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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Whitely v. Minister for Defence [1997] IEHC 92; [1998] 4 IR 442; [1997] 2 ILRM 416 (10th June, 1997)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1997/92.html
Cite as: [1998] 4 IR 442, [1997] 2 ILRM 416, [1997] IEHC 92

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Whitely v. Minister for Defence [1997] IEHC 92; [1998] 4 IR 442; [1997] 2 ILRM 416 (10th June, 1997)

THE HIGH COURT
1995 No. 7190P
BETWEEN
EDWARD WHITELY
PLAINTIFF
AND
THE MINISTER FOR DEFENCE, IRELAND AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
DEFENDANTS
JUDGMENT delivered on the 10th day of June, 1997 by Mr. Justice Quirke

1. The Plaintiff enlisted in the Army in 1957 and served until 1978 by which time he had been promoted through the ranks to the position of Quarter Master Sergeant.

2. Whilst in the Army he was based in the Curragh Camp and he served in the First Armoured Squadron and in the Cavalry Corps. In both of those units and indeed throughout the duration of his time within the Army, the Plaintiff was required to participate in

(1) Annual range practice, and
(2) An annual activity known as Butt duty.

3. During range practice the Plaintiff was required to fire a machine gun which discharged 36 rounds per minute and he estimates that in each year he would have discharged in excess of two hundred rounds of ammunition, whilst at the same time being exposed to the noise of other colleagues firing similar weapons in close proximity and at approximately the same rate. The annual range practice was of two or three days duration.

4. Butt duty was also an annual activity and it lasted for three or four weeks. It involved the shooting of targets and sometimes required different units in the Army to compete against one another in teams. During Butt duty the Plaintiff estimates that he was exposed to the noise of two or three hundred rounds of ammunition every day for three or four weeks, discharged by Browning sub-machine guns and Malzun Canon.

5. The Plaintiff testified to the intent that throughout the entire twenty one years whilst he was a member of the Army (between 1957 and 1978) he was never at any time issued with hearing protection or ear defenders (in the form of ear plugs or ear muffs) or safety equipment directed towards protecting him from exposure to excessive noise. Furthermore he never received any instruction or training directed towards protecting him from the risk of damaged hearing and was not issued with any literature warning him of the potential risk of damage to hearing posed by the noise of the gunfire to which he was exposed during range practice and Butt duty.

6. At the commencement of the case, Counsel on behalf of the Defendants indicated that it would not be necessary for the Plaintiff to prove either

(a) That exposure to noise of the type to which the Plaintiff had been exposed during his career within the Army was capable of causing noise induced hearing impairment (it was conceded that such was the case) or
(b) That certain levels of hearing protection ought to have been (but were not) provided by the Defendant to the Plaintiff whilst he was engaged upon range practice and Butt duty in order to protect the Plaintiff and his colleagues from the risk of damage to his hearing.

7. The evidence adduced on behalf of the Plaintiff to the intent that every year for twenty one years he was exposed to the noise of several hundred rounds of ammunition for between twenty and thirty days of each year and that he was never provided with hearing protection or instruction, was not challenged by the Defendant at any time throughout the trial of this action. At the conclusion of the evidence, it was expressly conceded on behalf of the Defendants that throughout the duration of the twenty one years whilst the Plaintiff was a member of the Army, the Defendants were negligent and in breach of their duty to the Plaintiff inter alia in failing to provide him with any or any adequate hearing protection and with any or any sufficient training and instruction as how best to protect himself from the risk of damage to his hearing resulting from his exposure to noise from gunfire.


THE PLAINTIFF'S CLAIM

8. The Plaintiff claims that by reason of the negligence and breach of duty of the Defendants he has sustained serious personal injury involving hearing loss and tinnitus and whilst a claim has been advanced on his behalf in respect of other loss and damage, no evidence has been adduced in support of any claim for pecuniary loss. Accordingly on the evidence, the Plaintiff's claim is confined to general damages arising out of his injury.

9. The Plaintiff further claims that

(i) Since, by reason of the negligence and breach of duty of the Defendants, he was exposed to noise levels which (on the admission of the Defendants) were capable of causing hearing impairment and tinnitus, and
(ii) Since this exposure occurred for a number of weeks annually over a period of twenty one years and
(iii) Since the Plaintiff did not sustain further exposure to excessive levels of noise after his discharge from the Army then it is probable that his hearing impairment was caused by his exposure to noise during his Army career between 1957 and 1978.

