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Puttick v Tenon Limited (formerly called Fletcher Challenge Forests Limited) [2008] HCA 54 (12 November 2008)
Last Updated: 12 November 2008
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON, CRENNAN AND KIEFEL JJ
JANINA PUTTICK (AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE
OF RUSSELL SIMON PUTTICK) APPELLANT
AND
TENON LIMITED (FORMERLY CALLED FLETCHER
CHALLENGE FORESTS LIMITED) RESPONDENT
Puttick v Tenon Limited (formerly called Fletcher Challenge Forests Limited)
[2008] HCA 54
12 November 2008
M40/2008
ORDER
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
2. Set aside paragraphs 2 and 3 of the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria made on 27 November 2007, and
in their place order:
(a) appeal allowed with costs; and
(b) set aside the orders of Justice Harper made on 13 October 2006 and in their place order that the defendant's summons filed on
6 March 2006 be dismissed with costs.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of Victoria
Representation
B W Walker SC with J R C Gordon for the appellant (instructed by Slater & Gordon)
A S Bell SC with L G De Ferrari and R L Garnett for the respondent (instructed by Freehills)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Puttick v Tenon Limited (formerly called Fletcher Challenge Forests Limited)
Private international law - Stay of proceedings - Forum non conveniens - Governing law - Law of the place of the tort - Whether place of the tort was New Zealand, where holding company of employer based,
or in Malaysia and Belgium, where employee inspected factories owned by third parties and inhaled asbestos fibres - Whether material
available on stay application sufficient to enable court to determine governing law - If governing law cannot be determined, how
should discretion to grant stay be exercised.
Private international law - Stay of proceedings - Forum non conveniens - Whether test in Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 correct or to be re-opened.
Private international law - Stay of proceedings - Forum non conveniens - Meaning of "clearly inappropriate forum" - Whether fact that governing law is foreign law, coupled with other factors suggesting
foreign forum more appropriate, sufficient to render Victorian court clearly inappropriate forum - Additional considerations where
foreign law in question is law of New Zealand.
Private international law - Governing law - Importance of pleading foreign law clearly and with appropriate particulars.
Words and phrases - "clearly inappropriate forum", "forum non conveniens", "governing law", "lex causae", "lex loci delicti", "place of the tort".
- FRENCH CJ, GUMMOW, HAYNE AND KIEFEL JJ. The appellant (Mrs Puttick) appeals against orders[1] of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria dismissing her appeal against orders[2] of a single judge of the Supreme Court permanently staying her action as brought in a clearly inappropriate forum. Much of the argument
of the appeal in this Court proceeded on the footing that an important, even a determinative, issue in deciding whether Victoria
was a clearly inappropriate forum is what law governs the appellant's claim for damages. Is it, as the respondent alleged, the law
of New Zealand, or is it, as the appellant alleged, some other law or laws?
- These reasons will show that the Court of Appeal (and the primary judge) erred in deciding that the material available in this matter
was sufficient to decide what law (or laws) govern the rights and duties of the parties. Rather, each should have held only that
it was arguable that the law of New Zealand was the law that governed the determination of those rights and duties. Each should
have further held, that assuming, without deciding, that the respondent was right to say that the parties' rights and duties are
governed by the law of New Zealand, the respondent did not establish that Victoria is a clearly inappropriate forum.
- Mrs Puttick's late husband, of whose estate she is executor, was employed by Tasman Pulp and Paper Company Limited ("Tasman")
as a marketing assistant, export assistant, and export manager, between about 1981 and 1989. She alleges that her husband contracted
malignant mesothelioma and other asbestos-related injuries as a result of his being exposed to asbestos during that time. This exposure
is said to have occurred during visits Mr Puttick made to factories in Belgium and Malaysia in the course of his employment
by Tasman.
- Mrs Puttick is now the plaintiff (in substitution for her late husband) in proceedings instituted in the Supreme Court of Victoria
claiming damages for the personal injuries suffered by Mr Puttick. The defendant to those proceedings is the present respondent
- Tenon Limited ("Tenon") referred to in the courts below by its former name of Fletcher Challenge Forests Ltd or "Fletcher Challenge".
- Initially the proceedings alleged that Mr Puttick had been employed by Tenon, but it soon emerged that this seemed not to have
been the case. As the proceedings are now framed, it is accepted that between about 1981 and 1989 Mr Puttick was employed by
Tasman, not Tenon. It is alleged, however, that Tenon owed Mr Puttick a duty of care and that it breached that duty. It is
pleaded that the duty was owed "[b]y reason of the direction, management and control exercised by [Tenon], its servants and agents,
over Tasman and over the work of its employees" including Mr Puttick. And it is alleged that:
"Throughout the Tasman employment, Tasman was:
(a) a subsidiary of [Tenon];
(b) subject to the direction, management and control of [Tenon], its servants or agents;
(c) directed, managed and controlled by [Tenon], its servants or agents;
(d) a corporation with no effective independent direction, management and control other than that exercised by [Tenon], its servants
or agents."
