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Supreme Court of New South Wales - Court of Appeal |
Last Updated: 2 September 2008
NEW SOUTH WALES COURT OF APPEAL
CITATION:
Commissioner of Police v
David Rea [2008] NSWCA 199
FILE NUMBER(S):
40545/07
HEARING DATE(S):
13 August 2008
EX TEMPORE
DATE:
13 August 2008
PARTIES:
Commissioner of Police
(Appellant)
David Rea (Respondent)
JUDGMENT OF:
Allsop P Handley
AJA Johnson J
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION:
District
Court
LOWER COURT FILE NUMBER(S):
RJ 00187/076
LOWER COURT
JUDICIAL OFFICER:
Armitage DCJ
LOWER COURT DATE OF DECISION:
1
August 2007
COUNSEL:
T Ower (Appellant)
S Campbell SC/T
Edwards (Respondent)
SOLICITORS:
Tress Cox (Appellant)
Harris
Wheeler (Respondent)
CATCHWORDS:
WORKERS' COMPENSATION - Police -
Causation - Not excluded by medical evidence - Finding of causation open to lay
tribunal
LEGISLATION CITED:
Police Regulation (Superannuation) Act
1906
CATEGORY:
Principal judgment
CASES CITED:
Adelaide
Stevedoring Co Limited v Forst [1940] HCA 45; (1940) 64 CLR 538
Commonwealth of Australia v
McLean (1996) 41 NSWLR 389
Edwards v Bairstow [1955] UKHL 3; [1956] AC 14
EMI (Australia)
Limited v Bes (1970) WCR 114
Makita (Australia) Pty Limited v Sprowles (2001)
52 NSWLR 705
Vetter v Lake Macquarie C.C. (2001) 205 CLR 439
TEXTS
CITED:
DECISION:
Appeal dismissed with
costs.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
COURT OF
APPEAL
CA 40545/07
RJ00187/076
ALLSOP P
HANDLEY AJA
JOHNSON J
WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2008
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE v DAVID REA
WORKERS’ COMPENSATION – police – causation – not
excluded by medical evidence – finding of causation
open to lay
tribunal
HEADNOTE
The respondent, a former police officer was certified under the Police
Regulation (Superannuation) Act 1906 as suffering from a heart condition.
The Commissioner declined to find that this was caused by his being hurt on
duty. The
former officer’s appeal to the District Court was allowed, and
findings made that his work-related stress was the cause of
or a substantially
contributing factor to the contraction or aggravation of his heart condition.
On appeal to the Court of Appeal
which was limited to a question of law, the
Commissioner contended that the expert medical evidence did not support the
judge’s
causation finding. HELD: The expert medical evidence did
not exclude a finding of causation and the judge was entitled to apply the
principles in Adelaide Stevedoring Co Ltd v Forst [1940] HCA 45; (1940) 64 CLR 538 and
EMI (Australia) Ltd v Bes (1970) 44 WCR 114 and make the finding he
did.
ORDERS
Appeal dismissed with costs.
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
COURT
OF APPEAL
CA 40545/07
RJ00187/076
ALLSOP P
HANDLEY AJA
JOHNSON J
WEDNESDAY 13 AUGUST 2008
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE v DAVID REA
Judgment
1 ALLSOP P: I will ask Justice Handley to deliver the first
judgment.
2 HANDLEY AJA: The Commissioner of Police appeals or seeks leave
to appeal from the judgment of Armitage DCJ that the certified infirmity of
paroxysmal
atrial fibrillation the former police officer suffers from was caused
by his being hurt on duty. The judge’s finding entitled
or may entitle
the former police officer to additional compensation in the nature of
workers’ compensation under the Police Regulation
(Superannuation) Act 1906.
3 It is common ground that the
appeal from the District Court in its residual jurisdiction in workers’
compensation cases is
limited to questions of law. The trial judge found that
the police officer had been exposed to significant stress as a detective
stationed at Maitland and as the sole police officer on general duties at
Clarencetown. The critical question for his Honour’s
decision was whether
that stress was the cause of or a substantial contributing factor to the
contraction of his heart condition
or was a substantial contributing factor to
its aggravation, acceleration, exacerbation or deterioration.
