BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you
consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it
will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free
access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[New search]
[Printable PDF version]
[Help]
NO REDACTION REQUIRED
APPROVED
[2021] IEHC 104
THE HIGH COURT
2019 No. 3435 P
BETWEEN
DERMOT McCORRY
PLAINTIFF
AND
MARGARET McCORRY
DEFENDANT
JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Garrett Simons delivered on 19 February 2021
INTRODUCTION
1. This matter comes before the High Court by way of an application for the discovery of
documents in personal injuries proceedings. The proceedings arise out of a road traffic
accident. Liability has been admitted by the defendant, through her insurers who have
carriage of the proceedings, and the case now proceeds as an assessment of damages
only.
2. The defendant has sought discovery of two broad categories of medical records as
follows. The first category comprises the plaintiff's medical records for an eight year
period prior to the accident. The second category comprises the plaintiff's medical
records for a three-month period post-accident. (The precise wording of the motion is
addressed towards the end of this judgment).
2
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
3. Insofar as relevant to the discovery application, the procedural history is as follows. The
claim for damages arises out of a road traffic accident on 7 March 2018. As appears from
the personal injuries summons, the plaintiff had been a passenger in a motor vehicle being
driven by the defendant (his wife). It appears that the vehicle skidded on black ice; left
the road and went down into a ditch; and turned over onto its side.
4. It is pleaded that, at the scene of the accident, the plaintiff was aware of pain affecting
both of his shoulders, the front of his chest, his back and abdomen. The plaintiff was
treated at Cavan General Hospital.
5. Following a further examination on 5 April 2018 (that is, some four weeks after the date
of the accident), the plaintiff's consultant medical advisor is reported as having
confirmed that the plaintiff suffered and sustained soft tissue musculoskeletal injuries to
his spine, chest, both shoulders and abdomen due to the road traffic accident. The
plaintiff also suffered and sustained abrasions to his right shin.
6. It is next pleaded that the plaintiff developed progressive right pelvic pain subsequent to
the accident. The plaintiff ultimately elected to proceed with surgery involving the total
replacement of his right hip. The procedure was carried out on 29 June 2018, that is,
some three months after the date of the accident.
7. The personal injuries summons discloses that the plaintiff has a very complex medical
history. The plaintiff suffers from Parkinson's disease. The plaintiff had also suffered
from prostate cancer, and the treatment for this (radiotherapy) has resulted in a softening
of the bones in his lower back and pelvis. He also had a history of left inguinal hernia
repair (approximately seven years prior to the accident). At the time of the accident, the
plaintiff had had a supra pubic catheter inserted.
3
8. The defendant served a notice for further and better particulars on 24 August 2020. The
plaintiff was specifically asked to confirm that his hip replacement in June 2018 was not
a sequela of the accident on 7 March 2018. The plaintiff was also asked to confirm that
his treatment in Cavan General Hospital, in the aftermath of the accident, did not include
any treatment for right hip injury or pain.
9. The plaintiff's solicitors replied to the notice for further and better particulars on
23 November 2020. In response to the queries raised in respect of the plaintiff's hip
replacement, it was stated as follows.
"The queries posed in this paragraph stray significantly beyond the
scope of a notice (i)- (vi) for particulars and the legal position as we
have recorded it in the objection above. Questions of this nature can
be posed in the form of cross examination at the trial of the action.
For the avoidance of any doubt the plaintiff will make the case that
the road traffic accident which is the subject matter of these
proceedings amounted to a contributory/precipitating factor in
relation to the subsequent hip operation. The plaintiff began to
experience symptoms affecting his hip within a relatively short
period post the accident. The plaintiff was admitted to the Mater
Hospital on the 25 May 2018 (2 months post-accident). He had a hip
operation carried out on the 29 June 2018. Moreover, the plaintiff's
mobility was considerably worse since the accident."
10. As appears, the plaintiff's case is that the road traffic accident amounted to a contributory
or precipitating factor in relation to his subsequent hip operation. This is so
notwithstanding that there does not appear to have been any complaint made in respect
of his hip in the initial weeks after the accident.
11. The solicitors acting on behalf of the defendant's insurers sought voluntary discovery by
letter dated 5 December 2019. Following an exchange of correspondence, a motion
seeking discovery was issued on 27 February 2020. The plaintiff has since sworn a
limited affidavit of discovery confined primarily to (i) his medical records for a period
of five years prior to the date of the accident, and (ii) the initial attendance records from
Cavan General Hospital on the day of the accident.
4
12. The hearing of the discovery motion was delayed as a result of the restrictions on court
sittings imposed as part of the public health measures in response to the coronavirus
pandemic. The motion ultimately came on for hearing before me on 15 February 2021.
