SUPREME COURT OF THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY Case Title: Jausnik v Nominal Defendant (No 5) Citation: [2016] ACTSC 306 Hearing Dates: 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 May, 22, 23 September 2015 Decision Date: 18 October 2016 Before: Mossop AsJ Decision: See [202] Catchwords: TORTS – Negligence – Police involved in pursuit of fleeing vehicle across NSW/ACT border – Failure to comply with police protocols for safe driving and cross-border pursuits – Passenger in police vehicle suffering mental harm arising from attending scene of accident arising from police pursuit – Liability of State of New South Wales for failure to provide training in use of radios and cross-border pursuit protocols – Liability of police driver for injury to passenger CHOICE OF LAW – Statutory contribution between tortfeasors – Accident in the Territory following police pursuit from New South Wales – Claim for contribution by ACT Nominal Defendant against New South Wales police office and State of New South Wales – Characterisation of apportionment legislation – Applicable choice of law rule. TORTS – Causation – Police pursuit of driver cross border – Pursued driver involved in fatal accident – Whether pursued driver would have avoided accident if pursuit terminated earlier – Expert evidence based on aggregate statistics – Whether likely conduct of pursued driver proved on balance of probabilities – Causation not established TORTS – Statutory contribution – Nominal defendant liable for conduct of pursued driver who caused an accident – State of New South Wales and police officer also negligent – Contingent assessment of appropriate contribution Legislation Cited: Australian Federal Police Act 1979 (Cth), ss, s 8(1A), 40E Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT), ss 19, 21, 32, 34, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46 Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), ss 5D, 5E Constitution (Cth), ss 75(iv), 76(ii), 122 Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1992 (ACT), s 111(2) Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth), s 80 Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1946 (NSW), s 5 Police Act 1990 (NSW) Road Transport (Third-Party Insurance) Act 2008 (ACT), ss 20- 21, 59, 151 Workers Compensation Act 1951 (ACT), s 182D Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW), s 150A Cases Cited: Adeels Palace Pty Ltd v Moubarak [2009] HCA 48; (2009) 239
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SUPREME COURT OF THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL ......5 5. A blood sample from Mr Williams taken within two hours of the accident showed a blood alcohol concentration of 0.154%. Mr Williams’
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SUPREME COURT OF THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
Case Title: Jausnik v Nominal Defendant (No 5)
Citation: [2016] ACTSC 306
Hearing Dates: 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 May, 22, 23 September 2015
Decision Date: 18 October 2016
Before: Mossop AsJ
Decision: See [202]
Catchwords: TORTS – Negligence – Police involved in pursuit of fleeing vehicle across NSW/ACT border – Failure to comply with police protocols for safe driving and cross-border pursuits – Passenger in police vehicle suffering mental harm arising from attending scene of accident arising from police pursuit – Liability of State of New South Wales for failure to provide training in use of radios and cross-border pursuit protocols – Liability of police driver for injury to passenger
CHOICE OF LAW – Statutory contribution between tortfeasors – Accident in the Territory following police pursuit from New South Wales – Claim for contribution by ACT Nominal Defendant against New South Wales police office and State of New South Wales – Characterisation of apportionment legislation – Applicable choice of law rule.
TORTS – Causation – Police pursuit of driver cross border – Pursued driver involved in fatal accident – Whether pursued driver would have avoided accident if pursuit terminated earlier – Expert evidence based on aggregate statistics – Whether likely conduct of pursued driver proved on balance of probabilities – Causation not established
TORTS – Statutory contribution – Nominal defendant liable for conduct of pursued driver who caused an accident – State of New South Wales and police officer also negligent – Contingent assessment of appropriate contribution
Legislation Cited: Australian Federal Police Act 1979 (Cth), ss, s 8(1A), 40E Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT), ss 19, 21, 32, 34, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46 Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), ss 5D, 5E Constitution (Cth), ss 75(iv), 76(ii), 122 Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1992 (ACT), s 111(2) Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth), s 80 Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1946 (NSW), s 5 Police Act 1990 (NSW) Road Transport (Third-Party Insurance) Act 2008 (ACT), ss 20-21, 59, 151 Workers Compensation Act 1951 (ACT), s 182D Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW), s 150A
CLR 420 Amaca Pty Ltd v New South Wales [2003] HCA 44; (2003) 77 ALJR 1509 Australian Capital Territory v Crowley [2012] ACTCA 52; (2012) 273 FLR 370 Baldry v Jackson [1977] 1 NSWLR 494 Blunden v Commonwealth [2003] HCA 73; (2003) 218 CLR 330 British American Tobacco Australia Ltd v Western Australia [2003] HCA 47; (2003) 217 CLR 30 Chapman v Hearse [1961] HCA 46; (1961) 106 CLR 112 Crosby v Kelly [2012] FCAFC 96; (2012) 203 FCR 451 Crouch v Commissioner of Railways (Q) [1985] HCA 69; (1985) 159 CLR 22 Dow Jones & Co Inc v Gutnick [2002] HCA 56; (2002) 210 CLR 575 Electro Optic Systems Pty Ltd v New South Wales [2012] ACTSC 184 Grills v Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd [2015] NSWCA 72 Hodge v Club Motor Insurance Agency Pty Ltd (1974) 7 SASR 86 Hodgson v Dimbola Pty Ltd [2009] ACTSC 59 John Pfeiffer Pty Ltd v Rogerson [2000] HCA 36; (2000) 203 CLR 503 Johnstone v Woolmer (1977) 16 ACTR 6 King v Philcox [2015] HCA 19; (2015) 255 CLR 304 Leishman v Thomas (1957) 75 WN (NSW) 173 LNC Industries Ltd v BMW (Australia) Ltd [1983] HCA 31; (1983) 151 CLR 575 Mahony v J Kruschich (Demolitions) Pty Ltd [1985] HCA 37; (1985) 156 CLR 522 March v E & MH Stramare Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 12; (1910) 171 CLR 506 McLean v Tedman [1984] HCA 60; (1984) 155 CLR 306 Mobbs v Kain [2009] NSWCA 301 Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty v Anzil [2000] HCA 61; (2000) 205 CLR 254 New South Wales v Fahy [2007] HCA 20; (2007) 232 CLR 486 New South Wales v Tyszyk [2008] NSWCA 107 Nominal Defendant v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Company Ltd [1971] SASR 346 O’Neill v Mann [2000] FCA 1180; (2000) 101 FCR 160 Podrebersek v Australian Iron and Steel Pty Ltd [1985] HCA 34; (1985) 59 ALJR 492 Redbro Investments Pty Ltd v Ceva Logistics (Australia) Pty Ltd [2015] NSWCA 73 Soblusky v Egan [1960] HCA 9; (1960) 103 CLR 215 Stuart v Walsh [2012] NSWCA 186 Sullivan v Moody [2001] HCA 59; (2001) 207 CLR 562 Sweedman v Transport Accident Commission [2006] HCA 8; (2006) 226 CLR 362 Tame v New South Wales [2002] HCA 35; (2002) 211 CLR 317 Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd [1990] HCA 55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 Wicks v State Rail Authority (NSW) [2010] HCA 22; (2010) 241 CLR 60
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Texts Cited: Atiyah, P S, An Introduction to the Law of Contract (Oxford University Press, 3rd ed, 1981) Davies, M, A Bell and P Brereton (eds), Nygh’s Conflict of Laws in Australia (LexisNexis Butterworths, 14th ed, 2014) Hart, H.L.A and Honoré, T, Causation in the Law (Clarendon Press, 2nd ed, 1985) Kourakis, C, “Sweedman v Transport Accident Commission: A simple crash and bang?” (2007) 28 Adelaide Law Review 23 Leeming, M, Authority to Decide (Federation Press, 2012) Leeming, M, Resolving Conflicts of Laws (Federation Press, 2011) Lindell, G and Mason, A, “The resolution of inconsistent State and territory legislation” (2010) 38(3) Fed L Rev 390 Prosser, W L, “Interstate publication” (1953) 51(7) Michigan Law Review 959
Parties: Edward Robert Jausnik (Plaintiff)
The Nominal Defendant (Defendant)
Michael Hannaford (First Third Party)
State of New South Wales (Second Third Party)
Representation: Counsel
P J Deakin QC, L P McFee (Defendant)
G M Watson, W S Reynolds (First Third Party)
J Sheller (Second Third Party)
M Rennie (New South Wales Commissioner of Police)
Solicitors
Minter Ellison (Defendant)
Moray & Agnew (First Third Party)
HWL Ebsworth (Second Third Party)
NSW Crown Solicitor’s Office (New South Wales Commissioner of Police)
File Number: SC 291 of 2012
Publication Restriction: The order of the Court made on 11 May 2015 prohibits
publication of contents of the NSW Police Force Safe Driving
Policy version 7.2. The version of the judgment published on the
internet has been redacted in accordance with that order.
MOSSOP AsJ:
Introduction
1. On 20 March 2010 the plaintiff, Mr Edward Jausnik, and the first third party, Mr Michael
Hannaford, were New South Wales police officers. They were conducting random
breath testing on Richard Avenue in Queanbeyan, New South Wales. While
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conducting breath testing, they observed, by looking down Richard Avenue, a vehicle
driving at speed in a westerly direction across the roundabout at the intersection of
Uriarra Road, Richard Avenue and Kendall Avenue. The vehicle was travelling across
the roundabout onto Kendall Avenue and continued westward along Kendall Avenue.
The officers got into their police vehicle and pursued the vehicle. They turned left at
the roundabout into Kendall Avenue and shortly after having turned left into Kendall
Avenue observed the tail lights of the vehicle in the distance. The police then
continued along Kendall Avenue until the traffic lights at the intersection of Kendall
Avenue and Canberra Avenue. Up until this point the police had not activated the
vehicle’s siren or flashing lights.
2. The vehicle that was being pursued was a silver Mazda being driven by Mr Justin
Williams. It pulled up at the traffic lights at the intersection of Kendall Avenue and
Canberra Avenue and the police vehicle pulled up behind it. Mr Hannaford activated
the police vehicle’s lights. As a result of this occurring the silver Mazda took off, turning
right through the red lights onto Canberra Avenue and proceeding in a north-westerly
direction across the border between New South Wales and the Australian Capital
Territory (ACT). Mr Hannaford activated his vehicle’s siren and followed. The silver
Mazda proceeded through traffic lights at the entrance to HMAS Harman as well as
traffic lights near the intersection between Canberra Avenue and Tom Price Street.
The police officers continued to pursue the silver Mazda in their vehicle. They
estimated that when outside HMAS Harman they were travelling at approximately 140
to 150 km/h.
3. The silver Mazda was detected doing a speed of 157 km/h by a fixed speed camera
located a short distance to the south-east of the intersection of Canberra Avenue and
Hindmarsh Drive. The pursuing police vehicle was detected travelling at 150 km/h.
The pursuit continued through the intersection with Hindmarsh Drive, the silver Mazda
travelling north-east along Canberra Avenue down the hill towards the intersection with
Ipswich Street and the Monaro Highway.
4. There were two sets of traffic lights at the intersection where Canberra Avenue passes
under the Monaro Highway. The first set of traffic lights was at the intersection
between Canberra Avenue and Ipswich Street, on the Queanbeyan side of the
underpass. The second set of traffic lights was on the Canberra side of the underpass.
That second set of traffic lights regulated cars travelling north down the exit ramp from
the Monaro Highway. Where the exit ramp met Canberra Avenue the traffic lights
permitted cars to either turn left and head towards Canberra or right and head towards
Queanbeyan and Fyshwick. As the silver Mazda travelled at high speed under the
overpass, a vehicle driven by Mr Scott Oppelaar was turning right from the exit ramp
onto Canberra Avenue. Mr Oppelaar’s vehicle was facing a green light. The silver
Mazda faced a red light. The silver Mazda continued through the red light and collided
at high speed with Mr Oppelaar’s vehicle. The result of the collision was catastrophic.
Mr Oppelaar’s vehicle was struck on the right side by the silver Mazda and broke in
two. Mr Oppelaar, his partner, Samantha Ford, and their infant son, Brodie Oppelaar,
were all killed as a result of the impact. The driver of the silver Mazda, Mr Williams,
was trapped in his vehicle. He was removed from the vehicle, but died later at
Canberra Hospital. His passenger, Skye Webbe, was conveyed to hospital in a critical
condition, but survived.
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5. A blood sample from Mr Williams taken within two hours of the accident showed a
blood alcohol concentration of 0.154%. Mr Williams’ level of intoxication was not
known to police at the time of the pursuit.
The proceedings
6. The silver Mazda driven by Mr Williams was unregistered. Because it was
unregistered it did not have compulsory third party insurance required by the Road
Transport (Third-Party Insurance) Act 2008 (ACT) (RTTPI Act). Because of these
circumstances, Mr Jausnik brought proceedings against the Nominal Defendant
established under that Act. Under s 59 of the RTTPI Act the Nominal Defendant is
liable as if a compulsory third party (CTP) insurance policy was in force for the motor
vehicle and the Nominal Defendant was the CTP insurer. As a consequence the
Nominal Defendant is in the position of an insurer against whom proceedings may be
brought and judgment entered based on its obligation to indemnify Mr Williams against
liability for personal injury caused by a motor accident: RTTPI Act ss 20-21, 151.
7. These proceedings were commenced on 11 October 2012. The claim against the
Nominal Defendant pleaded, relevantly:
Justin Charles Williams, while driving an unregistered motor vehicle, was attempting to evade apprehension by the plaintiff, a New South Wales police officer who was in a police vehicle pursuing him. In so attempting to evade apprehension Justin Charles Williams drove his vehicle in an unlawful, dangerous and negligent manner and at an unlawful and excessively high speed and failed to obey traffic signals and collided with a third vehicle. The plaintiff attempted to render first aid to the occupants of all vehicles and in doing so sustained psychiatric injury.
8. The psychiatric injury identified was chronic post-traumatic stress disorder and major
depression. The report of Dr Michael Barry, a clinical psychologist, in 2011
demonstrated that the plaintiff suffered from chronic post traumatic stress disorder and
a major depressive disorder.
9. The Nominal Defendant filed a defence which involved general denials and a pleading
of contributory negligence. The particulars of contributory negligence were:
(a) failing to stop the pursuit when it was apparent that the plaintiff was seeking to “out-run” the police vehicle;
(b) continuing the pursuit when it was apparent that by doing so he and his fellow officer were placing others, including himself, in danger and at risk of injury;
(c) failing to comply with protocols for cross-border pursuits;
(d) failing to adequately or at all consider the risk from pursuing Williams’ vehicle at excessive speed upon the health and safety of persons including himself from, or as a consequence of, a collision involving Williams’ vehicle.