- Mrs Puttick brings the action against Tenon pursuant to s 29 of the Administration and Probate Act 1958 (Vic) as administrator of her late husband's estate for the benefit of the estate, and pursuant to Pt III of the Wrongs Act 1958 (Vic) on her own behalf and on behalf of their children as dependants of the deceased.
- Tenon is registered as a foreign company in Australia. It was served with the proceedings at its Australian registered office.
Tenon entered a conditional appearance and sought either an order permanently staying the proceedings, or an order dismissing the
proceedings summarily. Tenon contended that the tort of negligence alleged in the proceedings had occurred in New Zealand, that
the law to be applied in determining the claim was the law of New Zealand, and that the statute law of New Zealand providing for
a no-fault compensation scheme barred the common law claim made in the proceedings. In support of its application, Tenon filed affidavit
evidence deposing to matters alleged to bear upon those issues.
- The primary judge (Harper J) held[3] that the proceedings should be permanently stayed "on forum non conveniens grounds". It was therefore not necessary to decide Tenon's application for summary judgment. Accordingly, the primary judge declined[4] to express an opinion about the effect of the New Zealand no-fault compensation scheme on Mrs Puttick's claim.
- The reasoning adopted at first instance proceeded in two steps. First, the primary judge accepted[5] that "many - if not the great majority - of the witnesses and the relevant documents will be based or located in New Zealand". On
that footing he considered[6] that although New Zealand would be a more appropriate forum, Victoria was not shown to be a clearly inappropriate forum. He accepted[7] that if those were the only considerations, the Supreme Court of Victoria should not decline to exercise the jurisdiction which the
plaintiff (the present appellant) had regularly invoked.
- The second step taken to the conclusion that the action should be permanently stayed depended upon identifying the law that governed
the tort of negligence alleged in the proceedings. At first instance, the plaintiff argued[8] that her claim was governed by Victorian law, as the law of the forum. The primary judge rejected the plaintiff's argument and concluded[9] that the law governing questions of substance in the proceedings was the law of New Zealand. The primary judge correctly held[10] that questions of substance were to be determined according to the law of the place where the tort occurred: the lex loci delicti. The primary judge further concluded[11] that in this case the tort occurred in New Zealand and in this respect referred to a number of cases considering where the tort of
negligence occurs, including, in particular, Distillers Co (Biochemicals) Ltd v Thompson[12]. The conclusion that the proceedings should be permanently stayed must therefore be seen as proceeding from the two steps identified
earlier: first, where is the evidence found, and secondly, what is the governing law.
- The choice of law question loomed large in the argument in the Court of Appeal. In part that was because Mrs Puttick alleged
that the discretionary judgment of the primary judge to order a permanent stay should be set aside on appeal on the basis that the
primary judge had made an identified error of law in this respect[13]. But the prominence given to questions of choice of law can also be traced to the fact that the respondent (Tenon) cross-appealed
to the Court of Appeal, alleging that, because the law of New Zealand is the governing law and New Zealand law regulating the no-fault
compensation scheme[14] should be held to preclude a claim for negligence of the kind made in this case, the plaintiff's action should be dismissed as bound
to fail.
- Mrs Puttick's appeal to the Court of Appeal was dismissed. By majority (Warren CJ and Chernov JA; Maxwell P dissenting)
the Court of Appeal held that the primary judge was not shown to have erred in making the order for a permanent stay. The majority
agreed[15] with the primary judge's conclusion that the lex loci delicti, and thus the lex causae in the matter, was the law of New Zealand. This, coupled with what was identified[16] by Warren CJ as "the general undesirability of a Victorian court making a pronouncement upon a foreign legislative regime" (the
New Zealand statutes regulating the no-fault compensation scheme), was held sufficient not to disturb the primary judge's order that
the action be stayed permanently. It was not necessary, therefore, for the majority to decide the issues raised by Tenon's cross-appeal.
- The third member of the Court, Maxwell P, concluded[17] that, consistent with a number of decisions of the Court of Appeal of New South Wales[18], it should be held that in substance the cause of action alleged by Mrs Puttick had arisen in the "unsafe overseas factories,
in Malaysia and Belgium, where the employer by its travel instruction required Mr Puttick to work". In the opinion[19] of Maxwell P, Tenon "failed to discharge the onus of showing that [the Supreme Court of Victoria] would be a clearly inappropriate
forum". And because Maxwell P concluded that the tort of which the appellant complained was not committed in New Zealand, it
followed that the premise for Tenon's cross-appeal (that the law of New Zealand was the lex causae) was not made good, and he expressed no view on the issues raised by that cross-appeal.
- By special leave, Mrs Puttick appeals to this Court. Only one ground of appeal was stated in her notice of appeal, namely:
"The majority in the Court of Appeal erred in finding that the omissions of the Respondent in New Zealand determined the place where,
in substance, the tort occurred and gave rise to the Applicant's 'complaint in law', as such omissions to act (and the further omissions
in Belgium and Malaysia) were devoid of fault (and thus legal consequence) until the deceased was, in the course of his employment
foreseeably exposed to asbestos in Malaysia and Belgium."
