehicle was, at
the time of the
accident, temporarily in New South Wales. His Honour was not satisfied that
the vehicle at the time of the accident
was but temporarily in New South
Wales. The Court of Appeal agreed that the nominal defendant had not proved
that the vehicle was
temporarily in New South Wales at that time. (at p40)
6. With respect to the learned judges of the Supreme Court, I have reached a
different conclusion as to this. I do not rest my decision
upon the actual
intention of the driver Wing, although it would seem that he was driving,
perhaps as a thief, from Queensland to
Victoria and did not intend to remain
in New South Wales but simply to pass through the State. In Dunstan v.
Betteridge (1963) 80
WN (NSW) 421, at p 424 , it was stated by Ferguson J.
that : " . . . a motor vehicle, removed from the owner's control in another
State by theft and brought by the thief into New South Wales, is not, while it
remains in the hands of the thief, a motor vehicle
temporarily in New South
Wales". This view of the law was accepted in the Supreme Court. (at p40)
7. With respect, I cannot accept it. It is easy to envisage many cases, as a
matter of fact, when a thief takes a motor car across
a State border into New
South Wales, it is only temporarily in New South Wales. Perhaps the simplest
instance is where a stolen car
is driven by the thief out of Queensland into
New South Wales and back again. When, in such circumstances, the car was out
of Queensland,
why was it not temporarily in New South Wales ? My decision in
the circumstances of this case depends, however, upon the attitude
of the
owner, not upon that of Wing. The owner was using its car registered in
Queensland for the purpose of its business there in
which the car was hired
upon the terms that it should be returned to the owner in Brisbane. It was, I
think, quite certain that the
owner wanted its car in Queensland and, as
between the car remaining permanently in New South Wales after Wing had, in
breach of
contract, taken it across the border, and it being there but
temporarily, I cannot but reject the former and accept the latter. It
is, of
course, possible that if the car had been stolen, the owner would never have
recovered it ; it is possible indeed that it
would have remained permanently
in New South Wales. However this may be, it seems clear to me that unless Wing
had stolen the car,
it would, after a temporary absence, be taken back to
Queensland and it is my opinion that if Wing had stolen the vehicle, the
likelihood
still was that it would have been recovered and returned to
Queensland. As it happened, the motor vehicle was eventually taken back
to
Queensland ; surely during the whole time from its entry into New South Wales
until its return to Queensland it was temporarily
in New South Wales. If not,
when did it cease to be permanently in New South Wales and become but
temporarily there? I do not accept
the dictum of Ferguson J. that if a car is
stolen in one State and taken into another State, that car should not, simply
because
it is in the hands of a thief, be regarded as temporarily in the State
to which the thief has taken it. (at p41)
8. I see no reason for giving a limited effect to reg. 17. When a car is
stolen within New South Wales and is driven on the public
streets of New South
Wales, the thief in so driving commits no breach of s. 7 (1) of the Act. It
seems to me that one effect of reg.