10. On 22 November 2012 the Nominal Defendant filed a third-party notice. That notice
was directed to Mr Hannaford, the driver of the police vehicle in which Mr Jausnik was
travelling, and the State of New South Wales. That notice alleged negligence on the
part of Mr Hannaford as follows:
(i) continuing the pursuit of Williams’ vehicle when Williams commenced driving at an excessive speed in all the circumstances;
(ii) continuing the pursuit of Williams’ vehicle when it became, or ought to have become, apparent that Williams was seeking to “out-run” the first third party’s vehicle in
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circumstances where he knew, or ought reasonably to have known, that the pursuit exposed other persons, including the plaintiff, to risk of injury;
(iii) failing to comply with or heed the request and/or instruction of the plaintiff to terminate the pursuit;
(iv) continuing with the pursuit contrary to the advice of the plaintiff that the pursuit was unsafe;
(v) failing to comply with protocols for cross-border pursuits;
(vi) failing to terminate the pursuit when it was, or ought to have been, apparent that the risk of a collision was in all the circumstances foreseeably placing other persons, including the plaintiff, to risk of injury;
(vii) failing to adequately or at all consider the risk from pursuing Williams’ vehicle at excessive speed upon the safety of other persons, including the plaintiff, from, or as a consequence of, a collision involving Williams’ vehicle; and
(viii) failing to accept that the risk of injury outweighed the need to continue the pursuit.
11. It should be noted that there is no allegation that the commencement of the pursuit was
in breach of Mr Hannaford’s duty.
12. The claim against the State of New South Wales (the State) alleged that a new radio
system had been installed in the police vehicle used by Mr Jausnik and Mr Hannaford
and that no adequate steps were taken to ensure that officers on duty had an
understanding of the new radio system or how to use it. It further alleged that the State
had not provided any training or adequate instruction on cross-jurisdictional pursuits.
The negligence claim made against the State was particularised as follows:
(i) failing to provide and/or ensure that its police officers, the first third party and the plaintiff, had proper guidance, instruction and training concerning the conduct of pursuits of other vehicles, including the termination of pursuits;
(ii) failing to provide and/or ensure that the equipment provided to its officers for use in the course of their duties could be properly operated by the first third party and the plaintiff;
(iii) failing to instruct the first third party and the plaintiff to terminate the pursuit when the risk of harm to persons was, or ought reasonably to have been, apparent;
(iv) failing to instruct the first third party and the plaintiff that the pursuit of vehicles being driven at dangerous speeds, and/or in a dangerous manner, and/or in such a way that persons were at risk of harm should be terminated;
(v) failing to instruct the first third party that if in the course of a pursuit, if his fellow officer expressed the reasonable opinion or request that the pursuit should be terminated, that he should comply with that opinion or request;
(vi) failing to instruct the first third party that he should in the conduct of his duties take reasonable care for the safety of or avoid the risk of harm to others; and
(vii) failing to ensure that the first third party and the plaintiff were at all relevant times able to obtain instructions and guidance as to the performance of their duties from a person competent to do so.
13. On 9 July 2013 consent orders were entered for judgment in favour of Mr Jausnik
against the Nominal Defendant in the sum of $1,225,000 plus $75,000 in costs. Mr
Hannaford and the State were aware of the settlement, but did not themselves consent
to it.
14. Mr Hannaford filed a defence to the third-party notice on 3 October 2013. That defence
involved general denials as well as a particularised claim of contributory negligence.
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The State filed a defence on 8 October 2013. That defence made no significant
admissions. It did not plead contributory negligence.
15. The claims for contribution identified in the third party notice are based upon either s 21
of the Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT) (CLW Act) or s 5 of the Law Reform
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1946 (NSW) (LRMP Act). Those sections permit a
person who is liable for damage caused by a tort to recover contribution from someone
else liable for the same damage. The precise terms of these provisions, and which of
the two is applicable, will be discussed below. The significant point is that it is
necessary for the person claiming contribution to establish that he, she or it is liable in
tort to the plaintiff and that the contributory is also liable to the plaintiff for the same
damage. In the context of this case, that means that in order to succeed the Nominal
Defendant must prove that:
(a) it was liable to the plaintiff; and
(b) each of the third parties was also liable to the plaintiff.
Chronology of the pursuit
16. Mr Hannaford had been a New South Wales police officer since 2007. In 2010 he held
the rank of Constable. Mr Jausnik had been a New South Wales police officer since
2008. He held the rank of Constable. Both were also special members of the
Australian Federal Police (AFP) appointed under s 40E of the Australian Federal Police
Act 1979 (Cth) (AFP Act).
17. On 20 March 2010, Mr Hannaford and Mr Jausnik were on patrol in a standard police
vehicle which was identified as “Queanbeyan 37”. I will refer to their vehicle as
Queanbeyan 37.
18. At about 10 pm the officers were conducting a breathalyser stop at Richard Avenue,
Queanbeyan, near the intersection with Ernest Street. They were stopped
approximately 100 m from the roundabout intersection of Kendall Avenue, Richard
Avenue and Uriarra Road. They had stopped a vehicle which had left the
Queanbeyan Kangaroos Rugby Club, located just up the road, and performed a
random breath test on that driver. The breathalyser result was negative.
19. The officers observed a silver Mazda, Mr Williams’ vehicle, drive through the
roundabout intersection of Uriarra Road, Kendall Avenue and Richard Avenue. The
vehicle came to their attention because of the noise of the engine and the screech of
tyres as it went through the roundabout. It was driving at speed. The silver Mazda
drove westward from Uriarra Road onto Kendall Avenue.
20. Mr Hannaford and Mr Jausnik got into their vehicle and followed Mr Williams' vehicle
onto Kendall Avenue. Mr Hannaford was driving and Mr Jausnik was the front seat
passenger.
21. Shortly after Queanbeyan 37 turned left onto Kendall Avenue (50 to 80 m south of the
roundabout intersection of Uriarra Road, Kendall Avenue and Richard Avenue), the
silver Mazda was at the bend on Kendall Avenue heading towards the intersection with
Canberra Avenue.
22. At this point Queanbeyan 37 was travelling between 90 and 130 km/hr on Kendall
Avenue to catch up to the silver Mazda. The speed limit on Kendall Avenue was
50 km/hr. Queanbeyan 37 had no flashing lights or siren activated at this point.
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23. Queanbeyan 37 was at approximately the Stephens Road and Kendall Avenue
T-intersection when the officers observed the silver Mazda slowing and approaching
the traffic light controlled intersection of Kendall Avenue and Canberra Avenue. The
silver Mazda stopped at the red traffic light at the intersection.
24. Queanbeyan 37 pulled up behind the stationary silver Mazda and Mr Hannaford
activated the vehicle’s light bar.
25. Having been alerted to the presence of the police vehicle behind him, Mr Williams
proceeded into the traffic light controlled intersection of Kendall Avenue and Canberra
Avenue against a red traffic light, turning right onto Canberra Avenue. Queanbeyan 37
followed. A car travelling through the intersection was forced to “slam on its brakes” to
avoid a collision with the silver Mazda.
26. Mr Hannaford followed the silver Mazda through the intersection. As he did so he
turned on the vehicle’s siren. He was aware that making the right-hand turn from
Kendall Avenue onto Canberra Avenue would lead the pursuit into the ACT. He called
out the numberplate of the silver Mazda to Mr Jausnik. Mr Hannaford told Mr Jausnik
to “call in the pursuit” and Mr Jausnik made contact with the NSW Police Force radio
(NSW Police radio) for the first time during the course of the pursuit. The
communication by Mr Jausnik was “Queanbeyan 37, urgent in pursuit”.
27. The ACT border was approximately 50 m from the Kendall Avenue and Canberra
Avenue intersection and is 4.685 km from the collision site. Therefore, the total length
of the pursuit was approximately 4.735 km. (A vehicle travelling at 150 km/h would
travel that distance in 114 seconds, just under two minutes. At an average speed of
130km/h, the distance would be travelled in 131 seconds, just over two minutes.)
28. Less than 100 m into the ACT, just past the point where Canberra Avenue passes over
Norse Road, there was an ACT speed limit sign indicating a speed limit of 80 km/h.
When it passed that point, Queanbeyan 37 was travelling between 110 and 130 km/hr.
29. The road was a divided road which, from near the border to the intersection with
Hindmarsh Drive, travelled through a semi-rural landscape. There were two lanes in
each direction. There was not much traffic on the road and driving conditions were
good.
30. Approximately 300 to 400 m past the Kendall Avenue and Canberra Avenue
intersection, the NSW Police radio acknowledged and responded to Mr Jausnik’s call.
31. Fourteen seconds after first notifying the NSW Police radio that they were in pursuit,
Mr Jausnik said he was changing to the AFP channel. He was asked for his vehicle
classification and, 34 seconds after first notifying the NSW Police radio of the pursuit,
said again that he was changing to the AFP channel.
32. Queanbeyan 37 passed through the intersection at HMAS Harman approximately
800 m from the ACT/NSW border and was travelling at 140 to 150 km/h as it passed
the rock wall to the west of that intersection.
33. Between HMAS Harman and the intersection of Canberra Avenue and Tom Price
Street, Canberra Avenue goes over a rise approximately 1400 m from the New South
Wales border.
34. Prior to reaching that rise Queanbeyan 37 was on the NSW Police radio requesting
details of the AFP channel. This was one minute and 10 seconds after first calling in
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the pursuit. Ten seconds later another NSW Police Force vehicle, Queanbeyan 35,
responded to this request identifying the AFP channel as zone 3 channel 73. This
information was, in fact, incorrect as it related to old zone and channel numbers rather
than new ones. I will return to this issue below. A few seconds later Mr Jausnik made
another request “what’s the new radio channel?” and an unidentified patrol vehicle is
identified in the transcript of the NSW Police radio as responding “… (indistinct)…
along 45”. The audio of this is consistent with it being a further transmission from Mr
Jausnik saying “Somewhere along 45”. After that point there was no communication
from Queanbeyan 37 on the NSW Police radio channel until it reported being at the
scene of the accident.
35. At about the rise on Canberra Avenue, Mr Jausnik hit the buttons “45#” on his car
radio. At this point the vehicle was approximately 1400 m from the ACT/NSW border
and 3285 m from the collision site. At this point Mr Hannaford could still see the tail
lights of the silver Mazda and estimated that the police vehicle was travelling at around
150 km/h.
36. There was no response on channel 45 from the AFP. Because of this, prior to reaching
the intersection between Canberra Avenue and Hindmarsh Drive, Mr Jausnik saw
Mr Hannaford trying to get at is portable radio and so he too reached for his portable
radio. He did this because this radio still used the old zone and channel numbers and
he knew how to get the AFP channel on this radio.
37. The intersection of Canberra Avenue with Hindmarsh Drive is approximately 3 km from
the New South Wales border and 1.685 km from the site of the accident. Red light
cameras measured the silver Mazda passing through that intersection at 157 km/h and,
1.73 seconds later, Queanbeyan 37 at a speed of 150 km/h.
38. The traffic light controlling the intersection of Hindmarsh Drive and Canberra Avenue
had been red for 1.64 seconds when the silver Mazda entered the intersection. The
traffic light controlling the intersection of Hindmarsh Drive and Canberra Avenue had
been red for 3.37 seconds when Queanbeyan 37 entered the intersection. The gap
between the silver Mazda and Queanbeyan 37 was approximately 75 m.
39. As the silver Mazda and Queanbeyan 37 entered the intersection of Hindmarsh Drive
and Canberra Avenue against the red light, there were other vehicles waiting to enter
the intersection from Hindmarsh Drive.
40. Queanbeyan 37 continued to pursue the silver Mazda down the hill towards the
intersection with the Monaro Highway. When in the vicinity of the intersection between
Canberra Avenue and Whyalla Street, Mr Jausnik managed to communicate on his
portable radio with the AFP. He reported “Queanbeyan 37, urgent in pursuit in ACT”.
This was the first radio contact that Queanbeyan 37 had with the AFP during the
course of the pursuit. The response from the AFP operator was that he was on an
enquiry channel and he was asked for his location. The reference to being on the
enquiry channel was to indicate that the communication was made on the incorrect
channel because that was a channel for dealing with longer enquiries rather than
operational communications. Mr Jausnik then started to attempt to change to the
correct radio channel.
41. About 300 m prior to the intersection between Ipswich Street and Canberra Avenue, as
Queanbeyan 37 was passing the Canberra South Motor Park, Mr Hannaford took his
foot off the accelerator after he saw that the silver Mazda had gone through the
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intersection of Ipswich Street and Canberra Avenue against the red lights. Even
though Mr Jausnik was looking down, he felt the car slowing.
42. Nine seconds after the conclusion of the first transmission to the AFP, somebody giving
an exclamation transcribed as “Oh, Oh” can be heard in the background before
Mr Jausnik reports “current location Canberra Avenue”. Mr Jausnik looked up and saw
the debris from the collision and what he thought was a spinning vehicle. The operator
was in the process of being told that he needed to go to secure channel number 72
when Mr Jausnik reported the collision.
43. The silver Mazda travelled at high speed through the intersection between Canberra
Avenue and Ipswich Street against a red light. Mr Colin Hill who was turning right from
Ipswich Street into Canberra Avenue in order to travel towards Manuka was just about
to enter the Manuka bound side of the carriageway when the silver Mazda passed at
high speed. He said it was travelling “very fast”. He then heard the sound of the siren
coming from his left and saw a white marked police vehicle approaching which was
also travelling “quite fast”. It also crossed against the red lights and passed in front of
him. He estimated the speed of the police vehicle at around 120 km/h. At about the
same time he heard the impact caused by the collision. Queanbeyan 37 still had its
lights and sirens on when it passed through the intersection.
44. Nineteen seconds after first contacting the AFP, Mr Jausnik reported the collision to the
AFP. This was seven seconds after the “Oh, Oh” is heard on the audio. At some stage
later a report of the accident was made on the NSW Police radio. It appears to be
some time after the report to the AFP because by the time of the report on the NSW
Police radio the officer was aware of two fatalities as a result of the accident. The
report was: “We’ve got a very major accident here. We’ve got two - two deceased.”
This report was approximately three and half minutes after the pursuit was first “called
in” on the NSW Police radio and two minutes since the last communication on the NSW
Police radio.
45. When the officers reached the accident they found a dark blue Mazda which had been
split in two by the accident and two people who appeared to be dead. There were
people yelling and gathering around the car. There was screaming coming from the
silver Mazda which the officers had been pursuing. The driver (Mr Williams) was stuck
in the vehicle and a bystander reported that the passenger (Ms Webbe) still had a
pulse. Mr Jausnik yelled to Mr Hannaford to get some help. Mr Jausnik subsequently
set about getting the baby that was travelling in the blue Mazda out of the vehicle. The
baby was dead.
46. Both Mr Williams and Ms Webbe were taken to the Canberra Hospital. Mr Williams
later died of his injuries. While being conveyed to the Canberra Hospital by ambulance
officers, Mr Williams was abusive and aggressive towards them. He was required to
be restrained while in the ambulance.