MEDICAL EXAMINATION AND REPORT
13. The plaintiff had been examined on 14 January 2020 by a consultant in emergency
medicine, Mr. Aidan Gleeson, nominated by the defendant's insurers. Mr. Gleeson
subsequently prepared a report dated 23 January 2020. The report had been compiled by
reference to a standard form which contains certain headings and queries.
14. The focus of much of the submissions on the application for discovery were directed to
the content of this report. It is necessary, therefore, to set out the key findings of the
report in full, as follows.
"Opinion/Comment/Latest Prognosis
Are the injuries consistent with the accident?
The history is of this gentleman sustaining soft tissue injuries of his
cervical spine, lumbar spine, right shoulder, chest and right shin in
the index accident. It is not consistent with him suffering a definite
fracture of the neck of his right femur and I say that for the following
reasons:
1.
The mechanism of injury is not consistent with that which
would normally cause a right neck of femur fracture. Such
fractures are normally seen after falls, but can be seen,
although, infrequently in road traffic accident. In the latter
case, the mechanism of injury would be if there was a high
impact frontal collision, causing the dash/engine to impact on
the knee and with that force being transmitted up to the
femoral neck, but that is not what happened here. The vehicle
this gentleman was in skidded across the road and ended up
partially on its side in a dyke, with the passenger side lower
most. He was restrained in his seat by his seatbelt. A
traumatic neck of femur fracture should not have been caused
by such a mechanism.
2.
According to Mr Butt's report, there is no record of Mr
McCorry complaining of right hip pain when he was assessed
5
in the Emergency Department, either on the day of the
accident or the following day when he returned with issues
relating to his suprapubic catheter. Had he an undisplaced
fracture of the hip at that time, pain would have been
expected.
3.
When Mr McCorry attended with Mr Butt for a medico legal
report and review on 05/04/2018, which was four weeks after
the index accident, there is no record of him complaining of
right hip pain either at that time or before it. I note further
that when he was examined by Mr Butt he was able to stand
and bend forward, bringing his fingertips to the level of the
upper tibia on both sides and he had normal rotation of his
lumbosacral spine. If he had a fracture of the neck of femur
at that time, even if it was undisplaced, he would have had
pain in the right hip and difficulty mobilising, which was not
the case.
Are further investigations required?
No.
Is a full recovery expected?
He has made a full recovery from the accident related injuries
described above.
Please state the expected time period to full recovery
...
Are late complications expected?
No.
Are further Specialist reports recommended?
I recommend you obtain the opinion of a hip Orthopaedic Surgeon in
this case.
6
General Comments and Observations
In my opinion, there is insufficient evidence that this gentleman
sustained a traumatic intracapsular neck of femur fracture in the index
accident and for the reasons described above. It appears more likely
that there was another pathological process at play and a further
opinion in that regard is recommended from a hip Orthopaedic
Surgeon."
DISCUSSION
15. There was some debate at the hearing before me as to whether special rules govern an
application for discovery of post-accident medical records. The position adopted on
behalf of the plaintiff, in the solicitor's replying affidavit and in counsel's oral
submission, is that a court will rarely direct discovery of post-accident records, and will
only do so in circumstances where there exists a proper evidential basis. Counsel cited
the following passages from the judgment of the High Court (Barrett J.) in
"One question that does arise, and which is not answered by
McGrory,* nor it seems more generally is where the outlying
borderline lies between medical records that are `relevant and
necessary' and those that are not. Given Keane C.J.'s favourable
reference to Dunn in McGrory albeit in a particular regard it
might be considered that the decision of the Court of Appeal of
England and Wales in that case provides a useful starting-point in
seeking to answer this question. It offers the proposition that general
discovery of a plaintiff's entire pre-medical history ought to be
allowable. However, this is but a starting-point: discovery, were it
always or even widely to be ordered on this basis, would almost
invariably be disproportionate (oppressive). Hence it would seem to
this Court that the correct position as a matter of law, when it comes
to disclosure/discovery in personal injuries proceedings, is that
(a) there should be a medical examination of the plaintiff by the
defendant's doctor (with the usual right of the court, as acknowledged
in McGrory, to grant a stay), and (b) (i) if that examining doctor
forms the opinion that there is some pre-existing condition, and/or
(ii) there is some other evidential indicator to which the defendant
can point that suggests a plaintiff's prior medical history to be
relevant, then and in that instance access to prior medical history will
typically be ordered, subject to any such time constraint as appears
appropriate in the particular circumstances arising so as to ensure that
7
only that which is relevant and necessary is discovered and
oppression avoided.
