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Sydney Water Corporation v Turano [2009] HCA 42 (13 October 2009)
Last Updated: 13 October 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, CRENNAN AND BELL JJ
SYDNEY WATER CORPORATION APPELLANT
AND
MARIA TURANO & ANOR RESPONDENTS
Sydney Water Corporation v Turano [2009] HCA 42
13 October 2009
S104/2009
ORDER
1. Leave to file the amended notice of appeal dated 9 July 2009
granted.
2. Appeal allowed.
- Set
aside the following orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New
South Wales:
(a) orders 4, 6, and 8 of the orders made on 31 October
2008;
(b) that part of order 5 of the orders made on 31 October 2008 which set
aside orders and declarations stated at [155] of the judgment
of Delaney DCJ
numbered 2 and 3; and
(c) order 1 of the orders made on 2 July 2009.
In lieu thereof, order that the cross-appeal to the Court of Appeal be
dismissed with costs.
4. First respondent to pay the costs of the appellant in this
Court.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
J T Gleeson SC with N J Owens for the appellant (instructed by DLA Phillips Fox
Lawyers)
B M Toomey QC with M J McAuley and E G Romaniuk for the first respondent
(instructed by Paul A Curtis & Co)
Submitting appearance for the second respondent
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Sydney Water Corporation v Turano
Negligence – Duty of care – Liability of statutory authority –
Water main installed under statutory power –
Altered subsoil drainage
leading to compromise of root system of roadside tree – Approximately 20
years later tree fell on
passing vehicle during storm resulting in death to an
occupant and personal injury to other occupants of vehicle – Whether
death
and injury a reasonably foreseeable consequence of installation of water main
– Significance of temporal relation between
allegedly negligent conduct
and injury occurring – Significance of statutory authority's lack of
control over the tree in interval
between installation of water main and injury
– Section 43A of Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW) addressing
civil liability in tort of public or other authorities exercising a "special
statutory power" not relied upon.
Words and phrases – "reasonable foreseeability".
Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), ss 5B, 5C, 43A.
Metropolitan Water, Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), ss 30,
32.
FRENCH CJ, GUMMOW, HAYNE, CRENNAN AND BELL JJ.
Introduction
- On
18 November 2001 Mr Napoleone Turano sustained fatal injuries when a
eucalyptus tree fell onto the car that he was driving.
His wife,
Mrs Turano (the first respondent), and their two children were travelling
in the car at the time and each sustained
injury in the incident.
Mrs Turano brought proceedings in negligence in the District Court of New
South Wales on her own behalf
and on behalf of the two children against the
second respondent, the Council of the City of Liverpool ("the Council"), and the
appellant,
Sydney Water Corporation ("Sydney Water"), claiming damages for
physical and psychological injury and for loss of dependency.
- The
liability of the defendants was determined as a separate issue by the primary
judge (Delaney DCJ). His Honour found that
the Council was liable in
negligence, directing a verdict for Mrs Turano, and that Sydney Water was
not liable, directing a
verdict for Sydney Water. He considered that in the
circumstances Sydney Water did not owe a duty of care for the benefit of
Mrs Turano.
Cross-claims brought by the Council and Sydney Water against
each other were dismissed.
- The
Council appealed to the New South Wales Court of Appeal against the primary
judge's order and Mrs Turano cross-appealed
against the dismissal of her
claim against Sydney Water. It was not clear whether the trial of the separate
issue had been confined
to the determination of the defendants' liability to
Mrs Turano only, or to Mrs Turano and the two children. The Council
and Sydney Water each stated that it considered itself bound in all three cases
by the determination of the separate
issue[1]. In
these reasons, a reference to a duty owed to Mrs Turano is to be understood
as including a duty owed to the two children.
- The
Court of Appeal (Beazley, Hodgson and McColl JJA) upheld the Council's
appeal, set aside the orders made by the primary
judge and substituted a verdict
for the Council. By majority (Beazley and Hodgson JJA) the Court of Appeal
upheld Mrs Turano's
cross-appeal. The verdict in favour of Sydney Water
was set aside and a verdict for Mrs Turano against Sydney Water on the
issue of liability was directed. The proceedings against Sydney Water were
remitted to the District Court for the assessment of
damages.
The case against Sydney Water
- Mrs Turano's
case against Sydney Water was that the tree fell because its root system had
been compromised by the intermittent
water-logging of the surrounding soil over
an extended period. This environment created the conditions in which a pathogen
entered
the root system and flourished. The installation of a water main by
Sydney Water was said to have diverted drainage from a nearby
culvert causing
the periodic water-logging. Sydney Water's negligence was said to lie in its
failure to take into account the impact
of the installation of the water main on
drainage in the area, which required that it depart from its usual method of
laying water
mains in order to avoid adversely affecting the surrounding
vegetation including the tree.
- The
tree was growing on the grassed section of a road reserve. Property in the tree
and the road were vested in the
Council[2]. The
tree fell approximately 20 years after the installation of the water main.
