Judgments Of the Supreme Court


Judgment
Title:
Boland -v- Dublin Corporation
Neutral Citation:
[2002] IESC 69
Supreme Court Record Number:
304/00
High Court Record Number:
1996 No. 8283p
Date of Delivery:
10/15/2002
Court:
Supreme Court
Composition of Court:
Murphy J., Mc Guinness J., Hardiman J.
Judgment by:
Hardiman J.
Status:
Approved
Result:
Allow And Set Aside
Judgments by
Link to Judgment
Concurring
Hardiman J.
Murphy J., McGuinness J.



[2002] IESC 69
THE SUPREME COURT
304/00
Murphy J.
McGuinness J.
Hardiman J.
      Between:
JOHN BOLAND
Plaintiff
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE LORD MAYOR ALDERMEN and BURGESSES of DUBLIN
Defendant/Appellant
and (by Order of the Court) David Mayrs Limited
First named Third Party/Respondent
and
COLOURMAN (INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED
Second named Third Party/Respondent
JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Hardiman delivered the 15th day of October, 2002.

1. This is an appeal by Dublin Corporation, the Defendant in the original action, against the Order of the High Court (O’Higgins J.) made the 20th November, 2000. The High Court directed that the Third Party Notice as against the First Named Third Party be set aside.

2. The application to set aside the Third Party Notice was heard on affidavit, that of Mr. Daniel Oliver Leahy for the First Named Third Party and that of Ms. Deborah Ryan for the Defendant. From these affidavits it emerges that the Plaintiff’s claim is for damages for personal injuries arising out of an accident alleged to have occurred on the 3rd December, 1993. On the 16th November, 1995 the Plaintiff’s solicitors intimated a claim against the Defendants. It appears from the Statement of Claim that the Plaintiff says that he was walking along the public highway at Broombridge Road, Cabra, Dublin when he fell. He claims the fall was due to “the presence of an unreasonable danger and a concealed danger in the nature of a trap, namely a broken down and poorly repaired and reinstated area of the footpath with both raised and damaged/lowered sections” whereby he was caused to trip and fall sideways into a fence.

3. The Plaintiff issued a plenary summons on the 23rd September, 1996. An appearance was entered on the 3rd October of that year, the Statement of Claim was delivered on the 19th January, 1998 and a Notice of Intention to Proceed was delivered on the 5th May, 1998. The Defendant raised a Notice for Particulars on the 17th June, 1998 and replies were delivered on the 23rd July, 1998. The Defence was delivered on the 11th August, 1998. Prior to this exchange of pleadings the Defendant had received from the Plaintiff’s solicitors photographs of the alleged location of the accident. These were received on the 7th December, 1995. The Corporation say that the location of the accident “appears to be adjacent to a broken down chain linked fence” which it believes “was the property of and was supposed to be maintained by the Third Parties, one or other or both of them”.

4. Accordingly, by letter dated the 26th November, 1998 the Defendant wrote to the First Named Third Party informing it of the intention of the Corporation to join it as a Third Party. On the 8th February, 1999 the High Court granted liberty to issue and serve the Third Party Notice. This document was actually served on the 11th February, 1999. On the 22nd March, 1999 the First Named Third Party entered an appearance and required delivery of a statement of claim. On the 4th August, 1999 the First Named Third Party issued a Motion to compel delivery of a Third Party Statement of Claim. This pleading was delivered on the 9th August, 1999. On the 17th August, 1999 the Third Party raised particulars arising out of the Third Party Statement of Claim. On the 11th October, 1999 the Defendant replied to the Notice for Particulars. On the 14th July, 2000 the Motion to set aside the Third Party Notice was issued. It thus appears that some seventeen or eighteen months had elapsed between the service of the Party Notice and the issue of the Motion to set it aside, during which the Third Party made no objection to the procedure adopted by the Defendant.

5. In the course of argument the Defendant emphasised the proposition that it had sent to the First Named Third Party the photographs it had received from the Plaintiff’s solicitor prior to the institution of proceedings. It transpired however that this much emphasised contention was erroneous and that the Third Party had no knowledge of the claim until a few days before the letter of the 26th November, 1998 when its Managing Director was verbally notified by the Corporation’s law agent of the intention to issue the Third Party Notice.

6. The First Named Third Party contends that the spot where the accident occurred is in charge of the Defendant. It also says that the fence was removed and replaced in its entirety between the date of the accident and an unknown date in 1995, following an incident in which a car crashed into it. The Defendant denies this.

The Law.

7. This application is based on the proposition that the First Named Third Party, as occupier of its premises, is a concurrent wrongdoer with the Defendant, either jointly with the Second Named Third Party or individually. Though the term “concurrent wrongdoer” is not used, this basis of the claim seems to emerge clearly from paragraph 4 of the Third Party Statement of Claim dated the 9th August, 1999. This being so, the entitlement to issue and serve a Third Party Notice is governed by Section 27(1) of the Civil Liability Act, 1961 which provides as follows:-

      “(1) A concurrent wrongdoer who is sued for damages or for contribution and wishes to make a claim for contribution under this part

      (a)

      (b) shall, if the said person is not already a party to the action, serve a Third Party Notice upon such person as soon as is reasonably possible and, having served such notice, he shall not be entitled to claim contribution except under the Third Party procedure. If such third party notice is not served as aforesaid, the Court may in its discretion refuse to make an order for contribution against the person from whom contribution is claimed.” (Emphasis added).