17 is to achieve a like result with regard
to motor vehicles being brought into New South Wales so that Wing, whether or
not he was
a thief, did not commit a breach of s. 7 (1) in driving in New
South Wales as he did. This appears to me in full accord with the
scheme of
the Act which was, no doubt, intended to fit in with similar legislation in
other States. Its general policy is surely
that motor vehicles being driven on
public streets in New South Wales should be insured vehicles rather than
uninsured vehicles and
reg. 17 is directed, inter alia, to carrying out the
policy. I would not import into reg. 17 the limitation that it applies only
when a motor vehicle is being driven in New South Wales with the consent of
the out-of-State owner. (at p41)
9. In my opinion, the nominal defendant did prove that the motor car was an
exempt vehicle because at the time of the accident it
was, on the balance of
probabilities, temporarily in New South Wales. Accordingly, the judgment in
favour of the plaintiff against
the nominal defendant should be set aside. (at
p41)
10. On the other question which depends upon s. 32 (1) of the Act, there was
a difference of opinion in the Supreme Court of New
South Wales. The learned
trial judge found that, at the time of the accident, Wing was driving with the
authority of the owner, notwithstanding
that he was driving in breach of the
terms of his agreement with the owner. This finding was reversed by the Court
of Appeal. If
Wing had stolen the car, he was, of course, not driving it with
the authority of the owner. His Honour, the learned trial judge's
view was
that the authority which Wing had to drive continued notwithstanding that he
was acting contrary to the agreement in driving
as he was when the accident
happened. With respect, I share the opinion of the Court of Appeal that, in
this, the learned trial judge
was in error. When Wing's obligation to the
owner was to return the car to it at Brisbane at 11.15 a.m. on 29th July, I do
not see
how Wing could be driving the car with the authority of the owner when
he was driving the car in the southern part of New South Wales
and towards
Victoria on the afternoon of that day. I do not think this requires further
elaboration. I agree with the Court of Appeal
upon the matter and in view of
my earlier conclusion, it is not necessary for me to say any more. (at p42)
11. In my opinion, the appeal should be allowed and the judgment in favour of
the plaintiff against the nominal defendant be set
aside. Because I consider
that the motor vehicle was an insured vehicle at the time of the accident,
there ought to have been judgment
against the owner instead of the nominal
defendant for $29,000 damages.
WALSH J. An action was brought in the Supreme Court of New South Wales by
John Egbert Taylor for damages for personal injury suffered
by him on 29th
July 1963 when he was a passenger in a car owned by the respondent Alex Kay
Pty. Ltd., herein called the "owner".
The owner and the appellant, the nominal
defendant, were joined as defendants in the action. The nominal defendant gave
a third-party
notice to the owner claiming to recover from it, pursuant to the
provisions of s. 32 of the Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Act, 1942
(N.S.W.), as amended (the Act), any amount that might be properly paid or
payable by the nominal defendant in satisfaction of the
plaintiff's claim. (at
p42)
2. The owner is a company incorporated in Victoria and it was found by the
learned judge who tried the action to be "ordinarily
resident outside the
State of New South Wales". The car was registered in Queensland. The trial
judge found that a contract of insurance
in respect of the car was in force in
Queensland, which complied with The Motor Vehicles Insurance Acts, 1936 to
1961 of that State.
The accident occurred some miles south of Tarcutta in New
South Wales, when the car was being driven by a man named Lew Fee Wing
or Wang
(herein called Wing). He had entered in Queensland into an agreement to hire
the car from the owner. This agreement contained
a provision in the following
terms:
"Renter agrees that he will return the said vehicle toThe "return date" was indicated in the agreement by the words and figures "Will Return 29.7.63 Time 11.15 a.m." The agreement contained, also, the following provisions :
Owner's station from which it was rented, in the same
condition as he received it, ordinary wear and tear excepted, on
the return date stated above or sooner upon demand of Owner.
If the Renter shall fail within 7 days of the return date or of
demand by the Owner to deliver up the vehicle the Owner
shall be entitled to presume the vehicle to be stolen, and the
Renter hereby releases and discharges the Owner from all
actions claims and demands arising out of any charge laid or
complaint made to the police in relation thereto.
Provided that this presumption shall not apply if the Owner
has given the Renter a written or telegraphed extension of
the return date."
"Renter agrees not to use said vehicle for the transportation
of persons or property for hire, express or implied ; not to use
the vehicle while it is in an unsafe condition ; not to use it in
violation of any Federal, State or Municipal law, ordinance,
rule, regulation or by-law governing the use or return thereof;
not to remove it from the State or Territory in which this
agreement was signed without the written consent thereto of
Owner" (cl. 3).
"The Renter shall not operate and shall not permit, suffer
or allow the vehicle to be operated -
(a) In violation of any of the terms in the Rental
Agreement . . ." (cl. 9 (a)).
