Home
| Databases
| WorldLII
| Search
| Feedback
High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 26 May 2015
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
CIV 2014-404-002436 [2015] NZHC 971
BETWEEN
|
EM
Plaintiff/Respondent
|
AND
|
ACCIDENT COMPENSATION CORPORATION Defendant/Applicant
|
Hearing:
|
4 May 2015
|
Appearances:
|
A Hooker for the Plaintiff/Respondent
C Hlavac and A Keir for the Defendant/Applicant
|
Judgment:
|
8 May 2015
|
JUDGMENT OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE
CHRISTIANSEN
This judgment was delivered by me on
08.05.15 at 4:30pm, pursuant to
Rule 11.5 of the High Court Rules.
Registrar/Deputy Registrar
Date...............
EM v ACCIDENT COMPENSATION CORPORATION [2015] NZHC 971 [8 May 2015]
Background
[1] The defendant Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) applies to
strike out the plaintiff’s claim of losses she says
she has incurred
because of the way ACC dealt with her son’s claim.
[2] In 1993 ACC accepted a claim by the plaintiff ’s son for
compensation as a
result of post-traumatic stress disorder.
[3] The plaintiff says despite requests for assistance, from
May 1995 until December 2008 ACC repeatedly refused to
approve or pay for more
than 13 hours of attendant care for her son. Because of this the plaintiff
says she was forced to provide
that attendant care without compensation and that
she suffered significant financial consequences as a result.
[4] In December 2008 a review and decision required ACC to increase
attendant care payments and to refund previous short payments.
[5] The plaintiff’s claim is for negligence. She pleads she was
a person who it was foreseeable would suffer harm if
ACC failed to comply with
its obligations. It is pleaded ACC owed the plaintiff a duty of care
to:
(a) Provide entitlements in accordance with the provisions of
the Accident Compensation Act 2001 (the Act) in respect
of her son who had cover
under that Act.
(b) Ensure that her son received all the entitlements he was entitled
to receive.
(c) Correctly and fully perform its obligations in relation to the
provision for and funding of attendant care for her son.
[6] The claim is an unusual one. It is a claim brought by someone other than whom ACC accepted a responsibility to make payments for. Someone ACC had no statutory obligations to.
[7] The plaintiff accepts no statutory duty was owed to her, rather
that in the circumstances whereby it is claimed, the statutory
obligations owed
to her son were not maintained; that ACC was negligent to her the care attendant
of her son in circumstances where
it was reasonably foreseeable the
economic consequences would likely cause a cost to her.
[8] The plaintiff said her relationship with ACC arises at common law
because she is a person that ACC knew about who would
suffer harm if ACC did not
do what it was meant to do. It is her case that ACC knew, as a result of her
repeated requests, that
she needed support and therefore ACC assumed
responsibility.
[9] A single cause of action in negligence is pleaded in support of the
plaintiff’s
claim.
Application for strike out
[10] In issue for consideration is whether or not the plaintiff has a
claim capable of succeeding and if not then it should be
struck out. If so,
then likely it would be because some further factual enquiry into the
circumstances of the claim may be needed
and for that reason a trial enquiry is
appropriate.
[11] Rule 15.1 of the High Court Rules provides:
15.1 Dismissing or staying all or part of proceeding
(1) The court may strike out all or part of a pleading if it–
(a) discloses no reasonably arguable cause of action, defence, or case
appropriate to the nature of the pleading; or
(b) is likely to cause prejudice or delay; or
(c) is frivolous or vexatious; or
(d) is otherwise an abuse of process of the court.
...
[12] The leading case addressing the principles to apply in an
application to strike out a claim is now Couch v AG1, per the
minority decision of Elias CJ and Anderson J. Those principles can be summarised
as follows:
(a) Pleaded facts are assumed to be true, although pleaded allegations
which are speculative and without foundation are not.
(b) The cause of action or defence must be clearly untenable.
(c) It is inappropriate to strike out a claim summarily unless the
Court can be certain that it cannot succeed.
(d) The jurisdiction is to be exercised sparingly and only in clear
cases.
(e) The jurisdiction is not excluded by the need to decide
difficult questions of law requiring extensive argument.
(f) The Court will be slow to strike out a claim in a developing area
of law and particular care is required in areas where
the law is confusing or
developing.