In this last regard, the court notes that there is, it seems, a not
uncommon practice on the part of the courts when ordering discovery
of a plaintiff's prior medical history to confine that discovery
generally to a three-year period in a bid to ensure proportionality and
avoid oppression in the discovery process. Be that as it may, there is
no presumption that three years is good, with anything shorter being
untypical and anything longer verboten: a shorter or longer period,
stretching in theory at least to a plaintiff's entire medical history
(though it is difficult to conceive that many circumstances would
present in which this would be appropriate) may be merited in the
particular circumstances presenting in any one case."
16. Counsel submitted that no proper evidential basis had been laid for the post-accident
discovery in the present case. Emphasis was placed on the fact that, in response to the
query on the standard form report "Are further investigations required?", Mr. Gleeson
had responded "No".
17. In reply, counsel on behalf of the defendant submitted that the report had to be read in
full, and drew attention to the detailed response to the query "Are the injuries consistent
with the accident?" (set out in full at paragraph 14 above). More generally, counsel
submitted that one of the issues which will have to be resolved at the trial of the action is
whether there is a causal connection between the accident and the subsequent hip
replacement operation. The position adopted by the plaintiff is that the accident is a
contributory or precipitating factor. The emergency consultant's report, however,
suggests that another pathological process is at play, and he recommends that a further
opinion be obtained from a hip orthopaedic surgeon.
DECISION
18. The guiding principle in any application for discovery is whether the category of
documents sought are relevant and necessary. There are, of course, obvious sensitivities
8
attendant on the disclosure of medical records, and a court must ensure that the nature
and extent of the discovery sought is not oppressive. Nevertheless, as explained by the
Supreme Court in McGrory v. Electricity Supply Board [2003] 3 IR 407 (at page 414),
an individual who pursues a claim for personal injuries waives the right of privacy which
he would otherwise enjoy in relation to his medical condition.
"Those principles, which have been adopted by courts in other
common law jurisdictions, should also, in my view, be adopted in our
jurisdiction. The plaintiff who sues for damages for personal injuries
by implication necessarily waives the right of privacy which he
would otherwise enjoy in relation to his medical condition. The law
must be in a position to ensure that he does not unfairly and
unreasonably impede the defendant in the preparation of his defence
by refusing to consent to a medical examination. Similarly, the court
must be able to ensure that the defendant has access to any relevant
medical records and to obtain from the treating doctors any
information they may have relevant to the plaintiff's medical
condition, although the plaintiff cannot be required to disclose
medical reports in respect of which he is entitled to claim legal
professional privilege."
19. The facts of the present case are such that more extensive discovery is justified than
would be the position in many personal injuries proceedings. As is apparent from the
personal injuries summons, the plaintiff has a complex medical history. The defendant's
insurers are entitled to advance an argument that his current health conditions are
attributable to factors other than the accident in March 2018. This is not mere speculation
on their part: a report by a consultant in emergency medicine has been exhibited as part
of the application for discovery. (The relevant extracts of the report have been set out at
20. Counsel on behalf of the plaintiff appears to elevate the judgment in Power v. Tesco
Ireland Ltd into an evidential rule that post-accident discovery will not be granted save
in circumstances where there is an opinion of a medical expert to the effect that such
discovery is necessary. With respect, this is to read too much into the judgment in Power.
As appears from the passages cited earlier, the judgment goes no further than saying that
9
a defendant must be able to point to an "evidential indicator" which suggests that the
plaintiff's prior medical history may be relevant. It should also be noted that the
judgment does not appear to draw any principled distinction between pre- and post-
accident medical records.
21. As emphasised by the Court of Appeal in Micks-Wallace (A Minor) v. Dunne
[2020] IECA 282 (at paragraph 49), it is the court, not an expert witness, that decides
whether documentation is relevant and necessary for the purposes of discovery.
"Of course, the fact that a professional expert witness says that he or
she requires documentation to properly present his or her report is a
very important consideration to which a Court will have regard in
determining whether to direct additional discovery. However, it is
not always sufficient to simply record the expression of that view by
the expert. It is the Court, not the expert, that decides whether
documentation is relevant and necessary for the purposes of
Order 31. Many experts if asked what documentation they require to
prepare their report are likely to express their requirements as broadly
as they can. That is both entirely proper and understandable.
However, the Court must be told more than that the expert says he
believes he requires particular categories of documents. The concept
of `relevance' and of `necessity' required by law will depend on the
circumstances and may not accord with the subjective view of an
expert of what is necessary. The Court must be given sufficient
information to form its own judgment as to why the material sought
is required to address these issues and, from there, to reach its own
adjudication as to whether discovery should be directed. Obviously,
the amount of information it requires to this end will depend on the
case: frequently the necessity of the documents will be so obvious as
to require little elaboration. In most cases, the relevance of all
medical records may be self-evident where there is an issue as to
whether a condition was caused by the accident in issue. [...]"
