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Hickson v Goodman Fielder Limited [2009] HCA 11 (12 March 2009)
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Hickson v Goodman Fielder Limited [2009] HCA 11 (12 March 2009)
Last Updated: 12 March 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ
GLENN ANDREW JOSEPH HICKSON APPELLANT
AND
GOODMAN FIELDER LIMITED RESPONDENT
Hickson v Goodman Fielder Limited [2009] HCA 11
12 March 2009
S470/2008
ORDER
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
made on 24 April 2008.
- In
lieu thereof, order that the appeal to that Court be dismissed with
costs.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
A S Bell SC with D J Hooke for the appellant (instructed by Beilby Poulden
Costello)
J T Gleeson SC with P Kulevski for the respondent (instructed by Eakin McCaffrey
Cox Solicitors)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Hickson v Goodman Fielder Limited
Workers' compensation – Contributory negligence – Worker recovers
workers' compensation as a result of injury –
Worker brings damages claim
against third party tortfeasor – Damages claim settled – Employer
seeks recovery of workers'
compensation pursuant to Workers Compensation Act
1987 (NSW), s 151Z(1)(b) – Whether Law Reform
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965 (NSW), s 10(2) operates to reduce amount
of repayment on account of worker's contributory negligence where damages claim
settled.
Statutes – Interpretation – Whether Law Reform (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1965 (NSW), s 10(2) operates on damages recovered by way of
settlement – Whether reduction of repayment proportionate or by specific
amount.
Words and phrases – "damages recoverable", "to the same
extent".
Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965 (NSW), ss 9, 10.
Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW), s 151Z(1), (5).
- GUMMOW
J. The appeal should be allowed and consequential orders made as proposed by
Bell J. I agree with her Honour's reasons.
- HAYNE J.
I agree with Bell J.
- HEYDON
J. I agree with Bell J.
- KIEFEL
J. I agree with the orders proposed by Bell J for the reasons given by
her Honour.
- BELL
J. On 12 March 2003, the appellant ("Mr Hickson") suffered serious injury as
the result of a collision between his pushbike
and a motor vehicle driven by Mr
Ala. The accident occurred while Mr Hickson was on a journey to which s 10 of
the Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW) ("the Compensation Act") applies.
Accordingly, his injury for the purposes of the Compensation Act is taken to
have occurred in the course of his employment with the respondent ("Goodman
Fielder"). Goodman Fielder made compensation
payments to Mr Hickson. Mr
Hickson also had rights in tort against Mr Ala.
- Mr
Hickson sued Mr Ala in tort in the District Court of New South Wales ("the
tortfeasor action"). Goodman Fielder was not a party
to that action.
Mr Ala filed Notice of Grounds of Defence containing extensive particulars
of Mr Hickson's alleged contributory
negligence. It was common ground in
the later litigation between Goodman Fielder and Mr Hickson that contributory
negligence had
been a live issue in the tortfeasor action.
- The
tortfeasor action was settled by Mr Hickson and Mr Ala. Effect to the
settlement was given by an order in the District Court
(Charteris DCJ) for
judgment in favour of Mr Hickson for $2.8 million plus costs. The order was
pronounced orally on 6 June 2006.
No formal order was settled and entered.
- Goodman
Fielder commenced proceedings in the District Court on 7 June 2006 against Mr
Hickson seeking repayment of the amount of
the compensation which it had paid to
Mr Hickson, a sum of $607,315.43, pursuant to s 151Z(1)(b) of the Compensation
Act[1] ("the
repayment action").
- The
Compensation Act manifests a policy against the receipt of what might be called
"double compensation". This is evident in provisions in Pt 5 which include
those of s 151Z. In a case such as this, in which a worker recovers, first,
compensation and, secondly, damages from a person other than the employer,
s 151Z(1)(b) provides that the worker is liable to repay out of those
damages the amount of compensation which has been paid in respect of the
injury
and that the worker is not entitled to any further compensation.
- Under
s 9(1)(a) of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965
(NSW)[2] ("the
Law Reform Act"), Mr Hickson's claim against Mr Ala was not defeated by his
contributory negligence but the damages recoverable by him were subject
to
reduction on this
account[3].
