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(ERIC
FLOWERS |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
(
(AND
(
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(BATRA
(BERNE HYDRO-MECHANIC LIMITED
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FIRST
DEFENDANT
SECOND DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 210 of 1979
15th July, 1980
Moe, J
Mr. M.C.
Young for the Plaintiff
Mr. M. Sosa for the Defendants
Civil
Practice and Procedure - Application for leave to administer
interrogatories - Circumstances in which it is proper for
the court to exercise its discretion to give leave to administer
interrogatories.
J
U D G M E N T
The plaintiff
in this matter seeks leave to administer the same six interrogatories
on each of the defendants. The plaintiff claims (1) Damages
for personal injuries and loss occasioned to him by reason
of the negligence and/or breach of the contract of employment
on the part of the defendants, their servants, or agents on
the 6th July at the Water Treatment Plant at Mile 17 on the
Northern Highway or in the alternative (2) Compensation under
the workmen`s Compensation Ordinance (No. 9 of 1959) for injuries
sustained by the plaintiff in an accident at the Water Treatment
Plant at Mile 17 Northern Highway on the 6th July, 1979.
2. In
his Statement of Claim he alleged in paragraph 5 thereof:
"On or about the 6th day of July, 1979 at the Water Treatment
Plant while the plaintiff was in the course of his employment
assisting his fellow employees and employees of the first-named
defendants in the matter of the raising of a steel bridge
for a water tank the boom of a crane driven by the servant
or agent of the Defendants fell and hit the plaintiff in consequence
whereof the plaintiff sustained severe injuries and he suffered
loss and damage." Each defendant admitted that statement
in paragraph 5.
3. In
paragraph 6 of the statement of claim the plaintiff alleges
that "the said injuries and loss and damages were occasioned
to the plaintiff by reason of the negligence and/or breach
of duty of the defendants their servants or agents and/or
breach of contract of employment on the part of the second
defendants their servants or agents". Each defendant
denies that it was guilty of the alleged or any negligence
and/or the alleged or any breach of duty whether through its
servants or agents or otherwise or that the matters complained
of were caused as alleged in paragraph 6 of the Statement
of Claim.
4. The
interrogatories under examination are directed as follow:
(1)
Who was the person that drove the crane referred to in paragraph
5 of the Statement Claim?
(2)
By whom was the person who drove the crane hired?
(3)
Was the crane your property?
(4)
If the answer to (3) is no then who owned the craned?
(5)
If the crane was neither owned by Batra nor Berne Hydro-Mechanic
Ltd., who hired the crane?
(6)
Under whose control was the crane at the time of the accident
referred to in paragraph 5 of the Statement of Claim?
5. Generally,
interrogatories will be allowed whenever the answers to them
will serve either to maintain the case of the party administering
them or to destroy the case of his adversary (Hennessey
v. Wright (No. 2) (1888) 24 Q.B.D. 445 per Esher, M.R.).
However their allowance or disallowance is a matter in the
discretion of the court on the merits of the particular case
(Heaton v. Goldney (1910) 1 K.B. 754 )
6. Now
it will be seen that issues involved in this matter will be
(i) Whether the injuries and loss were caused by negligence,
and (ii) If so, whether that negligence is that for which
the defendants may properly be held liable. The defendants
contend that the interrogatories have no bearing on the issues
whereas the plaintiff maintains that the whole thrust of the
interrogatories is to ascertain the relationship between the
driver of the crane and the defendants i.e. whether he was
their servant or agent.
7. Relevant
to the second stated issue is whether a servant or agent of
the defendants or a defendant was driving the crane at the
relevant time. And it would be quite proper for a party by
interrogatory to get an admission of anything which he has
to prove on any issue which is raised between him and the
defendant. [See A.G. v Gaskill (1882 ) 20 Ch. D. 519
at page 528].
8. However,
in this case, no issue is raised between the parties as to
whether the driver of the crane at the relevant time was a
servant or agent of the defendants. The defendants have, as
indicated, admitted that this is so. It does not appear therefore
that answers to interrogatories (1), (2), - which are directed
at ascertaining of whom the driver was a servant or agent
- will really assist the plaintiff. As Smith L.J. said in
Kennedy v. Dodson [1895] 1 Ch. 334 "The legitimate
use and the only legitimate use of interrogatories is to obtain
admissions from the party interrogated of facts which it is
necessary for the party interrogating to prove to establish
his case and if the party interrogating goes further and seeks
by his interrogatories to get from the party interrogated
answers as to matters which it is not incumbent on him to
prove, although such matters may indirectly assist his case,
the interrogatories ought not to be allowed."
9. The
interrogatories Nos. (3), (4), (5) and (6) seem also to offend
the rule set out in Kennedy v. Dodson (vide supra).
Those questions go beyond what the plaintiff has to prove
and are therefore not admissible by way of interrogation.
10. In
the result all the interrogatories are disallowed. Costs are
to be costs in the cause.
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