4 The
expert medical evidence that the judge accepted did not support a positive
finding that the stress experienced by the police
officer in the course of his
duties was the cause or a substantial contributing factor in initiating or
aggravating the officer’s
heart condition. On the other hand, the
evidence of Dr Nickoletatos, Dr Hickey and Professor Keogh and the material
published in
peer review journals in the United States referred to by Professor
Keogh established as the judge found that:
“Medical science could not exclude causation of this condition as the result of employment related stress”.
5 Counsel for the appellant
challenged this finding in reliance on the principles stated by Heydon JA in
Makita (Australia) Pty Limited v Sprowles (2001) 52 NSWLR
705 and submitted that the medical evidence was not admissible or had no
persuasive force for reasons that he developed.
However, he eventually conceded
that the finding by the judge that causation could not be excluded was open on
the evidence and
was not affected by legal error. That concession was clearly
correct and indeed emerged as a result of the discussion between the
Court and
counsel.
6 The second question identified by Mr Ower, counsel for the
appellant, was whether it was open for the trial judge to bridge the
evidentiary
gap in the medical evidence in the way he did. His Honour’s ultimate
conclusion on the second question was:
“To a mind uninstructed in pathology the sequence of events described in the plaintiff’s evidence, suggests that after September 2001 plaintiff was subjected to a number of critical incidents, as he put it, in the course of his police service which inspired fear in his mind and, as I full accept caused him raised stress on a chronic basis after they occurred.
He did not, it is true, develop atrial fibrillation in immediate temporal proximity to these critical incidents. His assertion was that they simply added to his general stress levels and contributed to the feeling of being ‘stressed out’ and unable to sleep. He did not say that in immediate temporal proximity to them he experienced the chest tightening feeling he described as being like a rubber band stretched around his chest. This only occurred, on his evidence, from time to time.
However, he did describe a picture of gradually increased emotional stress from September 2001 until his eventual application for medical discharge, including the period after he went on sick leave in April 2004 and before he eventually left the police residence and moved to his own house at Dungog a considerable number of months later. It was during this period of time that his admission to Maitland Hospital with atrial fibrillation occurred.
To a mind uninstructed in pathology, this series of events would suggest a connection between his development of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and the gradually increasing stress he described at work.”
7 Mr Ower submitted that this
reasoning involved a misapplication of the principles referred to in
Adelaide Stevedoring Co Limited v Forst [1940] HCA 45; (1940) 64 CLR 538 at 563-4
and 569 in the judgements of Rich J and Dixon J respectively. He submitted that
the immediate association in that case
between the worker’s exertion and
his fatal heart attack was not present in this case. He further submitted that
a finding
based on what I will describe as the Forst principles
was not open where the stress was experienced over some three years and the
condition was not suffered and diagnosed until
some months after the police
officer went on sick leave.
8 These submissions must be rejected because
it is now well established that the Forst principles are not
limited to cases where there is an immediate temporal connection between the
alleged cause and the injury. In
EMI (Australia) Limited v Bes
(1970) 44 WCR 114 at 119 Herron CJ said:
“It is not incumbent upon the applicant, upon whom the onus rests, to produce evidence from medical witnesses which proves to demonstration that the applicant’s contention is correct. Medical science may say in individual cases that there is no possible connection between the events and the death in which case of course, if the facts stand outside an area in which common experience can be the touchstone, then the judge cannot act as if there were a connection. But if medical science is prepared to say that it is a possible view, then in my opinion the judge after examining the lay evidence may decide that it is probable. It is only when medical science denies that there is any such connection that the judge is not entitled in such a case to act on his own intuitive reasoning”.
See also Commonwealth of Australia v McLean (1996) 41 NSWLR 389
at 410. In my judgment the finding of causation by the trial judge was not
affected by legal error.
9 There was no overt legal error, his Honour did
not ask himself the wrong question and he did not misdirect himself in law. Nor,
in my judgment, was this a case where the finding of fact was so unreasonable in
relation to the underlying events and the medical
evidence that it is open to a
court limited to the correction of legal error to conclude that the challenged
finding was not reasonably
open on the evidence and demonstrated a latent error
of law: Vetter v Lake Macquarie C. C. [2001] HCA 12; (2001) 202 CLR 439,
450; Edwards v Bairstow [1955] UKHL 3; [1956] AC 14, 36. In my judgment
therefore the appeal fails and should be dismissed with
costs.
10 ALLSOP P: I agree.
11 JOHNSON J: I also
agree.
12 ALLSOP P: The orders of the court are as proposed by
Justice Handley.
**********
LAST UPDATED:
19
August 2008
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