Section 10(2) of the Law Reform Act provides for the reduction in the
liability of the worker to repay workers' compensation in a case in which the
damages recoverable
at common law are reduced on account of contributory
negligence.
- In
answer to Goodman Fielder's claim, Mr Hickson pleaded that his actions on 12
March 2003 contributed to his injuries and that his
liability to repay
compensation to Goodman Fielder was reduced to the same extent that the damages
recoverable by him against Mr
Ala were reduced.
- The
principal question raised by the appeal is whether the reduction in the
liability provided by s 10(2) of the Law Reform Act operates only where the
third party tortfeasor is sued to judgment and the court has made a finding of
the extent to which it is
just and reasonable that the damages recoverable are
reduced having regard to the worker's share in responsibility for the damage.
- In
the repayment action the District Court was asked to determine three questions
separately. The first question was whether s 10(2) of the Law Reform Act
can operate to reduce the amount of workers' compensation benefits repayable to
Goodman Fielder from damages recovered as the result
of a settlement of Mr
Hickson's action against Mr Ala without any determination by a court concerning
contributory negligence and
the quantum of damages (question 1(a)). Kearns
DCJ answered this question "yes". His Honour went on to hold, subject to the
rules of evidence, that evidence was admissible in the repayment action to
establish the extent to which the damages recovered by
Mr Hickson as a
result of the settlement of the tortfeasor action were in fact reduced on
account of his contributory negligence
(question 1(b)). His Honour answered the
third question, which was expressed to be in the alternative to the second,
holding that
evidence was admissible to establish the degree of
Mr Hickson's contributory negligence and the quantum of the damages to
which
he would have been entitled without reduction for contributory negligence
(question 3)[4].
- An
appeal by Goodman Fielder to the New South Wales Court of Appeal was successful
(Giles JA and Hislop J; Hodgson JA
dissenting)[5].
The Court of Appeal set aside the answers to the questions given by the District
Court and answered "no" to question 1(a) with
the result that questions 1(b) and
3 did not arise.
- By
special leave Mr Hickson appeals to this Court. He seeks reinstatement of the
position established in the District Court and
an order dismissing the appeal
from that Court to the Court of Appeal. For the reasons which follow, the
appeal to this Court should
be allowed and the consequential orders sought by Mr
Hickson should be made.
The legislative antecedents of Pt 5 of the Compensation
Act
- It
is appropriate to refer to the legislative antecedents of the relevant
provisions of Pt 5 of the Compensation Act. Section 6 of the Workmen's
Compensation Act 1897 (UK) ("the 1897 Act") stated:
"Where the injury for which compensation is payable under this Act was caused
under circumstances creating a legal liability in
some person other than the
employer to pay damages in respect thereof, the workman may, at his option,
proceed, either at law against
that person to recover damages, or against his
employer for compensation under this Act, but not against both, and if
compensation
be paid under this Act, the employer shall be entitled to be
indemnified by the said other person."
- The
1897 Act was replaced by the Workmen's Compensation Act 1906 (UK) ("the
1906 Act"). Section 6 of that Act spelled out more fully both the
prohibition upon double recovery by the worker
and the obligation of the
tortfeasor to indemnify the employer. Section 6 of the 1906 Act
stated:
"Where the injury for which compensation is payable under this Act was caused
under circumstances creating a legal liability in
some person other than the
employer to pay damages in respect thereof –
(1) The workman may take proceedings both against that person to recover
damages and against any person liable to pay compensation
under this Act for
such compensation, but shall not be entitled to recover both damages and
compensation; and
(2) If the workman has recovered compensation under this Act, the person by
whom the compensation was paid, and any person who has
been called on to pay an
indemnity under the section of this Act relating to sub-contracting, shall be
entitled to be indemnified
by the person so liable to pay damages as aforesaid,
and all questions as to the right to and amount of any such indemnity shall,
in
default of agreement, be settled by action, or, by consent of the parties, by
arbitration under this Act."