10. In support of his claim the Plaintiff testified to the intent that whilst he was in the Army he noticed that he was encountering a problem with his hearing and a ringing in his ears immediately after the range practice and Butt duty and that these symptoms would continue for "a day or two" . After he was voluntarily discharged from the Army in 1978 he suffered from tinnitus and difficulty with speech discrimination in the presence of background noise and he found it necessary to turn his television to a level higher than was comfortable for the other members of his family. He became particularly conscious of his disability in 1993 and in September, 1995 he was prevailed upon by the other members of his family to visit Dr. O'Shea for the purpose of having his hearing tested.

11. Dr. O'Shea's tests disclosed what the latter described as "mild to moderate noise hearing loss" together with tinnitus and the Plaintiff was then referred to Mr. Savage-Jones who is an Ear, Nose and Throat Consultant Surgeon who arranged a further audiogram for the Plaintiff which more or less confirmed the earlier test relative to the nature and extent of the Plaintiff's hearing impairment. Both Dr. O'Shea and Mr. Savage-Jones indicated in evidence that the Plaintiff's hearing loss occurs in the high tone frequencies and both of these expert medical witnesses were of the opinion that his hearing loss was noise induced and that tinnitus (which is fundamentally a subjective complaint) is a condition which is frequently found in the presence of noise induced hearing impairment.

12. The Plaintiff's testimony to the intent that he was not exposed to excessive levels of noise at any time during the period between his discharge from the Army in 1978 and his presentation for audiogram testing by Dr. O'Shea in 1995 was not challenged on behalf of the Defendants.

13. No Reply has been delivered on behalf of the Plaintiff to the Defence delivered on behalf of the Defendants and in consequence there has been no formal joinder of pleadings in relation to the issue raised in the Defence relative to the Statute of Limitations, 1957 as amended. No application was made by either party to have that issue determined by way of an issue preliminary to the trial of the action but in response to the contentions advanced on behalf of the Defendants in relation to that issue, the Plaintiff relied upon the provisions of Section 2 of the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act, 1991, claiming that he brought his action against the Defendants within the period of three years from his "date of knowledge" within the meaning of Section 2 of the 1991 Act. In particular it was argued on behalf of the Plaintiff that he first had knowledge of the fact that his injury was "significant" in 1993 and that a Plenary Summons was issued on his behalf on the 15th September, 1995.

14. It was conceded on behalf of the Plaintiff that he had knowledge of the following facts more than fifteen years prior to the institution of proceedings, that is to say:-

(1) That he had been injured,
(2) That the injury was attributable in whole or in part to the Defendants' negligence and breach of duty,
(3) The identity of the Defendants, and
(4) That he was not alleging negligence or breach of duty on the part of any person other than the Defendants.

THE DEFENCE RAISED BY THE DEFENDANTS

15. At the conclusion of the evidence the Defendants, by their Counsel, conceded that the unchallenged evidence of the Plaintiff constituted proof of negligence and breach of the Defendants' duty to the Plaintiff in failing to provide him with adequate hearing protection and appropriate instruction.

16. They contend however, that the Plaintiff did not sustain any injury or other loss or damage as a result of the Defendants admitted negligence and breach of duty. In support of that contention they point to the evidence adduced on their behalf by Mr. Alexander Blayney who testified to the intent, that when he examined an audiogram which had been commissioned on his behalf he found that the Plaintiff's hearing thresholds fell within the normal range to be expected of a man in his mid-fifties (the Plaintiff's age at the date of the audiogram). He concluded that there was no objective evidence available to him that the Plaintiff had ever sustained noise induced hearing damage.

17. Alternatively the Defendants claim that prima facie the Plaintiff's claim is barred by the provisions of the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act, 1991 and in particular Section 3 (1) thereof which provides as follows:-


"An action, other than one to which section 6 of this Act applies, claiming damages in respect of personal injuries to a person caused by negligence, nuisance or breach of duty (whether the duty exists by virtue of a contract or of a provision made by or under a statute or independently of any contract or any such provision) shall not be brought after the expiration of three years from the date on which the cause of action accrued or the date of knowledge (if later) of the person injured"

18. Furthermore the Defendants claim that insofar as the Plaintiff seeks to rely upon the provisions of Section 2 of the 1991 Act (with which I will deal in greater detail later) to prove his "date of knowledge" within the meaning of the Act, the evidence which was adduced at the trial of the action disclosed that well before the appropriate three year period the Plaintiff had knowledge of all of the facts which are relevant in determining the Plaintiff's "date of knowledge" within the meaning of Section 2 of the 1991 Act.


