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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 17 November 2004
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION: Lasermax Engineering Pty
Limited v QBE Insurance (Australia) Limited & Ors [2004] NSWSC 483
CURRENT JURISDICTION: Equity Division
Commercial
List
FILE NUMBER(S): 50052/03
HEARING DATE{S):
21/05/04
JUDGMENT DATE: 21/05/2004
PARTIES:
Lasermax
Engineering Pty Limited (Plaintiff)
QBE Insurance (Australia) Limited (First
Defendant)
Mercantile Mutual Insurance (Australia) Limited (Second
Defendant)
Integral Energy Australia (Third Defendant)
JUDGMENT OF:
Einstein J
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION: Not Applicable
LOWER
COURT FILE NUMBER(S): Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER: Not
Applicable
COUNSEL:
Mr M Williams SC, Mr R Scruby (Plaintiff)
Mr
BJ Toomey QC, Mr MT McCulloch (First and Second Defendants)
Mr S Finnane
(Third Defendant)
SOLICITORS:
Maguire and McInerney
(Plaintiff)
PricewaterhouseCoopers Legal (First and Second
Defendants)
Colin Biggers and Paisley (Third
Defendant)
CATCHWORDS:
Insurance
Meaning of "directly
caused"
Fire on power pole
Power surge to premises
Damage to
laser
Whether directly caused by fire on power pole within meaning of policy
clause
ACTS CITED:
DECISION:
Separate question answered
'No'.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW
SOUTH WALES
EQUITY DIVISION
COMMERCIAL
LIST
Einstein J
Friday 21 May 2004 ex
tempore
Revised 17 June 2004
50052/03 Lasermax
Engineering Pty Limited v QBE Insurance (Australia) Limited &
Ors
JUDGMENT
1 The plaintiff, Lasermax Pty Limited
("Lasermax") carries on the business of manufacturing and metal processing at
premises located
152-154 Shellharbour Road, Kemblawarra ("the premises").
2 The proceedings concern damage to a laser ("the laser") used by
Lasermax for the purposes of welding, cutting and treating materials.
The laser
was apparently the subject of a hire purchase agreement entered into between
Lasermax and a finance company.
3 The material allegations made in the
summons identify the damage as having occurred as follows:
· The
laser was at all material times powered by electricity drawn from the
premises.
· Electrical power has at all material times been supplied
to the premises by way of electrical wires supported by poles ("power
poles")
located outside the premises.
· Each power pole has an upper
horizontal arm supporting electrical wiring carrying approximately 11,000 volts,
("the upper arm"),
and a lower horizontal arm supporting electrical wiring
carrying approximately 415 volts, ("the lower arm").
· On or about
11 November 2002, a fire occurred, ("the fire"), on a power pole in the vicinity
of the premises.
· As a direct result of the fire, electrical wiring
supported by the upper arm of the aforesaid power pole fell onto electrical
wiring supported by its lower arm and a power surge of approximately 11,000
volts of electricity passed to the premises and through
to the laser, ("the
power surge").
· The fire, and through it the power surge, resulted
directly in further fire, smoke, overheating and burning in and about the
laser
and by these means or otherwise damaged the laser.
4 The first and
second defendants were the insurers under a contract of insurance with Lasermax
and Chromax Hard Chrome Pty Limited
[which was the owner of the premises]
apparently entered into in early February 2002, providing various forms of
cover, including
accidental damage as defined by the policy with a limit of
$50,000. Lasermax claims that upon a proper construction of the subject
policy,
each of the first and second defendants were liable to indemnify it for 50 per
cent of the damage caused to the laser. Lasermax
alleges that the policy
properly construed responds because the insurers are liable to indemnify it in
respect of physical loss or
damage to the laser directly caused by the
fire, the allegation being that the fire on the power pole was a direct cause of
the damage to the laser.
5 The relevant insuring clause under the
"Property" section is to be found at page 4 of the policy. It
provides:
“2. We will indemnify You up to the limit specified in
the Schedule:
2.1 In respect of physical loss of or damage to;. .
.
