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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 25 February 2010
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION:
DY (by his tutor MY) v The
Commonwealth of Australia [2010] NSWSC 83
JURISDICTION:
FILE NUMBER(S):
20454/2007
HEARING DATE(S):
15
February 2010
JUDGMENT DATE:
19 February 2010
PARTIES:
DY
(by his tutor MY) (First plaintiff)
TA (Second plaintiff)
The Commonwealth
of Australia (First defendant)
International Organization for Migration
(Second defendant)
JUDGMENT OF:
R A Hulme J
LOWER
COURT JURISDICTION:
Not Applicable
LOWER COURT FILE
NUMBER(S):
Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER:
Not
Applicable
COUNSEL:
S Pritchard (Plaintiffs)
R E Williams
QC with P Jones (Defendants)
SOLICITORS:
Legal Aid NSW
Australian
Government Solicitors
CATCHWORDS:
PROCEDURE
miscellaneous
procedural matters
other matters
application to amend statement of claim
to add cause of action and join additional plaintiffs
application that
plaintiffs be identitified by pseudonyms
LEGISLATION CITED:
Civil
Procedure Act 2005
CASES CITED:
Wardley Australia Ltd v State of
Western Australia [1992] HCA 55; (1992) 175 CLR 514
TEXTS CITED:
DECISION:
Leave granted for the filing of a further amended statement of claim within
14 days. Order pursuant to s 72 Civil Procedure Act 2005 that the 3rd and 4th
plaintiffs be referred to by their initials.
PUBLICATION RESTRICTION:
All plaintiffs and tutor be referred to by initials.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
COMMON LAW DIVISION
R A Hulme J
19 February 2010
2007/00265347 DY (by his tutor MY) & anor v The Commonwealth of Australia
JUDGMENT
1 HIS HONOUR: These proceedings concern four members of the Y family
who are natives of Iraq. The family comprises the father, MY, mother, TA,
and
two boys, DY (born 1996) and SY (born 1994). Up until now the plaintiffs in the
proceedings have been DY and TA, with MY appointed
as tutor for DY.
2 The events upon which their grievance with the defendants is based
commenced with their departure from Indonesia as asylum seekers
on a boat
identified as SIEV-4 in October 2001. It is claimed that when the SIEV-4 came
into the Australian contiguous zone it was
boarded by Commonwealth defence
personnel and the Y family (and others) were taken to Christmas Island. They
were then transferred
to Manus Island, Papua New Guinea, where they remained in
an Offshore Processing Centre until 26 September 2002. On that date they
were
removed by Australian forces from Manus Island and transported to the Republic
of Nauru. It is pleaded that the family remained
on Nauru in an Offshore
Processing Centre until MY was granted refugee status in December 2004. The
family was then allowed to enter
and reside in Australia.
3 It is alleged that whilst on Nauru the family were mistreated in a variety
of ways. It is claimed that DY was sexually assaulted
and that this was not
properly investigated, or investigated at all. It is claimed that TA was held
in a prison for a period of
time. It is now sought to advance a further claim
that all four members of the family were unlawfully imprisoned in the period 26
September 2002 to 9 October 2002, being the date the family was removed from
Manus Island and the date when, apparently unknown to
them until recently, they
were granted a Special Purpose Visa under the provisions of the Immigration Act
of the Republic of Nauru.
4 By notice of motion filed on 6 November 2009 the plaintiff seeks the
following orders:
1. Leave to amend the Second Further Amended Statement of Claim in the form of the proposed Third Further Amended Statement of Claim annexed to the affidavit of Joe Tan sworn 6 December 2009.
2. Order under section 72 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 that the Third and Fourth Plaintiffs be referred to in these proceedings by their initials, namely, “MY” and “SY” respectively and the tutor for the Fourth Plaintiff be referred to in these proceedings as “MY”.
3. Any other order the Court deems fit.
4. Costs.
5 The matter came before me on Monday of this week when sitting as the duty
judge. Ms Pritchard appeared for the plaintiffs and Mr
Williams QC with Mr
Jones appeared for the first defendant. The second defendant has not entered an
appearance or participated in
any way to date in the proceedings.
6 There are three issues raised for determination. The first is the
plaintiffs’ application to plead an additional cause of
action in false
imprisonment with a claim for exemplary and aggravated damages. This, at least
in part, has arisen from further
information that has come to hand in the course
of the exchange of particulars between the parties. The Commonwealth does not
oppose
this additional pleading. It was not suggested that there would be any
significant prejudice to the defendants. I propose to grant
leave for the
filing of the Third Further Amended Statement of Claim in this respect.
7 A further aspect of the proposed Third Further Amended Statement of Claim
is that it is sought to add as plaintiffs MY, the father,
and SY, the eldest
son. It is also sought to appoint MY as tutor for SY. In the affidavit of Mr
Joe Tan, solicitor for the plaintiffs,
it is indicated that the necessary
consents have been provided.
