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[2011] NSWCA 369
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Miskovic v Stryke Corporation Pty Ltd t/as KSS Security [2011] NSWCA 369 (30 November 2011)
Last Updated: 2 December 2011
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Case Title:
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Miskovic v Stryke Corporation Pty Ltd t/as KSS
Security
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Before:
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Giles JA at 1, Macfarlan JA at 6, Handley AJA at
7
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Decision:
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Appeal dismissed with costs. [Note: The
Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court
otherwise orders, a judgment or order is taken to be entered when it is recorded
in the Court's computerised
court record system. Setting aside and variation of
judgments or orders is dealt with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18.
Parties should in particular note the time limit of fourteen days in Rule
36.16.]
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Catchwords:
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NEGLIGENCE - employer and employee - psychiatric
injury from performance of work - not foreseeable - employer not
liable APPEAL & NEW TRIAL - errors by trial Judge - not material - no
substantial wrong or miscarriage
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Parties:
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(A) - Zoran Miskovic (1st R) - Stryke Corporation
Pty Ltd t/as KSS Security (2nd R) - Workers Compensation Nominal
Insurer
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Representation
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(A) - D E Baran (Rs 1&2) - L King SC
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- Solicitors:
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(A) - NSW Compensation Lawyers (1st R) -
Makinson & D'Apice (2nd R) - Turks Legal
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File number(s):
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Decision Under Appeal
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Publication Restriction:
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JUDGMENT
- GILES
JA : Subject to what follows, for the reasons given by Handley AJA the
appeal should be dismissed.
- The
only breach of duty found against the respondent was its failure to have a
system of regular safety calls to check on an officer's
welfare and whereabouts.
No basis has been made out for deficiency in the trial judge's reasons for his
findings in those respects
or the findings themselves.
- The
breach of duty, however, was irrelevant to the psychiatric injury, first because
his Honour found that the psychiatric injury
for which the appellant claimed
damages had "already been precipitated" (although unknown to the respondent)
prior to the lift incident
material to the breach of duty; and secondly because
his Honour found that the system, if in place, would not have "ameliorated"
any
contribution made by that incident to the appellant's psychiatric condition:
that is, that his condition would have developed
as it did in any event.
- As
Handley AJA points out, any error in referring to s 5C or 5D of the Civil
Liability Act 2005 is immaterial. I would prefer not to join in what his
Honour says concerning the judge's references to "substantial cause" and
similar
phrases, but for the reasons in the preceding paragraph any error in that
respect is also not material.
- I
agree with the orders proposed by Handley AJA.
- MACFARLAN
JA : Subject to the observations of Giles JA (with which I agree), I agree
with Handley AJA.
- HANDLEY
AJA : This is an appeal by the plaintiff from judgment for the defendant
entered by Rothman J in an industrial injury case.
- The
plaintiff suffered what used to be called a nervous breakdown during his
employment which was exacerbated by an incident at work
when he was trapped in a
lift for some hours on the night 7/8 April 2001. He had some time off before
returning to work but continued
to have difficulties and finally left his job
sometime in June 2001.
- The
plaintiff's psychiatric illness was diagnosed as a Major Depressive and
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. He is unable to work and
has not done so since he
left the defendant's employment.
- He
sued his employer for damages alleging that his psychiatric illness was caused
by his work and the employer was in breach of its
duty to provide a safe system.
The case attracted the principles in Koehler v Cerebos (Aust) Ltd [2005]
HCA 15; 222 CLR 44. Rothman J held that the employer had not been aware of the
plaintiff's difficulties and his psychiatric illness had not been caused
by any
breach of its duty: [2010] NSWSC 128.
- In
May or June 1999, at the age of 19, the plaintiff commenced working for the
defendant as a security guard. He was then a fit young
man who had been trained
in martial arts. He attended an external training course for two weeks to obtain
his licence and had two
weeks on the job training with a number of security
guards employed by the defendant.