There had been no complaint relating to the
water main, or its effect on
drainage in the surrounding area, in the intervening years.
A concession by Sydney Water?
- Sydney
Water appeals by special leave from the orders of the Court of Appeal. At the
hearing of the leave application Sydney Water
submitted that Mrs Turano's
claim raised consideration of the nature and extent of any duty of care owed to
members of the public
by a public authority arising out of the impact of
infrastructure installed under statutory power on things growing on another's
land[3]. On that
occasion Mrs Turano did not submit that Sydney Water was precluded by its
conduct of the proceedings below from contending
that it did not owe a duty of
care to her. In written submissions filed on the appeal Mrs Turano
asserted that the existence
of a duty of care owed to her by Sydney Water had
not been in issue before the Court of Appeal and that Sydney Water ought not to
be permitted to depart from that position in this Court.
- The
primary judge said that there had been no dispute that each defendant owed
Mrs Turano a duty to take reasonable
care[4]. The
making of such a concession was disputed by the Council in the Court of
Appeal[5] and by
Sydney Water in this Court. Sydney Water denied that it owed a duty of care to
Mrs Turano in its notice of grounds of
defence[6]. It
maintained this position throughout the trial. In closing submissions Sydney
Water's counsel addressed the "conceptual difficulty
facing the plaintiff ... in
respect of just the existence of the duty".
- In
the Court of Appeal, Sydney Water submitted that:
"[I]t is unrealistic to contend that the duty cast upon Sydney Water surrounding
the installation of its mains, is such that in circumstances
where there is no
failure in a pipe nor leak, Sydney Water ought visit each roadway above where
the mains are laid ... to see if
a tree might have a pathogen infecting it as
part of the duties of Sydney Water."
- Read
in context, this submission is not a concession that Sydney Water owed a duty of
care to Mrs Turano.
- The
primary judge found that in the circumstances Sydney Water did not owe a duty of
care for the benefit of
Mrs Turano[7].
It was against this determination that Mrs Turano brought her cross-appeal.
The conduct of the proceedings below does not preclude
Sydney Water from
contesting that it owed a duty of care to her.
Sydney Water's statutory powers
- Sydney
Water is a corporation established under s 4 of the Sydney Water Act
1994 (NSW)[8].
It is the successor in liabilities to the Metropolitan Water Sewerage and
Drainage Board, which was established under the Metropolitan Water, Sewerage,
and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW) ("the MWS&D
Act")[9].
References in these reasons to Sydney Water include reference to its
predecessors. Under the MWS&D Act, Sydney Water was at
all material times,
relevantly, charged with the conservation, preservation and distribution of
water for domestic and other
uses[10], the
construction of any new, additional, or supplementary works of water
supply[11], and
the extension of its services to areas or districts not served with its
mains[12].
Sydney Water was given the power to enter upon any Crown or private land, public
road, or street and lay any water main, pipe or
drain
therein[13].
In the exercise of these powers, Sydney Water was subject to the mandate that it
inflict as little damage as may be and that it
make full compensation for all
damage
sustained[14].
The Civil Liability Act
- Mrs Turano's
claim is subject to the provisions of the Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW)
("the CLA"). Part 1A of the CLA (ss 5-5T) applies to any claim for
damages for harm resulting from negligence, regardless of whether the claim is
brought in tort, in contract,
under statute or
otherwise[15].
Negligence is defined for the purposes of Pt 1A to mean the "failure to
exercise reasonable care and
skill"[16].
Section 5B sets out what are described as "[g]eneral principles" and
s 5C "[o]ther principles".
- Part 5
of the CLA (ss 40-46) applies to the civil liability in tort of public and
other
authorities[17].
It extends to any such liability even if the damages are sought in an action for
breach of contract or any other
action[18]. A
public or other authority includes any public or local authority constituted by
or under an
Act[19].
- Section 43A
of the CLA applies to proceedings for civil liability to which Pt 5 applies
to the extent that the liability
is based on a public or other authority's
exercise of, or failure to exercise, a special statutory
power[20]. A
"special statutory power" is a power that is conferred by or under a statute and
that is of a kind that persons generally are
not authorised to exercise without
specific statutory
authority[21].
Sub-section (3) provides:
"For the purposes of any such proceedings, any act or omission involving an
exercise of, or failure to exercise, a special statutory
power does not give
rise to civil liability unless the act or omission was in the circumstances so
unreasonable that no authority
having the special statutory power in question
could properly consider the act or omission to be a reasonable exercise of, or
failure
to exercise, its power."
- Sydney
Water did not plead reliance on s 43A in its notice of grounds of defence.
No reference was made to the operation of
the provision before the primary judge
or in the Court of Appeal. At the conclusion of the hearing in this Court,
senior counsel
for Sydney Water drew attention to the provision and informed the
Court that it had not been argued below and that Sydney Water did
not invoke it
on the appeal.