- In
Tickle Industries Pty Ltd v
Hann[6] this
Court considered a similar provision of the Northern Territory workers'
compensation legislation. Barwick CJ said that
s 6 of the 1906 Act
had provided the origin of the workers' compensation legislation as developed
throughout
Australia[7]. In
New South Wales like provision was later made in s 64 of the Workers'
Compensation Act 1926 (NSW) ("the 1926 Act").
- The
tripartite legal relationship between worker, employer and tortfeasor, which was
regulated in the United Kingdom by s 6
of the 1897 Act, by s 6 of the
1906 Act and, in New South Wales, by s 64 of the 1926 Act, differed in a
significant respect
from the tripartite relationship between Mr Hickson, Goodman
Fielder and Mr Ala. Before the enactment of the Law Reform Act the position in
New South Wales was that Mr Hickson's claim in tort against Mr Ala was liable to
defeat upon proof of contributory
negligence and no apportionment was possible
under the common
law[8].
- The
effect of the decision of the Court of Appeal is that s 10(2) of the Law
Reform Act does not operate on the amount of compensation repayable by
Mr Hickson to reflect the common ground between Goodman Fielder
and
Mr Hickson that contributory negligence had been a live issue in the
settled tortfeasor action. It is accepted that this
would not have been so had
the tortfeasor action proceeded to trial with a determination by the District
Court of the total damages
that would have been recoverable had there been no
contributory negligence by Mr
Hickson[9].
- Section
9(1)(b) of the Law Reform Act states:
"the damages recoverable in respect of the wrong are to be reduced to such
extent as the court thinks just and equitable having regard
to the claimant's
share in the responsibility for the damage."
- The
issue to which question 1(a) was directed in the District Court concerns the
construction of s 10(2) of the Law Reform Act, which reads:
"If the claimant is liable to repay compensation to his or her employer under
section 64(1)(a) of the [1926 Act] or under section 151Z
of the
[Compensation Act], the amount of compensation so repayable is to be reduced to
the same extent as the damages recoverable
by the claimant are reduced under
section 9."
- As
noted, the effect of the decision of the Court of Appeal is that a critical
determinant is the settlement of the tortfeasor action.
- The
predecessor of s 10(2) (s 10(1)(d)) did not refer to the extent of the
damages "reduced under section 9". Section 10(1)(d)
as originally
enacted was in these terms:
"where the claimant is liable to repay compensation to his employer pursuant to
section 64(a) of the [1926 Act], the amount
of compensation so repayable
shall be reduced to the same extent as the damages recoverable by
him".
- The
Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Amendment Act 2000 (NSW) ("the
Amendment Act") inserted a new Pt 3 into the Law Reform Act dealing with
contributory negligence. The evident purpose of the amendments introduced by
the Amendment Act was to overcome the decision of this Court in Astley v
Austrust
Ltd[10].
In the Parliamentary Secretary's speech on the second reading it was said that
the Bill "also rewrites the apportionment provisions
in plainer
language."[11]
It does not appear that the amendments were intended to alter the effect of
s 9 and s 10 as originally enacted.
The Court of Appeal's reasons
- The
reasoning of the Court of Appeal did not depend upon the inclusion of the words
"under section 9" in s 10(2). The majority considered
that the Law Reform Act
as originally enacted was against reduction of the liability to repay
compensation in cases in which the tortfeasor action was settled.
Giles JA said
that while the words of s 10(2) differed in some respects from the words of
its predecessor, s 10(1)(d), the two provisions were to the same effect,
which is that the reduction in liability is tied to "the objective fact of the
court-determined
reduction, ascertainable through the recording required by
s 11."[12]
- Giles
JA considered that a "trial within a trial", in the repayment action, as to the
damages recoverable by the worker and the extent
of the reduction produced an
unsatisfactory
situation[13].
He pointed out that the worker's concern in the repayment action will have
changed, in the tortfeasor action it would have been
to deny or minimise
contributory negligence, in the repayment action it will be to admit and
maximise it. The language of the provision,
in his Honour's view, was against
permitting the question to be litigated in the repayment action since the court
would be determining
what the court hearing the tortfeasor action would have
considered just and equitable by way of reduction. This would not allow
of a
reduction to the same extent as "the damages recoverable by the claimant
are reduced under section
9"[14]. His
Honour considered that the measure of the reduction under s 10(2) is the
court's determination and that this reflected the legislature's preference for
certainty[15].