(b) Contents . . .
directly caused by the following insured
events . . .
...
3.1 Fire.”
6 The insurers have
submitted that the policy responds to damage caused to the laser by the power
surge under the head of "Accidental
damage" (see clause 3.11 of the "Property"
section of the policy). The maximum amount payable under that head, $50,000, has
been
paid to the plaintiff by the insurers (see defence of first and second
defendants' paragraph 14).
7 Lasermax has also joined Integral Energy
Australia ("Integral"), as a defendant and pursues a cause of action in
negligence against
Integral. That claim is grounded upon the following
allegations made in the summons:
· At all material times Integral
was the owner and responsible for the care, control and maintenance of power
lines and power
poles that provided electrical power to the
premise.
· At all material times, Integral was the supplier of
electrical power to the premises.
· Initially in about 1998, Chromax
and Integral discussed the provision of electricity to the premises ("the
discussion") and
in particular the break-up of supply to tenants of the
premises.
· In approximately late 2001 or early 2002 Integral were
made aware that Lasermax was from that time operating the laser from
the
premises and that new mains power had to be installed by a contractor on behalf
of Lasermax to properly and adequately supply
power to the laser.
· In late October or early November 2002, Lasermax was experiencing
low-voltage supply from the power sources provided by Integral
Energy and, as a
consequence of that, defective supply, Integral inspected the electricity supply
to the premises and in particular
to the laser.
· As a consequence
of the above, Integral was aware:
(a) that Lasermax conducted business
from the premises;
(b) that the aforesaid business involved the use of
the laser; and
(c) that the laser was powered by
electricity.
· As a result of the matters [pleaded in the above
paragraphs], Integral owed a duty to Lasermax to exercise all reasonable care
in
the provision of electricity to the premises.
· The fire [as pleaded
above] and the damage caused to the laser [as particularised above] were caused
by the negligence of Integral.
Particulars of
Negligence
(a) Failure to exercise reasonable care in the maintenance of
insulators on the Power Pole;
(b) Failure to wash insulators on the Power
Pole;
(c) Failure to install adequate insulators on the Power
Pole;
(d) Failure to exercise reasonable care in the prevention of
current leakage on the Power Pole
(e) Failure to exercise reasonable care
in the prevention of fire on the Power Pole;
(f) Failure to exercise
reasonable care in the prevention of power surges.
· As a result of
the aforesaid damage to the laser, the plaintiff:
(a) has been unable to
operate the laser;
(b) has been unable to carry on
business;
(c) has lost profits; and
(d) has suffered a
diminishment in the value of its goodwill.
8 By a recent amendment to
the summons a count by way of failure to warn has been added.
9 On 19
December 2003, the court [2003] NSWSC 1268 ordered that a separate question be
determined, namely: whether, on the agreed and assumed facts, damage to the
plaintiff's laser
was "directly caused" by fire within the meaning of the
policy. That judgment covers a deal of background matters and explains the
considerations which led to the separate question order.
10 The relevant
facts as set out in the statement of agreed and assumed facts and before the
court as part of the agreed bundle [exhibit
PX] are as follows:
Agreed
facts
(1) The plaintiff has an insurable interest in a Lumonics AM
356 Laser (“the Laser).
(2) The Laser was, at all relevant times,
located in premises occupied by the plaintiff and known as 152-154 Shellharbour
Rd, Kemblawarra
(“the Premises).
(3) By a policy of insurance
number 31A233731BPK (“the Policy”) the first and second defendants
agreed, subject to the
terms of the Policy, to indemnify the plaintiff, up to
the limit specified in the Policy, in respect of damage to machinery, plant
and
equipment, where such damage was directly caused by fire.
(4) The Laser
was machinery, plant or equipment within the meaning of the
Policy.
(5) At all relevant times, the Laser was connected to and powered
by electricity supplied by the third defendant to the
Premises.