- Following
the hearing, the Court raised with the parties whether the existence of a duty
of care at common law owed by Sydney Water
to Mrs Turano is a hypothetical
question in light of s 43A, or not one that can properly be decided without
regard to the
operation of the provision. The parties were invited, in the
event that the answer to either question was "yes", to address the
further
question of whether special leave should be revoked. They were asked to
indicate whether it was desired to have the Court
hear further oral argument.
Neither party sought to take up the latter invitation.
- On
the hearing of the appeal Sydney Water submitted that in an action in tort in
New South Wales a plaintiff is required to establish
a legal obligation owed to
him or her requiring the defendant to exercise reasonable care and skill before
Pt 1A of the CLA
is engaged. It followed that the existence and extent of
any duty of care owed by Sydney Water to Mrs Turano is to be determined
by
the application of the common law. In the event that a duty is found to exist,
Pt 1A is said to govern the determination
of whether the defendant is held
to have failed to exercise reasonable care and skill. On this analysis the
heading of Div 2
of Pt 1A (ss 5B, 5C), "Duty of care", is a
misnomer. In Sydney Water's submission, the provisions of Div 2 are a
statutory modification of the principles stated by Mason J in Wyong
Shire Council v
Shirt[22]
for the determination of the issue of breach. Senior counsel for
Mrs Turano adopted this analysis of the relationship between
the common law
and the CLA on the hearing of the appeal.
- In
its supplementary submissions, in answer to the questions asked by the Court,
Sydney Water maintained (consistently with the stance
that it had taken on the
hearing of the appeal) that s 43A does not speak to whether a legal
obligation is imposed on a public
authority to exercise reasonable care and
skill for the benefit of another. It also submitted that it is unclear that the
installation
of a water main under statutory power involves the exercise of a
"special statutory power" within the meaning of s 43A(2).
- Mrs Turano
submitted that the provisions of s 43A operate to confer immunity on a
public authority in relation to the exercise
of, or failure to exercise, a
special statutory power subject only to the proviso in sub-s (3). In her
submission, it is plain
that the installation of a water main under statutory
power engages the immunity. It followed on this view that the proceedings
are
singular and do not raise a question of general importance concerning the
liability of public authorities in tort in New South
Wales. She submitted that
the grant of special leave should be revoked.
- Following
the final report of the Ipp
Committee[23],
a number of jurisdictions, including New South Wales, enacted legislation
modifying the liability of public authorities in
tort[24]. The
approach has not been uniform. In New South Wales, Pt 5, dealing with the
liability of public and other authorities,
was introduced into the
CLA[25].
Section 43A was introduced into Pt 5 at a later date, apparently as a
reaction to a decision at first instance of the New
South Wales Supreme
Court[26]. The
history of s 43A is referred to in Precision Products (NSW) Pty Ltd v
Hawkesbury City
Council[27].
In that case the Court's consideration of the operation of s 43A was
undertaken in the context of the analysis of breach of
duty in circumstances in
which the parties had not addressed full argument on the terms of the section.
- This
Court does not have the benefit of the consideration by the New South Wales
Court of Appeal of the correctness of the assumption
on which the appeal was
argued: that the legal obligation on a defendant to exercise care and skill for
the benefit of a plaintiff
is to be found outside the framework of the CLA.
- This
appeal does not provide the occasion to consider the operation of s 43A.
Mrs Turano's submission that laying a water
main pursuant to the power
conferred under the MWS&D Act plainly involves the exercise of a "special
statutory power" is not
one that can be accepted in the absence of full
argument.
- Professor Aronson
has written of
s 43A[28]
that it is important to understand its scope,
adding[29]:
"We know from Hansard that the section was intended to apply to doctors
performing certification roles under the mental health
legislation[30].
By analogy and equally unfortunately, it may also apply in the context of police
watch-houses and prisons, but nothing is certain."
- Professor Aronson
refers to the definition of "special statutory power" in s 43A(2), stating
that this talks separately
of "power" and "authority". He goes
on[31]:
"The idea appears to have been to distinguish statutory authority per se ...
from statutes permitting coercive acts or non-consensual
rights-depriving acts.
If that is correct, then one of the limits to the section's scope is that the
defendant must have received
statutory authority to act in a way that changes,
creates or alters people's legal status or rights or obligations without their
consent."
- In
light of the conduct of the proceedings below and the uncertain reach of
s 43A, the question upon which special leave was
granted should not be seen
as hypothetical.
- It
should be added that at the trial Sydney Water did not lead any evidence of its
financial or other resources, so as to raise the
operation of s 42 of the
CLA with respect to its liability to Mrs Turano. Section 42 lays out
certain principles
respecting resources and responsibilities of public
authorities, which apply in determining the existence or breach of a duty of
care.
The facts of the case
- The
evidence at trial largely comprised expert opinion. The Court of Appeal was
critical of the primary judge's failure to analyse
aspects of the evidence and
to record findings in these
respects[32].