- He
was allocated an area in the North Sydney business district that he had to
patrol during the night. He did this on foot because
he did not have a driver's
licence. He initially worked 5 nights a week from 7:30 p.m. to 3:30 a.m.
- In
November 1999 the plaintiff's shift was extended to 4:30 a.m. In July 2000 it
was extended for another hour. In October 2000 his
roster was altered to 10
nights on and 4 nights off. In December 2000 four more buildings were added to
his roster, and in March
2001 his shifts were extended to 11 1/2 hours from 6
p.m. to 5:30 a.m. The Judge found that these increases occurred with the
plaintiff's
consent, because he requested "as many hours of work as possible"
[18].
- The
plaintiff gave evidence that he had to walk very fast or run to complete his
rounds and could not take a break. He said he became
very stressed when he got
behind with his work. The Judge did not accept this evidence but found that,
apart from special occasions
such as the events of 7/8 April 2001 "there is no
evidence that [the plaintiff] ever failed to complete the work assigned to him"
[26]. He also found [26], [43] the plaintiff "acting reasonably could have
comfortably finished the work in each shift and still
had breaks".
- The
plaintiff gave evidence that break and enter incidents in buildings on his
rounds increased after March 2001 [33] and that in
June there were two to three
alarm responses a week [24]. The Judge rejected this evidence [33].
- On
the night of 7/8 April 2001 the plaintiff found himself trapped in a lift at 56
Berry St. The emergency telephone in the lift was
out of order and his two-way
radio would not work, possibly because the lift was below ground level. The
plaintiff panicked [34]-[35].
He said he was stuck in the lift for 8 1/2 to 9
hours [35]-[36], [48]. The Judge accepted other evidence and found that he had
been
trapped for 3 1/2 hours [48].
- The
plaintiff developed symptoms of his psychiatric illness during March 2001 [77].
He had difficulty sleeping, had stomach cramps
and was very nervous at work. His
symptoms were aggravated when he was required to deal with break and enters
[30].
- The
plaintiff reported for duty the night after the incident in the lift on 7/8
April, but left early. He was not feeling well, was
nervous, had stomach cramps
and felt frightened. He reported to his supervisor who told him to take five
days' leave and have a rest.
On his return to work he continued to be
frightened, sweated a lot and was shaking and shivering. He could not finish his
roster.
- The
Judge found that the plaintiff's evidence was unreliable [40]-[43], and where
there was any conflict in the evidence he accepted
that given by the witnesses
for the defendant.
- He
concluded in [73] (see also [48]):
"... there were not, prior to 9 April 2001, any outward signs of Mr Mr
Miskovic's psychiatric injury, or his predisposition thereto.
Nor was there
anything inherent in the work, the workload or the system of work that gives
rise to, or would render foreseeable,
any risk of sustaining psychiatric
illness. The Court concludes that a reasonable person in the position of [the
defendant] would
not have foreseen the risk of sustaining a recognizable
psychiatric illness to [the plaintiff] or anyone else ...".
- The
joint report of the medical experts concluded that the plaintiff's condition had
a constitutional component (red 42 O), that his
employment was a substantial
contributing factor in causing his psychiatric condition (red 41 U, 42 G, 43 E,
43 Q), and "but for"
the work injury he would not have developed his psychiatric
illness (red 42 X).
- The
report which answered a Schedule of Questions (red 41 G) was tendered by senior
counsel for the plaintiff and admitted without
objection (black 140).
Unsurprisingly in these circumstances the Judge found [65] that the plaintiff's
employment was a substantial
cause of his psychiatric injury and a substantial
contributing factor to his mental condition.
- The
plaintiff's case at trial that remains relevant on appeal is that he was
unreasonably overworked and this precipitated his psychiatric
injury [68]. This
case failed because the Judge found [26], [43] that the plaintiff acting
reasonably could have comfortably finished
his shift and still have breaks.