He was mindful that most workers' claims, including those in which there is a
question of contributory negligence, are resolved
by settlement and that
s 151Z(5) recognises
settlements[16].
The text of s 151Z(5) is set out later in these
reasons[17].
- Hodgson
JA, in dissent, considered the question to be not to what extent the damages
"recovered" by the claimant are reduced but
to what extent are the damages
"recoverable by the claimant
reduced"[18].
His Honour considered that the court hearing the repayment action may come to
its own view as to what a court hearing the case
between the claimant and the
tortfeasor would reasonably have thought to be a just and equitable
reduction[19].
The notice of contention
- Before
addressing the submissions on the appeal it is convenient to deal with the
Notice of Contention by which Goodman Fielder sought
to affirm the judgment of
the Court of Appeal on a ground that was not argued before that Court. The
contention is that s 10(2) of the Law Reform Act when read with s 151Z
of the Compensation Act operates to reduce the amount of the repayment by the
worker to the employer only
in circumstances in which the damages recovered by
the worker from the tortfeasor, as reduced under s 9 of the Law Reform Act,
are less than the amount of workers' compensation that is otherwise repayable.
Since the point was one of pure construction the
Court entertained argument on
it. For the reasons that follow the contention should be rejected.
- The
provisions of s 151Z that are relevant to the issue raised by the
contention are set out below.
"151Z Recovery against both employer and stranger
(1) If the injury for which compensation is payable under this Act was caused
under circumstances creating a liability in some person
other than the worker's
employer to pay damages in respect of the injury, the following provisions have
effect:
(a) the worker may take proceedings both against that person to recover damages
and against any person liable to pay compensation
under this Act for payment of
that compensation, but is not entitled to retain both damages and compensation,
(b) if the worker recovers firstly compensation and secondly those damages, the
worker is liable to repay out of those damages the
amount of compensation which
a person has paid in respect of the worker's injury under this Act, and the
worker is not entitled to
any further compensation,
(c) if the worker firstly recovers those damages the worker is not entitled to
recover compensation under this Act,
(d) if the worker has recovered compensation under this Act, the person by whom
the compensation was paid is entitled to be indemnified
by the person so liable
to pay those damages (being an indemnity limited to the amount of those
damages),
(e) if any payment is made under the indemnity and, at the time of the payment,
the worker has not obtained judgment for damages
against the person paying under
the indemnity, the payment is, to the extent of its amount, a defence to
proceedings by the worker
against that person for damages,
(e1) if any payment is made under the indemnity and, at the time of the payment,
the worker has obtained judgment for damages against
the person paying under the
indemnity (but judgment has not been
satisfied), the payment, to the extent of its amount, satisfies the
judgment,
..."
- Goodman
Fielder submitted that the purpose of s 151Z is to ensure that the worker
retains on a net basis the greater of amounts
of statutory compensation actually
paid and the damages recovered from the tortfeasor. Once contributory
negligence ceased operating
as a complete defence, and provision was made for
apportionment of damages, the prospect of the damages recovered by the worker
being
less than the amount of compensation paid by the employer became a real
one[20].
Understood in this light, the purpose of s 10(2) (and its predecessor) is said
to be to ensure that the worker is relieved of liability
to repay compensation
"to the full extent of the damages ignoring their reduction for contributory
negligence." The words "to the
same extent" in s 10(2), Goodman Fielder
submitted, convey that the amount of damages out of which the repayment is to be
made is
identified after making the same deduction as was made for
contributory negligence in the tortfeasor action.
- The
Law Reform Act was enacted following the report of the New South Wales Law
Reform Committee, which adopted the report and recommendations of a
Sub-Committee
chaired by Herron
CJ[21]. The
Sub-Committee's recommendation was that the contributory negligence of a
plaintiff no longer be a defence in bar to an action
for damages based on the
negligence of another and that in such a case the damages recoverable be reduced
to such extent as the court
thinks just and equitable having regard to the
plaintiff's share in the responsibility for the
damage[22].