Each of the Justices reviewed the evidence. Justices Beazley and Hodgson
were in agreement as to the factual findings and
the legal conclusions that
flowed from them. Justice McColl came to a different conclusion on
critical questions of fact.
It is sufficient to refer to the primary judge's
unchallenged findings of fact and to the further findings of the majority in the
Court of Appeal in order to demonstrate that Sydney Water did not owe a duty of
care to Mrs Turano and accordingly that the appeal
should be allowed.
- Edmondson
Avenue, Austral, runs in a generally north/south direction. It is located in a
semi-rural area. On either side of the
sealed road surface is a grassed
shoulder forming part of the road reserve. The tree was standing on the western
grassed shoulder,
about 4 metres from the western outlet of a culvert. The
culvert had been installed under Edmondson Avenue in the 1960s and
was designed
to drain water from east to west. Water flowing from the culvert pipe on the
western side drained into an outlet pit
and from there it had been designed to
drain by means of a scalloped area of excavation (a "tail-out drain") to pasture
land lying
to the west.
- In
about 1981 Sydney Water laid the water main, a cast iron pipe, 900mm below
ground in a trench which ran parallel to Edmondson
Avenue, under the western
grassed shoulder. The water main transversed the outlet pit of the culvert. It
was laid at a higher level
than the invert of the culvert pipe and this caused
it to obstruct the free flow of water from the culvert pipe. The earth of the
outlet pit was impermeable clay. The water main was laid on a bed of sand 300mm
deep.
- The
sand that was laid in the trench was much more permeable than the clay of the
outlet pit. One consequence of this difference
was that the trench acted as a
drain for the water that periodically collected in the outlet pit. It was
probable that excess water
reached the roots of the tree by travelling north
along the sand-filled
trench[33].
- On
the day of the accident there was a strong windstorm, which was the immediate
cause of the tree's fall. An underlying cause of
the fall was that the tree's
root system had been compromised by the presence of phytophthera, a root
pathogen. The intermittent
water-logging of the root system had facilitated the
introduction of the
pathogen[34].
- The
water main had been laid in accordance with standard engineering practice.
- A
consultant engineer, Mr Burn, gave uncontradicted evidence that a person
installing a water main in a bed of sand in this
location would have appreciated
that the sand-filled trench would probably create a north/south drain. He
considered that this result
could have been avoided by installing a drain to the
west, although this would have required Sydney Water to work on private land.
Alternatively, Mr Burn pointed out that the water main could have been laid
under the bed of the culvert.
- At
the time of the accident there were about 64,000 trees planted along roads under
the Council's control. The Council's risk management
co-ordinator gave evidence
that the Council did not carry out routine inspections of trees and culverts
located on its land; it would
only do so in response to a complaint or report in
respect of the condition of a particular asset.
- The
Council was not notified of the installation of the water main and it had no
knowledge that the water main was laid in a sand-filled
trench. In November
1999 the Council surveyed the area in the course of undertaking preparatory work
for a road-widening proposal
of Edmondson Avenue. The survey identified the
water main and recorded its height relative to the invert of the culvert pipe.
- The
tree had white marks which were on the trunk located about one metre above the
ground. These were indicative of the presence
of phytophthera, within the trunk
or lower root system. The crown of the tree did not show signs of distress. It
was not clear
that the white marks on the tree would have been visible from a
passing car.
The primary judge's reasons
- The
primary judge referred to the evidence that the installation of the water main
interrupted the flow of water from the culvert,
which was likely to lead to
water pooling from time to time. His Honour appears to have accepted that it
was probable that water
which was partly dammed in the outlet pit reached the
tree's root system by travelling along the sand-filled
trench[35]. He
observed that there was no evidence that Sydney Water had obtained or was
required to obtain an arborist's opinion before installing
the water main. He
found that it was not foreseeable by Sydney Water that water travelling along
the sand-filled trench would undermine
the tree to such an extent that it would
eventually become unstable and fall. It followed that Sydney Water did not owe
a duty of
care for the benefit of Mrs Turano when it laid the water
main[36].
The Court of Appeal's reasons
- Justice Beazley
identified two errors in the primary judge's analysis of Sydney Water's
liability. First, her Honour considered
that the primary judge had wrongly
focussed on foreseeability of the precise sequence of events in determining the
question of the
duty of
care[37]. She
pointed out that it is sufficient that the class of injury, as distinct from the
particular injury, be foreseen as a possible
consequence of the
conduct[38].
Justice Beazley formulated the question in this
way[39]:
"[W]hether it was foreseeable that, by laying the water main in sand which acted
as a conduit for water, in circumstances where the
water main was installed in a
position that both breached the existing drainage system and obstructed the
drainage of water from
the culvert, that there could be an effect on the
surrounding area such as might cause harm."