(6) Electricity is supplied to the Premises by wires supported
by a series of power poles located in the street outside the Premises
(“the Power Poles”).
(7) The Power Poles are made of wood and
have an upper horizontal wooden arm supporting insulators for electrical wiring
carrying
approximately 11,000 volts (“the Upper Arm”) and a lower
horizontal wooden arm supporting insulators for electrical wiring
carrying
approximately 415 volts (“the Lower Arm”).
(8) On 11 November
2002 there was a fire, within the meaning of the Policy, on one of the Power
Poles which was located two power
pole spans away from the Premises at a
distance of approximately 55 metres (“the Burnt
Pole”).
(9) The fire caused the Upper Arm on the Burnt Pole to
fail.
Assumed facts
(10) The wiring supported by the Upper
Arm on the Burnt Pole came into contact with the wiring supported by the Lower
Arm, causing
a high voltage/low voltage intermix (“the
Intermix”).
(11) The Intermix caused a power surge to the Premises
and the Laser.
(12) The power surge caused damage to the Laser, the
extent of which has not yet been determined.
The policy
11 The relevant clauses of the policy are clauses 2 and 3 in the
section headed "Property section - Fire and other insured events".
12 Pursuant to clause 2, the insurers have indemnified the plaintiff for
damage to "contents" "directly caused" by one of the events
in clause 3 -
relevantly, "Fire" (clause 3.1).
13 It is agreed that the laser forms
part of the "Contents" for the purposes of clause 2.1(b) and that the fire on
the power pole
is a "fire" for the purposes of clause 3.1.
The
question for determination
14 The question to be determined is
whether the damage assumed to have been caused to the laser was "directly
caused", within the
meaning of clause 2 by the fire on the power pole.
The principles
15 Plainly enough, the meaning of the
phrase "directly caused" is ultimately a question of construction of the policy.
The ordinary
rules of contractual interpretation apply to the construction of a
policy of insurance, although a liberal interpretation in favour
of the insured
should be adopted in so far as the ordinary and natural meaning of the words
used by the insurers permits this to
be done: Australian Casualty Co. Limited
v Federico [1986] HCA 32; [1986] 160 CLR 513 at 520-521, per Gibbs J.
16 In general
terms, the following principles which apply to the interpretation of contracts
in general and contracts of insurance
are taken as a given.
· “A policy of insurance, even one required by statute, is a
commercial contract which should be given a businesslike interpretation.
Interpreting a commercial document requires attention to the language used by
the parties, the commercial circumstances which the
document addresses and the
objects which it is intended to secure [per Gleeson CJ, McCann v Switzerland
Insurance Australia Limited [2000] HCA 65; (2003) 203 CLR 579 at [22]]
· In
Robertson v French [1803] EngR 639; (1803) 4 East 130 at 135-6 [1803-13] All ER Rep 360
Lord Ellenborough put the matter as follows:
"[A Contract of insurance]
is to be construed according to its sense and meaning, as collected in the first
place from the terms used
in it, which terms are themselves to be understood in
their plain ordinary and popular sense."
· In order to depart from
the plain and ordinary meaning of a word or phrase, a good reason must be given.
Star Fire Diamond Rings Pty Limited Angel [1962] 2 Lloyds Rep 217 at
219:
· the meaning should take account of the context in which the
words appear;
· the meaning should take into account the main object
or the commercial purpose of the contract;
· if the words are
ambiguous they should be construed contra proferentem.
The
submissions from the parties
17 The plaintiff and the first two
defendants advanced detailed written submissions and the plaintiff's senior
counsel spoke to the
plaintiff's submissions. The first, second and third
defendants were not called upon. A number of authorities were cited.
18 Whilst I accept the importance of looking to particular decisions,
ultimately the question presently before the court is no more
than one of
impression. It is trite to observe that in every case the particular facts
before the court need to be carefully understood
in order to follow the reasons
for decision.