- Tenon did not seek leave to cross-appeal to argue that the proceedings should be summarily dismissed. That is, Tenon did not seek
to argue, as it had argued in the courts below, that the lex causae should now be held to be New Zealand and that, according to the law of New Zealand, the appellant's claim was bound to fail[20].
- As the appellant's sole ground of appeal alleged that the Court of Appeal erred in locating where the alleged tort occurred, it is
not surprising that oral argument in this Court proceeded on the footing that it was necessary to decide where the tort alleged by
the appellant should be located[21] (and thus what was the lex loci delicti). But to proceed on that basis requires making several assumptions which should be exposed and tested. That is why, after the conclusion
of oral argument, the parties were invited to make written submissions directed to a number of questions, including whether the courts
below could decide which was the country or countries whose law would govern whether Tenon is liable to Mrs Puttick, and what
consequences were said to follow if the Court of Appeal should be held to have erred in deciding that question or deciding it as
it did.
- The joint reasons in Regie Nationale des Usines Renault SA v Zhang[22] emphasise the need for a party relying upon a foreign lex causae to do so clearly and with appropriate particulars; in Zhang it was said not to be enough that merely on one reading of the statement of claim the plaintiff alleged that the lex causae was that of New Caledonia. In the present litigation failure to heed what was said in Zhang has given rise to difficulties which became manifest in the course of argument in this Court.
- The amended statement of claim filed in the proceedings makes no express allegation that the plaintiff's claim was governed by any
foreign law. No defence has been filed. The plaintiff's pleading contains only a few allegations which locate the occurrence of
any fact or circumstance. First, it alleges Tenon's incorporation in New Zealand (and its registration in Australia as a registered
foreign corporation with a registered office in Sydney). Secondly, it alleges Mr Puttick's death in Victoria. Thirdly, it alleges
that he was exposed to asbestos in Belgium and Malaysia. The pleading says nothing about where Mr Puttick was employed, or
where Tenon or Tasman operated at the material times, whether generally or in whatever were the operations in which Mr Puttick
was engaged.
- The plaintiff's pleading might be understood as alleging that although Tasman employed staff, including Mr Puttick, Tasman had
no management at all, and that all relevant management of Mr Puttick's activities was done by employees of Tenon. It may well
be thought that such an arrangement would be (at the least) highly unusual. And against that understanding of the relevant arrangements,
it may be noted that Mr Puttick's job or jobs with Tasman were described in the plaintiff's pleading as "marketing assistant,
export assistant and export manager" (emphasis added). But although there was some evidence tendered about the employment of Mr Puttick by Tasman and some evidence
of the corporate structures of both Tenon and Tasman at various times, that material provided no sufficient basis for any positive
finding that relationships of the kind alleged in the plaintiff's pleading could not be established. And the respondent did not submit in this Court, or in the courts below, that any finding to that effect could be
made.
- No less importantly, there was no material that amplified the allegations, made in the plaintiff's pleading, that Mr Puttick
had been "required" to do certain things. No particulars were given in the pleading, or in the evidence adduced at first instance,
of how, when, or where it was that Mr Puttick had been "required to travel to Belgium and Malaysia", repeatedly "required to
work in or inspect" one plant where asbestos products were being manufactured, or repeatedly "required to work in, inspect or walk
through" another such plant.
- These uncertainties and ambiguities about the relevant relationships between Mr Puttick, Tenon and Tasman could not be, and
were not, resolved in determining the respondent's application for a permanent stay. Those were treated as issues that if they were
to be resolved would be decided at trial. But because the relevant relationships between the parties could not be identified and
described in any relevant detail, and because it was not possible to say where (or for that matter how) the various requirements
referred to in the plaintiff's pleading were made of Mr Puttick, not even a provisional finding could be made about what was
the place of commission of the tort alleged. Rather, all that the material advanced in support of the application for a permanent
stay demonstrated about questions of choice of law was that there would likely be a lively dispute about those questions, and that
one possible outcome of the dispute is that New Zealand law would be found to govern the rights and duties of the parties.
- Because the material bearing upon where the alleged tort occurred took the exiguous form it did, the present matter differed from
the New South Wales decisions upon which Maxwell P relied. In James Hardie & Co Pty Ltd v Hall[23], it was found on appeal, after trial of the action, that the lex causae was New Zealand. In James Hardie Industries Pty Ltd v Grigor[24] most of the negligent acts alleged by the plaintiff occurred in New Zealand and the Court of Appeal of New South Wales considered[25] the question of forum non conveniens on the footing that because the negligent conduct occurred there, the place of the tort was New Zealand. But unlike the present case,
the material available to the Court in Grigor showed where critical events occurred. Likewise, in Amaca Pty Ltd v Frost[26], the third decision relied on by Maxwell P, the case proceeded on agreed facts which were understood as showing[27] that the tort occurred in New Zealand.
- None of these three cases provided a sufficient footing for any conclusion about what law should be held to govern the rights and
duties of the parties in the present matter. Rather, as Spigelman CJ rightly said in Frost[28], each case in which it is necessary to decide where a tort occurred "turns on its facts and it will rarely be appropriate to try
to reason on the basis of factual analogies".