- The
second error that Beazley JA identified was the primary judge's acceptance
that the water main had been laid in accordance
with usual practice. This
finding overlooked the expert evidence that it was foreseeable that the
sand-filled trench would act as
a drain. Her Honour considered that it was
incumbent upon Sydney Water to have regard to the terrain, including the
presence of
other installations (the culvert), in which or near which the water
main was
laid[40]. The
uncontradicted evidence was that the sand would act as a conduit for the water
and that by laying the water main at this level
water would not drain from the
culvert as it had been designed to do. After referring to these matters her
Honour addressed Sydney
Water's liability to Mrs Turano in this
way[41]:
"Given those facts and circumstances, Sydney Water had a duty to install the
water main in such a way that the integrity of the
culvert drainage system was
not compromised. Accordingly, Sydney Water owed Mrs Turano a duty of care
of the content or scope
that I have described.
In my opinion it is also clear on the evidence that Sydney Water breached that
duty in two respects. The first was that by laying
the drain at a higher level
than the discharge drain from the culvert, it caused periodic damming of the
drain. Secondly, by laying
the drain in sand, it permitted the water to drain
northwards, so as to undermine the roots of the
tree."
- Justice Hodgson
did not separately discuss the formulation of the duty of care. His Honour
expressed substantial agreement
with the reasons of
Beazley JA[42].
He went on to say that the impact on drainage in the surrounding area created by
the installation of the water main would have been
readily foreseeable by Sydney
Water, whose business involved the management of water. He considered that
Sydney Water should have
carried out the works differently or that it should
have investigated the consequences of the periodic saturation of the sand-filled
trench[43].
The latter course should have alerted Sydney Water to the possibility of the
roots of the tree being adversely affected. In either
case, his Honour
concluded Sydney Water should have acted so as to avoid the risk that
eventuated[44].
The parties' submissions
- Sydney
Water submits that the majority in the Court of Appeal imposed on it a duty of
care without addressing the question of whether
injury to a class of which Mrs
Turano was a member was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of its conduct. It
complains that the
class to whom the duty is owed is not confined within
reasonable limits. It contends that the formulation of the scope of the duty
reflects reasoning with hindsight from the events that occurred leading to the
imposition of a duty of strict liability.
- Mrs Turano
submits that the inferences drawn by the majority in the Court of Appeal were
open on the evidence and involved the
orthodox performance of its
function[45].
Her claim is for damages for personal injury arising from Sydney Water's conduct
in laying the water main in a manner that created
a foreseeable risk of injury
to any member of the public present on Edmondson Avenue. In her submission, the
lengthy interval between
the conduct and the resulting injury does not stand in
the way of the imposition of liability. The claim, it is said, is analogous
to
a claim for the recovery of damages for asbestos-related disease brought many
years after the date of exposure to the asbestos
fibre. Mrs Turano submits
that the conclusion of the majority in the Court of Appeal as to Sydney Water's
liability is consistent
with the application of settled principle.
Discussion
- The
proposition that at common law a public authority may be subject to a general
duty of care arising out of its conduct of works
pursuant to a statutory power
is not in
issue[46].
Sydney Water acknowledged that it may be liable in damages to a person who
suffers injury as the result of the rupture of a carelessly
installed,
defective, water
main[47].
Mrs Turano's claim may be understood as arising from her status as a road
user. It is a claim for damages for personal injury.
While the class to whom
the duty is owed is potentially very large, only those members of it suffering
injury as the result of the
tree's fall would have a cause of action against
Sydney Water. Sydney Water's challenge does not turn on the indeterminacy of
the
class, defined as road users, so much as on the reasonableness of the
conclusion that in 1981 Sydney Water should have had in its
contemplation, as
persons closely and directly affected by its conduct in laying the water main,
persons on or near Edmondson Avenue
in
2001[48].
- Reasonable
foreseeability of the class of injury is an essential condition of the existence
of a legal obligation to take care for
the benefit of
another[49].
The concept is relevant at each of the three, related, stages of the analysis of
liability in negligence: the existence and scope
of a duty of care, breach of
the duty, and remoteness of damage. At the first stage, the inquiry has been
said to involve the assessment
of foreseeability conducted at "a higher level of
abstraction"[50]
than at the subsequent stages. However, to speak of a higher level of
abstraction in dealing with that first stage does not support
a formulation of
duty in terms devoid of meaningful
content[51].
It remains, as Gleeson CJ observed in Tame v New South
Wales[52],
that the concept is to be understood and applied with due regard to the
consideration that, in the context of the issue as to duty
of care, it is bound
up with the question of whether it is reasonable to require a person to have in
contemplation the risk of injury
that has eventuated.
- It
was not necessary that the precise sequence of events leading to
Mrs Turano's injury be
foreseen[53].