[13] The Court will strike out a claim if, as pleaded, it is so clearly
untenable that the plaintiff cannot possibly succeed but
if disputed questions
of fact arise, the case should go to trial.2
ACC’s case for strike out
[14] ACC’s case does not turn on issues of fact. Its focus is upon
applications of principles of law relating to:
(a) The operation of the statute bar at s 317 of the
Act.
2 Attorney-General v Equiticorp Industries Group Limited [1996] 1 NZLR 528 (CA) at 533.
(b) Whether, as a matter of law, ACC owes a duty of care to the plaintiff,
being a third party taking care of the claimant.
(c) Whether, as a matter of law, ACC owes a duty of care to prevent economic
loss being caused to the plaintiff.
[15] For ACC it is submitted that there is no reasonably arguable cause
of action.
The plaintiff ’s case in opposition
[16] It is the plaintiff ’s case that her claim is not for breach
of statutory duty. She
accepts ACC owed no statutory duty to her. Hers is a claim in
negligence.
[17] For the plaintiff it is asserted she is not a claimant from, and nor
does she have any relationship with ACC; rather she
is the mother of the
claimant and her relationship with ACC arises at common law because she is a
person that ACC knew about who
would suffer harm if ACC did not do what it was
meant to do.
[18] The plaintiff’s case is that ACC knew, as a result of her
repeated requests, that she needed support, and therefore
assumed responsibility
and that is the basis for her claim of a duty of care.
Considerations
[19] ACC says the plaintiff’s claim is statute barred by s 317 of
the Act. To the extent the plaintiff’s claim alleges
negligence by ACC it
is submitted on behalf of ACC that the claim is, in practical terms, actually
for a breach of statutory duty.
[20] Issues include whether ACC owes a duty of care to the plaintiff and
whether that duty includes preventing economic loss to
the
plaintiff.
[21] This judgment will address the respective arguments of counsel on these matters.
Statute bar
[22] Section 317 provides:
317 Proceedings for personal injury
(1) No person may bring proceedings independently of this Act, whether
under any rule of law or any enactment, in
any court in New Zealand,
for damages arising directly or indirectly out of–
(a) personal injury covered by this Act; or
(b) personal injury covered by the former Acts.
[23] If an injury is covered by the ACC regime the bar applies and if not
then common law action is preserved.
[24] It is ACC’s position that the plaintiff’s claim
arises indirectly from the personal injury suffered
by her son. For the
plaintiff it is argued that that analysis is an over-simplification.
Duty of care
[25] The views of counsel are expressed by reference to their
consideration of case authority.
[26] In Queenstown Lakes District Council v Palmer3 the
Court of Appeal noted:
Essentially, the Accident Compensation Legislation in both its original and
amended forms denied those persons covered under the Act
access to the Courts at
common law in return for the perceived advantages of the statutory scheme. The
legislation reflected this
policy from the outset. The exchange has frequently
been spoken of as a social contract or social compact.
[27] In that case Mr Palmer suffered mental injuries from witnessing his wife’s death from drowning in a river-rafting accident. His claim included exemplary damages. The Court of Appeal held his claim was not barred because it did not arise directly out of his wife’s death but related to a personal injury suffered by Mr Palmer
as a “secondary victim”.
3 [1998] NZCA 190; [1999] 1 NZLR 549 at 555.
[28] The injuries for which Mr Palmer sought damages were the mental
injuries he himself suffered as a result of the alleged breach
of duty of care
owed to him. The Court of Appeal held that it would have been unjust that a
person who suffers mental injury witnessing
a personal injury or death of
another would not be entitled to either compensation under the Act or damages of
common law.
[29] In Chalecki v ARCIC4 the High Court
considered an appeal against the decision of the District Court striking out
Mr Chalecki’s claim. The
claim alleged that due to pressure by ACC he was
required to return to work causing him personal injury separate to that for
which
he had cover for. Mr Chalecki claimed he suffered economic losses as a
result.
[30] Justice John Hansen held:
It seems to me that s 14 is a complete bar to these proceedings. On any
assessment of the pleadings, it is clear that the
damages sought by Mr
Chalecki arise directly, or indirectly from his original personal injury. If he
had not been personally
injured, he would not have come within the aegis of ACC
or the relevant statutory provisions. The alleged damages arise from efforts
made by ACC to rehabilitate Mr Chalecki within the terms of the Act. The loss
alleged must, therefore, arise directly, or indirectly,
from a personal injury
covered by the Act.