- The Court of Appeal (and the primary judge) therefore erred in concluding that it was possible in this case to make a finding (even
a provisional finding) about where the alleged tort occurred. And it follows that it was not possible, on the material available,
to decide what the lex causae is, or is likely to be. Rather, all that the courts below could decide was that it was arguable that the lex causae is the law of New Zealand.
- As noted earlier, the respondent's claim to summary judgment was not pursued in this Court. But it is to be noticed that it follows
from the conclusion that the courts below could decide only that it was arguable that the lex causae is the law of New Zealand that the respondent did not demonstrate that the proceedings should be dismissed as bound to fail. Showing
that the lex causae is the law of New Zealand was a necessary step in the respondent's argument, in the courts below, that the proceedings should be summarily
dismissed. The questions about construction and application of New Zealand statutes regulating the no-fault compensation scheme
should therefore not have been reached, not because of any supposed principle of judicial diffidence or deference, but because the
premise for their consideration was not established. It is, therefore, not necessary to consider whether a principle of the kind
mentioned by Warren CJ[29] and the primary judge[30] (that Australian courts should hesitate before expressing views about the construction or application of foreign statutes) should
be identified or rather rejected as inconsistent with the existence and application of choice of law rules.
- The conclusion that the majority in the Court of Appeal erred in deciding that the lex causae is the law of New Zealand is a conclusion that it was not open to find, in the words of the notice of appeal in this Court, "that
the omissions of the Respondent in New Zealand determined the place where, in substance, the tort occurred and gave rise to the [appellant's]
'complaint in law'". It follows, then, that the appellant made out her ground of appeal, although for reasons other than those she
assigned in her ground of appeal. What consequential orders should this Court make?
- In Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd[31], the Court held that a defendant will ordinarily be entitled to a permanent stay of proceedings instituted against it and regularly
served upon it within the jurisdiction, if the defendant persuades the local court that, having regard to the circumstances of the
particular case, and the availability of an alternative foreign forum to whose jurisdiction the defendant is amenable, the local
court is a clearly inappropriate forum for determination of the dispute. The reasons of the plurality in Voth pointed out[32] that the focus must be "upon the inappropriateness of the local court and not the appropriateness or comparative appropriateness
of the suggested foreign forum".
- Tenon contended that, if the occasion arose for the re-exercise of discretion on the stay application, this Court "should restate
the test for a stay of proceedings either by holding that a stay should be granted when the local forum is an 'inappropriate forum'
... or, alternatively, by holding that a stay should be granted where there is a more appropriate forum for the resolution of the
dispute". It was submitted that this would eliminate "the scope for tension and confusion" said to be produced by the explanation,
given in Voth[33], of the different content that had been given in earlier cases to the adjectives "oppressive" and "vexatious". These submissions
of Tenon should not be accepted.
- It may readily be accepted that, as pointed out in Voth[34], the power to stay proceedings, regularly commenced, on inappropriate forum grounds, is exercised "in accordance with the general
principle empowering a court to dismiss or stay proceedings which are oppressive, vexatious or an abuse of process" and that "the
rationale for the exercise of the power to stay is the avoidance of injustice between parties in the particular case". It may also
be observed, as it was in Voth[35], that "oppressive" and "vexatious" are terms that have been understood in different senses[36]. But in Voth, these differences were examined in the course of considering what test should be adopted for deciding whether proceedings should
be stayed on inappropriate forum grounds. What was said in Voth about those differences casts no doubt on the content of the test ultimately stated in Voth. In particular, contrary to Tenon's submissions, it provides no "scope for tension and confusion" about the content or application
of the clearly inappropriate forum test.
- Tenon's invitation to the Court to restate the test in Voth should not be accepted.
- If the tort which Mrs Puttick alleges Tenon committed against her late husband was shown not to be a foreign tort, Tenon's claim
to a stay of proceedings would have been greatly weakened. But it by no means follows that showing that the tort which is alleged
is, or may be, governed by a law other than the law of the forum demonstrates that the chosen forum is clearly inappropriate to try
the action. The very existence of choice of law rules denies that the identification of foreign law as the lex causae is reason enough for an Australian court to decline to exercise jurisdiction. Moreover, considerations of geographical proximity and
essential similarities between legal systems, as well as the legislative provisions now made for the determination of some trans-Tasman
litigation[37], all point against treating the identification of New Zealand law as the lex causae as a sufficient basis on which to conclude that an Australian court is a clearly inappropriate forum to try a dispute.
- The Court of Appeal should have held that the primary judge erred in ordering a permanent stay. The primary judge's error lay in
attributing determinative weight to a finding (not open on the material then available) that the lex causae was the law of New Zealand. For the reasons given earlier, the majority in the Court of Appeal also erred in deciding that the lex causae was shown to be the law of New Zealand. Rather, the Court of Appeal should have held that it was not possible to decide what would
be the lex causae. And the Court of Appeal should then have held that even if the lex causae was later shown to be the law of New Zealand, that circumstance, coupled with the fact that most evidence relating to the issues in
the case would be found in New Zealand, did not demonstrate that the Supreme Court of Victoria was a clearly inappropriate forum.