19 In deference to the care with which the parties in
their written submissions, and the plaintiff complementing its submissions at
the bar table, took the court through decided cases, it is appropriate to
acknowledge those submissions. The plaintiff helpfully
gave a number of
authorities as examples of events being held to be the “direct” or
“proximate” cause one
of another.
· In Re Etherington
and Lancashire and Yorkshire Accident Insurance Co [1909] 1 KB 591, a policy
insured against death caused by accidental means provided “the accident is
the direct or proximate cause of death”.
The insured fell off a horse and
became wet. He rode home and came down with pneumonia and died. The insurer
was held liable under
the Policy by the Court of Appeal. Vaughan Williams LJ
stated at 598.5:
“’direct or proximate cause’ covers
... not only the immediate result of the accident, but also all those things
which may fairly be considered as results usually attendant upon the particular
accident in question”
· In Lynn Gas & Electric Co v
Meriden Fire Ins Co 33 NE 690 (1893) a policy insured machinery in a factory
against damage caused by fire. The factory was large and the machinery was only
in
one part of it. A fire occurred in a different part of the factory and
caused a short-circuit in the electricity supplied throughout
the factory, which
in turn caused the machinery to malfunction and resulted in damage to it.
Knowlton J in the Supreme Court of
Massachusetts held that the fire was the
“direct, proximate” cause of the damage.
· In
Transport Accident Commission v Jewell [1995] VicRp 22; [1995] 1 VR 300, the Full Court of
the Supreme Court of Victoria considered the legislation insuring an occupier if
his injuries were “directly
caused” by the driving of a motor
vehicle. A farmer, whilst driving his truck, snapped the ignition key in the
ignition.
He managed to stop the truck, turn off the engine, dismantle and
re-assemble the ignition and remove the key. He left the truck
in low gear. He
then leant into the engine compartment from outside the truck and tested the new
key, causing the truck to move
forward and crush him. The Full Court held that
the snapping of the key was the “direct cause” of his
injuries”.
Tadgell J, with whom Ormiston J agreed, stated (at
308):
“[leaving the truck in low gear] was immediate in the sense
that it was linked, not merely casually, coincidentally or adventitiously,
but
centrally, in time and place, to the happening of the incident. In my opinion
it would be contrary to common sense, when determining
the circumstances out of
which the incident arose, to divorce the circumstance of leaving the truck in
low gear from the circumstance
of turning the ignition
key”
· In Leyland Shipping Co Ltd v Norwich Union Fire
Insurance Society Ltd [1918] AC 350, a vessel was torpedoed but made port.
Port authorities ordered that she be moored outside the harbour in case she sank
and blocked
the harbour entrance. The vessel sunk in a storm after having been
moved outside the entrance. The House of Lords held that the
insurer was
protected under an exclusion clause which absolved it from liability in the
event the vessel was lost as a result of
war or hostilities. Their Lordships
were satisfied that the torpedoing of the vessel was the proximate cause of its
sinking. Lord
Finlay LC said of the vessel at 355: “[s]he was not lost by
any new peril, but by the natural consequence of the explosion
of the
torpedo”. Lord Dunedin stated at 364 “[w]hat happened in the
circumstances was the natural sequel to injury by
the
torpedo”.
20 The plaintiff then submitted that from the case law,
the following propositions may be derived:
(1) “Direct cause”
and “proximate cause” are the same or relevantly the same concept
and both can be assimilated
to the concept “dominant and effective
cause”: State Government Insurance Commission v Sinfein Pty Ltd
(1996) 15 WAR 434 at 443-5, 454; Transport Accident Commission v Jewell
[1995] VicRp 22; [1995] 1 VR 300 at 306-7. Both connote a more proximate relationship between
two events than does the phrase “arising out of”: City Centre
Cold Store Pty Ltd v Preservatrice Skandia Insurance Ltd (1985) 3 NSWLR 739
at 742;
(2) A “direct cause” need not be the most immediate
cause of, or the cause nearest in time to, the event in question:
Transport
Accident Commission v Jewell [1995] VicRp 22; [1995] 1 VR 300 at 306-7; Leyland Shipping
Co Ltd v Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society Ltd [1918] AC 350 at 369.