[31] As earlier noted the plaintiff denies she seeks to impose a new
category of duty. The plaintiff says as the Naysmith5
authority confirms, the concept of ACC owing a duty of care to family
members of a claimant is not a novel duty of care.
[32] In Naysmith the Court did not strike out the
plaintiff’s negligence claim noting that based on the facts pleaded the
losses would not have
occurred had ACC not given and then breached its
undertaking to the family member claimant.
[33] In Naysmith the Court held that it was arguable that the legislative policy of the legislation excluded claims for personal injury by accident but did not touch a claim for injury caused not by the accident but by the negligent breach of an
assumed obligation.
4 (AP 28/01) H.C. Greymouth, John Hansen J, 10 October 2011.
5 Naysmith v ACC [2006] 1 NZLR 40.
[34] The plaintiff ’s case here is that a trial would permit an
inquiry to determine whether ACC’s failure to pay
for sufficient attendant
care (until a review decision determined the extent of care required) was a
negligent breach of duty.
Pure economic loss
[35] ACC says the plaintiff’s claim is for pure economic loss
relating to lost income and losses involved in the sale of
her property. Mr
Hlavac submits that the extent to which a person can be liable for pure
financial loss is itself also another area
of controversy. Mr Hlavac submits it
is a matter of assessing the remoteness of the loss and ordinary principles of
causation claims
of economic loss suffered by a caregiver and is without
precedent in New Zealand law.
[36] Mr Hooker submits any consideration of reasons for and
against the imposition of a duty in the particular circumstances
should be
decided in the factual setting; that the Court should hear evidence about
the matters pleaded before deciding
whether in all the circumstances a duty
applies.
[37] Mr Hooker submits it is clearly established that if the defendant
has or is deemed to have assumed responsibility to the
plaintiff to be careful
in what is said or written, thereby creating proximity, it would
usually, subject to policy
considerations, be fair, just and reasonable to
hold the defendant liable for want of care. 6
[38] At paragraph 26 of the judgment the Court stated:
In most cases, however, there will be no voluntary assumption of
responsibility. The Court will, however, deem the defendant
to have
assumed responsibility and find proximity accordingly if, when making the
statement in question, the defendant foresees
or ought to foresee that the
plaintiff will reasonably place reliance on what is said.
[39] This case, Mr Hooker submits, is about a situation where the plaintiff repeatedly made enquiry of ACC for help; that the plaintiff did not know that she
was asking for “attendant care” but ACC’s repeated
statements that there was no help
6 A J v Carter (2003) CA 72/02 at paras 24 – 26.
available provides evidence of a situation where a reasonable person in the
plaintiff’s
position would rely upon that advice given.
[40] Mr Hooker submits the Court needs to find out exactly what was said
by ACC and what exactly was asked by the plaintiff,
before deciding whether the
circumstances imposed a duty of care.
Overview of considerations
[41] It is ACC’s case that the plaintiff’s claim be struck
out in its entirety because there is no reasonably arguable
cause of action
because s 317 of the Act bars the claim but that even if it was not statute
barred ACC owes no duty of care and there
is no basis for imposing such in
this case, and there is no basis for creating an exception in finding a
duty to prevent
pure economic loss as claimed.
[42] The plaintiff ’s position is that she relied on ACC’s
representations and in such circumstances the Courts have
ruled ACC has a duty
of care. Also, as ACC knew there was clearly a relationship between the
plaintiff and ACC. The plaintiff submits
therefore a duty of care exists but at
the very least the matter needs to go to a trial so that the evidence around
statements and
assumption can be explored.
[43] Mr Hooker rejects claims the proceedings are barred because it
arises out of the conduct of ACC; and the Courts have already
accepted a duty of
care can arise in such circumstances.
Discussion
Statute Bar
[44] In this proceeding it is the case for the plaintiff that the harm suffered by her had no connection to the injuries suffered by her son; that the harm was caused by the actions of ACC and occurred as a result of entirely separate events which happened some time after the personal injury suffered by her son.
[45] Mr Hooker submits it is clear that the alleged harm suffered by the
plaintiff is completely unrelated to that for which ACC
was addressing in its
obligations to her son; that the plaintiff’s position is more aligned to
the Naysmith situation where the plaintiff was not a claimant but a
family member who alleged harm caused by ACC’s actions or
inactions.