19. In summary then the Defendants contend

(1) that the Plaintiff's claim is barred by the provisions of the Statutes of Limitations, 1957 and 1991, and
(2) that if his claim is not barred, then he has not sustained any injury, loss or damage by reason of the admitted negligence and breach of duty of the Defendants

THE ISSUES

20. I have reached the conclusion that the following issues require to be determined in this case:

1. Were the Defendants negligent and in breach of their duty to the Plaintiff in failing to provide him with adequate protection and appropriate instruction directed towards protecting him from the risk of injury to his hearing whilst he was a member of the armed forces between 1957 and 1978?

21. I have no hesitation in determining this issue in favour of the Plaintiff having regard to his unchallenged evidence in that respect and to the concessions made on behalf of the Defendants to which I have referred earlier.


2. Did the Plaintiff sustain personal injuries, loss or damage by reason of the Defendants admitted negligence?

22. I also determine this issue in favour of the Plaintiff and in doing so I have had regard in particular for the following:

(a) I accept the Plaintiff's evidence that immediately after range practice and Butt duty he suffered hearing problems and tinnitus for "a day or two".
(b) Dr. O'Shea stated in evidence that the symptoms of which the Plaintiff complained and the hearing loss disclosed by audiogram were inconsistent with age-related deafness but were consistent with the Plaintiff's occupational history which included exposure to small arms fire.
(c) Mr. Savage-Jones in his evidence endorsed the views expressed by Dr. O'Shea and indicated that the audiogram evidence which he had commissioned was consistent with noise induced damage. He described the Plaintiff's hearing loss as "..... abnormal for his age....".
(d) Mr. Alexander Blayney who testified on behalf of the Plaintiff felt that the Plaintiff's hearing loss fell "... within its normal range for the hearing of a man within his mid-fifties being specifically fifty-six".

23. He felt similarly that the Plaintiff's tinnitus fell within the normal range of frequency and disability for a man of the Plaintiff's age.

24. I was impressed by Mr. Blayney's evidence and have little difficulty in accepting it but I had the impression that Mr. Blayney was concerned to be able to demonstrate the presence or absence of ".... a water tight case of noise induced hearing loss" and felt that he was not in the position to be definite on that issue.

25. Of greater significance there was a difference between the audiogram prepared for Mr. Blayney and those prepared for Dr. O'Shea and Mr. Savage-Jones which showed a greater hearing loss. Mr. Blayney very clearly agreed that the audiograms were prepared by wholly independent technicians and that it was entirely reasonable for Mr. Savage-Jones and Dr. O'Shea to have given the evidence which they gave, having regard to the audiograms which they examined.

26. In the light of the foregoing I am satisfied that on the balance of probabilities the Plaintiff sustained noise induced hearing loss and tinnitus between 1957 and 1978 by reason of the Defendants' negligence.


3. Is the Plaintiff's claim barred by the provisions of the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act, 1991 and in particular Section 3 (1) thereof?

27. The Plaintiff claims that he commenced proceedings against the Defendants within the period of three years from his "date of knowledge" within the meaning of Section 2 (1) of the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act, 1991 which provides as follows:


"For the purposes of any provision of this Act whereby the time within which an action in respect of an injury may be brought depends on a person's date of knowledge (whether he is the person injured or a personal representative or dependant of the person injured) references to that person's date of knowledge are references to the date on which he first had knowledge of the following facts:

(a) that the person alleged to have been injured had been injured,
(b) that the injury in question was significant,
(c) that the injury was attributable in whole or in part to the act or omission which is alleged to constitute negligence, nuisance or breach of duty,
(d) the identity of the defendant, and
(e) if it is alleged that the act or omission was that of a person other than the defendant, the identity of that person and the additional facts supporting the bringing of an action against the defendant;

and knowledge that any acts or omissions did or did not, as a matter of law, involve negligence, nuisance, or breach of duty is irrelevant".

28. The provisions of sub-section (2) of Section 2 of the 1991 Act is of some relevance to this case. It provides as follows:-


"For the purposes of this section, a person's knowledge includes knowledge which he might reasonably have been expected to acquire -

(a) from facts observable or ascertainable by him, or
(b) from facts ascertainable by him with the help of medical or other appropriate expert advice which it is reasonable for him to seek".

29. It has been expressly admitted by the Plaintiff in evidence and by his Counsel that he had knowledge of the following facts as early as 1979 or 1980 that is to say:-


(1) That he had been injured,
(2) That the injury was attributable in whole or in part to the negligence and the breach of duty of the Defendants,
(3) The identity of the Defendants, and
(4) That the negligence and breach of duty was not that of a person other than the Defendants.