- The
Judge also found [75] that the defendant's system of work did not deal with the
risk that persons with criminal intent might wait
for a security guard to obtain
access to the premises, or might accost a guard inside, or that a guard might
become trapped in the
lift or behind a self-closing door. After the incident in
the lift on the night 7/8 April 2001 the defendant's system was changed
to
include a regular safety call to each security officer to check on his welfare
and whereabouts.
- The
Judge said that this was not evidence that the previous system was negligent
"for which principle now see s 5C of the Civil Liability Act 2002" (the
Act) but it was evidence of "a simple, inexpensive means of checking on the
safety of personnel" and he concluded [76] that
the defendant had been negligent
in not having that system in place before 7 April.
- He
held however that this negligence had not caused the plaintiff's psychiatric
injury which had been "precipitated" by March. He
said that the negligence "was
not a necessary condition of the occurrence of the harm" and referred [77] to s
5D(1)(a) of the Act.
- He
continued [78]:
"It is necessary to deal more fully with the factual causation issue. Even if
the test on causation were not defined by the ... Act
there would be a want of
causal connection."
- The
Judge said [79] "the expert medical evidence does not suggest that the lift
incident was the cause of his disability", and [80]
that "the psychiatric
illness was manifest well before 7 April 2001. If the lift incident was 'the
last straw' it was not, on the
evidence, a substantial contributing factor."
- An
additional reason, for finding that causation had not been established was that
[83]:
"... the existence of a safe system involving security or welfare calls to
[the plaintiff] at regular intervals would not have prevented
[him] from being
trapped in the lift. It would ... have shortened the period during which [he]
was in the lift, but it would not
have eliminated it ... Given his sense of
panic and the perception that of the lift had been sabotaged, a lesser period
(no matter
how short) in the lift would not, it seems, have ameliorated the
injury. "
- The
appeal must be determined in accordance with the principles in Koehler v
Cerebos ( Aust ) Ltd (above). The plurality said at [20], [22], [27],
[35], [41]:
"... this case may be decided ... at the level of breach of duty, on the
basis that the risk of psychiatric injury to the appellant
was not reasonably
foreseeable ... What is important is that questions of the content of the duty
of care, and what satisfaction
of that duty may require, are not to be examined
without considering the other obligations which exist between the parties ...
There
are two reasons why the Full Court was right to reach the conclusion it
did. First, the appellant agreed to perform the duties which
were a cause of her
injury. Secondly, the employer had no reason to suspect that the appellant was
at risk of psychiatric injury
... The duty which an employer owes is owed to
each employee. The relevant duty of care is engaged if psychiatric injury to the
particular
employee is reasonably foreseeable ... that invites attention to the
nature and extent of the work being done by the particular employee
and signs
given by the employee concerned ... Here there was no indication (explicit or
implicit) of any particular vulnerability
of the appellant."
- The
Judge applied these principles, and error in their formulation or application
was not alleged. Nor did the plaintiff challenge
the primary findings. Instead
counsel relied on the Judge's references to the Act, which did not apply because
of the exclusion for
industrial claims in s 3B(1)(f). It was submitted that
these errors entitled the plaintiff to a new trial.
- The
first of the references was in [76] where the Judge said that the change of
system after the incident on 7/8 April "does not render
the previous system
negligent: for which principle now see ss 5C of the ... Act." The principle
referred to in s 5C(c) is not new.
In this State it dates from Davis v
Langdon (1911) 11 SR(NSW) 149. Any error in saying "now see s 5C" was not
material for two reasons. The previous law was the same, and the Judge found
negligence.
- The
second reference was in [77] where the Judge said:
"The negligence was not a necessary condition of the occurrence of the harm:
s 5D(1)(a) ... and see also Adeels Palace Pty Ltd v Moubarak [2009] HCA
48, 239 CLR 420 at [45] etc."
- Moubarak
was decided on s 5D(1)(a) and the Court said at [44]:
"It is not necessary to examine whether or to what extent the approach to
causation described in March v Stramare might lead to a conclusion about
factual causation different from the conclusion that should be reached by
applying s 5D(1)."