[46] It is submitted for the plaintiff that Naysmith is authority
for a claim that a member of a family who suffers loss as a result of a breach
of duty of care by ACC when handling the
person’s family claim, is
covered. In that case the court upheld the right of the Naysmith family to
pursue its common law
claim for negligence. The Court confirmed that whilst the
Act excluded claims for personal injury by accident it did not affect
a claim
for injury caused not by the accident but by negligent breach of an assumed
obligation – as the court held had occurred
when an ACC officer assured Mr
Naysmith’s wife that ACC would look after her husband but that in the
circumstances of the case
it did not do this appropriately.
[47] Mr Hooker submits that both the Queensland Lakes and
Naysmith cases are authorities for the proposition that a right of
action will exist where the harm suffered by the plaintiff does
not
directly arise from personal injury and that harm suffered in circumstances
which are totally separate from the personal injury
shall provide recourse to a
remedy.
Duty of Care
[48] In the Court’s view there are differences between the
Naysmith case and this one. There is not here, as there was there a
representation about what would be provided by way of cover under the
Act. In
this case there was no representation that anything else would be provided
outside of ACC’s statutory obligations.
In Naysmith there was a
separate indication that other treatment and costs would be provided and paid
for.
[49] This case is about whether a duty of care can be owed in the circumstances to a person other than he for whom the payment was intended to benefit. At its core this case is about claims of a failure to carry out a statutory obligation to assess and
pay attendant care. It is not just about the foreseeability of harm
occurring to someone other than the party to whom and on whose
behalf the
payment is made. This Court thinks that it is also about whether there should be
an additional duty imposed when parliament
has not seen fit to offer a
remedy.
[50] In Couch the Supreme Court considered whether the probation
service could owe a duty of care to the plaintiff who was injured when a parolee
with whom she worked violently assaulted her during a robbery. The
Court’s focus was upon a claim for exemplary damages.
The Court noted it
would always be cautious about imposing a new duty in cases of omission. In the
particular circumstances of
that case the Court majority held it was possible to
frame a duty not to the public at large but to those at “particular
risk”. The Court said that if proximity could be established
then the next consideration is whether the
policy reasons mitigated
against the imposition of a duty.
[51] In this case the Court agrees that Couch confirms that a
public body may owe a duty to certain people at ‘particular risk’ of
foreseeable harm, but that does not
assist the plaintiff because the question of
duties owed by ACC has already been considered and the relevant decisions
already reject
the imposition of such duties against ACC.
[52] In Pearce v ACC7 Penlington J considered whether
to strike out a statement of claim seeking exemplary damages for negligence and
breach of statutory
duty. The learned Judge considered the decision of the
English Court of Appeal in Jones v Department of Employment8
in which case the plaintiff’s claim for an unemployment benefit had
been disallowed by an adjudication officer, then was upheld
after further
evidence had been provided, but then was overturned on appeal. In that case
the plaintiff then commenced a common
law action against the department alleging
the adjudication officer had been negligent in disallowing the claim for the
benefit.
[53] The UK Court of Appeal said:
7 (1991) 5 PRNZ 297 (Penlington J).
8 [1988] All ER 725, at 734 - 736.
The present action, if it were to proceed, would necessarily involve a
challenge to the correctness of the adjudication officer’s
decision.
That would be a challenge to its finality by a route other then provided by the
statutory provisions themselves.
...
The question thus is whether taking all the circumstances into account it is
just and reasonable that the adjudication officer should
be under a duty of care
of common law to the claimant to benefit. Having regard to the non- judicial
nature of the adjudication
officer’s responsibilities, and in particular
to the fact that statutory framework provides a right of appeal which, if a
point
of law arises can eventually bring the matter to this Court, it is my view
that the adjudication officer is not under any common
law duty of care. In other
words I agree with counsel for the Department that his decision is not
susceptible to challenge at common
law unless it be shown that he is guilty of
misfeasance.
Indeed in my view it is a general principle that if a government department
or officer in charge with the making of decisions whether
certain payments
should be made is subject to statutory right of appeal against its decisions he
owes no duty of care in private
law. Misfeasance apart, he is only
susceptible in public law judicial review or to the right of appeal provided by
the statute
under which he makes his decision.
...