- The appeal to this Court should be allowed with costs. The order of the Court of Appeal granting leave to appeal to that Court should
not be disturbed. Paragraphs 2 and 3 of the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria made on 27 November
2007 should be set aside and in their place there should be orders:
(a) appeal allowed with costs;
(b) set aside the orders of Justice Harper made on 13 October 2006 and in their place order that the defendant's summons filed
on 6 March 2006 be dismissed with costs.
- HEYDON AND CRENNAN JJ. The circumstances of this appeal are set out in the judgment of French CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Kiefel JJ.
The appeal should be allowed and the notice of motion before the primary judge should be dismissed for the following reasons.
Four questions for consideration
- There are four questions for consideration. The first is whether the courts below erred in concluding that the lex causae was New Zealand law. If that first question is answered affirmatively, it follows that the primary judge's exercise of discretion
miscarried. A second question then arises, namely whether this Court should remit the matter to the Supreme Court of Victoria for
the discretion to be re-exercised or whether this Court should re-exercise the discretion itself. If the answer to the second question
is that this Court is to re-exercise the discretion, a third question must be considered. That question is whether the discretion
should be exercised in accordance with the principles stated in Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd[38], or in accordance with some other test. However the third question is answered, a fourth question is whether the Court's discretion
should be exercised in favour of or against the respondent's application for a stay.
First question: was the lex causae New Zealand law?
- For the reasons given in the plurality judgment, it is not at present possible to decide whether the lex causae is New Zealand law[39]. A conclusion reached on a stay application about what the proper law of a tort is will normally only be a provisional conclusion:
it will be a conclusion open to alteration in the light of further evidence called at the trial. A judge considering a stay application
may be able to determine the location of the alleged tort despite somewhat unreal or artificial contentions in the pleadings[40]. However, in the present proceedings it is not possible, on the state of the pleadings and the evidence called before the primary
judge, to reach even a provisional view on that subject.
Second question: should the matter be remitted to the Supreme Court of Victoria?
- It follows from the answer to the first question that the primary judge's exercise of his discretion to order a stay, upheld by a
majority of the Court of Appeal, miscarried. It miscarried because it depended in part on the proposition that the lex causae was New Zealand law, and the answer to the first question is inconsistent with that proposition. Hence the discretion must be exercised
afresh. Should the Supreme Court of Victoria exercise the discretion, or this Court? It would be unduly onerous on the parties,
by remitting the matter to the Supreme Court of Victoria, in effect to compel them to conduct further interlocutory litigation, particularly
since the loser of that further litigation may seek special leave to appeal to this Court. Consideration of the evidentiary materials
does not appear to turn on any issue in relation to which the Supreme Court of Victoria was in a position of advantage compared to
this Court. Neither party advocated remitter. Accordingly the answer to the second question is that the matter should not be remitted
and that this Court should re-exercise the discretion.
Third question: should Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd be applied?
- The invitation extended by the respondent to overrule Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd[41] completely, or to substitute for the test it states a "modified" test, should be rejected. Voth's case should not be overruled in this appeal. Nor is it appropriate even to contemplate that course in this appeal. Voth's case should simply be followed until the time comes, if it ever comes, for full argument to be developed about its correctness, and
for an argument that it is wrong to be accepted. That is so for the following reasons.
- First, the contention that the Voth test should be modified was the third of three contentions which only arise if, contrary to the arguments of the respondent, New
Zealand law is not the lex causae, but the law of Malaysia or Belgium is. The precondition for that particular forensic approach on the respondent's part has not
been met. The Court's view is not that New Zealand law is not the lex causae and that some other law is. Instead the Court's view is simply that it is premature to decide that question. That does not create
a satisfactory forensic background against which to explore the correctness of Voth's case.
- Secondly, although it was submitted that the considerations relevant to overruling prior authorities analysed in John v Federal Commissioner of Taxation[42] were satisfied, the submissions did not explain in detail how they were satisfied.
- Thirdly, the question is whether a well-known decision of the Court, which was arrived at in a determined endeavour to settle controversies
of legal principle, should be overruled. Because the parties concentrated on the lex causae question the written submissions advanced by the respondent in relation to the correctness of Voth's case were not developed in the detail which is desirable when a question of that very important kind is presented. The same is true
a fortiori of the respondent's oral submissions, which were necessarily advanced only in compressed fashion in the short time left
available at a late stage of the hearing. Thus a primary reason advanced by the respondent for overruling Voth's case was that it had been undercut in certain respects by later decisions of the Court - John Pfeiffer Pty Ltd v Rogerson[43]; Regie Nationale des Usines Renault SA v Zhang[44]; Neilson v Overseas Projects Corporation[45]. A contention of this kind makes it necessary that there be much more than passing references to the authorities. It calls for close
analysis of the language used in the authorities in the light of their particular facts and the issues thrown up by that language.
- Fourthly, it was not demonstrated that even if the Voth test were overruled or modified, there would be any difference in the result of this appeal. In the absence of that demonstration,
any observations making a change to the Voth test would in one sense be dicta only. This is not in general a satisfactory method of developing the law.
Fourth question: how should this Court's discretion be exercised?