47. Following the accident a police investigation took place. That included, on 22 March
2010, both Mr Jausnik and Mr Hannaford participating (separately) in a drive-through of
the route over which the pursuit occurred, answering questions in relation to what
occurred at each point along that route. This process recorded the contemporaneous
recollection of each officer as to what had occurred during the pursuit.
48. The report of Dr Maurice O’Dell, a Senior Forensic Physician at the Victorian Institute
of Forensic Medicine, dated 13 May 2015 (Exhibit 13) identified that Mr Williams had a
11
blood alcohol concentration of 0.154% measured in his blood taken within two hours of
the collision. In the period between the collision and the taking of the blood sample, his
blood alcohol concentration may have altered in either direction depending upon
various identified factors. Dr O’Dell stated the following conclusion in relation to Mr
Williams’ driving ability:
Mr Williams’ ability to have proper control of a motor vehicle would have been seriously degraded to the point of non-existence at a [blood alcohol concentration] of 0.154%. His risk [of] being involved in a collision would be increased by between 10 and 100 times compared to the non-intoxicated state.
The change in police radios
49. At some time after 15 February 2010 and prior to the pursuit on 20 March 2010, New
South Wales police vehicles in the Monaro Local Area Command were fitted with
“Simoco” brand radios. Police radios both before and after the change required a user
to identify both a zone number and a channel number to communicate on a particular
police channel. The change in radios led to a change in the zone and channel
numbers for the AFP. On 15 February 2010 a sergeant, who appears to have had
some responsibility in relation to the implementation of the change, sent an email to
police officers containing instructions on how to change channels and zones on the
new radios. That email included notice that the AFP was no longer in zone 3, but
instead had changed to zone 5. Similarly, it provided the new channel numbers for the
AFP including channel numbers for “North Canberra”, “South Canberra” and an
“Enquiry” channel.
50. On 16 March 2010 the same officer circulated a further email attaching a channel list
relevant to the Monaro Local Area Command. The email requested that the channel
list be printed out and placed in each police vehicle. This included the zone and
channel numbers for the AFP on both Simoco radios (new zone and channel numbers)
and the Motorola radios which they replaced (old zone and channel numbers). The
hand-held radios carried by officers continued to use the old zone and channel
numbers. It is for this reason that Mr Jausnik and Mr Hannaford sought to use their
personal radios during the pursuit after Mr Jausnik was unable to make contact with the
AFP on the vehicle’s new Simoco radio. It is apparent that no such channel list had
been printed out and placed in Queanbeyan 37. Mr Hannaford said in an answer to an
interrogatory that he had read this email and made a “visual note” of it. He did not
receive any further training beyond the provision of the email. Mr Jausnik said that he
had read the email, pasted the section with the AFP channels into a word processing
document and put it in his notebook. Prior to this incident Mr Jausnik had never had to
change over to the AFP channels on the new radios. Neither Mr Jausnik nor Mr
Hannaford had received any training other than what was contained in the emails in
relation to the change in the radios prior to 20 March 2010.
51. In order to establish contact with the AFP from New South Wales both the channel and
zone were required to be changed. To change the channel officers were required to
enter the number of the channel and then press hash (#). To change the zone the
officers were required to press “okay” and then use the up/down arrows on the radio to
scroll to the correct zone. The relevant New South Wales police channels were in
zone 1. In order to communicate with the North Canberra section of the AFP the old
radios communicated via zone 3 channel 71, while the new radios communicated via
zone 5 channel 45.
12
52. At the commencement of the pursuit Mr Jausnik was trying to find the piece of paper in
his notebook which set out the AFP channels for the new radio. On the NSW Police
radio he requested the AFP channel. Another police vehicle, Queanbeyan 35,
responded saying that the AFP channel was zone 3 channel 73. That was clearly
information relevant to the old, rather than the new, vehicle radios. Mr Jausnik then
asked on the radio again for the new radio channel and the audio is consistent with
Mr Jausnik referring to channel 45. While channel 45 was the correct channel using
the Simoco radio, Mr Jausnik did not change the zone on the radio from zone 1 to zone
5. He was not aware that both the zone and the channel had to be changed on the
new radios. As a consequence he was unable to effectively communicate with the AFP
and only managed to contact them when he used his personal radio on the old
channels. That only occurred after the Hindmarsh Drive intersection with Canberra
Avenue as Queanbeyan 37 was travelling down towards the collision site.
Police pursuit policies
53. As at the date of the accident, the AFP had published a document entitled “AFP
National Guideline: ACT Policing: Urgent duty driving and pursuits” (AFP National
Guideline). The document took effect from 7 December 2007. The NSW Police Force
had also published a Safe Driving Policy in November 2009 (NSW SDP). The contents
of the NSW SDP were the subject of an order under s 111(2) of the Evidence
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1992 (ACT) prohibiting their publication. As a
consequence, redactions will be made of these reasons prior to publication on the
internet.
54. Both documents were relied upon in general terms in the particulars of negligence
pleaded by the Nominal Defendant. The Nominal Defendant relied upon both of these
documents as documents which, on their terms, applied to the circumstances of the
pursuit on 20 March 2010 and were relevant to an assessment of whether Mr
Hannaford or the State breached a duty of care owed to Mr Jausnik.
55. Extracts of those documents to which specific reference was made in submissions are
set out in an appendix to these reasons. The key points made by the AFP National
Guideline relevant to the circumstances of the present case are:
(a) “The sworn duty of a police officer to protect life and property will always have
primacy over the need to apprehend offenders, especially when the offence
involved is relatively minor, or where there are safer options other than
immediate apprehension”: paragraph 6.
(b) “The primary responsibility for the initiation and conduct of a pursuit rests with
the member driving the police vehicle”: paragraph 19.b
(c) The driver is obliged to “drive in a manner that prioritises the safety of the
police and public”: paragraph 19.b.i.
(d) Prior to commencing, as well as during a pursuit, members must assess and
continue to reassess the risk to “members of the public, themselves and those
persons in the suspect vehicle”: paragraph 21.h. That exercise includes
considering the danger posed by the suspect vehicle, the nature and
comparative seriousness of the offence and whether there are other
reasonable means available for police to identify or apprehend the relevant
people.
13
(e) A pursuit must be terminated when the value of apprehending an offender is
outweighed by any one of: “the real or potential danger to police, members of
the public or people in the suspect vehicle” having regard to the various
factors including the volume of traffic, the nature and comparative seriousness
of the offence and the speed of the subject vehicle: paragraph 24.
(f) Where there are cross-border pursuits, New South Wales police vehicles
engaged in a pursuit into the ACT are expected to comply with the same
requirements as an AFP vehicle entering New South Wales: paragraph
26(f),(g). Members must also comply with the pursuit driving policy of the
jurisdiction being entered: paragraph 26(i). That requires the police vehicle to
seek permission to continue the pursuit into the other jurisdiction until the
other jurisdiction can resume or terminate the pursuit: paragraph 26(a). If that
permission cannot be obtained or permission to continue the pursuit is
declined then it must be terminated prior to entering the other State or
Territory or, in any case, immediately upon receipt of notification to terminate:
paragraph 26(c).
56. As will be apparent, the terms of the AFP National Guideline are, and are clearly
intended to be, quite restrictive. An emphasis is placed upon ensuring safety over
pursuit of offenders and there are additional significant restrictions on conducting
pursuits across a State or Territory border. Plainly enough, having regard to the
community policing role of the AFP in the Territory, so far as the AFP is concerned the
New South Wales/ACT border is likely to be the principal State or Territory border to
which the statements in the AFP National Guideline applies.
57. [Redacted]
58. [Redacted]
59. A statement of Superintendent Gary Merryweather, Commander of the Monaro Local
Area Command, dated 10 September 2010 provided:
Prior to this incident occurring there was no formal training within the command in relation to interstate pursuit guidelines with the ACT as this was considered to be an on-the-job training process. The process although informal was [effective] as all officers were aware that if they were to engage in a pursuit that travelled into the ACT that they must notify ACT Police Communications.
Testimony to this was that since I took Command in September 2008 there were numerous pursuits that had crossed over into the ACT and on all occasions ACT Communications were notified. In the incident on the 20 March 2010 the officers involved were also in the process of changing channels to ACT Police Communications.
…
Prior to me commencing duties at the Monaro LAC I am not aware of any formal training being provided to police attached to the Command relating to the AFP pursuit guidelines.
Since the incident on the 20 March 2010 the Monaro Command as reviewed the Command induction package for new offices and now has incorporated a component relating to interstate pursuit guidelines.
60. This statement is consistent with the evidence of Mr Hannaford.
61. It is apparent that the Mr Hannaford had only a limited understanding of the
requirements of the AFP National Guideline and NSW SDP. He initially denied that he
was aware that he needed permission to enter the ACT, but later said that he could not
14
recall. He had no recollection of understanding that he was bound by the AFP National
Guidelines. He agreed with the proposition that he was intending to pursue Mr
Williams’ vehicle no matter what speed he was travelling at. He did understand that
the loss of radio contact was itself a reason for terminating the pursuit.
62. Mr Jausnik’s understanding of the obligations when conducting a pursuit was also
relatively limited. It was to adhere to the safe driver policies and that the general
consideration when in pursuit was that “safety of all persons would be number one”.
Mr Jausnik’s understanding of the requirement of the safe driver policy was [redacted].
63. So far as the evidence discloses neither had any current knowledge of the obligation to
terminate a pursuit if contact could not be made with the AFP or the need for the driver
to continually reassess whether it was appropriate to continue the pursuit.
Expert evidence
64. Both parties obtained expert evidence going, inter alia, to the issue of whether, if the
pursuit had been terminated at an earlier time, Mr Williams would have altered his
driving behaviour so that the accident did not occur. The Nominal Defendant relied
upon the expert evidence of Prof Jeffrey Alpert and Mr Peter Hosking. The first third
party relied upon the evidence of Prof Michael Lyman.
Professor Alpert
65. Prof Alpert is Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of South
Carolina. He prepared reports dated 30 October 2014 and 27 April 2015 and gave oral
evidence. After reciting the factual background he provided some general observations
in relation to pursuit principles and best practice. He then expressed “Conclusions and
Opinions”. They included the following:
(a) When suspects flee from police, the suspects are likely to continue running as
long as police continue chasing.
(b) In most cases suspects terminate their flight when the police terminate their
active attempts to apprehend by turning off their emergency equipment and
showing the fleeing suspects that they are safe from the police.
(c) Police should terminate their pursuits when the need to immediately
apprehend the suspect is outweighed by the risk of the chase.
(d) Police officers should be trained in the decision-making process of when to
drive in an emergency and how to evaluate risks versus benefits of emergency
and pursuit driving.
(e) Upon Mr Williams travelling through the red lights at Kendall Avenue the police
should have begun an assessment of risk and benefit of continuing a pursuit.
They should have realised that the need to apprehend the suspect was for
minor traffic offences.
(f) “Although it would have been appropriate to terminate the pursuit shortly after
it began due to the low need to apprehend and the high and increasing risk of
the pursuit, it would have been reasonable to continue the pursuit for a short
period and hope the driver, Mr Williams, would stop.”
(g) “A continued pursuit was reasonable until Mr Williams drove through the
HMAS Harman and Canberra Avenue intersection, and the crest of a hill,
15
1.4 km into the pursuit. At that point the officers should have realised that
Mr Williams was not likely to terminate his flight while being chased and that a
continued chase was unreasonably risky compared to the likelihood of a
successful apprehension of Mr Williams, a traffic offender.”
66. The important conclusion which he reached was:
Had the pursuit been terminated as it passed the HMAS Harman and Canberra Avenue intersection, it is more likely than not that Mr Williams would have felt safe and slowed down within approximately two-three km and the collision would not have occurred. Research on pursuit drivers in the United States indicates that they feel safe and slow down after the police terminate the pursuit and do so in a relatively short period of time.
67. In support of this conclusion he annexed two research articles to which I will return
below. His conclusion was:
The pursuit was a proximate cause of the collision and had the pursuit been terminated at the HMAS Harman and Canberra Avenue intersection where the hill crests (1.4 km into the pursuit), it is more likely than not that the collision would not have occurred.
68. Prof Alpert prepared a supplementary report dated 27 April 2015 in reply to the report
of Prof Lyman.
69. In cross-examination he was asked about various characteristics of Mr Williams which
were not specifically taken into account in expressing his opinion as to what would
have occurred. They were the fact that Mr Williams was an unlicensed driver, was
driving a stolen car, was on bail and had bail conditions, had a high blood-alcohol level,
had a criminal record, was posting Facebook entries hostile to the police and had an
earlier accident when travelling on 160 km/h. (Only the blood-alcohol level was
established by the evidence.) Prof Alpert said:
We know from the aggregate statistics what the likely behaviour of people who flee from the police is. I cannot tell you what he would have done under any condition.
70. It was clear that Prof Alpert’s opinion relied upon the application of aggregate statistics
to the circumstances of Mr Williams. He said:
There is no way we would know what Mr Williams would do individually so what we can do is go to an aggregate analysis of the data which we have done and that leads the conclusion to be that it is more likely than not he would fit into that aggregate for people who fled from the police in what they report.
71. One of the studies relied upon by Prof Alpert used three questions to identify suspects
“more willing to take extreme risks than others to escape police”. He was asked in
cross-examination how those questions would have been answered by Mr Williams. He
said: “Well, that would be an inferential nightmare that I couldn’t do and no one can do
that.”
Mr Hosking
72. Mr Hosking was a former Queensland police officer who at the time of his report was a
Ph.D. candidate in the Griffith University School of Criminology and Criminal Justice.
He prepared two reports, the first dated 5 November 2014, the second dated 27 April
2015. He was requested to comment on Prof Alpert’s report, in particular, the extent to
which the opinions expressed were applicable to Australia. He expressed the opinion
that the conclusions in the report were generally applicable to Australia and expressed
opinions generally consistent with Prof Alpert. He was not aware of any empirical
research conducted in Australia to complement the research referred to in Prof Alpert’s
16
report. He expressed opinions on the adequacy of training provided in relation to
police pursuits and on the change in radio systems. He was not required for cross-
examination.
Professor Lyman
73. Prof Lyman is a professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Human Services
at Columbia College, Missouri. He prepared two reports dated 25 March 2015 and 5
May 2015. In his first report he identified the relevant standards to be adopted by a
pursuing police officer as follows: “Should the officer make the decision to pursue, they
must do so with the utmost care while practising safe and prudent driving.”
74. He made some observations about the adequacy of the training in relation to the newly
installed radios and the radio communications during the pursuit. He appeared to
express the opinion that the AFP National Guideline was complied with. He concluded:
The considerable amount of scrutiny given to this pursuit and the consensus that the pursuit was justified shows that at least in Australia, the National Guideline includes [no mandate for early termination of the pursuit]. In fact, there was no policy in place at the time of this pursuit consistent with Dr Alpert’s or Dr Hosking’s arguments that Hannaford should have terminated the pursuit. Instead, the policies that were in place at the time addressing his operation of the police vehicle were properly observed. Thus any criticism of Hannaford for not terminating the pursuit is unwarranted. So considering what Hannaford knew at the time of the pursuit, and under the circumstances he was faced with at the time, his operations of the New South Wales vehicle was proper, professional and consistent with applicable policies, legislation and the National Guideline.