30. It is contended on behalf of the Plaintiff that whilst he had knowledge as early as 1979 or 1980 that he had been injured, he did not have knowledge that the injury in question was "significant" until some time between 1993 and 1995 and accordingly it has been argued on his behalf that his "date of knowledge" was no earlier than 1993 and that his action is not barred in the manner alleged.

The "date of knowledge" for the purposes of the 1991 Act is virtually identical to the "date of knowledge" contemplated for the purposes of Section 14 of the English Limitation Act, 1980 which contains a similar provision as to knowledge ".... that the injury in question was significant" (see Subsection 14 (1)(a) of that Act).

31. It is to be noted that Section 14 (2) of the English Act expressly defines an injury as significant "if the person whose date of knowledge is in question would reasonably have considered it sufficiently serious to justify his instituting proceedings for damages against a Defendant who did not dispute liability and was able to satisfy a judgment" . The above definition comprises a re-enactment of an identical provision in the Limitation Act, 1975 which in turn was considered by Geoffrey Lane L.J. in McCafferty v. Metropolitan Police Receiver, (1977) 2 ALL E.R. 756 at p. 775 in the following terms:


"It is not altogether clear to me why the word 'would' is used in that sub-section. It may be that one must understand such words as 'if he had considered the matter'; or it may be that it is because of the possibility of knowledge being imputed to the plaintiff..... Whatever the answer to that particular problem may be, it is clear that the test is partly a subjective test, namely: would this plaintiff have considered the injury sufficiently serious? And partly an objective test, namely: would he have been reasonable if he did not regard it as sufficiently serious? It seems to me that ..(the sub-section).. is directed at the nature of the injury as known to the Plaintiff at that time. Taking that plaintiff with that plaintiff's intelligence, would he have been reasonable in considering the injury not sufficiently serious to justify instituting proceedings for damages?"

32. Similar provisions contained within English Statutes have been considered within the courts in England (see Miller -v- London Electrical Manufacturing Company [1976] 2 Lloyd's Rep. 284 and Knipe -v- British Railways Board [1972] 1 All E.R. 673) but it would appear that there has been no judicial considerations of sub-section 2(1)(b) of the 1991 Act within this jurisdiction and no similar consideration in any other jurisdiction of similar provisions in the absence of an express definition of the word "significant".

33. The Law Reform Commission Report entitled "The Statute of Limitations: Claims In Respect Of Latent Personal Injuries" published in 1987 expressly considered the definition contained in Section 14 of the English Act and pointed out that the provision had been criticised on various grounds (see page 17 thereof). The Commission expressed the view that "the best approach would be for the legislation to require that, for time to begin to run, the plaintiff ought to have been aware that the injury is significant" (see page 44). Furthermore the Report provided a "general scheme of a bill" which made no provision for a definition of the kind contained in Section 14 (2) of the English Act and indeed this "general scheme" appears to have been enacted into legislation more or less without amendment by the Legislature.

34. Accordingly Section 2 of the 1991 Act expressly avoids any attempt to define what is meant by a "significant" injury within the meaning of sub-section 2(1)(b) of the Act and I take the view that by excluding any definition it was the intention of the legislature to avoid confining the sense in which the word "significant" ought to be understood to the terms of the definition contained in Section 14 (2) of the English Act or to any particular terms. If I am correct and if it was intended that a broader test should be applied than was contemplated by the definition contained within Section 14(2) of the English Act, then it would seem to follow that the test to be applied should be primarily subjective and that the Court should take into account the state of mind of the particular Plaintiff at the particular time having regard to his particular circumstances at that time.

35. As I have indicated, I believe the appropriate test to be primarily subjective because it must be qualified to a certain extent by the provisions of sub-section 2(2) of the 1991 Act to which I have already referred. That sub-section introduces a degree of objectivity into the test and potentially requires the additional consideration of whether or not the particular Plaintiff at the particular time ought reasonably to have sought medical or other expert advice having regard to the symptoms from which he was suffering and the other circumstances in which he then found himself.

36. Whilst the definition contained within Section 14(2) of the English Limitation Act of 1980 is clearly not the appropriate means of defining the word "significant" for the purposes of Section 2 of the 1991 Act, it may provide a useful starting point in applying the broader test which is appropriate for the purposes of the 1991 Act. In that regard I have little doubt that if the test appropriate to the English statutory definition were to be applied to this Plaintiff then he would undoubtedly fail that test.