Another way of putting this is to say that the peril insured against need not be
the agent of destruction: MacGillivray
on Insurance Law (10th ed, 2003) at
[19-2]. In Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co of Canada v Sherwin-Williams
Co of Canada Ltd [1951] AC 319 at 333, Lord Porter put the matter this
way:
“Whatever meaning the word ‘direct’ may
have ..., it does not imply that there can be no step between the cause and the
consequence”.
(3) It follows from (2) that a fire may be
the “direct cause” of damage to an item without actually burning
that item,
and without being on the same premises in which that item is located:
Lynn Gas & Electric Co v Meriden Fire Ins Co 33 NE 690 (1893);
Sutton, Insurance Law in Australia (3rd ed, 1999) at [9.8];
MacGillivray on Insurance Law (10th ed 2003) at [26-6]; 43 Am Jur (2d) at
[477].
(4) One event will not be the “direct cause” of
another if the latter is not the “natural and probable consequence”
of the former, or if there is some novus actus interveniens between the
two.
(5) There can be more than one “direct” or
“proximate” cause of an event: City Centre Cold Store Pty Ltd v
Preservatrice Skandia Insurance Ltd (1985) 3 NSWLR 739 at 742. Where there
are competing “direct” or “proximate” causes of an
event, and loss from one such cause
is insured against and the recovery of loss
from the others is not expressly excluded by the Policy, the insured is entitled
to recover:
HIH Casualty & General Insurance Ltd v Waterwell Shipping
Inc [1998] NSWSC 436; (1998) 43 NSWLR 601 at 612B.
21 The plaintiff's submission was
that the present case is really on all fours with Lynn Gas. The only
distinguishing feature of the present case was said to be that the fire was not
on the same premises as the machinery damaged
by the power surge or short
circuit. That point of distinction, so the plaintiff submitted, did not detract
from the directness of
the fire as a causative event. The plaintiff observed
that Lynn Gas was cited without disapproval in MacGillivray at
[26-28].
22 The defendants' submissions essentially took the court to
the proposition that this is not a case where the "directly caused by
fire"
phrase has any technical meaning. On the contrary, the plain English form of
wording was said to militate against the technical
interpretation. I accept the
submission as of substance.
23 I further accept as of substance and
adopt a number of the further submissions put by the defendants.
24 The
presumption is that the ordinary meaning of the words used is the one intended
by the parties unless it can be shown that there
is a good reason to depart from
that ordinary meaning because the word used, for example, is a term of art:
L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Limited [1973] UKHL 2; [1974] AC 235 at
264:
“Most words in English are capable of a number of meanings,
either in a popular sense or as legal terms of art or both. In
either category,
prima facie, they will be read according to their most usual and natural, (or
primary) sense. But this...is a rebuttable
presumption; so that a word will be
construed in a less usual or natural (or secondary) sense if the instrument
shows that it is
intended in such a sense.”
25 No special or
technical or term of art is in issue here and the phrase "directly caused by
fire" should be construed according
to its ordinary and natural meaning. See
also Nishina Trading Co Limited v Chiyoda Fire and marine Insurance Co
Limited [1969] 2 QB 449 at 462.
Dictionary
definitions
26 As the defendants have pointed out, a starting point
is the dictionary definition of a word. Such a course has been sanctioned
by the
court in State Chamber of Commerce and Industry v The Commonwealth (1987)
16 3 CLR 329 at 348; and Provincial Insurance Australia Pty Limited v
Consolidated Wood Products Pty Limited (1991) 25 NSWLR 541 at 553 per Kirby
P (as he then was).
27 The word "directly" is an adverb of ordinary usage
well understood.
28 The Oxford English Dictionary on line (Oxford
University Press 2004) 2nd ED 1999 defines the word “directly” as
the
adverbial form of the word “direct” which is in turn defined as:
“in a direct manner or way”.