The research articles
75. The study of which Prof Alpert was a joint author was titled “High-speed pursuit: The
offender’s perspective” (1998) 25(1) Criminal Justice and Behaviour 30-45. It was
based upon interviews conducted with prisoners who had fled from police in a vehicle
within the year before the date of the interview. They were interviewed as to why they
fled from police and were permitted to provide more than one reason. The reasons
provided included driving a stolen car, driving with a suspended drivers licence, running
from a crime scene or to avoid arrest, driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol or
being afraid of being beaten by the police. The critical portion of the article for present
purposes recorded what the interviewees said about what they would have done if they
were not being chased aggressively by the police. The article provides:
In this situation, an aggressive chase was defined as one that involved high risks and evasive manoeuvres. When asked what it would have taken for them to slow down, about 75% said they would have done so only when they felt safe. The suspects reported, on average, that to feel safe, they had to be free from the police show of authority by emergency lights or siren for approximately 2 blocks (2.2) in town, between 2 and 2.5 miles on the highway (2.3 miles), and 2.5 miles on a freeway.
76. Questions were asked as part of a study in order to identify high risk subjects including
the question “were you willing to run at all costs?”.
77. In its application to the present circumstances the article was used to support the
proposition that 75% of persons being pursued by police would slow down within 3.2 to
4 km on a highway (this equates to 2 to 2.5 miles referred to in the study). The site of
the collision was 4.685 km from the border which in turn was 50 m from the Kendall
Avenue intersection. As a consequence the Nominal Defendant submitted that it was
more likely than not that, had the pursuit been terminated at the entrance to HMAS
Harman and prior to the crest of the hill on Canberra Avenue (3.2 to 3.9 km from the
17
site of the accident), Mr Williams would have slowed down prior to the collision
occurring and hence that the collision would not have occurred.
78. Arising out of the terms of the study, Prof Alpert was asked about the identified
motivations of the people the subject of the study. The motivations listed in the study
are referred to above (at [75]). He was asked questions going to whether or not, based
on the study, Mr Williams would have fallen into the 75% that would slow down or the
25% that would not slow down:
A matter, ultimately, that I suppose would be a matter for the court but the court may well infer that if Mr Williams had been the subject of this questionnaire he might have ticked four or five of these items?---He might have, yes, sir.
And that would put him in a very small minority of the cohort. Correct?---Yes, sir.
And that would be indicative of him being an extreme example of a fleeing driver within the cohort. Do you agree with that?---It could, yes, sir.
So, if we then go to page 38 of the report, which is 255. When we talk about the 75 per cent of people who would have slowed down if there had been an ostensible ceasing of the pursuit; that is, not only police pulling over but also lights off et cetera?---Yes, sir.
That obviously, the 75 per cent, factors in the whole of the cohort? Correct?---Yes, sir.
And does that permit us to conclude that 25 per cent would do something different?---Yes, sir. We gave them categories to answer and 75 per cent said they would slow down within the prescribed limits that we talked about and the other 25 would do something else, yes.
Given your agreement with my proposition earlier that Mr Williams could be described as someone who's an extreme case within the cohort, do you accept that that makes it more likely than not that he would be outside the 75 per cent of people who would stop?---I can't do that. I can't make that assumption. I mean he could be or he could not.
79. The other paper that was annexed to Prof Alpert’s report was a paper presented to the
Annual Meeting of the International Association of Chiefs of Police in October 2014. It
related to the use of a tracking technology known as “StarChase” which permitted
vehicles which were fleeing from police to be tagged and tracked by a GPS unit. The
paper was only of marginal relevance to the circumstances of the present case.
Because of the data acquired during GPS tracking of vehicles it was possible to
measure the time from deployment of the GPS tag until the vehicle returned to within
10 mph of the posted speed limit. The paper described a number of case studies in
which the period from deployment of the GPS to being within 10 mph of the posted
speed limit was measured. Only very limited use could be made of this information
because of the variety of circumstances in which the device was deployed. No general
conclusions as to the period during which a fleeing vehicle would continue to flee after
a pursuit was terminated were identified or could be drawn from the data in the report.
Issues
80. In order to determine the outcome of the present case it is necessary to address the
following issues:
(a) What law applies to the resolution of this claim?
(b) Was the Nominal Defendant liable to Mr Jausnik?
(c) Did the State breach its duty of care to Mr Jausnik?
(d) Did Mr Hannaford breach his duty of care to Mr Jausnik?
18
(e) Would the accident have occurred but for the breach of duty?
(f) What is the relevant apportionment as between the defendant and the third
parties?
What law applies to the resolution of this claim?
81. The Nominal Defendant filed a single third-party notice and statement of claim for the
purposes of its claim against Mr Hannaford and the State. The statement of claim
provided: “The defendant claims a contribution from the first and second third parties.”
Nowhere in the statement of claim was the statutory basis for the entitlement to
contribution identified. In the circumstances of this case the source of such an
obligation could be either s 21 of the CLW Act 2002 or s 5 of the LRMP Act. Section
21 of the CLW Act provides:
(1) A person (the First person) who is liable for damage caused by a wrong can recover contribution from someone else (a contributory) who is also liable for the same damage.
(2) The contribution must be an amount that the court considers just and equitable having regard to the extent of the contributory’s responsibility for the damage.
(3) However, the first person is not entitled to contribution under this section if—
(a) the first person is liable to indemnify the contributory against the contributory’s liability for the damage; or
(b) the court exempts the contributory from liability to make contribution; or
(c) the court has directed that contribution to be recovered from a person for the damage is a complete indemnity for the damage.
82. “Wrong” is defined in s 19 as an “act or omission that gives rise to a liability in tort in
relation to which a defence of contributory negligence is available at common law or
such an act or omission which amounts to a breach of a contractual duty of care that is
concurrent and coextensive with a duty of care in tort.”
83. Section 5 of the LRMP Act provides:
5 Proceedings against and contribution between joint and several tort-feasors
(1) Where damage is suffered by any person as a result of a tort (whether a crime or not):
...
(c) any tort-feasor liable in respect of that damage may recover contribution from any other tort-feasor who is, or would if sued have been, liable in respect of the same damage, whether as a joint tort-feasor or otherwise, so, however, that no person shall be entitled to recover contribution under this section from any person entitled to be indemnified by that person in respect of the liability in respect of which the contribution is sought.
(2) In any proceedings for contribution under this section the amount of the contribution recoverable from any person shall be such as may be found by the court to be just and equitable having regard to the extent of that person’s responsibility for the damage; and the court shall have power to exempt any person from liability to make contribution, or to direct that the contribution to be recovered from any person shall amount to a complete indemnity.
...
84. Senior Counsel for Mr Hannaford raised the possibility that the proceedings were within
federal jurisdiction for a variety of reasons. This was first because Mr Hannaford relied
upon a “right” as a special member of the AFP to pursue Mr Williams and this was a
19
right derived from federal law and hence a matter arising under a law made by the
Parliament for the purposes of s 76(ii) of the Constitution. No such right was pleaded.
Reference was made to the fact that Mr Hannaford was a special member of the AFP
(AFP Act s 40E), that “police services” are provided in the Territory by the AFP (AFP
Act s 8(1A)) and that the “police services” “includes services by way of the prevention
of crime and the protection of persons from injury or death, and property from damage,
whether arising from criminal acts or otherwise”. Those matters, individually or
collectively, do not mean that the proceedings arose under the provisions referred to in
the sense required by s 76(ii): LNC Industries Ltd v BMW (Australia) Ltd [1983] HCA
31; (1983) 151 CLR 575 at 581. Rather, as the case was pleaded, they merely formed
the background against which any relevant duty of care is to exist: cf Australian Capital
Territory v Crowley [2012] ACTCA 52; (2012) 273 FLR 370 at [270]ff (Crowley).
85. Second, the matter was said to be in federal jurisdiction because the Nominal
Defendant was a resident of the ACT and suing Mr Hannaford (presumed to be a
resident of NSW) and hence within the scope of s 75(iv) of the Constitution. This
contention could not be correct because the Nominal Defendant is not a “resident” of “a
State”. That is because the Australian Capital Territory is not a “State” and because
the Nominal Defendant is not a natural person and hence not a “resident” for the
purposes of s 75(iv): Crouch v Commissioner of Railways (Q) [1985] HCA 69; (1985)
159 CLR 22; British American Tobacco Australia Ltd v Western Australia [2003] HCA
47; (2003) 217 CLR 30 at [37].
86. No submission was made to the effect that because the underlying claim by Mr Jausnik
was a common law claim the “matter”, including the claims for contribution, was one
arising under a law made by the Parliament because of the statutory basis for the
application of the common law in the Territory (O’Neill v Mann [2000] FCA 1180; (2000)
101 FCR 160); M Leeming Authority to Decide (Federation Press, 2012) at 25-26. This
is an issue referred to but not decided in Crosby v Kelly [2012] FCAFC 96; (2012) 203
FCR 451 at [46].
87. If the matter was in federal jurisdiction, s 80 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) must be
applied before recourse is had to s 79 of that Act: Blunden v Commonwealth [2003]
HCA 73; (2003) 218 CLR 330 at 339. Section 80 would pick up the common law
choice of law rules in any event. No party contended that if the matter was in federal
jurisdiction it would make any practical difference to the issue as to which law should
be applied to the claim. Because of the very limited submissions on the issue, its
complexity and its lack of practical consequence in the present case, I do not attempt
to finally determine it.
88. Because of the identity of the parties and the location in which the various matters
relevant to a claim for contribution occurred, the claim could be governed by the law of
the ACT or of New South Wales. In the light of the terms of s 21 of the CLW Act and s
5 of the LRMP Act it may not ultimately make a difference which provision applies to
the claims made by the Nominal Defendant in this case. As a consequence, it may be
possible to avoid any issue as to which applies. However, in order to identify whether
that is the case and to understand what, if any, issue is being avoided, it is necessary
to say something more about the choice of law in a case such as this.
89. Surprisingly, the relevant choice of law rule to be applied to claims for contribution or
indemnity is not settled. There are at least four possible rules.
20
First approach: quasi-contract rule
90. First is the approach explained by Bray CJ in Nominal Defendant v Bagot’s Executor
and Trustee Company Ltd [1971] SASR 346 at 365-366 (Bagot). This approach
characterises the obligation as one of quasi-contract, namely, like an obligation arising
out of a contract, but not dependent upon any consensus of the parties.
91. Atiyah described quasi-contract as “a heterogeneous collection of cases [that]
themselves have little more in common than the fact that one person is held obliged to
restore or pay for some benefit received from another in order that a just result should
be reached in the circumstances of the case”: PS Atiyah An Introduction to the Law of
Contract (Oxford University Press, 3rd ed, 1981) at 35.
92. In Bagot the NSW Nominal Defendant had paid a judgment obtained against it arising
out of the driving of a vehicle in New South Wales by a South Australian driver. The
relevant NSW statutory provision was one which created a statutory debt in favour of
the Nominal Defendant against the owner of the motor vehicle out of which the claim
against the Nominal Defendant arose. The approach adopted by Bray CJ was that the
statutory provision created an obligation characterised as quasi-contract. As a result,
his Honour identified the relevant choice of law rule as that being applicable in relation
to quasi-contract namely “the law of the place with which the circumstances giving rise
to the claim have the most real connection”: Bagot at 366. In the circumstances of that
case, which involved a claim for indemnity by the NSW Nominal Defendant from the
estate of a person who lived in South Australia, Bray CJ found that the place with the
closest connection was NSW because that was where the accident occurred and
where the injured passenger acquired his right of action.
93. His Honour adopted a similar approach in Hodge v Club Motor Insurance Agency Pty
Ltd (1974) 7 SASR 86 (Hodge) which involved an accident in South Australia and a
Queensland statute which imposed a liability for damages directly upon the insurer of a
motor vehicle. His Honour characterised the obligation as quasi-contractual even
though the statute was imposing upon the insurer direct liability for conduct amounting
to a tort: Hodge at 89-90.
94. These two decisions of Bray CJ were referred to with approval by the High Court in
Sweedman v Transport Accident Commission [2006] HCA 8; (2006) 226 CLR 362 at
[29] (Sweedman).
95. Adopting a formulation based on the closest connection inevitably gives rise to the
potential for a dispute to arise as to which place fits this description, particularly where
it is possible to place differing weight on connecting factors in any particular case.
That is illustrated by the differing approaches in Sweedman, with the plurality judgment
characterising the claim for indemnity as connected more closely to Victoria (at [30]),
yet Callinan J reaching the opposite conclusion (at [120]).
Second approach: lex loci delicti rule
96. Second is the approach adopted by Allen M in Baldry v Jackson [1977] 1 NSWLR 494
(Baldry). His Honour did not follow the approach taken by Bray CJ, saying “[t]he claim
is to be classified, in my opinion, as a delictual claim for the purposes of private
international law. That, rather than quasi-contract, is the substantial character of the
claim.” That was because the focus of the claim was on whether the party against
whom the claim for contribution was made was guilty of a tort and, if so, the extent of
21
that party’s responsibility in order to work out a just and equitable contribution to the
amount paid by the party claiming contribution. In other words, it applies the choice of
law rule that would be applicable to the tort alleged to have been committed by the
persons from whom contribution was claimed against the injured party. Having regard
to the decision in John Pfeiffer Pty Ltd v Rogerson [2000] HCA 36; (2000) 203 CLR
503, this approach would apply the law of the lex loci delicti of the tort alleged to have
been committed by the person from whom contribution was claimed.
97. The approach in Baldry was criticised in Redbro Investments Pty Ltd v Ceva Logistics
(Australia) Pty Ltd [2015] NSWCA 73 at [18]. It also appears to be now inconsistent
with the decision of the High Court in Sweedman. Sweedman involved a statutory
provision which gave an entitlement to the Commission to indemnity for amounts paid
by the Commission to the extent “appropriate to the degree to which the injury was
attributable to the default or negligence” of the person from whom indemnity was
sought. A majority of the Court (at [27]) appeared to accept that “[t]he choice of law
rule in tort had no direct role to play”. Justice Callinan, who dissented in Sweedman,
adopted an analysis of the substance of the action consistent with the approach in
Baldry: Sweedman at [112]-[119].