- The test stated in Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd turns on the following matters[46]:
"First, a plaintiff who has regularly invoked the jurisdiction of a court has a prima facie right to insist upon its exercise. Secondly,
the traditional power to stay proceedings which have been regularly commenced, on inappropriate forum grounds, is to be exercised
in accordance with the general principle empowering a court to dismiss or stay proceedings which are oppressive, vexatious or an
abuse of process and the rationale for the exercise of the power to stay is the avoidance of injustice between parties in the particular
case. Thirdly, the mere fact that the balance of convenience favours another jurisdiction or that some other jurisdiction would provide
a more appropriate forum does not justify the dismissal of the action or the grant of a stay. Finally, the jurisdiction to grant
a stay or dismiss the action is to be exercised 'with great care' or 'extreme caution'."
The Court also said[47] that in applying those principles the discussion by Lord Goff of Chieveley in Spiliada Maritime Corp v Cansulex Ltd[48] of relevant "connecting factors" and "a legitimate personal or juridical advantage" provides valuable assistance.
- In her written submissions filed before oral argument, the appellant submitted:
"If the lex loci delicti is not the law of New Zealand, then the Courts below have exercised their discretion to stay the proceedings largely or solely on
the basis of an error of law and so the exercise of discretion should be set aside and re-exercised - against the grant of a stay."
No reasons were advanced as to why this submission should be accepted.
- In its written submissions filed before oral argument, the respondent, on the assumption that the test in Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd was to be applied, submitted:
"the preponderance of relevant connections is with New Zealand, and this will remain the case even if the court were to hold, contrary
to the respondent's principal submission, that the place of the tort was Belgium and or Malaysia. One of the key issues both of
fact and law relates to the allegation of direction, management and control by the respondent of Tasman. That issue has every connection,
both factually and legally, with New Zealand and it is singularly appropriate that that be resolved by a New Zealand Court."
The respondent repeated this argument in written submissions filed after oral argument closed. By the expression "the preponderance
of relevant connections" the respondent meant the following facts referred to earlier in its submissions. The respondent was incorporated
in New Zealand. Its board meetings were always held in New Zealand. Its corporate records were and remained located in New Zealand.
Tasman, Mr Puttick's employer, was also a New Zealand company, and a subsidiary of the respondent. The board meetings of Tasman
were held in Auckland and it retained its board records there. Mr Puttick was a New Zealand citizen and a resident of New Zealand
whilst employed by Tasman. It could be inferred that New Zealand law governed his contract of employment. The instruction to Mr
Puttick to visit overseas factories was issued by Tasman in New Zealand and received by Mr Puttick in New Zealand. Neither the respondent
nor Tasman owned or controlled the factories which Mr Puttick visited in Malaysia or Belgium. Mr Puttick applied to the New Zealand
Accidents Compensation Commission ("ACC") for compensation in relation to his injuries. The ACC accepted his application, and some
monies have been paid to the appellant. Under New Zealand law, any common law claim for exemplary damages that may have been available
outside the accident compensation regime was extinguished on Mr Puttick's death.
- In oral argument counsel for the respondent also handed up a list of "Factors relied upon by the Respondent on the forum non conveniens
question". Among the additional factors which were in existence when the notice of motion was heard and to which the respondent
thus referred were the following. At the time of the action the respondent had a very limited presence in Australia. Mr Puttick
never obtained Australian citizenship. Tasman had an independent board, and the respondent did not involve itself in the day-to-day
management of Tasman. The directors of Tasman resided in New Zealand. The documents of Tasman were in New Zealand. The documents
of Tasman were not in the possession of the respondent and would therefore have to be obtained from Tasman through some legal process
in New Zealand. The head office of the respondent was in New Zealand. All senior personnel of the respondent were employed in New
Zealand. The documents of the respondent were in New Zealand, and most had been placed in archives. All the witnesses for the respondent
were in New Zealand. Witnesses who were managers or employees of Tasman at the relevant time, were in New Zealand. There was no
allegation that either the respondent or Tasman were owners of or occupiers of or otherwise able to exert control or conduct supervision
at the overseas factories to which Mr Puttick travelled. The respondent referred in addition to the following matters. If
the current proceedings are not stayed, the respondent intends to cross-claim against Norske Skog Tasman Ltd, the successor of Tasman.
The appellant is able to conduct litigation in New Zealand. The appellant has in fact conducted litigation in New Zealand against
the ACC, and with her present lawyers. There would be no reason for the respondent or Norske Skog Tasman Ltd to dispute the evidence
to be called by the appellant that Mr Puttick died of mesothelioma. The issues at the trial would be limited to whether Tenon or
Norske Skog Tasman Ltd were liable, not whether damage occurred, nor, to any substantial extent, the extent of the damage. There
was no great need for the appellant to be present in New Zealand for the trial. The evidence to be called from Mr Puttick's treating
doctors will be limited, given that his death from mesothelioma will not be in issue. Mr Puttick's records relevant to the issues
of the case will be limited.