The Act makes it an offence to use or to cause, permit or suffer any
other person to use an uninsured motor vehicle upon a public
street : see s. 7 (1). The material part of the definition in s. 5
of "Uninsured motor vehicle" is in these terms :
"(a) a motor vehicle (not being a motor vehicle in respect of"Insured motor vehicle" is defined as meaning "a motor vehicle in relation to which there is in force at all material times a third-party policy", that is, a policy of insurance which complies with the requirements of the Act. (at p43)
which persons are exempted by or under this Act from
the provisions of subsection one of section seven of this
Act) which is not an insured motor vehicle . . ."
3. Every claim for damages in respect of the death of or bodily injury to any
person caused by or arising out of the use of an uninsured
motor vehicle upon
a public street shall be made to the nominal defendant and any proceedings to
enforce such claim shall be taken
against the nominal defendant and not
against the owner or driver : see s. 30 (1). By s. 45 (2) of the Act, the
Governor is empowered
to make regulations with respect to the exemption from
the operation of any of the provisions of the Act of -
"(i) motor vehicles or specified classes of motor vehicles which
are owned by persons ordinarily resident outside New
South Wales and which are temporarily in New South
Wales ;
(ii) motor vehicles of any other specified class ;By reg. 17 of the Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Regulations it is provided, inter alia, that persons are exempted from the provisions of s. 7 (1) of the Act in respect of "any motor vehicle which is owned by a person ordinarily resident outside the State of New South Wales and is temporarily in that State and in relation to which there is and remains in force . . . (c) a contract of insurance complying with The Motor Vehicle Insurance Acts, 1936 to 1961, of the State of Queensland, or with any Act replacing or amending the same". (at p44)
(iii) persons in respect of a specified class or specified classes
of motor vehicles (including motor vehicles or specified
classes of motor vehicles which are owned by persons
ordinarily resident outside New South Wales and which
are temporarily in New South Wales) ;"
4. It is not in dispute that the plaintiff's injuries were caused by the
negligence of Wing. But there is a dispute as to whether
the liability to pay
damages should fall upon the appellant or upon the owner. (at p44)
5. The first question which arises in this appeal is whether the Court of
Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales was in
error in affirming the
decision of the learned trial judge that, within the meaning of reg. 17, it
had not been established that
the car was, at the time of the accident,
temporarily in the State of New South Wales. If it had been found that the car
was temporarily
in that State, the result would have followed that, being
within the exemption provided by the regulation, it was not an "uninsured
motor vehicle" and consequently damages could not be recovered from the
appellant. (at p44)
6. The evidence which might be relevant to the question whether or not the
vehicle was temporarily in New South Wales was somewhat
scanty. It was hired
in Brisbane under an agreement which provided that it was not to be removed
from that State without the written
consent of the owner and no such consent
was obtained. On the afternoon of the day on which it should have been
returned to the owner
in Brisbane, not later than 11.15 a.m., it was being
driven south at a place not far from the border between New South Wales and
Victoria. There was no direct evidence as to where the vehicle had been
between the time of its hiring and the occurrence of the
accident, as to when
it had entered New South Wales or as to the driver's intention either at that
time or when the accident occurred.
There was evidence from a police officer
that Wing said he had "gambling problems" in Queensland and was leaving
Queensland because
of that. The police officer said that Wing had some
criminal conviction or convictions. He had been employed at a motel in
Queensland.