Third approach: source of the obligation to compensate
98. Third is the approach contended for in Nygh’s Conflict of Laws in Australia (9th ed,
2014) which adopts the law of the place which imposes the obligation on the party
seeking contribution to pay the injured party damages. It chooses this law because it is
the source of the compulsion upon the person seeking contribution to compensate the
underlying claimant in full. It is this obligation which gives rise to the unfairness if there
are others responsible for the same damage. The rule is identified as having the
benefit of certainty and providing the same outcome no matter where the underlying
claim is brought. This appears to have been the position contended for in submissions
made by the State of Victoria in Sweedman, but which it was unnecessary for the
majority to decide: see Sweedman at [31]; Kourakis “Sweedman v Transport Accident
Commission: A simple crash and bang?” (2007) 28 Adelaide Law Review 23 at 31-32.
Fourth approach: the legislation with the closest territorial nexus
99. Fourth is a constitutional solution to determining which law is applicable such as that
proposed by Christopher Kourakis (when his Honour was Solicitor General), which
would have the effect that where there is an inconsistency between State statutes, the
statute with greater territorial nexus will prevail: see “Sweedman v Transport Accident
Commission: A simple crash and bang?” (2007) 28 Adelaide Law Review 23 at 39-46.
That would have the effect that “[t]he legislature of the place in which the conduct that
the competing enactments seek to regulate takes place will almost always have a
closer territorial nexus than the legislature of the place in which the consequences of
that conduct become manifest”. He did, however, recognise that identifying a single
place will not always be a simple task.
100. Although not addressed by Mr Kourakis, further issues would arise in relation to
conflicts between State laws and the laws of a territory deriving their force from s 122.
Although, on one view, laws derived from s122 should prevail, a result could be
achieved whereby conflicts between the law of a State and the law of a Territory are
treated in the same manner as conflicts between State and State: see G Lindell and A
Mason “The resolution of inconsistent State and territory legislation” (2010) 38(3) Fed L
Rev 390; M Leeming Resolving Conflicts of Laws (Federation Press, 2011) at 242-246.
22
The present case
101. This tentative examination of the different approaches and the issues that would arise
tends to demonstrate the unfortunate truth of the statement that private international
law is “a dismal swamp, filled with quaking quagmires, and inhabited by learned but
eccentric professors who theorise about mysterious matters in a strange and
102. Is it possible to avoid the issue and hence avoid entering this “dismal swamp”? The
answer to that question will be influenced by whether the four possible approaches
would lead to different approaches to the claims made against Mr Hannaford and
NSW.
103. Upon the first approach the law applicable to the claim for contribution from
Mr Hannaford and the State would be as follows. In relation to Mr Hannaford, the place
with which the circumstances giving rise to the claim against him have the most real
connection is clearly the ACT. Any negligence occurred in the ACT as did the incidents
giving rise to damage. In relation to the State, the place with which the circumstances
giving rise to the claim have the most real connection is less clear. The negligence
occurred in NSW, the injury caused by the negligence occurred in the ACT.
104. Upon the second approach the inquiry is as to the lex loci delicti of the tort committed
by the tortfeasor from whom contribution is claimed. The tort occurs where the
negligent act or omission of the defendant occurs: Electro Optic Systems Pty Ltd v New
South Wales [2012] ACTSC 184 at [292]-[295]; Dow Jones & Co Inc v Gutnick [2002]
HCA 56; (2002) 210 CLR 575 at [43]; Voth v Manildra Flour Mills Pty Ltd [1990] HCA
55; (1990) 171 CLR 538 at 567; M Davies, A Bell and P Brereton (eds) Nygh’s Conflict
of Laws in Australia (LexisNexis Butterworths, 14th ed, 2014) at [20.9]; cf Hodgson v
Dimbola Pty Ltd [2009] ACTSC 59 at [16]. In the case of the claim against Mr
Hannaford, the lex loci delicti was the ACT as that is where the driving and negligence
occurred and (if it was relevant) the incident giving rise to damage occurred.
105. In the case of the claim against the State, the negligence occurred in NSW as a result
of the failure to provide appropriate training or equipment. Adopting the test articulated
above, the acts involved in the transition to the new radio system and any failures
associated with that occurred in NSW. So too did any failures associated with training
officers in relation to the cross-border pursuit policies and guidelines. As a
consequence NSW law would apply to the Nominal Defendant’s claim for contribution.
The position is, in any event, made clear by s 182D of the Workers Compensation Act
1951 (ACT) and s 150A of the Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW), which require
that the substantive law of New South Wales govern the claim.
106. Upon the third approach the law of the place giving rise to the obligation upon the party
paying compensation to the injured person is clearly the ACT, because that is the law
which creates the Nominal Defendant and imposes liability on it in relation to claims
arising from certain accidents in the ACT. Therefore the law applicable to the claim
against Mr Hannaford and the State would be the law of the ACT.
107. The fourth approach would only be triggered if there was an inconsistency between
statutes, which has not been identified in the present case. Adopting the position that
the legislature of the place in which the conduct that the competing enactments seek to
regulate takes place will almost always have a closer territorial nexus than the
23
legislature of the place in which the consequences of that conduct become manifest
would lead, in Mr Hannaford’s case, to the ACT law applying. In the claim against the
State, the outcome would depend upon whether the focus was upon the quasi-
contractual obligation to contribute or upon the tortious conduct which enlivens that
obligation. The former would indicate the ACT the latter NSW.
108. Clearly, having regard to the decision in Sweedman, notwithstanding the criticisms of
that decision, it would be appropriate to follow it. It is consistent with following the
decisions of Bray CJ characterising the obligation to contribute as quasi-contractual
and adopting a “closest connection” test. Yet, whichever approach is adopted, the law
applicable to the claim against Mr Hannaford is the law of the ACT. In relation to the
claim against the State, even adopting the first approach, it could be either the ACT or
NSW.
109. The Nominal Defendant and the State agreed with each other that NSW law applied.
The precise rationale for that conclusion was not exposed. As pointed out in Redbro at
[15] such an agreement does not bind the Court. However, in the circumstances of this
case and having regard to the similarity of the obligation, I will proceed on the basis
identified by the parties because it makes no difference to the analysis or the ultimate
conclusion reached. The effect of this approach is that s 21 of the CLW Act applies to
the claim against Mr Hannaford and s 5 of the LRMP Act applies to the claim against
the State. When applying those provisions, however, the question of the underlying
tortious liability must be determined by reference to the law that would have applied
had they been sued by Mr Jausnik. As it happens, those claims would follow the same
pattern. In the case of Mr Hannaford tortious liability would be determined in
accordance with the law of the ACT and in the case of the claim against the State, in
accordance with the law of NSW.
Was the Nominal Defendant liable to Mr Jausnik?
110. The threshold for the operation of either contribution provision is that the Nominal
Defendant was in fact liable to Mr Jausnik. The law applicable to Mr Jausnik’s claim
against the Nominal Defendant was that of the ACT because that is where the breach
of any relevant duty occurred and where damage was (initially) suffered.
111. The damage to Mr Jausnik was pure mental harm. Section 34 of the CLW Act provides
that a defendant does not owe a duty of care to a plaintiff to take care not to cause the
plaintiff mental harm unless a reasonable person in the defendant’s position would
have foreseen that a person of normal fortitude in the plaintiff’s position might, in the
circumstances of the case, suffer a recognised psychiatric illness if reasonable care
were not taken: s 34(1). Mental harm means an impairment of the person’s mental
condition: s 32. Section 34(1) does not alter the duty of care if the defendant knows or
ought reasonably to know that the plaintiff is a person of less than normal fortitude. In
other words, s 34(1) has the effect that, in the absence of knowledge or constructive
knowledge that the plaintiff is a person of less than normal fortitude, the question of
foreseeability must be determined by reference to “a person of normal fortitude in the
plaintiff’s position”.
112. Applied in the present circumstances, what must be shown is that Mr Williams should
have foreseen that Mr Jausnik might suffer a recognised psychiatric illness as a result
of Mr Jausnik being required to attend to persons suffering injuries caused by
Mr Williams’ negligent driving. Put as a general proposition the question becomes:
should a negligent driver have foreseen that a police officer of normal fortitude,
24
attending the scene of an accident caused by the driver involving the death and injury
caused in the present case, might suffer mental harm? When so expressed the
answer is clearly “yes”. It is reasonably foreseeable that a police officer may suffer
mental harm when attending the scene of an accident such as occurred here. The
threshold imposed by s 34 is passed.
113. The other matters necessary to establish the liability of the Nominal Defendant to Mr
Jausnik can be dealt with briefly.
114. In my view, the duty of a driver extends to persons who may suffer mental harm as a
consequence of his or her negligent driving. Clearly there was negligent driving on Mr
Williams’ part in the present case.
115. The evidence in the report of Dr Barry dated 25 October 2011 establishes that Mr
Jausnik suffered damage in the form of post-traumatic stress disorder and depression
as a consequence of what he saw and otherwise experienced at the site of the
accident and was, at that stage, unlikely to become fit for work in the foreseeable
future.
116. The plaintiff’s claim was particularised at almost $2.1 million. It was settled for $1.225
million. No submissions were made contesting the reasonableness of the settlement
entered into by the Nominal Defendant. I accept that it was liable for the amount for
which judgment was entered.
Did the State breach its duty of care to Mr Jausnik?
117. The State owed Mr Jausnik a duty to take reasonable care to avoid exposing him to
unnecessary risks of injury. The duty that the State owed to a police officer and the
relevant authorities are usefully summarised in the decision in Grills v Leighton
Contractors Pty Ltd [2015] NSWCA 72 at [131]-[136].
118. Although the existence of a duty was not admitted on the pleadings, in final
submissions the State accepted that it owed Mr Jausnik a duty of care. The State also
accepted that it had an obligation to train its officers in relation to the operation of
features of the motor vehicle being driven, including the radio. It did not address
particular submissions to training in relation to cross-border police duties and pursuits.
However, in my view, having regard to the proximity of the ACT border and the regular
necessity for officers stationed in Queanbeyan to undertake activities across the
border, the duty of care of the State extended to ensuring that the officers’ training
extended to the protocols to be followed when involved in a cross-border pursuit.
119. I do not accept the submission of the Nominal Defendant that the duty of care owed by
the State to Mr Jausnik was influenced by the scope of the duty that might be owed by
the State to persons travelling home from the “Skyfire” fireworks event that had recently
concluded at the time of the pursuit. The relevant question is the scope of the duty to
Mr Jausnik not to the public at large.
120. The principal contention of the State was that the Nominal Defendant’s analysis on the
question of breach did not extend to demonstrating what would have occurred had
there been no breach so as to permit a comparison between that situation and what
occurred. I will return to that issue below when considering causation.
121. In my view, the State breached its duty of care to Mr Jausnik in two ways. First, it
failed to take reasonable steps which were available to it to ensure that, upon the
25
installation of the new radio system within police vehicles, officers were appropriately
instructed both as to the method of operation as well as in relation to the actual
changes to channel and zone numbers.
122. As pointed out above at [49] and [50], the principal means of communicating the
consequences of the change in radio systems were two emails. The sending of the
two emails to officers was not sufficient to provide an appropriate level of training of
those officers. While those emails provided instructions as to the changes there was
nothing done to ensure that officers understood how that should be applied in practice
so that they could competently use the new system when under the pressures of
operational duties. Understanding often involves doing and there was nothing done to
ensure that a functional level of understanding was achieved.
123. Further, while there was an instruction to place the new channel list behind the visor in
each vehicle, there was no evidence of any system allocating actual responsibility for
that task to anyone in particular or to ensure that it actually occurred.
124. Radio communication is obviously fundamental to safe (and effective) policing
operations. Radio communication will routinely be required to occur in circumstances
of significant adversity due to time pressures or other stressors upon the relevant
officers. With a significant number of officers involved in the change to the new radio
system there was a reasonably foreseeable risk that an officer might come to harm if
the officer was unable to effectively use the radio system under adverse
circumstances. A safe system of work would have involved sufficient training to ensure
that the radio could be tuned to the correct channel. Specific training on that issue was
important having regard to the change in channel and zone numbers. That was not
achieved by the emails sent. In my view, the failure to put in place a system which
ensured that officers were able to use the radio so as to communicate with the AFP
was a breach of the State’s duty to Mr Jausnik.
125. Second, the State failed to provide any sufficient training to Mr Jausnik or
Mr Hannaford as to the circumstances in which it was appropriate to continue a cross-
border pursuit from NSW to the ACT. Mr Hannaford gave evidence that he had never
received training in relation to the AFP National Guidelines. He had seen an abridged
version of the NSW SDP in what he referred to as the “Police Handbook”. [Redacted].
126. For officers stationed in Queanbeyan, having regard to the physical relationship
between Queanbeyan and the ACT, cross-border activities must have been an obvious
and not uncommon part of their duties. It was for that reason that both such officers
were special members of the AFP. It was reasonably foreseeable that a lack of
knowledge of the circumstances in which cross-border pursuits should be undertaken
and, if so, the conditions upon which they should be undertaken, would expose the
officers to a risk of injury. Neither officer had an operational understanding of the
following policies contained in the AFP National Guidelines:
(a) The emphasis on pursuit as a last resort;
(b) The constant need to reassess whether continuing the pursuit was
appropriate; and
(c) The need to terminate a pursuit if radio contact could not be made.
127. [Redacted]
26
128. As a consequence, I find that the particulars of negligence identified in (i), (ii) and (vii)
(the terms of which are set out at [12] above) are made out.
129. I am not satisfied that the balance of the particulars of negligence (the terms of which
are set out at [12] above) are made out because:
(a) In relation to particular (iii), only limited information was conveyed to the NSW
Police radio and, in accordance with [redacted] AFP National Guidelines,
authority to control the pursuit was in the hands of the AFP.
(b) In relation to particular (iv), in so far as this particular goes beyond the matters
in particulars (i) and (iii), it fails to have regard to the fact that in some
circumstances the pursuit of vehicles at dangerous speeds, in a dangerous
manner or in a way that placed persons at risk of harm, would be justified.
(c) In relation to particular (v), I am not satisfied that Mr Jausnik made any request
to Mr Hannaford to terminate the pursuit: see [139] below.
(d) In relation to particular (vi), I am not satisfied that there was such a failure on
the part of the State or that, if there was, Mr Hannaford did not consider that
he was taking reasonable care in the circumstances.
130. The State did not contend that s 30 of the CLW Act precluded recovery of damages for
the mental harm suffered by Mr Jausnik. That section requires that the plaintiff witness
at the scene the victim being “killed, injured or put in peril”. In Wicks v State Rail
Authority (NSW) [2010] HCA 22; (2010) 241 CLR 60 the Court held that for the
purposes of s 30 a person is put in peril when put at risk and remains in peril until the
person ceases to be at risk. Thus, in that case, police officers arriving at the scene of
the railway accident satisfied the requirements of s 30 because there were some living
survivors of the accident who remained in peril until removed from the wreckage. In
the present case the requirements of s 30 were satisfied because Mr Jausnik observed
Mr Williams and Ms Webbe alive and in peril at the scene. That, in my view, would be
sufficient to satisfy the section. Had more been necessary, there would have been a
question of whether or not Mr Jausnik had also observed those in the Oppelaar car
being killed. Although when Queanbeyan 37 was approaching the intersection Mr
Jausnik was concentrating on the radio and only looked up in response to Mr
Hannaford’s exclamation, he saw at the intersection what he described as “dust and
debris” and thought he could see a “car spinning”. The issue would be whether that
was sufficient to satisfy the requirement of s 30(2)(a), in particular whether this satisfied
the requirement that Mr Jausnik “witnessed at the scene [the occupants of the
Oppelaar vehicle] being killed”. Whether or not that requirement was satisfied would
depend upon whether the words of s 30(2)(a) require observation of the person who is
being “killed” as that is occurring or whether observation of the accident without
sighting the person is sufficient. Neither Wicks nor King v Philcox [2015] HCA 19;
(2015) 255 CLR 304 (which related to a statute which used different terms) resolve this
issue.