[54] Penlington J commented:
In my view Jones is fatal to the plaintiff’s plea of negligence
in carrying out a statutory duty. The reasoning in Jones equally applies
to the present case. I find that the defendant did not owe a duty of care to the
plaintiff as alleged. Further the
combined effect of s 27(3), s 101(4), and the
hierarchy of rights of review and appeal available under the Act excludes any
right
of action at common law for alleged negligence in carrying out the
statutory duties prescribed by the Accident Compensation Act.
To allow the
plaintiff to sue the defendant in negligence for administration of its powers
would be to allow him to circumvent
the statutory review and appeal
provisions contained in that Act.
[55] As Mr Hlavac submits, in Chalecki the District Court had relied on the decision in Pearce and it was before that Court that it was argued that because ACC had not made any reviewable decision in terms of the Act that all common law remedies particularly tortious remedies were available. However the Court decided the statute bar operated to prevent the proceedings and the Court described the “powerful policy reasons” why that was so.
[56] New Zealand law accepts the existence of rights to bring actions in
assault or misfeasance in public office. The Court in
Chalecki did not
accept that it followed therefore that a claim in simple negligence could
succeed. The Court said at [38]:
... It would be anomalous if a claimant could sue for allegedly negligent
investigation, management or administration of a claim seeking
damages in a form
not available as compensation under the Act, but could not sue for a negligent
decision which is the culmination
of such a process.
[57] In Naysmith the Court concluded there was no cause of action for a breach of statutory demand against ACC and that particular claim was struck out. In considering whether the statute bar prevented the negligence claim the Court referred to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Rolls Royce New Zealand Limited v Carter
Holt Harvey9. In that case the Court of Appeal
said:
...In cases where the defendant is found to have undertaken to exercise
reasonable care in circumstances which are analogous to, but
short of contract,
it is foreseeable that the plaintiff will rely on that undertaking... then,
subject to any accountability policy
factors, a duty of care will
arise.
[58] In Traynor v ACC10 the Court considered Mr
Traynor’s claim of a breach of obligation by ACC to provide him with
vocational rehabilitation, of negligently
failing to provide rehabilitation, and
failing to advise him of his entitlement to it. Mr Traynor relied on the
decision in Naysmith. In response the Court said:
[29] Thus it is clear that the decision of the Court not to strike out
Mr Naysmith’s claim in negligence was based entirely
on the fact that the
claim rested on the corporation’s assurance to Mrs Naysmith that it would
look after her husband. This
was the effective cause of the loss suffered by Mr
and Mrs Naysmith.
[59] As Mr Hlavac notes the Court distinguished Mr Traynor’s
circumstances
saying at [30]:
The same cannot be said for Mr Traynor. Here, there is no allegation of any
assumption of responsibility outside the statutory regime.
The claim rests
solely on allegations that the corporation is in breach of its obligations to
exercise reasonable care in providing
the range of entitlements Mr Traynor had
under the Act. It does not come within the limited ambit of the decision in
Naysmith.
9 [2004] NZCA 97; [2005] 1 NZLR 324.
10 HC Wellington, 14/10/2012 Matthews AJ.
[60] Also for consideration is the High Court’s decision in
Taylor v Taite11. In that case the High Court considered a
question of the distribution of attendant care entitlements between family
members.
That case was decided under the 1982 Act where ACC had discretion
to make payment to family members who provided attendant
care. The mother
of a disabled child received a large back payment for attendant care. The
child’s grandmother who had provided
some of that care claimed for a share
of the back payment. The Court concluded that back paid attendant care
compensation was due
to be paid to the injured person, but on the basis that it
was used to reimburse caregivers. The Court found the duty to pay for
attendant
care was owed to the claimant and not the carer even though the Act provided for
payment directly to the carer.
Conclusion
[61] In this case ACC granted the plaintiff’s son cover for
injuries he suffered. The range of entitlements for that cover
included
attendant care. ACC agreed to meet the costs of the provision of 13 hours per
week attendant care for the son.
[62] The plaintiff on behalf of her son challenged the adequacy of that
provision. A reviewer said ACC incorrectly calculated
what was due and a
recalculation was directed.
[63] The plaintiff has made a claim calculated on the losses she said
occurred to her because of the shortfall paid to her son.
[64] The plaintiff says her losses were a foreseeable consequence of the failure of ACC to pay sufficient for her son. The plaintiff says that ACC owed a duty of care to her in the circumstances and that being in breach of that duty to her entitles her to a remedy which remedy is not related to the payment of the entitlement but
consequential damages arising out of an alleged statutory
breach.