The Sub-Committee noted that if its recommendation was accepted, a number of
"fringe problems" would require solution. It appended
its comments on these
problem areas, including on the impact of the proposed reform on the worker's
obligation to repay workers'
compensation. In this respect the Sub-Committee
reported[23]:
"In New South Wales in considering the effect of the proposed reform in
relation to Workers' Compensation the following matters
have been posed by all
who attended before the Sub-committee and particularly in the valuable report of
the New South Wales Bar Association:
(i) Where a worker first recovers Workers' Compensation and then a reduced
verdict at law against a Third Party should his obligation
to repay the Workers'
Compensation be to repay it in full (as Section 64(a) [of the 1926 Act] now
requires) or should his obligation
be to repay it reduced by an amount
proportionate to the diminution of his damages.
(ii) Where a worker recovers Workers' Compensation but does not pursue any
right of action he may have at law, and the employer
sues a tort feasor at law
(as Section 64(b) enables) should any contributory negligence on the
worker's part be effective to
reduce the amount which the employer might be able
otherwise to recover.
The problems posed by (i) and (ii) above have been considered and dealt with by
legislation in England, Queensland, Tasmania and
Western Australia, which the
Sub-committee have considered ...
Whilst contributory negligence has been an absolute bar to success in actions
at law, on the other hand the trend of Workers' Compensation
has been that with
few exceptions (eg serious and wilful misconduct) the fault of the worker has
not deprived him of or cut down
his workers' compensation. It is the view of
the Sub-committee that – (a) it is just and equitable that the worker
under S 64(a)
should be obliged to repay compensation in an amount reduced
in proportion to the diminution of his damages by reason of his own
contributory
negligence and (b) the same reductions be applied for the benefit of a tort
feasor in an action by an employer under
the provisions of Section 64(b)
and (c) consequentially there should be a similar reduction in the amount taken
as satisfaction
under S 64(a)."
- The
Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill was introduced into the Parliament on
30 November 1965. Part III (cll 8-11)
of the Bill dealt with contributory
negligence. The Bill did not make provision for reduction of the repayment of
workers' compensation
in cases in which the damages recoverable by the worker
were reduced on account of contributory negligence.
- An
amendment, inserting the predecessor to s 10(2) into the Bill, was moved and
approved in the Legislative Council and adopted in
the Legislative Assembly.
The Hon R Downing, the leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Council,
moving the amendment in the
Legislative Council, gave as an illustration the
case of a worker injured on his way to or from work by a negligent driver and
who,
at the prompting of his workers' compensation insurer, brings proceedings
in negligence against the third party. Mr Downing went
on to
say[24]:
"If perchance the worker entitled to compensation is guilty of any degree of
negligence, his verdict would be cut down. For example,
suppose his verdict
were cut down by 50 per cent because the court came to the conclusion that the
worker's negligence contributed
50 per cent to the accident. The fact that he
contributed 50 per cent to the accident by his own negligence would not debar
him
from receiving compensation. He gets compensation and it is to the
advantage of the employer and the employer's insurer that he
should take this
action against the third party. ... If workers' compensation payments have
been made to an employee, and under
the Act at present he is required to repay
the sum to the insurer, the amount that he has to repay to the insurer under the
Workers'
Compensation Act should be reduced by the same amount as his verdict
has been reduced by the jury or judge."
- In
supplementary written submissions filed on Goodman Fielder's behalf, the Court's
attention was drawn to the legislative history,
and it was acknowledged that the
argument in the Notice of Contention was weakened by this background material
insofar as it bore
on the intent of the Legislature.
- The
contention does not address the reference in s 151Z(1)(b) to the repayment of
the amount of the compensation "out of those damages".
It is not necessary to
determine whether sub-s (1)(b) confers upon the employer a preferential or
secured interest in the damages
recovered[25].