- The
Judge found [77], independently of s 5D(1)(a), that the negligence in question
"did not cause the injury" because it had already
been suffered. He added [78]:
"Even if the test on causation were not defined by the ... Act there would be
a want of causal connection."
- The
judge found [80] that the incident on 7/8 April "was not ... a substantial
contributing factor", and [82] that "the contribution
of the incident to the
injury would not have been substantial."
- Section
5D(1)(a) provides:
"(1) A determination that negligence caused particular harm comprises the
following elements:
(a) that the negligence was a necessary condition of the occurrence of the
harm (factual causation) ...".
- This
replicates the preliminary "but for" test at common law which, as Mason CJ said
in March v E&MH Stramare Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 12; 171 CLR 506, 515-6:
"... applied as a negative criterion of causation, [it] has an important role
to play in the resolution of the question."
See also per Deane J at 522. The qualifications that may be required at
common law for the "but for" test of causation can have no
application where the
Judge found that the plaintiff suffered his psychiatric injury before the
incident of 7/8 April. An event cannot
be the cause of something that occurred
before.
- Moreover
for two reasons given by the Judge any error in this respect was immaterial. The
Judge considered causation under the general
law [78] and found that it had not
been established. He also found [83] that the new system would not have
prevented the plaintiff
being trapped in the lift and any reduction in the time
he was there would have made no difference.
- A
third reason was formulated by Giles JA during argument [T 20], namely that the
negligence found "goes nowhere in the absence of
the employer having reason to
suspect that the plaintiff was at risk of psychiatric injury."
- The
final submission of counsel for the plaintiff was that the Judge's references to
"substantial cause" in [65], "the cause" [79],
"a substantial contributing
factor" [80], and "not ... substantial" [82] showed that he was applying the
requirement in s 9A of the Workers Compensation Act 1987.
- The
common law test of causation, in a case such as this, as Mason CJ said in
March v Stramare (above) at p 514 is satisfied if the plaintiff's injury
was "caused or materially contributed to by the defendant's wrongful conduct."
- In
my judgment there is no appreciable difference between a material contribution
and a substantial one and if there is the error
did not occasion a substantial
wrong or miscarriage within UCPR Pt 51 r 23(1).
- There
is another reason for refusing to order a new trial on this ground. The source
of the references complained of was not s 9A
of the 1987 Act but the Schedule of
Questions submitted to the psychiatrists and their joint report (red 41-44).
- The
source of the questions is not disclosed but the Court can safely infer that
they were settled by the legal advisers, and almost
certainly by senior counsel.
Questions 2(b), (c), 3(a), (b), 4(a), (b) and (c) asked the experts to comment
on the factors which
caused or contributed to the plaintiff's psychiatric
condition. The questions do not mention a material contribution but otherwise
they invoked the common law test of causation.
- The
experts answered question 2(c) which asked "To what extent did the plaintiff's
employment contribute to his condition" by saying
that it "contributed
significantly". They answered question 3(a) by saying his work was "a
substantial factor" and question 3(b)
by saying that it was "a substantial
contributing factor".
- Counsel
for the plaintiff tendered the report, and it was admitted without objection.
All parties invited the Judge to act on the
report and treat the answers as
material.
- In
these circumstances the Court should apply the principles developed in civil
jury trials. If counsel had agreed on the questions
to be submitted to the jury
the unsuccessful party could not obtain a new trial for the purpose of
submitting other questions to
another jury: Seaton v Burnand [1900] AC
135, at 143 per Lord Halsbury LC, and at 144-5 per Lord Morris; McAllister v
Richmond Brewing Co (NSW) Pty Ltd (1942) 42 SR (NSW) 187, 197 per Davidson
J.
- In
this case the questions were agreed and the answers were treated as relevant.
The Judge acted on the report and adopted its language.
This provides no basis
for a new trial. In my judgment the appeal fails and should be dismissed with
costs.
**********
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