11 M 13/00, HC, Rotorua, 23/05/02.
[65] It seems to the Court in this overview of matters the claim of a
separate duty to the plaintiff somewhat loses its identity
because it is all
about the consequences of the inadequacy of a payment due to her
son.
[66] In Chalecki the Court considered that the remedies available
were entirely those prescribed by the Act. The Court said there was nothing in
the Act which entitled payment to another of the losses they
claimed.
[67] The Court considers in this case that the only remedy is available
to the son and that was to have the extent of the attendant
care he needed
reassessed – and that is what it did.
[68] What the plaintiff is endeavouring to do is to extend the category
of statutory duties available to persons other than claimants
and in a way not
provided for in the Act and in doing so to give to the plaintiff access to
remedies not available to her son.
[69] Parliament clearly defined those who have entitlements under the
Act. The plaintiff’s claim seeks to extend the range
of remedies
available and much wider than parliament could have intended.
[70] There are always in cases involving decisions regarding the extent of
entitlements to be provided other persons who will be
affected by those
decisions.
[71] To widen the scope would mean that anyone in a situation with a
relationship with a claimant is therefore able to bring a
claim and to seek
damages beyond those a claimant would receive.
[72] It seems to the Court that that outcome threatens to undermine the
whole purpose of the ACC scheme.
[73] This is a case for damages arising out of cover provided under the
Act.
[74] There would be no basis for the plaintiff’s claim had the son not been injured and offered funding by ACC for the son’s care. A review of case authority suggests
Court’s have been very cautious about extending the range of
circumstances that might justify claims by others connected to
that person for
whom the entitlement was granted. In this case the claim of the plaintiff
places considerable reliance upon the
decision in Naysmith. But that
case is about the failure of ACC to provide that which it said it would
provide. This case is different because
there was no separate indication
by ACC of what it would provide outside of its statutory
obligations.
[75] The Queenstown Lakes case agreed that a duty of care was owed
to someone other than the claimant but that occurred because of a
secondary injury
which occurred to the other person in that event in which the
claimant was injured.
[76] It is clear from the Court’s decision in Chalecki that
any claim entitlement is limited to what the Act says can be paid.
[77] In this case the plaintiff seeks damages not available to her son by
seeking an extension of existing duties of care to her.
[78] For the plaintiff it is argued the claim is fact specific and
decisions about whether or not a duty of care was owed ought
to be left for
trial. The Court disagrees. It is clear that if relief at all was to be
provided to the plaintiff then ACC is at
risk of potential claims from a very
wide class of people.
[79] There appears nothing in the Act that extends rights to third
parties. The purpose and policy of the Act would be at risk
if this claim was
accepted because while the son cannot bring the claim someone close to him would
and would receive entitlements
not available to the son.
[80] It cannot be that the plaintiff’s claim is not connected to
her son’s injury for it is ACC’s judgment of
his claim for attendant
care that founds her claim of a duty of care.
[81] The Naysmith case did not dismiss the negligence claim as it did the breach of statutory duty claim, because of a clear representation that a certain degree of care
and cost would be provided, but it was not. It was not an issue about the
adequacy of the provision of care, but about not delivering
what was
promised.
[82] But, the issues are not just about the structure of the claim
referring to negligent breach and thereby avoiding any
connection with a claim
of breach of statutory duty. That would be too straightforward and should not
avoid addressing the claim’s
perspective in a broader context.
[83] It only arises because of claims ACC provided inadequate support for
her son and because on review ACC was required to provide
more. Should it
follow in that outcome that ACC had a duty of care to a person (mother or other)
who claims she had to pay or provide
more than otherwise she would
have.
[84] It is very much a case about the extent to which the present state
of the law should be prepared to extend its ability to
assist those
claims.
[85] Considerations of public policy and duty of care do not, this court
considers, admit to claims of the kind in this case.
Result
[86] It is the Court’s finding that this claim is statute barred by
s 317 of the Act; that even if it was not statute barred
no duty of care is owed
to the plaintiff and nor is there any basis for imposing such upon ACC; and the
plaintiff’s claim provides
no basis for creating an exception in finding a
duty to prevent pure economic loss as in this case.
Judgment
[87] The claim is struck out.
[88] The plaintiff shall pay the defendant’s costs calculated
on a 2B basis.
Associate Judge Christiansen
NZLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2015/971.html