The point to be made is that the damages out of which the repayment is to be
made are those recovered by the worker. In the event
that the damages are less
than the compensation paid there is no fund from which to repay that part of the
compensation which exceeds
the damages recovered. This further weakens the
argument in support of the contention.
- Goodman
Fielder submits that the operation of those provisions of s 151Z(1) which
confer an indemnity on the employer against
the tortfeasor, pars (d), (e)
and (e1), provide support for its contention. An employer who brings
proceedings pursuant to
the statutory indemnity is said to be entitled to full
recovery of the amount of the compensation paid. This is said to be
inconsistent
with reduction in the amount of the repayment by the worker under
s 10(2) in any but the confined circumstances asserted. The
submission
overlooks that s 10(2) speaks to s 151Z(1)(b) and not to pars (d), (e) and
(e1). It is not necessary to consider
the operation of pars (d), (e) and (e1)
for the determination of the appeal. However, it is to be observed that there
is no necessary
incongruity under a statutory no-fault compensation scheme in
treating the injured worker differently from the tortfeasor.
- The
text of s 10(2) is against acceptance of Goodman Fielder's contention, since
that contention requires reading into the provision
the limitation that is
asserted and there is no warrant to do so.
The resolution of the appeal
- Returning
to the appeal, the provisions of s 149(1) of the Compensation Act define
"damages", for the purposes of Pt 5, as including:
"(a) any form of monetary compensation, and
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), any amount paid under a compromise or
settlement of a claim for damages (whether or not legal
proceedings have been
instituted)".
- The
definition excludes certain matters including compensation under the
Compensation Act itself (s 149(1)(c)). The opening
words of s 151Z(1) and
the words of par (a) reflect antecedents in the United Kingdom legislation of
1897 and 1906. In the paragraphs
that follow this statement of general
principle, provision is made in temporal sequence. If the worker first recovers
those damages
against the tortfeasor, the worker is not entitled to recover
compensation under the Compensation Act (s 151Z(1)(c)). This
was not the
sequence of events in determining the liabilities between Mr Hickson, Goodman
Fielder and Mr Ala. Before recovering
in the tortfeasor action, Mr Hickson had
received compensation payments from Goodman Fielder. This situation is governed
by s 151Z(1)(b).
As noted, s 10(2) of the Law Reform Act is linked
directly to s 151Z(1)(b). It is necessary to consider the operation of the
two provisions in combination. All questions
relating to matters arising under
s 151Z are, in default of agreement, to be settled by action
(s 151Z(1)(f)). This provides
the statutory basis for the action by
Goodman Fielder against Mr Hickson for repayment under
s 151Z(1)(b)[26].
The reference to the recovery of damages in par (b) has antecedents in the
1897 Act and the 1906 Act. Authorities dealing
with those provisions
established that the term "recover" was not confined to recovery by legal
process: a worker had recovered
compensation, for example, if the employer
recognised a claim by making
payment[27].
- In
Watson v Newcastle
Corporation[28]
Windeyer J, speaking of s 64 of the 1926 Act, said:
"Moreover, throughout s 64 the word 'recover' must, it seems, mean not the
recovery of a judgment for damages or of an award
of compensation, but the
actual receipt of moneys, whether as the result of satisfaction of a judgment or
award or by the settlement
of a claim."
- Section 151Z(5),
which was inserted by the Workers Compensation Legislation (Amendment) Act
1994 (NSW), provides:
"For the avoidance of doubt, this section applies and is taken always to have
applied to the recovery of compensation or damages,
whether or not the
compensation or damages were paid under an award or judgment. For example,
compensation or damages may be paid
under an agreement."
- When
read with s 9(1), the opening expression in s 10(2) of the Law Reform
Act, "[i]f the claimant ...", is apt to identify Mr Hickson. This is because Mr
Hickson is a person who suffered the damage as a result
partly of his failure to
take reasonable care and partly of the wrong of Mr Ala. The case for Goodman
Fielder is that the closing
words of s 10(2) cannot apply to the
circumstances of this case because the amount paid under a settlement of
Mr Hickson's claim against Mr Ala
for damages was not "reduced under
section 9". However, the relevant condition which triggers the operation
of s 10(2) is identified in the terms of the sub-section as the liability
of Mr Hickson under s 151Z and, as has been explained above,
the "damages"
to which s 151Z speaks include any amount paid, as here, under the
settlement of the tortfeasor action. The closing
words of s 10(2) describe the
measure of the reduction, which is to such extent as the court thinks just and
equitable having regard to the claimant's
share in the responsibility for the
damage.