131. I will consider what would have occurred had the State complied with its duty of care to
Mr Jausnik below when I consider whether or not these breaches caused the accident.
Did Mr Hannaford breach his duty of care to Mr Jausnik?
132. In considering whether Mr Hannaford breached his duty of care to Mr Jausnik the
starting point is that Mr Hannaford was the driver of a vehicle in which Mr Jausnik was
27
the passenger. However, of equal significance is the fact that both were police officers
acting in the course of their duty.
133. The factual circumstances of the present case are in many respects similar to that
which arose for consideration in Johnstone v Woolmer (1977) 16 ACTR 6 (Johnstone),
a decision of this Court. In that case police had engaged in a pursuit of another
vehicle. The driver of the other vehicle braked suddenly and the police vehicle crashed
into it. The plaintiff was a passenger in the police vehicle and sued the driver of the
other vehicle. The driver of the other vehicle sought a contribution from the driver of
the police vehicle on the basis that the driver had been negligent. Joske J addressed a
submission based upon the operation of the Motor Traffic Ordinance 1936 (ACT),
which exempted from its provisions the driver of a motor vehicle conveying a member
of the police force on urgent duty connected with the prevention or investigation of an
offence or the apprehension of offenders against the law. His Honour held that the
effect of the provision was to exempt the police officer from liabilities created by the
Ordinance but did not relieve him from common law liability for negligence. His Honour
said (at 9-10):
It does not give the police officer an absolute right to travel as he chooses on the road. The duty of the police officer to suppress crime does not entitle him to be negligent in the course of suppressing crime. He is only entitled to the exemption of the statute in so far as the statute goes and no further. Whatever his views as to it being reasonable for him to take risks to carry out his duties, if in doing so he shows an absence of reasonable care which causes injury he is civilly liable in respect of that injury.
134. I do not take Johnstone as going further than denying that a provision such as was
there in question gave rise to any exemption from civil liability. It leaves open in any
particular case the question of whether or not the police officer was taking reasonable
care having regard to the functions that were being performed and the particular
exigencies of the circumstances in which a breach of duty is alleged. Thus the
decision is not inconsistent with later decisions which, in more unusual circumstances,
deny the existence of a duty of care because it would be inconsistent with the
performance of police functions, for example, New South Wales v Fahy [2007] HCA 20;
135. Notwithstanding that both were police officers and acting in the course of their duty, Mr
Hannaford had a duty to his fellow officer to drive safely. Mr Hannaford submitted that
the existence of such a duty would be inconsistent with statutory duties placed upon
him by either the Police Act 1990 (NSW) or the AFP Act. I do not accept that
submission. First, there is no obvious inconsistency between the general statutory
obligations and the existence of a duty of care. As I have pointed out above, the
content of the duty of care may have to accommodate itself to the circumstances of
police work, but that is different from there being an inconsistency between a statutory
obligation and any duty of care. Second, I do not accept that a duty could not exist
because it “would be inconsistent with, or have a tendency to discourage, the due
performance by” an officer of his duties: New South Wales v Tyszyk [2008] NSWCA
107 at [125]. Cases such as Crowley, Tyszyk and Sullivan v Moody [2001] HCA 59;
(2001) 207 CLR 562 are directed to taking care to limit the scope of a duty of care
owed by a person exercising police or other investigatory powers to a person being
investigated so as to ensure that any such duty remains consistent with the function
that the investigator is performing. In the present case the relevantly analogous
proposition would be to treat with caution any claim of a duty of care owed by Mr
28
Hannaford to Mr Williams. The cases do not address circumstances analogous to this
situation, namely, the existence of a duty between police officers. Having said that, if
there was some reason why a duty of any particular scope would be inconsistent with
the proper and effective discharge of Mr Hannaford’s functions then that would provide
a basis for not accepting a duty of that scope.
136. The relationship between driver and passenger is a commonly arising situation
involving the existence of a duty of care. There is no necessary inconsistency between
the duty of a police officer to a passenger in the vehicle and the driver’s duty as a
police officer. Such a duty is consistent with the decision in Johnstone. Having regard
to the terms of the NSW SDP, a policy produced by the NSW Police Force itself,
driving in accordance with that policy cannot be characterised as being inconsistent
with the proper and effective discharge by Mr Hannaford of his functions. For reasons
similar to those elaborated at [111]-[112] above that duty extended to protection
against damages arising from pure mental harm such as that suffered by Mr Jausnik.
137. In the present case, although the plaintiff pointed in submissions to aspects of Mr
Hannaford’s driving which might be considered dangerous, most notably, his speed
and travelling through red lights, the relevant aspects of Mr Hannaford’s driving are
those which were alleged to be causally related to Mr Williams’ collision.
138. The particularised negligence is relevantly that in (i), (ii) (v) (vi) (vii) (viii) set out at [10]
above.
139. In so far as particulars (iii) and (iv) are predicated upon a factual conclusion that Mr
Jausnik had made a request of Mr Hannaford to terminate the pursuit, I do not accept
that the factual predicate is established. The basis for the pleading was the statement
of the plaintiff recorded in May 2010 by his solicitors. That document recorded that
after Mr Jausnik had communicated to the NSW Police radio that he was going to
change to the AFP channel he was not getting any response from that channel. It
continues: “Then I said to Mick at some point there, ‘I think you’re going to have to stop
mate, I’m not getting anything’ and he said, ‘No, no, we’ve got this far.’ Then he went
for his portable and I went for mine…” Mr Hannaford gave evidence that there was no
such conversation. The statement recorded from May 2010 was inconsistent with the
evidence of Mr Jausnik during the drive-through immediately following the accident in
which he said that he did not feel uncomfortable with Mr Hannaford’s driving and could
not recall asking him to do anything in relation to his driving. Having regard to the
proximity of the drive-through to the events in question and the psychological effects of
the incident upon him, I consider it more likely that he made no request of Mr
Hannaford to stop.
140. The contentious issue between the parties is whether Mr Hannaford’s duty extended to
ceasing the pursuit at an earlier stage because of the risks involved in continuing it.
That is to be determined in accordance with ss 42, 43 and 44 of the CLW Act.
141. Clearly a high-speed pursuit of another vehicle on trafficked roads and crossing
intersections was a dangerous activity, even for a properly trained driver. It was
dangerous not only because it exposed those in the police vehicle to a risk of injury, but
also because it gave rise to a risk of injury to persons in the pursued vehicle as well as
other people on or about the road. Relevant to the present issue is the risk created for
passengers travelling in the vehicle. The factor which might lead to the continuation of
the pursuit being considered to be reasonable is that both Mr Hannaford and Mr
Jausnik were police officers. However, because of the obvious dangers arising from
29
police pursuits the NSW SDP and AFP National Guideline have been developed to
make clear the qualifications upon any perceived duty upon officers to pursue
offenders. The policy and guidelines identify, so far as the respective police forces are
concerned, the appropriate balance between the desirability of pursuing offenders and
the need to protect life and property from the dangers that arise from police engaging in
pursuits.
142. Compliance with the terms of these documents will not necessarily be determinative of
whether or not an officer is exercising reasonable care. There may be circumstances
in which it is reasonable for police officers to continue pursuits, including cross border
pursuits, in circumstances which were contrary to AFP National Guideline or NSW
SDP. Similarly, it may be that there are circumstances in which pursuits that comply
with the policy or guidelines would be found to involve a breach of a duty of care.
143. However, in circumstances where they are not complied with then, having regard to the
fact that the AFP National Guideline and NSW SDP are policy documents created by
the respective police forces themselves as representing appropriate standards, that will
be a strong indication that the conduct involved a breach of a duty to a person to whom
a duty is owed.
144. Mr Hannaford ought reasonably to have been aware of the key points of the NSW SDP
and the AFP National Guideline. At the point when he gave evidence, his
understanding of those documents was minimal (see [61] above). As I have pointed
out above in relation to the claim against the State, this was largely because of a lack
of training.
145. In my view, Mr Hannaford breached his duty to Mr Jausnik by:
(a) continuing to pursue Mr Williams’ vehicle in circumstances where no contact
had been made with the AFP; and
(b) failing to terminate the pursuit when the danger of its continuation clearly
outweighed the need to pursue the vehicle.
146. These breaches fell within (ii), (v) and (vi) of the particulars of negligence pleaded.
147. It was faintly submitted by Mr Hannaford that, because he was a special member of the
AFP, he was not required to comply with the cross-border protocols. I do not accept
that submission. Although not specifically addressed in the NSW SDP or AFP National
Guideline, I consider that provisions of those documents relating to cross-border
pursuits are intended to apply to officers in fact based in one jurisdiction travelling into
another even if they hold a position in the other jurisdiction in order to facilitate their
involvement in cross-border operations.
148. Having regard to the location in which the pursuit commenced, notwithstanding the
terms of the [redacted] AFP National Guideline, I do not consider that there was a
breach of duty arising from the failure to obtain permission prior to entry into the ACT.
The border was only approximately 50 m from the point at which the pursuit
commenced. I do not consider that a police officer in those circumstances breached
his duty to his passenger by crossing the border.
149. Further, I do not consider that there was a breach of duty in continuing the pursuit into
the ACT even though radio contact had not been made or permission granted. Clearly,
notwithstanding having made contact with the NSW Police radio, there was difficulty in
30
making contact with the AFP. Having regard to the fact that it occurred in the early
stages of the pursuit, there was still some prospect that the pursued vehicle would
cease fleeing, the road was reasonably clear and relatively safe and there were
ongoing efforts by Mr Jausnik to make the required contact, I do not consider that there
was a breach of duty in continuing the pursuit beyond the intersection with HMAS
Harman. In other words, notwithstanding that the strict application of the [redacted]
AFP National Guideline would dictate otherwise, because of the particular
circumstances in which the pursuit was occurring, it was not unreasonable to maintain
the pursuit for a limited period.
150. However, from the point where the pursued vehicle was approaching Hindmarsh Drive
it must have been obvious to Mr Hannaford that the pursued vehicle was not intending
to stop voluntarily and that continuation of the pursuit would have the effect of pushing
the fleeing vehicle into the built-up part of Canberra. In those circumstances I do not
consider that an officer acting reasonably and with an appropriate level of knowledge of
the NSW SDP and AFP National Guideline would continue the pursuit in circumstances
where no contact at all had been made with the AFP and it was apparent that there
was some unidentified difficulty with making that contact.
151. Similarly, the kind of risk assessment required by the AFP National Guideline was
never undertaken. Mr Hannaford in his evidence did not articulate that he had
undertaken any balancing exercise that weighed the importance of apprehending the
driver of the vehicle with the potential risks posed by engaging in a prolonged high-
speed pursuit. There is no evidence that Mr Hannaford gave consideration to the
relatively minor offending conduct or the fact that the vehicle had been identified by its
numberplate in considering whether it was appropriate to continue the pursuit. Had
that been done then, although it would not have been unreasonable to continue the
pursuit past HMAS Harman, having regard to the fact that continuing the pursuit
beyond Hindmarsh Drive would push the pursued vehicle into the built-up areas of
Canberra, an officer acting reasonably would have terminated the pursuit.
Notwithstanding the desirability of apprehending dangerous drivers, an officer acting
consistently with the AFP National Guideline would have been compelled to conclude
that continuing the pursuit was not appropriate. The circumstances of the present case
involved, initially, only relatively minor traffic offences followed by some more
potentially dangerous driving at the commencement of the pursuit. While recognising
the potential seriousness of the harm that might have followed from the driving conduct
which caused Mr Hannaford to pursue Mr Williams, it is clear that, in the context of the
spectrum of the criminal law, the offending conduct detected was at the low end of the
range. It was not a case where the seriousness of the offending conduct or the
immediacy of the threat of harm to the public was such that might warrant a departure
from what might otherwise be the standard expected of an officer. Not only was the
potential offending conduct at the low end of the spectrum, but the officers had clearly
managed to identify the numberplate of the vehicle involved and had alternative
courses available to them to seek to apprehend the driver, most obviously, providing
the details of the vehicle to the AFP. Having regard to the failure of the driver to stop
over a considerable distance, it is hard to understand what the officers hoped to
achieve by pursuing the vehicle further. There is no obvious scenario which would
have led to a successful and safe end to the pursuit if it continued into the built-up area
of Canberra.
152. [Redacted]
31
153. In continuing the pursuit in the circumstances that he did, Mr Hannaford continued to
expose Mr Jausnik to all the risks involved in high speed pursuits, including the risk of
being exposed to the circumstances of a collision arising from the pursuit.
154. I do not accept the submission made by senior counsel for Mr Hannaford that “policy
considerations” or “the agony of the moment” mean that the conduct should not be
found to be in breach of duty. In relation to the “policy considerations” submission,
Mr Hannaford relied upon the statements made by McHugh J in Tame v New South
Wales [2002] HCA 35; (2002) 211 CLR 317 at [14]. However, that passage simply
emphasises the point made at the conclusion of the passage, namely:
Reasonableness is judged in the light of current community standards. As Lord Macmillan said in Donoghue v Stevenson [1932] AC 562 at 619, "conception[s] of legal responsibility ... adap[t] to ... social conditions and standards.
155. That statement, in my view, supports rather than detracts from a finding of breach of
duty in the present case. Although there is room for debate about community
standards, in the present case it is clear that community standards are no less stringent
than the guidelines prepared by the respective police forces. In circumstances where
those guidelines are not complied with it involves no departure from “social
considerations and standards” to find that Mr Hannaford breached his duty.
156. The “agony of the moment” submission was based upon the passage from the
judgment of Street CJ in Leishman v Thomas (1957) 75 WN (NSW) 173 at 175 which
was quoted in Stuart v Walsh [2012] NSWCA 186 at [61]. Street CJ said:
This so called principle of acting in the 'agony of the moment' is merely an application of the ordinary rule for ascertaining whether or not the conduct of any party has been negligent by looking to all the surrounding circumstances and ascertaining whether the defendant behaved in such a fashion as a reasonably prudent man, in the light of those circumstances, would not have behaved. It is a circumstance, and one possibly of great importance, that the defendant, charged with negligence, may have been forced to act in a sudden crisis or emergency, unexpected and unheralded, without that opportunity for calm reflection which makes it easy after the event to suggest that it would have been wiser if he had done something else. The jury are required to judge his conduct in the light of the happenings of the moment, and a man is not to be charged with negligence if he, not being the creator of the crisis or emergency which has arisen, finds himself faced with a situation which requires immediate action of some sort and if, in the so-called 'agony of the moment', he makes an error of judgment and takes a step which wiser counsels and more careful thought would have suggested was unwise.