8. Furthermore, Order 16 of the Rules of the Superior Courts provides at Rule 1(iii):-
      “Application for leave to issue the Third Party Notice shall, unless otherwise ordered by the Court, be made within 28 days of the time limited for delivering the defence or, where the application is made by the Defendant to a counterclaim, the reply”.
9. I agree with the remarks of Kelly J. in SFL Engineering Ltd. v. Smyth Cladding Systems Ltd. (High Court unreported 9th May, 1997) as follows:-
      “This provision of the Rules gives expression in a concrete form to the temporal imperative contained in Section 27(1)(b) of the 1961 Act. It is to be noted that the Rules of Court require the application to be made not within 28 days from the delivery of the defence in the proceedings but within 28 days from the time limited for delivering the defence”.
10. It is also to be noted that under Order 16 Rule 8(3) Third Party proceedings may at any time be set aside by the Court. This is the jurisdiction which is invoked on the present application.

11. In The Board of Governors of St. Lawrences Hospital v. Staunton [1990] 2 IR 31 the Supreme Court considered Section of the 1961 Act. Referring specifically to Section 27(1)(b) Finlay C.J. said:-

      “I am quite satisfied upon the true construction of that subsection that the only service of a third party notice contemplated by it and, therefore, the only right of a person to obtain from the High Court liberty to serve a third party notice claiming contribution against a person who is not already a party to the action, is a right to serve a third party notice as soon as is reasonably possible. A defendant in an action seeking to claim contribution against a person who is not a party to the proceedings cannot serve any third party notice at any other time, other than as soon as is reasonably possible”.
12. This view has been followed, and its application to various specific circumstances considered, in a number of decisions of the High Court and in particular Ward v. O’Callaghan and Ors. High Court unreported (Morris P.) 2nd February, 1998; Carroll v. Fulflex International Company Limited and Combined Freight Services Limited High Court unreported Morris J. 18th October, 1995; Dillon v. MacGabhann High Court unreported Morris J. 24th July, 1995; Tierney v. Sweeney and Anor. High Court unreported Morris J. 18th October, 1995; and Grogan v. Ferrum Trading Company Limited and Ors. High Court unreported Morris J. 13th February, 1996.

13. In relation to a Motion to set aside a third party notice, in Carroll v. Fulflex, Morris J. (as he then was) said:-

      “A motion to set aside the Third Party Notice should only be brought before that Defendant has taken an active part in the Third Party proceedings and I believe that an application of this nature must itself be brought within the time scale identified in Section 27(1) of the Civil Liability Act, 1961, that is to say ‘as soon as is reasonably possible’. While that limitation is not spelt out in the Act, I believe that a fair interpretation of the Act must envisage that a person seeking relief under Section 27 would himself move with reasonable speed and certainly before significant costs and expenses have been occurred in the Third Party procedures”.
14. In Tierney v. Sweeney Morris J. (as he then was) said:-
      “I am of the view that where it is intended to make the case that a defendant has failed to move the Court to set aside an order giving a defendant liberty to serve a third party notice, such an application should be brought with reasonable expedition and in accordance with the time scale reflected in Section 27(1)(b) of the Civil Liability Act, 1961, that is as soon as reasonably possible and save in exceptional circumstances should not extend beyond the point where a defence is delivered to the Third Party Statement of Claim”.
15. I respectfully agree that the statutory requirement to move for liberty to issue a third party notice, “as soon as reasonably possible”, should be regarded as applying, also, to the bringing of an application to set aside such a notice. While it is difficult to imagine circumstances in which a delay by a third party until after he has himself delivered a defence to the Third Party Statement of Claim could be justified, it by no means follows that the mere fact that he has not yet delivered a defence means that the application to set aside has been brought as soon as reasonably possible.

The facts of the present case.

16. On the facts of the present case, the First Named Third Party brought its Motion to set aside on the 14th July, 2000, having been served with the Third Party Notice on the 11th February, 1999. This delay is simply not addressed at all in the Affidavit evidence on the hearing of this application. In particular, the nine month period between the delivery of particulars on the 11th October, 1999 and the issue of the Motion on the 14th July, 2000 seems incapable of justification: certainly none has been advanced. Just as the onus of justifying any delay in seeking liberty to issue the Third Party Notice devolve on the Defendant, the onus of justifying delay in bringing the Motion to set such notice aside devolves on the Third Party. Since the First Named Third Party in the moving party here, its delay falls to be considered first.

Conclusion.

17. Since the First Named Third Party has failed to demonstrate that its motion has been brought as soon as reasonably possible, the present application must fail. I would accordingly set aside the Order of the learned High Court Judge and decline the relief sought by the First Named Third Party.






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