However, it was necessary to show that in 1981 it was foreseeable by Sydney
Water that laying a water main in a bed of sand in
this location involved a risk
of injury to road users. The evidence was that in 1981 it was foreseeable that
laying a water main
in a sand-filled trench transversing the culvert outlet pit
would create a drain carrying water that collected in the pit north/south
along
its length. There was no evidence that it was foreseeable by Sydney Water that
altering sub-surface drainage in this way was
likely to undermine the integrity
of the roots of nearby trees. The primary judge found that it was not
foreseeable by Sydney Water
that the water travelling along the trench would
undermine the tree to such an extent that it would eventually become unstable
and
fall[54].
His reasons do not suggest that he misapprehended the nature of the inquiry.
The conclusion of the majority in the Court of Appeal,
that harm to the tree was
a foreseeable consequence of laying the water main in this location, was an
inference drawn from the fact
that Sydney Water was an authority involved in the
management of water. In the absence of any evidence, the basis for this
conclusion
may be doubted. However, accepting that the conclusion was open,
there remain difficulties with the majority's reasons leading to
the finding of
liability.
- In
considering the liability of the Council, Beazley JA referred to the
observations of Gummow J (with whose reasons in
this respect Callinan and
Heydon JJ agreed) in Roads and Traffic Authority (NSW) v
Dederer[55]:
"First, duties of care are not owed in the abstract. Rather, they are
obligations of a particular scope, and that scope may be more
or less expansive
depending on the relationship in question. Secondly, whatever their scope, all
duties of care are to be discharged
by the exercise of reasonable care. They do
not impose a more stringent or onerous burden."
- However,
when it came to considering the liability of Sydney Water, Beazley JA
stated the duty in absolute terms: not to compromise
the integrity of the
culvert drainage system. It was a duty called into existence because it was
foreseeable that laying a water
main in a trench that acted as a conduit for
water could have "an effect on the surrounding area such as might cause
harm"[56].
Neither the formulation of the duty nor the anterior inquiry as to
foreseeability addressed the risk of injury to Mrs Turano
or a class of
persons of which she was a member. In terms, it was a strict duty requiring
that Sydney Water preserve the existing
drainage in the vicinity of its
installation in order to prevent a foreseeable risk of shortening the life of
surrounding vegetation.
Stated in this way the force of Sydney Water's
complaint, that the scope of the duty was derived by reasoning backwards from
the
events that occurred, can be seen. It was not a duty requiring Sydney Water
to take reasonable care to avoid injury to road users
in carrying out its works.
The majority's conclusion of breach was inevitable having regard to the
formulation of the scope of the
duty. Thus, there was no consideration of the
general and other principles stated in ss 5B and 5C of the CLA.
Consideration
of these principles would have directed attention to the question
of whether in 1981 a water authority acting reasonably ought to
have obtained
the advice of an arborist on the impact of its proposed works on vegetation
growing in an unpopulated, semi-rural area.
- The
impact of the altered drainage from the outlet pit was such that over a lengthy
period the tree's stability was compromised.
The conditions that produced its
fall in the windstorm took effect after 20 years. It is reasonable to
consider that those
conditions might have caused the tree to fall in a windstorm
after a lesser or greater number of years. The point to be made is
that the
laying of the water main in this location did not create an immediate risk of
harm to road users. The temporal relation
between Sydney Water's conduct and
Mrs Turano's injury was relevant to the determination of whether the
relationship between
them gave rise to a duty. A related factor relevant to
this inquiry was the circumstance that in the interval between the conduct
and
the injury the tree was growing on land that was owned by the Council.
- Sydney
Water was empowered to remove trees in the course of carrying out
works[57].
Since the tree was not an obstacle to the installation of the water main and the
water main did not create an immediate danger
of compromise to the tree, its
removal may not have been justified pursuant to the power. (It will be recalled
that Sydney Water
was required in installing the water main to inflict as little
damage as may
be[58].)
Sydney Water had the power to enter upon land in order to carry out an
inspection of
works[59].
However, no occasion arose for it to exercise this power in the absence of any
report concerning the operation of the water main.
- On
the hearing in the Court of Appeal Mrs Turano did not maintain her case
that the Council was negligent by its failure to
carry out periodic inspections
of roadside trees. This was realistic in light of the evidence to which
Beazley JA referred,
that Edmondson Avenue is located in a semi-rural area,
with no houses or buildings in the immediate vicinity, and that the tree
population
was
sparse[60].
The evidence of an arborist, Mr Castor, which McColl JA extracted in
her reasons, may also be
noted[61]:
"Not all tree failure is predictable. Not all tree failures can be explained
even after the event. No tree is completely safe.
Trees are living organisms
which are anchored to the ground and so are subject, in situ, to activities and
stresses from man and
nature. ... For a tree hazard to exist there must be a
potential for failure and a potential for injury or damage to result. Dead
trees in remote locations are often less hazardous than healthy trees in
built-up areas."
- Nonetheless,
it was necessary in considering the liability of Sydney Water to take into
account that, in the years between the installation
of the water main and
Mrs Turano's injury, the risk of the tree's collapse was one over which the
Council and not Sydney Water
had control. It is true that the Council was not
on notice that the water main was laid in a sand-filled trench. However, it
would
not be right to characterise Sydney Water as having created a hidden
danger by the installation of the water main in this location.