(at p45)
7. In Dunstan v. Betteridge (1962) 80 WN (NSW) 421 , a car registered and
insured in Victoria and owned by a company which was held
to be "a person
ordinarily resident outside New South Wales" was stolen in Victoria and taken
into New South Wales. Ferguson J. held
that it had not been established that
the car was temporarily in New South Wales. In his judgment he said (1962) 80
WN (NSW), at
p 424 :
"In my opinion a motor vehicle, removed from the owner'sIn an appeal from the decision of Ferguson J., who held the nominal defendant liable, it was decided that the onus of proof of the conditions required to establish an exemption under reg. 17 lay on the nominal defendant. The appeal was dismissed : see Nominal Defendant v. Dunstan [1963] HCA 5; (1963) 109 CLR 143 . This Court did not expressly approve or disapprove the statement which I have quoted from the judgment of Ferguson J. In my opinion, the reference made (1963) 109 CLR, at p 147 to the absence of evidence of what had happened to the vehicle between the date of the theft and the date of the accident or of what were the thief's intentions should not be taken as an expression of the opinion of the Court that the intentions of a thief with respect to a stolen vehicle are important in deciding whether it was temporarily in New South Wales. It was not necessary for the Court to come to any conclusion on that point. In my opinion, the passage quoted from the judgment of Ferguson J. is a correct statement, so far as it goes, as to the meaning and operation of reg. 17. It is to be noticed that his Honour's statement relates only to the time during which the vehicle remains in the hands of the thief. If a stolen car is abandoned or recovered, subsequent actions, taken or authorized by the owner after becoming aware of what has happened, may well affect the question whether reg. 17 comes into operation with respect to the vehicle. But that is a matter which need not be pursued in this case. (at p46)
control in another State by theft and brought by the thief into
New South Wales, is not, while it remains in the hands of the
thief, a motor vehicle temporarily in New South Wales within
the meaning of the Act and Regulations, whatever the thief's
intention in regard to it may be."
8. The renter, Wing, obtained the possession of the car lawfully. But when
the accident occurred it had become impossible for him
to return it to the
owner in Queensland on that day, as he had agreed to do. It had been taken,
contrary to the agreement, out of
the State of Queensland. The learned trial
judge said that he was not prepared to find on the evidence that the driver
had stolen
or was illegally using the vehicle when it entered that State, but
his Honour was not satisfied by the evidence that the car was
temporarily in
New South Wales. In my opinion, the evidence provided ample ground for a
strong suspicion that the car had been stolen
or was being illegally used.
Even if the learned judge was correct in thinking that the evidence was
insufficient to justify an affirmative
finding that this was so, it was
clearly open to him to refuse to find that it was not so. But it was
necessary, in my opinion, for
the appellant to establish that it was not so.
The foregoing considerations lead to the conclusion that there was no valid
ground
upon which the Court of Appeal should have interfered with the decision
of the trial judge on this question. (at p46)
9. I am also of opinion for a different reason that the decision of his
Honour on this question was correct. Ferguson J. thought
that reg. 17 was
inapplicable when a vehicle is taken to New South Wales from another State by
a thief. In my opinion, it is inapplicable,
not only in that event, but also
in other cases in which the taking of the vehicle into New South Wales occurs
without the consent
of the owner and in which it continues to be in New South
Wales, without the owner's consent, up to the point of time which becomes
the
material one for the determination of the question whether the vehicle is
temporarily in New South Wales. (at p46)
10. Regulation 17 exempts persons from the provisions of s. 7 (1) of the Act.
Persons who if not exempted may become guilty of an
offence against s. 7 (1)
are persons who use an uninsured motor vehicle on a public street in New South
Wales and persons who cause,
permit or suffer another person so to use it. An
owner whose vehicle is taken into New South Wales by some other person could
not
be guilty himself of using it on a public street in that State, and if it
were taken there without his consent and used there by
another person the
owner could not be said to cause, permit or suffer the other person to use it
there. It seems, therefore, that
in such a case the owner needs no exemption
from the provisions of s. 7 (1). The person who takes the vehicle into New
South Wales
and uses it there does, if not exempted, commit an offence against
s. 7 (1). But it is difficult to suppose that it was intended
that the
regulation should operate to exempt him from that liability. In my opinion,
reg. 17 should be interpreted as applying only
in relation to a vehicle
brought into New South Wales by its owner or by some person authorized by its
owner, for use for a relatively
short period in that State. (at p47)
11. It is true that reg. 17 exempts persons from the provisions of s. 8 (1),
as well as from those of s. 7 (1) of the Act. In the
ordinary case of the
driving of a vehicle into New South Wales by an owner resident in another
State who is on a journey for holiday
or business purposes, it would appear
that he would be in any event exempt from the requirements of registration or
renewal of registration
of the vehicle in New South Wales : see s. 5B of the
Motor Traffic Act, 1909 (N.S.W.), as amended, and reg. 33A of the Motor
Traffic
Regulations made thereunder. But whatever may be the extent of the
operation of reg. 17 in so far as it grants exemption from the
provisions
of
s. 8 (1), it is the exemption from the provisions of s. 7 (1) that operates to
bring a vehicle to which that exemption
relates within the definition of an
"uninsured motor vehicle". The reference
in reg. 17 to s. 8 (1) does not
affect, in my opinion,
the reasons I have given for treating it as being
intended to grant exemption from the provisions
of s. 7 (1) in respect of
those
vehicles only which are at the relevant time in New South Wales with the
consent of the owner. (at p47)
12. I am of opinion, therefore, that the decision that the appellant was
liable to have proceedings taken against him under s. 30
(1) of the Act was
correct. (at p47)
13. The remaining question in the appeal concerns a claim made by the
appellant against the owner, in accordance with s. 32 (1)
of the Act, to
recover the amount which the appellant might become liable to pay to the
plaintiff. That claim succeeded at the trial
but it was held by the Court of
Appeal that the defence raised by the owner under par. (a) of the proviso to
s. 32 (1) should succeed.