157. As will be apparent, this statement simply involves the application of general principles
to a particular kind of factual circumstance. Plainly enough Mr Hannaford’s conduct
must be judged in the circumstances in which it arose. However, this is not a case
where there was any sudden crisis or emergency. Rather it involved a course of
conduct over a matter of minutes in which there was time to consider whether or not it
was appropriate to continue the pursuit. Therefore, while regard must be had to the
circumstances of the pursuit and care must be taken not to make unreasonable
criticism of a course of conduct in those circumstances, I do not consider that the
factual circumstances are ones which call for the application of the approach
articulated by Street CJ.
158. I will consider what would have happened if Mr Hannaford had not breached his duty
when I consider the issue of causation below.
32
Would the accident have occurred but for the breach of duty?
159. So far as the position of Mr Hannaford is concerned, questions of causation must be
dealt with in accordance with ss 45 and 46 of the CLW Act. Section 45 requires factual
causation to be established by the application of the “but for” test and also requires that
it be appropriate to extend liability to the harm so caused. Section 46 makes it clear
that the plaintiff always bears the burden of proving on the balance of probabilities any
fact relevant to the issue of causation.
160. So far as the claim against the State is concerned, the relevant provisions are ss 5D
and 5E of the Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW). Although the terms of those sections
differ in some respects from ss 45 and 46, they incorporate the same requirement for
factual causation, the scope of liability being appropriate and the burden of proof lying
upon the plaintiff.
161. The “but for” question that arises in assessing issues of causation must involve a
comparison between what would have occurred but for the breach of duty and what in
fact occurred. This involves first establishing what would have been the position had
the State and Mr Hannaford not breached their respective duties of care. The position
of Mr Hannaford is largely dependent upon the position of the State and as a
consequence I will first consider what would have been the case had the State not
breached its duty to Mr Jausnik.
162. Having regard to the breaches of duty identified at [121] to [128] above, if the State had
not breached its duty then the position would have been as follows:
(a) Both Mr Jausnik and Mr Hannaford would have had an operational
understanding of the key aspects of the [redacted] AFP National Guideline
outlined above. They would therefore have been aware of the necessity to
communicate with the AFP upon crossing the border or terminate the pursuit.
(b) Both Mr Jausnik and Mr Hannaford would have been aware of both how to
operate the new radio system as well as being aware of, or having immediate
access to, the new zone and channel numbers.
163. In those circumstances the position would have been as follows. Upon crossing the
border and after calling in the pursuit to the NSW Police radio, Mr Jausnik would then
have made contact, using the vehicle’s radio system, with the AFP. That would have
resulted in questions being asked and answers given by Sergeant Alison Williams, who
was the AFP pursuit controller on duty, so as to determine the reason for and
circumstances of the pursuit. Assuming that the report to NSW could have been
completed and communication established with the AFP within 500 m of the NSW
border (12-18 seconds after crossing the border) then there was approximately 2.5 km
between that point and the Hindmarsh Drive intersection. Travelling at 150 km/h that
distance would have been covered in 60 seconds.
164. It is at this point necessary to understand the evidence of Sergeant Williams. Her
function involved making decisions in relation to any pursuit that was reported over the
police radio. She was located in the Winchester Police Centre in Belconnen.
Individual operators were assigned to listen to and communicate on the three relevant
police channels. They were a northside channel, a southside channel and an enquiry
channel. The enquiry channel was used for enquiries on such matters as licence
checks which may take a little bit longer for the radio operator to pass a message back.
33
She was able to listen to the communications on each of those channels
simultaneously. She was asked what she would have done in relation to a pursuit had
she been provided with information describing the following circumstances:
A New South Wales registered vehicle had passed through a roundabout in Richard Avenue Queanbeyan with a revving the engine and a squeal of tyres and at excessive speed, it proceeded along Kendall Avenue to the intersection of Kendall Avenue and Canberra Avenue. In initially came to a halt at that intersection. Following the activation of the lights and sirens vehicle proceeded through a red light intersection of Kendall Avenue and Canberra Avenue and thereafter proceeded at a speed as high as 150 km/h or more down Canberra Avenue towards Canberra.
165. The answer she ultimately gave in relation to what she would have done after the
pursuit moved out of NSW and into the ACT was:
Again, in hindsight and knowing what I know now being 157 km an hour through that red light, then I would have terminated the pursuit.
166. She said that in assessing whether or not to give permission for a pursuit to continue
she made a risk assessment based upon the information that was being provided to
her over the radio. She said that she would take into account the manner in which the
vehicle was being driven, the speed and things like the road and weather conditions,
the number of vehicles on the road and any other information communicated to her
from within the pursuing vehicle.
167. In cross-examination she agreed that eliciting the relevant information from the vehicle
and, if necessary, the radio operator clarifying information with the pursuit vehicle
normally took “some seconds”. She said that there would be occasions when she
would call off a pursuit early, for example if she could hear some panic in the radio
operator’s voice or if the speed of the pursuit was concerning enough for her. She was
not asked to give any estimate of the overall time that it would take in a usual case to
elicit sufficient information to make a decision about whether or not to terminate a
pursuit. In re-examination she agreed with the proposition that a speed of 150 km/h on
Canberra Avenue at the time of night at which the pursuit occurred in this case would
have fallen into the category of information sufficient for her to decide to terminate the
pursuit. She also agreed that a pursuit at that speed involving passing through the
Hindmarsh Drive intersection against a red light would have caused her to terminate
the pursuit. Giving the instruction to terminate and having that relayed by the operator
to the vehicle would only have taken a couple of seconds.
168. In one of her statements Sergeant Williams refers to there being “pursuit signage”
posted in front of the operator monitoring the channels upon which a report of a pursuit
would be made (the northside or southside channel, rather than the enquiry channel
over which the report was in fact made). Her statement provided:
The pursuit signage details the pursuit warning and the things that the operator must elicit from the patrol calling the pursuit such as location, speed, traffic and road conditions, category of the police vehicle and a driver qualification.
169. This was the full extent of the evidence about what the pursuit signage involved.
170. In the light of the evidence of Sergeant Williams, there appear to be two possible
scenarios. The first, which arose out of a single answer that she gave in re-
examination, would be that she would be informed within a few seconds of
communication being established that the location was Canberra Avenue and the
speed was 150 km/h and that those facts alone would have caused her to terminate
34
the pursuit. If that was the case then, on the assumption that I have outlined above
that contact would have been made within 500 m of the border, the decision to
terminate the pursuit might have been made shortly before the crest of the rise on
Canberra Avenue some 1.4 km from the NSW border and 1.6 km prior to the
Hindmarsh Drive intersection.
171. The other alternative is that more information could have been exchanged between the
AFP and Queanbeyan 37 describing the location with more precision, the speed, the
amount of traffic and road conditions, category of police vehicle, driver qualification and
possibly the reason for the pursuit. That would be consistent with the “pursuit signage”
referred to in Sergeant Williams’ statement quoted above. If that was the case, the
evidence of Sergeant Williams does not give an estimate of the time that that would
have taken. However, in my view, having listened to the manner of communication in
the recording of the transmissions that in fact occurred on the NSW Police radio and
AFP radio, the information is likely to have been provided within 30 to 60 seconds of
initial contact with the AFP.
172. Although the likely timing was not described with precision in the evidence, having
regard to Sergeant Williams’ answers in re-examination, it is possible to find on the
balance of probabilities that she would not have permitted the continuation of the
pursuit beyond the Hindmarsh Drive intersection. It is possible to make that finding
because:
(a) while the road from the border to the intersection was relatively clear, in the
sense of being a good open road with few intersections, Hindmarsh Drive was
a major intersection which presented an obvious and significant risk that would
arise from the continuation of the pursuit past that point; and
(b) it is likely that she would have had sufficient information at that point to make a
decision in the light of the increasing hazards presented by continuing the
pursuit further into the Territory.
173. I do not consider it possible to find, in the light of the answer based solely upon speed
given in re-examination, that, on the balance of probabilities, Sergeant Williams would
have terminated the pursuit if she only had the information that the vehicle was
travelling at 150 km/h on Canberra Avenue. That is because the evidence does not
sufficiently disclose the order of questions that would be asked and it was not clear
which portion of Canberra Avenue Sergeant Williams was addressing in her answer.
174. On the assumption that the pursuit would, but for the negligence of the State and Mr
Hannaford, have been terminated prior to the Hindmarsh Drive intersection, the issue
then becomes whether or not it can be said on the balance of probabilities that the
collision would have been avoided. That in turn depends upon whether the evidence,
including the expert evidence, supports a finding that Mr Williams would have ceased
driving in the manner that he was if Queanbeyan 37 had terminated its pursuit prior to
the Hindmarsh Drive intersection. Termination of a pursuit involves the police vehicle
turning off lights and sirens, slowing to the speed limit and then turning around and
returning from whence it came.
175. On this issue I do not consider that significant weight can be placed upon the expert
evidence of Prof Alpert, Mr Hosking or for that matter Prof Lyman. The sole empirical
basis for any conclusion about the distance which a fleeing vehicle would travel after
the police ceased actively pursuing it was the study from the Journal of Criminal Justice
35
and Behaviour (the High Speed Pursuit Study). I do not consider that this is a reliable
basis for a finding as to how Mr Williams would actually have behaved for three
reasons.
176. First, it is a single study with no Australian equivalent and no body of research which
would indicate the robustness or general acceptance of the particular figures identified
in the study.
177. Second, it was based upon self-reports by prisoners as to “what it would have taken for
them to slow down”. Seventy-five percent reported that they would slow down “when
they felt safe”. Of that 75% the average distance which they said they would take
before they felt safe on a highway was 3.2 to 4 km. These figures are self-reported
figures and there is no indication in the study as to the accuracy of those estimates
when compared to actual pursuit behaviour. The 3.2 to 4 km figures are averages of
the estimates given by those respondees within the 75% who said they would stop
when they “felt safe”. Thus, within the 75% there will be a range of figures the
distribution of which is not disclosed in the report. The report does not disclose
whether the remaining 25% reported that they would not stop or whether they would
stop but in circumstances other than “when they felt safe”.
178. Third, it is not clear where Mr Williams would have fallen amongst the spectrum of
motivations reflected in the study. Having regard to the very high blood alcohol reading
and the absence of any information in the study identifying whether those who were
under the influence of drugs or alcohol were more or less likely to be within the 75%, it
is not possible to draw conclusions relevant to the behaviour of Mr Williams from the
study.
179. So far as the opinion expressed by Prof Alpert is based upon the High Speed Pursuit
Study I am not satisfied that the study provides a reliable basis for assessing the
behaviour of Mr Williams in the present case. Although Prof Alpert identified the
distance of approximately “two-three km” as the distance in which “Mr Williams would
have felt safe and slow down”, it is not clear how that figure is derived having regard to
the figures in the High Speed Pursuit study. While it is possible to accept as a general
proposition that pursued vehicles will generally slow down after a period during which
the pursued driver perceives that the police are no longer in pursuit, it is not, in my
view, possible, based upon the evidence of Prof Alpert and Mr Hosking, to reach the
more specific conclusion as to the distance in which, more likely than not, that would
generally occur or occur in the circumstances of this particular case.
180. In those circumstances, can it be said that it is more likely than not that the collision
would not have occurred if the pursuit had been terminated when the police vehicle
was between the crest of the rise on Canberra Avenue and the Hindmarsh Drive
intersection? On that hypothesis the police vehicle would have turned off its lights and
siren, slowed to the speed limit and then turned around in order to return to NSW. It is
likely that Mr Williams would have passed through the Hindmarsh Drive intersection at
a speed similar to that which he did in fact pass through it. The critical issue is whether
or not he would have slowed down in the 1.6 km between that intersection and the
crash site. Travelling at 150 km/h it would have taken approximately 40 seconds to
travel from the Hindmarsh Drive intersection to the site of the collision.
181. It is possible to reason that he would have. He would have travelled down the hill
towards the Monaro Highway intersection and observed in his rear view mirror that the
police were no longer pursuing him. He therefore, after a number of seconds, would
36
have felt safe enough to slow down from the speed at which he was travelling when he
passed through the Hindmarsh Drive intersection so that by the time he reached the
intersection with Ipswich Street he was travelling at a lesser speed and passed through
the intersection at a lower speed at a different time so as to not collide with the
Oppelaar family’s vehicle.
182. However, in my view, such an approach involves a substantial degree of speculation
about the behaviour of Mr Williams which is not warranted. Mr Williams was heavily
intoxicated and driving in a very reckless manner. While it is possible that he might
have adopted a relatively rational approach and modified his conduct if he observed
that the police were no longer chasing him, it certainly cannot be said on the balance of
probabilities that he would have. Reasoning based on “common sense” is dangerous
when assessing criminal conduct: Modbury Triangle Shopping Centre Pty v Anzil
[2000] HCA 61; (2000) 205 CLR 254 at [150]. The only witness to Mr Williams’
behaviour, state of mind or level of intoxication, his passenger Skye Webbe, did not
give evidence in this case and there is no evidence of what, if any, observations she
made of him. Having regard to his observed actions, what is known about his state of
intoxication, the absence of evidence about his state of mind and the absence of
evidence about his behaviour within the vehicle, it is not possible to reach a conclusion
on the balance of probabilities that he would have modified his conduct by reducing his
speed in the period prior to the collision.
183. This does not appear to be a case where the issue of the factors which led the silver
Mazda to be at the place where and at the time that the accident occurred can be
ignored: cf March v E & MH Stramare Pty Ltd [1991] HCA 12; (1910) 171 CLR 506 at
516; Mobbs v Kain [2009] NSWCA 301 at [21]; H.L.A Hart and T Honoré Causation in
the Law (Clarendon Press, 2nd ed, 1985) at 122. Therefore the Nominal Defendant
could succeed if it demonstrated on the balance of probabilities that the cessation of
the pursuit would have led to the silver Mazda passing through the intersection at a
different time and avoiding any accident. However, in the present case, any such
conclusion would involve the interplay of at least two factors in relation to which the
evidence does not permit more than speculation.
184. First, it involves an adjustment to Mr Williams’ speed that would result in his arrival at
the location of the collision at a time before or after Mr Oppelaar’s vehicle had crossed
the northbound carriageway of Canberra Avenue. It is not possible to say how much
earlier or later the silver Mazda would have had to have arrived in order to avoid the
collision with Mr Oppelaar's vehicle. Further, as I have pointed out above, it is not
possible to safely reach any conclusion as to Mr Williams’ behaviour following a
cessation of the pursuit. Slowing down, travelling at the same speed or speeding up
were all actions that Mr Williams might have taken if the pursuit had been ended prior
to the Hindmarsh Drive intersection.