“1(a) in a straight line
of motion: with undeviating course: straight
4. Completely, absolutely,
entirely, exactly, precisely, just”
10. Without intervention of a
medium or agent: immediately, by a direct process or mode.”
29 The
Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary defines “directly”
as:
“1. Adv in a direct manner: exactly (directly in front of): at
once, without delay: presently, in no long time...”
30 The
Macquarie Dictionary 3rd ED defines “directly” as:
(Adverb):
“In a direct line, way or manner: straight. Without
delay: immediately, presently, absolutely; exactly;
precisely”.
Dealing with the issue
31 What then was
the direct cause of the damage to the laser on the assumed and agreed facts? To
my mind, the answer is that upon
the proper construction of the subject policy,
the direct cause of the damage was the electrical surge which caused that
damage.
The surge was caused by the cross-arm on the power pole falling onto
the wires, allowing them to touch and create the surge. The
cross-arm fell onto
the conductors because of the fire on the pole. Looked at in this way, I accept
that the answer is obvious and
straightforward. The electrical surge, I accept,
could, in turn, presumably have been caused by a number of elements, not just a
fire on a power pole. In other words, it was not necessarily, it seems to me, a
natural consequence of the fire, that the power surge
took place.
32 Ultimately, the court's decision is clearly assisted by the fact that
a close examination of the whole of the policy throws up
a variety of
descriptions of causal connections, as the plaintiff usefully pointed out in
their own written submissions:
· The policy contains a broad
spectrum of descriptions of causal connections. The weakest of these is the
phrase "directly or indirectly caused by or contributed to by or arising
from" under clause 2 of the section headed "General exclusions." The
strongest of these is "caused solely as a result of" in clause
6(1)(a)(iii) in the section headed "Electronic Equipment Section".
· Between these two descriptions are a variety of descriptions of
causal connections: “caused by” (see, for example, cl 3.5(c)
in the “Property Section”), “occasioned by or in
consequence of”, “arising out of” (see, for
example, cl 3.7 of the “Property Section”), “direct
result” (see, for example, cl 4.7 of the “Property
Section”), “resulting from” (see, for example, cl 2.1
of the “Business Interruption Section”, “in consequence
of” (cl 3.1 of the “Business Interruption Section”),
“caused by or arising out of” (see, for example, cl 2.3 of
the “Broadform Liability Section”); “arising directly or
indirectly out of or in the course of” (cl 3.1(a) of the
“Broadform Liability Section”), “due to” (see,
for example, cl 3.3 of the “Broadform Liability Section”),
“caused by or naturally resulting from” (cl 5.3(c) of the
Electronic Equipment Section”), “occurring by reason
of” (cl 6.1 of the “Electronic Equipment Section”),
“consequent upon” (cl 2.1 of the “Theft
Section”), “attributed to” (cl 3.3 of the “Money
Section”), “arising out of or resulting from” (cl 3.4
of the “Money Section”), “directly or indirectly caused by
or arising from” (cl 3.14 of the “Broadform Liability
Section”), “caused directly or indirectly by” (cl 3.25
of the “Broadform Liability Section”), “directly or
indirectly caused to or contributed to by” (cl 7 of the “General
Exclusions”).
33 It is clearly appropriate for the court to look
at the whole of the policy. That examination points up that it was seen as
appropriate
to differentiate between a variety of descriptions of causal
connections. As already noted, in so far as the relevant insuring clause
is
concerned, it provided:
"We will indemnify you up to the limit specified
in schedule 2.1 in respect of physical loss of or damage
to...
(b) Contents...
directly caused by the following insured
events...
3.1 Fire."
34 That was to choose a clear and more
proximate causal connection rather than, for example, to choose words such as
"directly or indirectly, caused by or contributed to by or arising from".