This defence was that at the time of the accident
the driver Wing was driving the motor vehicle without the authority of the
owner.
(at p47)
14. In Andrews v. Nominal Defendant (1962) 63 SR (NSW) 110 , it was held that
a claim by the nominal defendant against an owner,
which was in that case a
claim against the plaintiff in the action, may be made the subject of a
third-party proceeding, in accordance
with the Law Reform (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1946 (N.S.W.). In Nominal Defendant v. Andrews [1969] HCA 51; (1969) 121 CLR
562 , further proceedings
in the same action were before
this Court, but no
question was decided as to the propriety
of the procedure that had been
adopted.
In the present case it has not
been contended that the course adopted
by the appellant was
not open to it and in the circumstances
I think it is
unnecessary to
examine the question of the appropriateness of that course.
(at
p48)
15. The owner contends that at the relevant time the car was being driven
without its authority, because it had been brought into
New South Wales
contrary to the agreement under which Wing had obtained possession of it and
because the time of the hiring had already
expired, at 11.15 in the morning,
before the accident occurred. Much of the argument on this question has been
directed to the relationship
between the owner and Wing as bailor and bailee
of the vehicle. It was contended on the one hand and denied on the other that
the
bailment of the vehicle to Wing had been determined. It was submitted for
the appellant that the case was not one in which the acts
of the driver were
so repugnant to the holding of the vehicle as bailee that they determined the
bailment and vested in the owner
the immediate right of possession : see
Penfolds Wines Pty. Ltd. v. Elliott [1946] HCA 46; (1946) 74 CLR 204, at pp 214, 227 . It
was
submitted
that there was evidence that it was the practice of the owner, when
vehicles
were returned later than the stipulated
time, to make
an additional
charge and that this had occurred in the present case and that
this was a
recognition that the bailment
had continued
notwithstanding the breaches of
the agreement committed by Wing. But, in my
opinion, it is not by reference to
those
questions that
the issue arising under the proviso to s. 32 (1) of the
Act is to be determined.
Whether or not the bailment was for
some purposes
still on foot at the time of the accident and whether or not the owner, on
becoming
aware of breaches of the agreement,
would have
been entitled to elect
to treat the agreement as still subsisting or at an end are
questions which
need to be decided
only if it
is to be assumed that the existence of the
relevant authority to drive is necessarily
coterminous with a bailment,
regarded
as remaining
in existence for all purposes until a definite point of
time. In my opinion, no
such assumption should be made. Nor
is it necessary
to
decide whether it was the owner or the driver who had at the relevant time
the
immediate right to possession of
the vehicle :
see Nominal Defendant v.
Andrews [1969] HCA 51; (1969) 121 CLR 562 . The question raised by the proviso to s. 32 (1)
is a different question. It
is the act of driving the vehicle
at the time of
the occurrence to which attention must be directed.
I pause to observe that on
the
facts of this case I regard it
as of no significance that the term
"driver" is stated in s. 5 to include
any person for the time
being "in charge
of" any vehicle.