- In written submissions filed after oral argument concluded, the appellant submitted - and a similar submission had been made briefly
in oral argument - that her appeal had "proceeded on the basis that, if the respondent's premise that [the] lex loci delicti was
the law of New Zealand could be successfully attacked, the other findings and conclusions of the judge at first instance ... should
be a good reason for the motion to be dismissed." By the expression "the ... findings and conclusions of the judge at first instance"
the appellant meant a passage appearing immediately after the primary judge had set out the difficulties which a trial in New Zealand
would cause the appellant in view of the youth of her children, the fact that she is the sole proprietor of a business and the fact
that she is a part-time student; described the links between the controversy and New Zealand; stated that Mr Puttick's health and
cause of death were unlikely to be contentious, so that the appellant's need to call medical evidence would be limited; and had concluded
that since the central dispute would be the degree of control exercised by the respondent over Tasman, "many - if not the great majority
- of the witnesses and the relevant documents will be based or located in New Zealand."[49] The passage referred to by the appellant was[50]:
"If matters were to rest at this point, New Zealand would be the more appropriate forum; but, at the same time, Victoria would not
be clearly inappropriate. Thus, were no further considerations to be taken into account, then this Court - following the principles
expounded in Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay[51] and Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd[52] - should not decline to exercise the jurisdiction which, as the [respondent] in effect concedes, has been regularly invoked. The
issue would of course be even clearer were Victorian law to be the lex causae. But if, according to Australian choice of law rules, New Zealand law were to be the governing law, the matter would have to be
revisited."
The primary judge thus made it plain that if it could not be concluded that New Zealand law were the lex causae, he would not have granted a stay. Those observations were of course dicta. After referring to the primary judge's analysis and
quoting parts of it, including the passage just set out, Warren CJ said that the primary judge's analysis "does not disclose any
error."[53] Since Warren CJ agreed with the primary judge that the lex causae was New Zealand law, that observation too was a dictum. Maxwell P agreed with the conclusion now stated by this Court that the lex causae could not be said to be New Zealand law, though he went further in concluding that the cause of action arose in the unsafe overseas
factories in Malaysia and Belgium. Maxwell P noted the conclusion stated by the primary judge in the passage just quoted. He proceeded
to analyse the relevant evidence for himself, and concluded that the respondent had failed to discharge the onus of showing that
the Supreme Court of Victoria was a clearly inappropriate forum[54]. Chernov JA did not examine the present point.
- In its written submissions filed in this Court after oral argument in answer to those of the appellant, the respondent set out and
evidently adopted the submission which it said it had put to the primary judge:
"If the Court formed the view that it was not possible ... to make even a 'predictive' finding ... that the place of the tort was
New Zealand, at the very least New Zealand would be a very strong candidate, and in the absence of any suggestion that Victorian
or Australian law was to apply, it remained legitimate to exercise the discretion taking that consideration into account."
Later the submission was reformulated thus:
"[I]f there was an issue of one or more foreign laws being applicable and one of them might be New Zealand, then, [if] all other relevant
factors [were] also taken into account and given such weight as they warranted, this was a proper case for a stay to be granted."
- This argument of the respondent should be rejected. The question of the lex causae can be relevant to the question whether Victoria is a clearly inappropriate forum. If the lex causae were New Zealand law, that would make a stay more likely, though not inevitable. But the question of what the lex causae is ceases to be relevant if it is impossible to say what it is. And the question remains irrelevant even if New Zealand law "might
be" a candidate, or is "a very strong candidate", for ex hypothesi it is impossible to say whether New Zealand law is in truth the
lex causae.
- The balance of the respondent's arguments boil down to a submission that this Court should reach a different conclusion from that
of the primary judge in the passage quoted above[55] simply because he gave incorrect weight to factors other than the lex causae. The respondent did not point to any error of law or fact on the primary judge's part, nor to any relevant matter which was wrongly
not considered, nor to any irrelevant matter which was wrongly considered - and it did not contend that the conclusion in question
of the primary judge was so unreasonable as to point to the existence of any otherwise undiscoverable error of those kinds. It is
true that the Court is re-exercising a discretion which miscarried, rather than considering an appeal against an order flowing from
the primary judge's conclusion, so that the factors summarised in the previous sentence, which are those relevant to appellate intervention
in discretionary decisions[56], are not conclusive. But the fact that the respondent's contention was only that if this Court examined for itself the relevant
materials de novo it would come to a different conclusion from that to which the primary judge came is not one attracting particular
sympathy. This is particularly so given the fact that Warren CJ found no error in the conclusion in question, and the fact that
Maxwell P arrived at the same conclusion independently. It is true that the primary judge's conclusion was a dictum, and so was
Warren CJ's approval of it. But Maxwell P's conclusion was not a dictum.
- When the relevant materials are examined, that examination does not suggest that once the lex causae issue is put on one side any conclusion should be reached which is different from that reached by the primary judge. The matters
relied on by the respondent certainly reveal that New Zealand is an appropriate forum, but other factors indicate that Victoria is
not clearly inappropriate. The respondent conceded that the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Victoria had been validly invoked.
The proceedings are not oppressive, vexatious or an abuse of process, particularly when factors affecting the appellant personally
are remembered.