- The
circumstance that in the repayment action the court may be required to determine
the damages recoverable by Mr Hickson and the
extent of reduction under s 9 is a
reflection of the fact that the parties in the repayment action are not the same
as in the tortfeasor action. The fact that
this may involve a "trial within a
trial" is an incident of the working out of the respective liabilities under the
statutory scheme
and the common law. As Giles JA noted, under s 151Z(2) the
court is called upon to determine the damages which the worker could
have
recovered from the employer in order to arrive at a reduction in the worker's
damages[29].
The desirability of finality does not justify reading s 10(2) as confined to
those cases in which the tortfeasor action proceeds to judgment with a curial
determination of the extent of the worker's
contributory negligence under s
9(1)(b).
Absolute or proportionate reduction under s 10(2)?
- On
the appeal the parties made submissions concerning one aspect of the
interpretation of s 10(2) of the Law Reform Act which was not raised by the
questions that Kearns DCJ was asked to determine. It concerns the amount of the
reduction and depends
upon the meaning of the words "to the same extent" in the
provision. Mr Hickson submits that his liability to repay the compensation
is
reduced by the amount by which the total damages that would have been
recoverable are reduced on account of his contributory negligence.
This, it is
submitted, ensures that to the extent Mr Hickson is under-compensated by
Mr Ala because of Mr Hickson's own fault
he does not lose the benefit of
his no-fault statutory compensation.
- The
significance of the distinction is illustrated in the submissions made on Mr
Hickson's behalf. Assume a worker is 25 per cent
responsible for his injury and
at the date of resolution of his common law claim has received $800,000 in
workers' compensation.
The worker's undiscounted damages are assessed at $4
million. After reduction for his contributory negligence, the worker is
entitled
to an award of $3 million damages on his common law claim. His damages
have been reduced under s 9 of the Law Reform Act on account of his contributory
negligence by an amount of $1 million. On the interpretation of s 10(2)
favoured by Mr Hickson there is no liability to repay any of the compensation
received because it is less than the amount by which
the damages have been
reduced on account of contributory negligence. On the alternative
interpretation, for which Goodman Fielder
contends, the liability to repay the
compensation is reduced by 25 per cent being the proportion by which the damages
were reduced.
In this example the worker is required to repay the compensation
less 25 per cent, an amount of $600,000, and in the result the
worker retains a
total of $2.4 million in common law damages.
- Although
the issue is not raised by the appeal, it is appropriate to say something about
it since it was addressed in the parties'
submissions and it is a question of
construction that may well arise when the proceedings are returned to the
District Court.
- Mr
Hickson submitted that the legislative history provides support for the
reduction under s 10(2) being the actual amount by which the damages are
reduced. This is because Mr Downing, moving the amendment to the Law Reform
(Miscellaneous
Provisions) Bill in the Legislative Council, proposed that the
amount the worker has to repay be reduced "by the same amount as his
verdict has been
reduced"[30].
- The
extrinsic material does not assist Mr Hickson. In the debate that followed Mr
Downing's proposed amendment, the Minister, after
making extensive reference to
the report of the Sub-Committee (including the passage that is extracted earlier
in these reasons),
expressed his understanding that the Bill gave effect to all
of the Sub-Committee's
recommendations[31].
Mr Downing's stated concern was that effect had not been given to the
Sub-Committee's recommendation with respect to the reduction
in repayment of
compensation[32].
The view of the Sub-Committee (contained in the passage of the report that I
have set out) was that the reduction should be proportionate.