The fact that has to be proved in order to establish the
defence is that
at the time of the occurrence
the driving of the vehicle
was
without the authority of the owner. I am of opinion that that fact was
proved.
The only authority
to drive that was ever given
to Wing was an authority which
arose from the hiring to him for a term of
a vehicle, the obvious purpose
of
this hiring being that
the vehicle would be driven. The agreement said nothing
in positive terms
as to the extent of that authority
to drive. But it provided
that the vehicle was not to be removed from Queensland without the written
consent of the owner. In my
opinion, the consequence was
that no authority to
drive the vehicle in any place outside that State was
ever granted to Wing.
The
agreement did not confer a general
authority to drive anywhere, which must
be deemed to continue unless
some fundamental breach of
the agreement
occurred. The question
is not one of distinguishing between different classes
of breach
some of which would and some
of which would not put an end to the
agreement. In my opinion, the driving of the vehicle in New South
Wales was
outside the scope
of any authority that ever existed.
It cannot be implied
merely from the fact that Wing obtained possession
of the vehicle, as a
bailee. (at p49)
16. In the second place, the agreement provided for the return of the vehicle
by 11.15 a.m. on 29th July. If through accident or
mischance beyond the
renter's control or through his own carelessness or other fault, its return
had been delayed, no doubt he could
have been properly regarded as still
having authority to drive the vehicle for the purpose of bringing it back to
the owner. That
would naturally be considered to have been within the
contemplation of the parties. But, in my opinion, his driving of the vehicle,
several hours after the period stipulated in the agreement had come to an end,
at a time when its return to Brisbane by the end of
that day had become
impossible, and in the opposite direction to that which would have brought him
to the agreed place for the return
of the vehicle, could not properly be found
to be a driving of the vehicle with the authority of the owner. (at p49)
17. It was submitted in this Court that the appellant could rely upon the
presumption of agency established by s. 16 (1) of the
Act. It was argued that
since that presumption is made applicable with respect to proceedings in which
the nominal defendant was
"involved" in any of the ways specified in sub-s.
(2), it was applicable in this case in which the nominal defendant had been
made
an alternative defendant. According to the argument the consequence was
that Wing must be deemed to have been at the relevant time
the agent of the
owner acting within the scope of his authority in relation to the vehicle and
therefore it could not be maintained
that he was driving it without the
authority of the owner. In my opinion these submissions must be rejected. The
authority to which
s. 32 refers is an actual authority. The absence of such
authority has to be established to the satisfaction of the Court, when an
owner raises par. (a) of the proviso as a defence. When a driver invokes par.
(b) of the proviso, the existence in fact of the owner's
authority or the
driver's belief on reasonable grounds in its existence is to be established to
the satisfaction of the Court. Section
16 is concerned with removing
difficulties confronting an injured person seeking to establish a right to
damages. It is not concerned
with a claim under s. 32. It was conceded that in
a separate action brought by the nominal defendant under s. 32 against the
owner
or the driver, s. 16 would have no application. But it was said that
when the nominal defendant has been joined as an alternative
defendant and in
that action has made a third-party claim based on s. 32 then s. 16 applies.
Such a construction of s. 16 is inconsistent,
in my opinion, with the
provisions of s. 3 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1946,
which are so expressed that no
greater right can be asserted against a person
upon whom a third-party notice is served than could
be asserted in a separate
action
brought against that person by the party by whom the third-party notice
is given. (at p50)
18. A separate argument that the driver Wing must be deemed to have been the
authorized agent of the owner and to have been acting
within the scope of the
authority was founded upon the provisions of s. 3 (2) of The Motor Vehicles
Insurance Acts, 1936 to 1961
(Q.). It is sufficient to say that, in my
opinion, it is plain that those
provisions have no application to this case.
(at p50)
19. In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed.
STEPHEN J. I have read and agree with the reasons for judgment of my brother
Walsh and would dismiss this appeal for the reasons
stated by him. (at p50)
ORDER
Appeal dismissed with costs.
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