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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Ryan v. Minister for Justice [2000] IESC 33 (21st December, 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2000/33.html Cite as: [2000] IESC 33 |
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1. The
issue in this appeal is whether the pleadings herein raise a point of law which
might be properly set down for hearing and disposed of before the trial of the
action.
2. The
question arises in this way. In her statement of claim delivered on the 27th
day of May, 1997, the Plaintiff alleges that on the 2nd day of April, 1994, she
was abducted and raped at Loughshinney, County Dublin. Her assailant is not a
party to these proceedings. The above named Defendants are sued on the basis
set out at paragraph 3 of the statement of claim, namely:- [*2]
4. By
notice dated the 23rd day of January, 1998, the Defendants sought particulars
which included the following:-
6. In
paragraph 2 of their Defence delivered on the 2nd day of February, 1998, the
Defendants pleaded as follows:-
7. By
letter dated the 9th September, 1998, the solicitors on behalf of the Plaintiff
invited the Defendants to make voluntary discovery in relation to details
concerning the imprisonment and release of the assailant. No such discovery was
made. Instead the Defendants applied by notice dated the 4th day of December,
1998, seeking an order pursuant to Order 25 Rule 1 and/or Order 34 Rule 2 of
the Rules of the Superior Courts and/or pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction
of the Court directing the trial of preliminary issues of law in the following
terms:-
8. That
application was grounded on an affidavit of the then Chief State Solicitor, Mr
Michael A Buckley, who, in paragraph 3 thereof referred to the claim by the
Plaintiff that she had been abducted and raped on the 2nd day of April, 1994,
and then went on to say:-
9. In
paragraph 6 of his affidavit Mr Buckley summarised the case on behalf of the
Defendants in the following terms:-
10. Mr
Buckley went on to draw attention to an order which had been made by Mr Justice
Kinlen on the 18th May, 1998, in the case of
Patricia
McCabe .v. The Minister for Justice & Ors
[1995] (No 9222 Op). That case was subsequently appealed to this Court and
reported in 1999 IR 4 IR 151. In his affidavit of reply Mr Matthews, the
solicitor on behalf of the Plaintiff, contended that it was not a case in which
a preliminary issue would be either appropriate or convenient. He went on in
paragraph 4 of his affidavit to say:-
12. The
matter came before Mr Justice Johnson on the 1st day of March, 1999, when he
delivered an ex tempore judgment, the agreed note of which is in the following
terms:-
13. The
Appellants relied primarily on two grounds in their argument to this Court.
First, it was argued that there was not, or at any rate for the purposes of the
issue, would not be, any dispute in relation to any question to fact. In his
affidavit sworn on the 2nd day of March, 1998, Mr Buckley had made it clear
that for the purposes of the preliminary issue
“The
Defendants will assume that the Plaintiff would, at the trial of this action,
prove the assault, that the person who perpetrated it was on temporary release,
that the temporary release had been accorded by the Defendants”
.
14. In
their written submissions to this Court the Defendants took the matter further.
In paragraph 23 of those submissions the Defendants - no doubt having regard to
the decision of this Court in the McCabe Case - stated that they were prepared:-
15. The
McCabe Case has a particular significance having regard to the close similarity
between the facts of that case and those in the instant matter. That too was a
case in which the plaintiff was assaulted by a person who was, at the time of
the assault, on
“temporary
release”
from
Mountjoy Prison pursuant to a statutory scheme. The plaintiff claimed damages
for personal injury and alleged that the personal injury sustained in the
assault were caused by reason of the negligence of the defendants. As in the
present case the defendants pleaded that in releasing a person on temporary
release they did not owe any duty of care to the plaintiff in that case. An
application was brought by the Defendants for the trial of a preliminary issue
as to the existence of a duty of care to the plaintiffs. Mr Justice Kinlen
granted the defendants’ application for the trial of the preliminary
issue and an appeal was taken by the plaintiff to this Court. In the course of
his judgment - with which the other members of the Court agreed - Lynch J said
(at page 157
):-
16. On
that basis the Court upheld the decision of Kinlen J to direct the trial of the
preliminary issue and went on to uphold the decision of the learned High Court
Judge to postpone an order for discovery of documents.
17. Counsel
for the Plaintiff/Respondent, Mr Peter Charleton SC, correctly pointed out that
the decision to direct the trial of preliminary issue was a discretionary one
and that accordingly the affirmation by this Court of the order of Mr Justice
Kinlen would not be necessarily inconsistent with a decision of the Court in
this case upholding the exercise by Johnson J of his discretion in a contrary
manner. Whilst I can accept that this argument is technically correct I think
it would be highly undesirable for this Court to endorse two conflicting orders
made on substantially the same facts. Furthermore, it does seem that the
learned trial Judge in the present case was incorrect in saying that there was
a dispute of fact. Mr Gardiner, SC, on behalf of the Appellants was at pains to
emphasise that all of the facts alleged by the Plaintiff in the statement of
claim and in the replies to notices for particulars would be accepted by the
Defendants for the purposes of the trial of the preliminary issue. That being
so the conflict apprehended by the learned trial Judge does not exist. In those
circumstances I would allow the appeal and, subject to the further
qualifications contained in this judgment, direct the trial of the preliminary
issues as set out in the notice of motion dated the 4th day of December, 1998.
[*11]
18. In
his argument to this Court Mr Charleton identified what was described as
“a
second tier”
in
the Plaintiff’s case. It was contended that the Plaintiff could claim,
and indeed had claimed, that the Defendants or some of them were or might be in
breach of a duty which they owed to her as a result of their failure to police
or enforce conditions governing the temporary release of the assailant. If such
a case were to be made then indeed serious problems would arise in identifying
a preliminary issue which could be segregated from the particular facts which
might emerge in the course of a plenary trial.
19. The
nature of this second tier basis of claim and the variable nature of the duty
to which it might give rise was discussed by reference to the decision in
Swan
(by his next friend)
.
v.
State of South Australia
[1994]
62 SASR 532. In that case the infant plaintiff alleged that he had suffered
injuries as a result of numerous sexual assaults committed against him by S who
had been sentenced in March 1984 to a period of imprisonment following his
conviction on eight counts of unlawful sexual intercourse with a young boy. At
the time of the alleged assaults S had been released on parole. It was a
condition of such release that S would not associate with children except in
the presence of another adult. It appears that this condition was breached and
that, notwithstanding allegations made to them, the parole board or their
officers who investigated the matter accepted the dishonest statements of S
that there was an adult present at all times when he was in the company of the
plaintiff. The issue, therefore in that case was the alleged negligence of the
parole board in supervising the released prisoner both to the conditions of the
parole and as to the prisoners compliance with them. One would have therefore
issues as to the existence of a duty at all or the existence of a duty having
regard to investigations which were or were not made.
20. As
I read the pleadings in the present case no allegation has been made as to the
nature of any conditions imposed on the Plaintiff as a term of his temporary
release or as to the supervision or policing of any such conditions. For that
reason it seems to me that the problems which arose in the Swan Case do not
exist here and accordingly, as the matter stands, it seems to me that it would
be appropriate for this Court to follow its judgment in the McCabe Case. If,
however, the pleadings are amended then the question of a preliminary hearing
would have to be reviewed. Indeed, it is my understanding that in those
circumstances the Defendants would not contend that any useful purpose would be
served by adopting that procedure. However, on the basis of the pleadings as
they exist it seems to me that the appeal must be allowed.