- It
is clear that the reduction for which s 9(1)(b) of the Law Reform Act
provides involves an exercise in
apportionment[33]
and that the words "to such extent" are used to convey "to the degree". While,
in some contexts, "extent" may mean
"amount"[34],
the use of the formulation "to the same extent" in s 10(2) in a context in which
it is linked to the reference "to such extent" in s 9(1)(b) is against
finding that it is intended to refer to the amount in money and not to
proportionate reduction. It strains the language
of s 10(2) to read "to the
same extent" as meaning "in the same amount". The reduction in liability to
repay compensation for which s 10(2) provides is proportionate to the reduction
in the damages recoverable on account of the worker's contributory
negligence[35].
Orders
- For
these reasons the orders that I propose are as follows:
1. Appeal allowed with costs.
- Set
aside the orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales
made on 24 April 2008.
- In
lieu thereof, order that the appeal to that Court be dismissed with costs.
[1] The appropriate text of the
Compensation Act is found in Reprint No 8.
[2] The appropriate text of the Law
Reform Act is found in Reprint No 3.
[3] Section 9(1)(b) of the Law Reform
Act.
[4] The numbering of the questions
1(a), 1(b) and 3 is unexplained.
[5] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69.
[6] (1974) 130 CLR 321; [1974] HCA
5.
[7] [1974] HCA 5; (1974) 130 CLR 321 at 326 and see
also Government Insurance Office of New South Wales v C E McDonald (NSW) Pty
Ltd (1991) 25 NSWLR 492 at 495-496.
[8] Astley v Austrust Ltd
[1999] HCA 6; (1999) 197 CLR 1 at 11 [21]; [1999] HCA 6.
[9] As required by s 11 of the Law
Reform Act.
[10] [1999] HCA 6; (1999) 197 CLR 1.
[11] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 17 November 2000 at
10295.
[12] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [17].
[13] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [24].
[14] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [25] (emphasis in original).
[15] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [31].
[16] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [26].
[17] At [42].
[18] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [40].
[19] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [40].
[20] See Watson v Newcastle
Corporation [1962] HCA 6; (1962) 106 CLR 426 at 446 per Windeyer J; [1962] HCA 6.
[21] New South Wales, Law Reform
Committee, Contributory Negligence, Interim Report No 3, (1962).
[22] New South Wales, Law Reform
Committee, Contributory Negligence, Interim Report No 3, (1962) at 8.
[23] New South Wales, Law Reform
Committee, Contributory Negligence, Interim Report No 3, (1962) at 9-10;
set out in New South Wales, Legislative Council, Parliamentary Debates
(Hansard), 7 December 1965 at 2921.
[24] New South Wales, Legislative
Council, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 7 December 1965 at 2920.
[25] Cf Workers' Compensation and
Injury Management Act 1981 (WA), s 92(c).
[26] See The Commonwealth v SCI
Operations Pty Ltd [1998] HCA 20; (1998) 192 CLR 285 at 313 [65]; [1998] HCA 20.
[27] Page v Burtwell [1908] 2
KB 758 at 762, 763, 764; Woodcock v London and North Western Railway
Company [1913] 3 KB 139 at 145.
[28] [1962] HCA 6; (1962) 106 CLR 426 at 445.
[29] Goodman Fielder Ltd v
Hickson [2008] NSWCA 69 at [24].
[30] New South Wales, Legislative
Council, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 7 December 1965 at 2920
(emphasis added).
[31] New South Wales, Legislative
Council, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 7 December 1965 at 2922.
[32] New South Wales, Legislative
Council, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 7 December 1965 at
2925.
[33] Section 15 of the Law Reform
Act.
[34] The Oxford English
Dictionary, 2nd ed (1989).
[35] This conclusion is consistent
with the analysis of the operation of s 10(1)(d) of the Law Reform Act (the
predecessor to s 10(2))
in association with s 64(a) of the 1926 Act:
Government Insurance Office of New South Wales v C E McDonald (NSW) Pty Ltd
(1991) 25 NSWLR 492 at 498-499 per Handley JA (Priestley JA and
Hope AJA concurring); and s 10(2) and s 151Z(1) in Tamerji v Rhee
[2008] NSWCA 314 at [44] per Campbell JA (Beazley and Ipp JJA concurring).
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