Its presence
transversing the outlet pit was observable. The adverse impact on vegetation
brought about by altered drainage might
be expected to be apparent to the owner
of land. The circumstance that the presence of the pathogen in the tree was not
readily
observable does not provide a justification for holding Sydney Water
liable after an interval of 20 years for the injury occasioned
by the tree's
failure.
Conclusion
- Sydney
Water's conduct in laying the water main in this location in 1981 with the
consequential alteration to drainage flows from
the culvert and any foreseeable
risk to the health of the tree did not impose on it a legal duty of care for Mrs
Turano's benefit.
The reason for this may be expressed as a conclusion that
injury to road users as the result of the tree's eventual collapse was
not a
reasonably foreseeable consequence of laying the water main, as the
primary judge held. Alternatively, it may be expressed as a conclusion
that in
the absence of control over any risk posed by the tree in the years after the
installation of the water main there was not
a sufficiently close and direct
connection between Sydney Water and Mrs Turano, a person present on
Edmondson Avenue in 2001,
for her to be a "neighbour" within Lord Atkin's
statement of the principle.
Orders
- The
appeal should be allowed and the following orders
made[62]:
- Leave
to file the amended notice of appeal dated 9 July 2009 granted.
- Appeal
allowed.
- Set
aside the following orders of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New
South Wales:
(a) orders 4, 6, and 8 of the orders made on 31 October
2008;
(b) that part of order 5 of the orders made on 31 October 2008 which set
aside orders and declarations stated at [155] of the
judgment of
Delaney DCJ numbered 2 and 3; and
(c) order 1 of the orders made on 2 July 2009.
In lieu thereof, order that the cross-appeal to the Court of Appeal be dismissed
with costs.
4. First respondent to pay the costs of the appellant in this Court.
[1] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 21 [4]; [2008] NSWCA 270.
[2] Local Government Act 1919
(NSW), ss 232(1), 233(3). The relevant reprint is as at 15 October
1980.
[3] Sydney Water Corporation v
Turano [2009] HCATrans 085 at 30-97.
[4] Turano v Liverpool City
Council unreported, District Court of New South Wales, 2 May 2007 at
[113] per Delaney DCJ.
[5] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 35 [109] per Beazley JA.
[6] Mrs Turano's claim proceeded
on her second amended statement of claim, which was filed in the District Court
on 3 October
2006, which was the first day of the trial. Counsel for
Sydney Water informed the Court that its amended defence was understood
to cover
the pleading in the second amended statement of claim but that a further amended
defence had been prepared. The materials
before this Court do not establish
that the further amended defence was filed. However, the pleading of the duty
of care in the
second amended statement of claim, par 14, that the
defendants were under a duty to exercise reasonable care for the safety
of the
deceased, is in the same terms as par 14 of the amended ordinary statement
of claim. By its defence to the amended ordinary
statement of claim, Sydney
Water denied par 14.
[7] Turano v Liverpool City
Council unreported, District Court of New South Wales, 2 May 2007 at
[150] per Delaney DCJ.
[8] The Sydney Water Act 1994
(NSW) was formerly called the Water Board (Corporatisation) Act 1994
(NSW).
[9] The Metropolitan Water Sewerage
and Drainage Board was established under s 7 of the Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW). The Water Legislation (Repeal,
Amendment and Savings) Act 1987 (NSW) repealed that Act (Sched 1) and
provided that the Water Board, as established under s 5(1) of the Water
Board Act 1987 (NSW), was a continuation of and the same legal entity as the
Metropolitan Water Sewerage and Drainage Board (Sched 3,
cl 2(1)).
The Water Board (Corporatisation) Act 1994 (NSW) dissolved the Water
Board (Sched 9, cl 4(1)) and provided that, on the dissolution of the
Water Board, Sydney
Water is taken for all purposes to be a continuation of and
the same legal entity as the Water Board (Sched 9, cl 6(1)).
[10] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 30(1)(a).
[11] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 30(1)(f).
[12] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 30(1)(g).
[13] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 32(1)(e).
[14] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 32(4).
[15] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 5A(1).
[16] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 5.
[17] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 40(1).
[18] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 40(2).
[19] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 41, definition of "public or other authority", par (e).
[20] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 43A(1).
[21] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), s 43A(2).
[22] [1980] HCA 12; (1980) 146 CLR 40 at 47-48;
[1980] HCA 12.
[23] Australia, Review of the Law
of Negligence: Final Report, September 2002.
[24] Civil Liability Act 2002
(NSW), Pt 5; Wrongs Act 1958 (Vic), s 84; Civil Liability
Act 2003 (Q), s 36; Civil Liability Act 2002 (WA), s 5X;
Civil Liability Act 2002 (Tas), Pt 9; Civil Law (Wrongs) Act
2002 (ACT), Ch 8.