185. Second, it would also involve a conclusion that arriving at the intersection at an earlier
or later time would have avoided an accident that gave rise to damage to Mr Jausnik.
There is evidence that there were other vehicles at the two intersections near the
Monaro highway overpass, one of which was driven by Mr Hill. Although it is hard to
imagine a more catastrophic collision than that which occurred, in the light of the
paucity of evidence and the very significantly intoxicated state in which Mr Williams
was driving, it is not possible to reach the conclusion that no accident would have
occurred or that no mental injury would have been inflicted on Mr Jausnik.
37
186. My conclusion therefore is that had there not been a breach of duty by the State or Mr
Hannaford, then the collision might have been avoided, but I cannot be satisfied of that
on the balance of probabilities: cf Adeels Palace Pty Ltd v Moubarak [2009] HCA 48;
(2009) 239 CLR 420 at [50]. As a consequence, I am not satisfied on the balance of
probabilities that either the State or Mr Hannaford are persons “who [are] liable for the
same damage”. For that reason the defendant’s claim against both third parties fails.
187. In reaching this conclusion I have not accepted Mr Hannaford’s submission that Mr
Williams’ criminal actions constituted an intervening cause severing any causal
connection between any act or omission on the part of Mr Hannaford and the injury
suffered by Mr Jausnik. What constitutes a novus actus interveniens sufficient to break
the causal chain is a matter of fact and degree: Mahony v J Kruschich (Demolitions)
Pty Ltd [1985] HCA 37;(1985) 156 CLR 522 at 528; Chapman v Hearse [1961] HCA 46;
(1961) 106 CLR 112 at 124-125. However, a novus actus interveniens does not arise
when the new act involves the very risk brought about by the negligence of the
offending behaviour, including his reckless and intoxicated driving, provided the context
in which Mr Hannaford performed his duties. It was not a matter separate from the
causal chain of events. Instead it was a reasonably foreseeable risk arising from the
decision by Mr Hannaford to continue the pursuit of Mr Williams’ vehicle as far as he
did.
What is the relevant apportionment as between the defendant and the third
parties?
188. In the event that I am wrong in my conclusion that the Nominal Defendant has failed to
prove on the balance of probabilities that, in the absence of the negligence on the part
of Mr Hannaford and Mr Jausnik, the accident would not have occurred, I will consider
the operation of s 21 of the CLW Act and s 5 of the LRMP Act.
189. There are two relevant aspects of these provisions. First, there is the commonly
applied apportionment provision. Second, each provision also incorporates the
capacity for the Court to exempt a party from whom a claim for contribution is made
from the obligation to make any contribution.
190. This second aspect of the provisions requires some further examination in order to
understand the apparently straightforward submission made by Mr Hannaford and the
State that no contribution should be ordered to be made even if liability was
established. The power to exempt a party from contribution is reflected in s 21(3)(b) of
the CLW Act, which provides that a person is not entitled to contribution if “the court
exempts the contributory from liability to make contribution”. It is also reflected in s 5(2)
of that LRMP Act, which provides “and the court shall have power to exempt any
person from liability to make contribution”. The structure of s 21 suggests that the
power to exempt a contributory from liability in s 21(3) is a separate and distinct power
from the obligation in s 21(2) to fix the contributory’s contribution at an amount that the
Court considers just and equitable. In contrast, in s 5 the power to exempt is dealt with
in the same provision as that identifying the amount of contribution as being that which
is just and equitable and permitting a contribution to be a complete indemnity, namely,
s 5(2). The structure of s 5(2) is suggestive of the exemption power simply being one
end of the just and equitable spectrum, the other being the contributory providing a
complete indemnity for the damage.
38
191. In the Soblusky v Egan [1960] HCA 9; (1960) 103 CLR 215 at 235 the High Court said
of an equivalent Queensland provision:
There is no doubt a question whether the words “just and equitable having regard to the extent of that person’s responsibility for the damage”, permit the court to take into account other considerations than responsibility for the damage. The power to exempt or on the other hand to direct a full indemnity perhaps suggests that other considerations, all considerations relevant to justice and equity, may be taken into account. It is a point however that need not now be decided.
192. Amaca Pty Ltd v New South Wales [2003] HCA 44; (2003) 77 ALJR 1509 (Amaca)
involved an appeal from the New South Wales Court of Appeal which, in turn, had
involved an appeal from a decision of a trial judge who had exempted the State of New
South Wales pursuant to s 5(2) of the LRMP Act. The effect was that the State was not
required to contribute to the liability of James Hardie & Coy Pty Ltd, the manufacturer
of the asbestos products. The trial judge exercised the power to exempt a party in
circumstances where, for the purposes of the exercise, the liability of the State to the
plaintiff had been assumed and not found. As a consequence neither the duty nor the
breach was identified with any particularity. Thus although the Court of Appeal had
found that it should not interfere with the exercise of the trial judge’s discretion ((2001)
53 NSWLR 626 at [144]-[149], [176], [189]), the High Court held that the decision of the
Court of Appeal had to be set aside and the matter remitted for further hearing. The
reasons of the High Court (Amaca at [20]) open up a further issue about the operation
of the exemption power which has not been determined:
What was assumed was that the State had breached a duty of care which it owed the injured plaintiff. But neither the duty nor the breach was identified with any particularity. Without identifying the duty owed, and the breach or breaches committed, it was not, and is not, possible to identify the extent of that party's responsibility for the damage. Nor is it possible to say that that party should be exempted from liability despite it having breached a duty which it owed the plaintiff. (It is unnecessary to consider whether, or in what circumstances, it would be proper to exempt a negligent party from liability to contribute. It may be that the power to exempt is engaged only where the party to be exempted was not at fault but found liable for some form of strict liability. That question was not argued and need not be decided.)
193. The bracketed portion of this quote leaves open the possibility that the power to
exempt is distinct from the power to apportion and can only operate in very limited
circumstances. Having regard to the conclusion that I have reached, the potential
complexity of this issue and the absence of any proper submissions as to the operation
of the provision, it is not appropriate the attempt to determine the scope and operation
of the exemption power in s 21(3)(b) of the CLW Act or s 5(2) of the LRMP Act.
194. Had the exercise been one simply involving an apportionment between tortfeasors it
would have involved a comparison of both culpability (in the sense of the degree of
departure from the standard of care of a reasonable person) and the relative
importance of the act of the parties in causing the damage: Podrebersek v Australian
Iron and Steel Pty Ltd [1985] HCA 34; (1985) 59 ALJR 492 at 494. In that case the
judgment of the Court provides:
The making of an apportionment as between a plaintiff and a defendant of their respective shares in the responsibility for the damage involves a comparison both of culpability, i.e. of the degree of departure from the standard of care of the reasonable man ... and of the relative importance of the acts of the parties in causing the damage ... It is the whole conduct of each negligent party in relation to the circumstances of the accident which must be subjected to comparative examination.
39
195. Consideration of the relative extent of departure from the standards of a reasonable
person and the relative causal potency of the act in causing the damage leads to an
apportionment of liability overwhelmingly to Mr Williams and hence the Nominal
Defendant.
196. The degree of departure from the standard of care: Mr Williams’ departure from the
standard of care involved the creation of the catastrophic circumstances of the accident
which, in turn, exposed Mr Jausnik to the experiences which have given rise to his post
traumatic stress disorder and depression. His conduct involved an outrageous
disregard for the safety of others. It occurred when, and I infer was facilitated by the
fact that, he was driving whilst intoxicated. His conduct therefore involved a gross
departure from the standard of care expected of a reasonable person.
197. So far as the State of New South Wales is concerned, it involved administrative failings
and a failure to provide adequate training to Mr Jausnik and Mr Hannaford. While there
was a departure from the standard of care expected, it cannot be said that it was a
major or gross departure from that standard.
198. So far as Mr Hannaford is concerned, his conduct involved a departure from the
standard of care expected of a police driver, but that was largely the result of the
breach of duty by his employer to ensure that he and Mr Jausnik were appropriately
trained. He was doing what he perceived to be his police duty at the time. There was
no degree of recklessness or irresponsibility in his conduct that would enable his
departure from the standard of care to be characterised as a major one.
199. Causal potency: In relation to this the conduct of Mr Williams is overwhelming. It was
his action which caused the accident and was the overwhelming cause of the harm to
Mr Jausnik. It was his vehicle and his conduct which caused the deaths of the three
victims as well as himself and the injury to his passenger. On the assumption that
causation was established, the conduct of the State and Mr Hannaford was only
indirectly a cause of harm to Mr Jausnik.
200. I do not accept the submissions made by Mr Hannaford and the State that this should
result in an apportionment of 100% responsibility to the Nominal Defendant. There
appears to me to be no appropriate reason to, in effect, ignore the fact that those
parties were responsible for the same damage, even if to a much lesser extent than
Mr Williams.
201. Having regard to these factors, had it been necessary, I would have assessed the
appropriate apportionment as being 92.5% to the Nominal Defendant, 5% to the State
of New South Wales and 2.5% to Mr Hannaford.
Orders
202. The orders of the Court are:
1. Judgment be entered in favour of the first third party and second third party
against the defendant.
2. The defendant is to pay the costs of the first third party and second third party.
3. Order 2 does not take effect for a period of 14 days and, if any party notifies my
associate by email (copied to each other party) within that period that it wishes to
be further heard in relation to costs, does not take effect until further order of the
Court.
40
Annexure – extracts of Police Pursuit Policies
203. As at the date of the accident the AFP had published a document entitled “AFP
National Guideline: ACT Policing: Urgent duty driving and pursuits”. The document
took effect from 7 December 2007 and, most relevantly, provided:
6. Policy
There are serious safety risks associated with police officers driving at speeds in excess of prescribed speed limits, and with the pursuit of drivers who refuse to comply with a direction to stop. The sworn duty of a police officer to protect life and property will always have primacy over the need to apprehend offenders, especially when the offence involved is relatively minor, or where there are safer options other than immediate apprehension.
...
19. Pursuit management and coordination
...
b. The primary responsibility for the initiation and conduct of a pursuit rests with the member driving the police vehicle. That member will:
i. Drive in a manner that prioritises the safety of the police and public
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20. Pursuit driving
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b. Members involved in a pursuit will, when approaching any intersection, slow their vehicle and only enter the intersection when it is safe to do so. Where an intersection is controlled by any traffic control device, including red traffic lights or stop signs facing the driver, the driver must consider whether it is necessary to bring the police vehicle to a complete stop in order to safely enter the intersection.
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21. Roles and responsibilities
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h. Prior to commencing, and during a pursuit, members will assess, and continue to re-assess the risk to member of the public, themselves and those persons in the subject vehicle. These risks include, but are not limited to:
i. The real or potential danger to police, members of the public or people in the suspect vehicle (for example, overtaking into oncoming traffic, disobeying traffic signals, crossing intersections at speed)
ii. The volume of road and pedestrian traffic in the area
iii. The weather and road surface conditions, and features of the particular locality of the pursuit
iv. The nature and comparative seriousness of the offence/matter
v. Whether there are other reasonable means available for police to identify or apprehend the relevant people
vi. Whether it would be practicable to terminate the pursuit with the use of tyre deflation devices
vii. The distance between the police vehicle and the other vehicle is so great that further pursuit is futile
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viii. The speed of the subject vehicle involved
ix. The experience/competency of the driver
x. The performance capabilities of the police vehicle
xi. The classification of the police vehicle in accordance with this National Guidelines
xii. The provisions providing exemptions for urgent duty driving within Rule 305 of the Australian Road Rules as outlined in Section 8.
i. When a pursuit is commenced, a member in the vehicle will notify Police Communications of:
i. The reason for the pursuit
ii. The vehicle description and registration number if available
iii. The location and direction of the offending vehicle
iv. The progress of the pursuit (at regular intervals)
v. The speed of the offending vehicle (at regular intervals)
vi. The relevant speed limit
vii. Traffic conditions
viii. The category class of the member’s vehicle
ix. The driving qualifications of the member.
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k. All vehicles involved in a pursuit will maintain a safe distance between each vehicle.
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24. Termination of pursuit
a. Where the value of apprehending an offender in pursuit, is outweighed by any one or more of the following criteria, the member who is the driver of the vehicle involved in the pursuit will terminate that pursuit:
b. The real or potential danger to police, members of the public or people in the suspect vehicle (for example, overtaking into oncoming traffic, disobeying traffic signals, crossing intersections at speed)
i. The volume of road and pedestrian traffic in the area
ii. The weather and road surface conditions, and features of the particular locality of the pursuit
iii. The nature and comparative seriousness of the offence/matter
iv. Whether there are other reasonable means available for police to identify or apprehend the relevant people
v. The offenders identity [sic] is established to a point where later apprehension is likely and there is no immediate threat to public safety
vi. The distance between the police vehicle and the other vehicle is so great that further pursuit is futile
vii. The speed of the subject vehicle involved
viii. The experience/competency of the driver
ix. The performance capabilities of the police vehicle
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x. The provisions providing exemption from urgent duty driving within Rule 305 of the Australian Road Rules no longer apply
xi. Where there are malfunctions with police equipment and/or serious damage to the police vehicle involved in a pursuit which makes the continued operation of the pursuit hazardous
xii. The vehicles in the pursuit lose radio contact with ACT Police Communications.
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26. Cross border pursuits
a. Where there is likelihood that pursuit will cross into New South Wales (NSW) Police Communications will make all reasonable attempts to notify the NSW Police Service and seek permissions to continue the pursuit in that State until that State can resume or terminate the pursuit.
b. At the time of notification the following information will be provided:
i. The location and directions of travel of the pursuit
ii. Speed of suspect vehicle
iii. Prevailing speed limit
iv. A description of the vehicle being pursued
v. Driver’s Special Constable status within NSW
vi. Driver’s police experience, rank, driving qualification and duty type, for example General Duties or Traffic Patrol
vii. The classification of the police vehicle involved in the pursuit
viii. The reason for the pursuit.
c. If permission cannot be obtained or permission to continue the pursuit is declined such pursuit will be terminated prior to entering NSW, or in any case immediately on receipt of notification to terminate.
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f. The provisions of this section will similarly apply when NSW Police vehicles cross into the Australian Capital Territory for the purposes of pursuit.
g. NSW Police vehicles engaged in a pursuit into the ACT are expected to comply with the provisions of this National Guideline.
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i. Members involved in pursuit driving will comply with both their home jurisdictions [sic] pursuit driving policy and that of the jurisdiction being entered. Where there is a conflict between those policies the policy of the jurisdiction being entered, and in which the pursuit is taking place, will take precedence.
204. The “Safe Driving Policy – NSW Police Force” provided:
[Redacted]
I certify that the preceding two hundred and four [204] numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment of his Honour Associate Justice Mossop.