8 The Commonwealth does not oppose the amendment insofar as it concerns the
addition of SY as a plaintiff and it seems to me appropriate
that leave be
granted for the amendment in that respect.
9 However, the Commonwealth does oppose the joinder of MY as a plaintiff.
This opposition arises from its contention that the action
proposed to be
brought in respect of MY is caught by laws governing limitation of actions.
There is an issue between the parties
as to whether the applicable law in this
respect is the lex loci delicti or the lex fori. This is no easy
question to resolve and will require an examination of the applicable laws of
Papua New Guinea and the Republic
of Nauru. The adoption by Nauru at the time
of independence in 1968 of English law may add an additional layer of
complexity. The
length and complexity of a hearing and determination of this
issue is well beyond the scope of a matter that a duty judge can undertake
and
the parties did not suggest otherwise.
10 It was submitted on behalf of the Commonwealth that this is an issue that
should be determined prior to a decision being made as
to the joinder of MY.
Alternatively it was suggested that the court might grant leave for MY to be
joined but that the limitation
issue then be the subject of a separate hearing
prior to the final hearing of the proceedings. On behalf of the plaintiffs it
was
submitted that the appropriate course was to permit the joinder of MY, leave
it for the Commonwealth to plead the limitation defence
and then to have that
issue determined along with all of the other issues at final hearing.
11 I accept as a general proposition that ordinarily limitation defences
should be determined at trial after all of the relevant evidence
has been taken.
In Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia [1992] HCA 55;
(1992) 175 CLR 514 at 533-534, Mason CJ, Dawson, Gaudron and McHugh JJ
observed:
“We should, however, state in the plainest of terms that we regard it as undesirable that limitation questions of the kind under consideration should be decided in interlocutory proceedings in advance of the hearing of the action, except in the clearest of cases. Generally speaking, in such proceedings, insufficient is known of the damage sustained by the plaintiff and of the circumstances in which it was sustained to justify a confident answer to the question.”
12 It may be, perhaps, that the determination of the limitation issue
concerning MY could be dealt with as a discrete issue separate
from the hearing
of all other issues in the case. However I am unable to see that there would be
any useful purpose served in the
Court proceeding in this fashion. If the
Commonwealth were to succeed with it’s contention it would not serve to
shorten the
prospective length of the final hearing in any significant way. The
claim of false imprisonment that is sought to be raised by MY
is identical, as
far as I can determine from the pleadings, to that which is raised by the other
three plaintiffs. Moreover, whilst
I have said that the limitation issue may be
a discrete issue, it is also possible that it’s determination will
necessitate
reference to facts found in respect of the substantive claim.
13 Pleadings in the matter are incomplete. I do not think it is appropriate
to foreclose at this stage on the suggestion raised by
the Commonwealth that
there be a preliminary hearing of the limitation issuing concerning MY. Once
the pleadings are complete it
may emerge that the better course would be to have
a separate determination of this issue. However, as the matter stands at the
moment, it seems to be appropriate to permit the joinder of MY to enable the
proceedings to move forward; leave it to the Commonwealth
to plead the
limitation issue in it’s defence; and then leave that issue to be
determined at the final hearing.
14 The final issue for determination is the question of whether the two new
complainants should be referred to by their initials,
MY and SY. The
Commonwealth does not oppose this application. Hoeben J made orders on 15 May
2008 that the first and second plaintiffs
and the tutor for the first plaintiff
be referred to by their initials for the purposes of preserving their anonymity.
Part of the
pleaded claims are allegations that DY, a minor, was the victim of
sexual assault. The Commonwealth consented to the orders made
by Hoeben J. It
was submitted on behalf of the plaintiffs that it is inevitable that exposure of
the identity of any single member
of the one family will have the consequence of
identifying other members of that family. I accept that there is a significant
risk
of that occurring. Moreover, to refuse to make the order would be contrary
to the purpose of, and would undermine, the orders made
by Hoeben
J.
Orders
1. Grant leave to amend the Second Further Amended Statement of Claim in the form of the proposed Third Further Amended Statement of Claim handed up in Court by the Plaintiffs’ counsel on 15 February 2010 as initialled and placed on the Court file.
2. Direct the filing of the Third Further Amended Statement of Claim within 14 days of the date of this judgment.
3. Order pursuant to s 72 of the Civil Procedure Act 2005 that the third and fourth plaintiffs be referred to in these proceedings by their initials, namely, “MY” and “SY” respectively, and the tutor for the fourth plaintiff be referred to in these proceedings as “MY”.
4. Direct the matter be listed before the Registrar for further directions on Friday, 12 March 2010 at 9:00am.
**********
LAST UPDATED:
23 February 2010
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