[25] Civil Liability Amendment
(Personal Responsibility) Act 2002 (NSW).
[26] Civil Liability Amendment
Act 2003 (NSW), Sched 1.
[27] [2008] NSWCA 278 at [167] per
Allsop P (Beazley and McColl JJA concurring) citing, inter alia, the
Second Reading Speech for the Bill for the Civil Liability Amendment Act
2003 (NSW): New South Wales, Legislative Assembly, Parliamentary Debates
(Hansard), 13 November 2003 at 4992-4993.
[28] Aronson, "Government Liability
in Negligence", (2008) 32 Melbourne University Law Review 44 at
78-79.
[29] Aronson, "Government Liability
in Negligence", (2008) 32 Melbourne University Law Review 44 at 78.
[30] New South Wales, Legislative
Assembly, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 13 November 2003 at
4993.
[31] Aronson, "Government Liability
in Negligence", (2008) 32 Melbourne University Law Review 44 at
78-79.
[32] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 52-53 [220] per Beazley JA, 56 [236] per
Hodgson JA, 64 [278] per McColl JA.
[33] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 51-52 [214] per Beazley JA.
[34] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 51-52 [214] per Beazley JA.
[35] Turano v Liverpool City
Council unreported, District Court of New South Wales, 2 May 2007 at
[144] per Delaney DCJ.
[36] Turano v Liverpool City
Council unreported, District Court of New South Wales, 2 May 2007 at
[148]-[150] per Delaney DCJ.
[37] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 50 [201]- [203].
[38] Mount Isa Mines Ltd v
Pusey [1970] HCA 60; (1970) 125 CLR 383 at 390; [1970] HCA 60.
[39] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 50 [203].
[40] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 50 [205].
[41] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 51 [210]- [211].
[42] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 56 [236].
[43] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 58 [243].
[44] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 58 [243].
[45] Supreme Court Act 1970
(NSW), s 75A; and see Fox v Percy (2003) 214 CLR 118; [2003] HCA
22.
[46] Geddis v Proprietors of Bann
Reservoir (1878) 3 App Cas 430; Caledonian Collieries Ltd v Speirs
[1957] HCA 14; (1957) 97 CLR 202 at 220 per Dixon CJ, McTiernan, Kitto and Taylor JJ;
[1957] HCA 14; Metropolitan Water, Sewerage and Drainage Board v O K Elliott
Ltd (1934) 52 CLR 134; [1934] HCA 57.
[47] [2009] HCATrans 135 at
149-151.
[48] Donoghue v Stevenson
[1931] UKHL 3; [1932] AC 562 at 580 per Lord Atkin; Sullivan v Moody [2001] HCA 59; (2001) 207 CLR
562 at 576 [42] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Hayne and
Callinan JJ; [2001] HCA 59.
[49] Sullivan v Moody [2001] HCA 59; (2001)
207 CLR 562 at 576 [42] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Hayne and
Callinan JJ.
[50] Vairy v Wyong Shire Council
[2005] HCA 62; (2005) 223 CLR 422 at 446-447 [70]- [72] per Gummow J; [2005] HCA 62;
Shirt v Wyong Shire Council [1978] 1 NSWLR 631 at 639 per
Glass JA.
[51] Vairy v Wyong Shire Council
[2005] HCA 62; (2005) 223 CLR 422 at 447 [73] per Gummow J.
[52] [2002] HCA 35; (2002) 211 CLR 317 at 331 [12];
[2002] HCA 35.
[53] Chapman v Hearse [1961] HCA 46; (1961)
106 CLR 112 at 120 per Dixon CJ, Kitto, Taylor, Menzies and
Windeyer JJ; [1961] HCA 46; Mount Isa Mines Ltd v Pusey [1970] HCA 60; (1970) 125
CLR 383 at 390 per Barwick CJ.
[54] Turano v Liverpool City
Council unreported, District Court of New South Wales, 2 May 2007 at
[150] per Delaney DCJ.
[55] (2007) 234 CLR 330 at 345 [43];
[2007] HCA 42.
[56] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 50 [203].
[57] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 32(1)(a).
[58] See [12].
[59] Metropolitan Water,
Sewerage, and Drainage Act 1924 (NSW), s 38(1).
[60] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 38 [124].
[61] Liverpool City Council v
Turano [2008] NSWCA 270; (2008) 164 LGERA 16 at 66-67 [304].
[62] In his judgment, delivered on
2 May 2007, Delaney DCJ set out declarations and orders in numbered
sub-paragraphs (par [155]).
These orders were entered on 22 May 2007.
The numbering of the orders entered on that date differs from the numbering set
out
in par [155] of the judgment. The orders of the Court of Appeal made
on 31 October 2008 are expressed by reference to
the "orders and
declarations stated at [155] of the judgment of Delaney DCJ".
Order 3(b) made by this Court reflects this
circumstance.
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