- Orders should be made as proposed in the judgment of French CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Kiefel JJ.
[1] Puttick v Fletcher Challenge Forests Ltd [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70.
[2] Puttick v Fletcher Challenge Forests Ltd [2006] VSC 370.
[3] [2006] VSC 370 at [36].
[4] [2006] VSC 370 at [36].
[5] [2006] VSC 370 at [20].
[6] [2006] VSC 370 at [21].
[7] Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd (1990) 171 CLR 538; [1990] HCA 55.
[8] [2006] VSC 370 at [22].
[9] [2006] VSC 370 at [28].
[10] [2006] VSC 370 at [22] citing Regie Nationale des Usines Renault SA v Zhang (2002) 210 CLR 491; [2002] HCA 10.
[11] [2006] VSC 370 at [25].
[12] [1971] AC 458.
[13] cf House v The King [1936] HCA 40; (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 505; [1936] HCA 40.
[14] Identified by the respondent as either or both of the Accident Compensation Act 1982 (NZ) and the Injury Prevention, Rehabilitation, and Compensation Act 2001 (NZ).
[15] [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 84 [42] per Warren CJ, 95-96 [97]-[99] per Chernov JA.
[16] [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 84 [42].
[17] [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 92 [81].
[18] James Hardie & Co Pty Ltd v Hall (1998) 43 NSWLR 554; James Hardie Industries Pty Ltd v Grigor (1998) 45 NSWLR 20; Amaca Pty Ltd v Frost [2006] NSWCA 173; (2006) 67 NSWLR 635.
[19] [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 93 [89].
[20] Dey v Victorian Railways Commissioners [1949] HCA 1; (1949) 78 CLR 62 at 91 per Dixon J; [1949] HCA 1; General Steel Industries Inc v Commissioner for Railways (NSW) [1964] HCA 69; (1964) 112 CLR 125 at 128-130 per Barwick CJ; [1964] HCA 69; Agar v Hyde (2000) 201 CLR 552 at 575-576 [57] per Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ; [2000] HCA 41; Batistatos v Roads and Traffic Authority (NSW) [2006] HCA 27; (2006) 226 CLR 256 at 274-275 [44]- [46] per Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Crennan JJ; [2006] HCA 27.
[21] Dow Jones & Co Inc v Gutnick [2002] HCA 56; (2002) 210 CLR 575 at 606 [43]; [2002] HCA 56.
[22] [2002] HCA 10; (2002) 210 CLR 491 at 517-518 [68] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ.
[23] (1998) 43 NSWLR 554.
[24] (1998) 45 NSWLR 20.
[25] (1998) 45 NSWLR 20 at 37.
[26] [2006] NSWCA 173; (2006) 67 NSWLR 635.
[27] [2006] NSWCA 173; (2006) 67 NSWLR 635 at 642-646 [25]- [58].
[28] [2006] NSWCA 173; (2006) 67 NSWLR 635 at 641 [20].
[29] [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 84 [42].
[30] [2006] VSC 370 at [36].
[31] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538.
[32] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 565 per Mason CJ, Deane, Dawson and Gaudron JJ.
[33] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 555-556.
[34] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 554.
[35] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 555-556.
[36] See, for example, Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay [1988] HCA 32; (1988) 165 CLR 197 at 233-234 per Brennan J, 246-247 per Deane J; [1988] HCA 32; The "Atlantic Star" [1974] AC 436 at 464 per Lord Wilberforce, 477 per Lord Kilbrandon.
[37] See, for example, Evidence and Procedure (New Zealand) Act 1994 (Cth); Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth), Pt IIIA.
[38] (1990) 171 CLR 538; [1990] HCA 55.
[39] At [16]-[24].
[40] See for example, Buttigeig v Universal Terminal & Stevedoring Corporation [1972] VR 626 at 629 per Crockett J.
[41] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538.
[42] [1989] HCA 5; (1989) 166 CLR 417 at 438-439; [1989] HCA 5.
[43] (2000) 203 CLR 503; [2000] HCA 36.
[44] (2002) 210 CLR 491; [2002] HCA 10.
[45] (2005) 223 CLR 331; [2005] HCA 54.
[46] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 554 per Mason CJ, Deane, Dawson and Gaudron JJ. At 564 they said that the principles to be applied were stated
by Deane J in Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay [1988] HCA 32; (1988) 165 CLR 197 at 247-248; [1988] HCA 32.
[47] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 564-565.
[48] [1987] 1 AC 460 at 477-478, 482-484.
[49] Puttick v Fletcher Challenge Forests Ltd [2006] VSC 370 at [18]- [20].
[50] Puttick v Fletcher Challenge Forests Ltd [2006] VSC 370 at [21].
[51] [1988] HCA 32; (1988) 165 CLR 197.
[52] [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538.
[53] Puttick v Fletcher Challenge Forests Pty Ltd [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 83 [41].
[54] Puttick v Fletcher Challenge Forests Pty Ltd [2007] VSCA 264; (2007) 18 VR 70 at 92-93 [84]- [89].
[55] At [47].
[56] House v The King [1936] HCA 40; (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 504-505; [1936] HCA 40.
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