37. Having listened carefully to the somewhat inconsistent testimony of the Plaintiff and his wife I formed the strong impression that as early as 1979 or 1980 the Plaintiff would have considered his hearing loss and his tinnitus sufficiently serious to justify his instituting proceedings for damages against "a Defendant who did not dispute liability and was able to satisfy a judgment" I formed the further impression from the Plaintiff's testimony and his demeanour that his failure to institute proceedings against the Defendants did not result from any belief that his injury was not sufficiently serious to justify instituting proceedings for damages.

38. As I have indicated, however, the test appropriate to the English statutory definition of the word "significant" is not appropriate to the Plaintiff. A broader and more subjective test must be applied.

39. In that regard Counsel on behalf of the Plaintiff has asked me to take a number of matters into consideration and I have taken into account the following:


1. 'The Plaintiff's heart condition and by-pass surgery would have distracted his attention from the symptoms of hearing loss and tinnitus'.

40. However the evidence disclosed that the Plaintiff required surgery in 1992 which was some fourteen years after his discharge from the army and no evidence was adduced to the intent that he suffered symptoms or required treatment during that fourteen year period.


2. The medical testimony adduced at the trial indicated that the Plaintiff would have sustained age-related hearing loss throughout the entire of the fifteen year period between 1978 and 1993. It was contended that this age-related hearing impairment would have gradually increased the level of the Plaintiff's deafness and tinnitus until he and the members of his family became conscious of it with happy precision some time in 1993. I am afraid that I cannot accept this contention because it does not accord with the Plaintiff's direct testimony at the trial of his action. When asked to describe his tinnitus for the period from 1979 and 1980 " .... until the early 90's " ... the Plaintiff answered "It was bad" . He went on to confirm that for a period of ten or eleven years his tinnitus was "constant". When asked to compare the symptoms from his tinnitus to " ... that last period of ten years" , he replied "No it is still the same".

41. In dealing with his hearing impairment the Plaintiff stated that during "...the year or two that followed" his discharge in 1978 he "....could not very well hear the television" and had difficulty in talking to his colleagues and hearing conversations in the presence of background noise and that this was in 1979.


42. All of the expert medical witnesses were in agreement that noise induced hearing impairment and tinnitus do not worsen when exposure to noise ceases. Accordingly the damage to the Plaintiff's ears would not have been affected by anything other than age-related hearing loss throughout the fifteen years between 1978 and 1993. On the medical testimony the influence of age-related hearing loss throughout that fifteen year period would have been very gradual and there would have been no dramatic increase in the level of symptoms at any particular time. I am afraid that I cannot accept the contention that the combination of the Plaintiff's noise induced hearing loss and tinnitus together with his age related impairment came to a head by a happy coincidence in 1993 but did not result in investigation by way of audiogram until September of 1995 with the resultant institution of proceedings on the precise date when the results of the audiogram were published.


3 I have taken into account the fact that the Plaintiff and his wife stated that his symptoms became worse in 1993 but having accepted the medical testimony adduced on his behalf to the intent that he sustained hearing impairment and tinnitus between 1957 and 1978 I cannot ignore his own direct testimony as to the symptoms which he experienced in 1979, 1980 and 1981 in favour of the proposition that because his wife said that he did not complain of his symptoms to her until 1993 I should conclude that his injury did not become significant until 1993.

4. No further evidence was adduced on behalf of the Plaintiff as to any particular circumstances which existed between 1978 and 1993 which would have interfered with the Plaintiff 's capacity to understand the nature and extent of his injury and on seeking to apply the subjective test to which I have referred above I cannot justify a conclusion other than that the Plaintiff must have known during that period that his injury was "significant" within the meaning of the 1991 Act.

5. In seeking to apply the more objective dimension of the test which is introduced by sub-section (2) of Section 2 of the 1991 Act I have reached the conclusion that the Plaintiff knew or ought reasonably to have known from facts which were observable or ascertainable by him alone that he had sustained an injury which was significant and accordingly it is not necessary for me to consider sub-section (b) of the same sub-section.

43. It follows from the foregoing conclusions that I have decided that the Plaintiff's "date of knowledge" within the meaning of Section 2(1) of the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act, 1991 was substantially before the 15th day of September, 1992 and probably as early as 1979 or 1980. Accordingly the Plaintiff's claim is barred by the provisions of Section 3(1) of the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act, 1991.

44. In the light of the above finding the assessment of damages will not be requried and the Plaintiff's claim must be dismissed.


© 1997 Irish High Court


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