22. The judgment goes on then to explain that further requirements apply where a defendant
comes a second or third time and seeks additional discovery. This is not a consideration
here.
23. I am satisfied that, in the particular circumstances of the present case, discovery of
medical records for a three month period post-accident is relevant and necessary for the
fair disposal of the case. It is apparent from the pleadings that one of the principal issues
10
which will have to be resolved by the trial judge is the extent, if any, to which the injuries
suffered in the road traffic accident contributed towards the necessity of the hip
replacement surgery some three months later. The defendant has exhibited a medical
report which opines that it is more likely that there was another pathological process at
play. It does not appear from the pleadings that any complaint had been made in respect
of hip pain in the initial weeks after the accident. It is reasonable to assume that discovery
of the post-accident medical records will assist in demonstrating which complaints were
related to the accident and which related to other pre-existing medical issues. The time-
limit of three months ensures that the discovery sought is proportionate and not
oppressive. This is a short time-limit, and is justified as it coincides with the period
between the date of the accident and the date of the hip replacement surgery.
24. The necessity of making discovery of post-accident medical reports might, perhaps, have
been avoided had the plaintiff made a fuller response to the request for further and better
particulars. At all events, the plaintiff having declined to answer the queries raised, the
defendant is entitled to the discovery sought.
25. I am also satisfied that pre-accident medical reports should be provided for an eight year
period, and not merely for five years as contended for by the plaintiff. This is because,
as pleaded in the personal injuries summons, the plaintiff has a very complex medical
history. The plaintiff had suffered from prostate cancer, and it is pleaded that the
radiotherapy treatment for this has resulted in a softening of the bones in his lower back
and pelvis. Discovery of the plaintiff's medical records are relevant and necessary to the
question of the extent, if any, to which the accident contributed to the need for the hip
replacement surgery. The medical records are likely to contain details of the ongoing
surveillance of the plaintiff's hip condition. The extended period of eight years will
11
ensure that all records in respect of the diagnosis of, and subsequent treatment of, the
plaintiff's prostate cancer will be included.
CONCLUSION AND FORM OF ORDER
26. For the reasons set out herein, the defendant is entitled to discovery of the plaintiff's
medical records for the period of eight years prior to the road traffic accident, and to his
post-accident medical records for a period of three months from the date of the accident.
27. The attention of the parties is drawn to the notice published on 24 March 2020 in respect
of the delivery of judgments electronically, as follows.
"The parties will be invited to communicate electronically with the
Court on issues arising (if any) out of the judgment such as the precise
form of order which requires to be made or questions concerning
costs. If there are such issues and the parties do not agree in this
regard concise written submissions should be filed electronically with
the Office of the Court within 14 days of delivery subject to any other
direction given in the judgment. Unless the interests of justice require
an oral hearing to resolve such matters then any issues thereby arising
will be dealt with remotely and any ruling which the Court is required
to make will also be published on the website and will include a
synopsis of the relevant submissions made, where appropriate."
28. The parties are requested to correspond with each other on the question of the precise
form of the order, and, in particular, should confirm that the second part of the order
should refer to "medical records" rather than simply "hospital records". There is some
overlap between the two categories identified in the notice of motion, in that the first
category includes both pre- and post-accident medical records, but without express
reference to the three month time-limit in the case of the latter. The second category
specifies the three month time-limit but refers to "hospital records" only. In the event
that the parties are unable to reach agreement, short written submissions should be filed
within two weeks of today's date.
12
29. As to the costs of the motion, Order 99, rule 2(3) provides that the High Court, upon
determining any interlocutory application, shall make an award of costs save where it is
not possible justly to adjudicate upon liability for costs on the basis of the interlocutory
application. The default position under Part 11 of the Legal Services Regulation Act
2015 is that a party who has been "entirely successful" is prima facie entitled to costs
against the unsuccessful party. The court retains a discretion, however, to make a
different form of costs order. One of the factors to which regard may be had in the
exercise of this discretion is the conduct of the litigation.
30. The starting position, therefore, is that the defendant is prima facie entitled to the costs
of the motion in that she has been entirely successful. My provisional view is that an
order of costs should be made in her favour, with a stay on adjudication and execution
pending the determination of the proceedings. If the plaintiff wishes to contend for a
different form of costs order, he should notify the defendant's solicitor accordingly; and
both sides should then file written legal submissions within two weeks of today's date.
Such submissions are not to exceed 2,000 words.
Appearances
Elizabeth-Anne Kirwan for the plaintiff instructed by Garrett J. Fortune Solicitors
Claire Hogan for the defendant instructed by AXA Legal Services Solicitors
Result: Discovery ordered of both pre- and post -accident medical reports.
BAILII:
Copyright Policy |
Disclaimers |
Privacy Policy |
Feedback |
Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2021/2021IEHC104.html