35 The plaintiff has taken the court to a number of authorities where
courts have dealt in general terms with issues of causation
and in particular
have interpreted the words "proximate cause" as appropriate to mean
“direct cause”, and have held that
there are in particular contexts,
no difference in meaning between the word "direct" and the word "proximate".
Those authorities,
for example, include City Centre Cold Store v
Preservatrice Skandia Insurance Ltd (1985) 3 NSWLR 739, where at 742 Clarke
J observed that the approach which the trial judge took accorded with the
statement of Lord Porter in Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co of Canada v
Sherwin-Williams Co of Canada Ltd [1951] AC 319 at 333:
"Whatever
meaning the word 'direct' may have in qualifying the word 'result', it does not
imply that there can be no step between
the cause and the consequence. It is
unnecessary to multiply examples."
Likewise in State Government
Insurance Commission v Sinfein Pty Limited (1996) 15 WAR 434, Ipp J observed
at 452:
"Senior counsel for the appellant accepted (correctly, in my
view,) that 'directly' did not mean 'immediately' (i.e. coming in time
immediately after the driving of the vehicle.)". [proceeding to cite the above
passage from Lord Porter’s speech]
36 Notwithstanding those
authorities to which the court was taken in such detail and notwithstanding
acceptance of the notion that
in determining the issue of causation for the
purpose of the law of tort, causation is to be determined in accordance with
common-sense
notions March v Stramare, to my mind, the proper approach to
the question which is separated out here is simply one of construction of the
particular policy
before the court.
37 To the extent that it may be
germane to look, however, in terms of the subject policy under construction, to
questions of separation,
the position would seem to be that there was, clearly,
a separation in terms of place, because
1. the fire took place on the
electricity poles;
2. the effect of the surge to the laser took place
within the premises.
38 The plaintiff has from the bar table indicated,
as I understood it, that experts' reports to be mobilised at some stage in the
proceedings have suggested that there was but a nano-second in time as between
the fire and the power surge. As a matter of principle,
it would seem logical
that there had to have been a separation in terms of time as between the two
events even if it was only a nano-second
in separation. The matter is not the
subject of an agreed or assumed fact. It is sufficient to simply make the point
that if separation
be presently relevant, there was separation.
39 The
very matters which occupied the careful consideration by the court of whether or
not it was here appropriate to order the separate
question are perhaps also
germane to the decision on that question. I refer here to the fact that the
effect of the power surge,
in terms of its possible consequences, may have been
arguably different depending upon the precise structure of the laser. The whole
universe of working out precisely why and how the power surge may
have caused damage to the laser is a matter for examination, but that question
is all about the power surge and its effect upon the laser and
does not require any examination of the disparate matter, namely, how the fire
on the electricity pole, in fact, caused the power
surge.
40 The many
authorities dealing with questions of proximate cause and the learning to be
derived from those authorities have presumably
resulted in Mr Williams, leading
counsel for the plaintiff, at the commencement of his address, taking exception
to the way in which
the defendants have formulated the question for the court in
their written submissions. The defendants' formulation was that the
relevant
question is "What was the direct cause of the damage to the laser?" Mr
Williams in his submissions made plain that whilst the plaintiff would accept as
correct, the question formulated as "What was the proximate cause of the
damage to the laser?", they did not accept that the proper question for the
court was as formulated by the defendant.
41 That submission was then
followed by a careful analysis of the case law in relation to what a proximate
cause has been held to
be and to the many places where courts have held that
there is no difference in meaning between the word "direct" and the word
"proximate".
42 My own view is that neither counsel identified
the question correctly. The question for the court is: “Upon the proper
construction
of the subject insurance policy and clause, what was the direct
cause of the damage to the laser?”
43 For those reasons, in my
view, the separate question posed should be answered "No".
I certify
that paragraphs 1 - 43
are a true copy of the reasons
for
judgment herein of
the Hon. Justice Einstein
given on 21
May 2004ex tempore
and revised on 17 June
2004
___________________
Susan
Piggott
Associate
17 June 2004
LAST UPDATED: 17/06/2004
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