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28 June 2022

Personal Injury Case Note: GIO Insurance (Australia) Ltd v Taouk [2021] NSWPICMP 193

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Facts & important takeaways from recent personal injury case.
Australia Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration

Review Panel: Principal Member John Harris, Dr Richard Crane and Dr Shane Moloney

Important takeaways:

  • Where the examination findings of the initial Assessor are not in dispute, a physical re-examination of the Claimant is not necessary, and is consistent with the objects of the PIC to "resolve the real issues in proceedings justly, quickly, cost effectively and with as little formality as possible" (see Section 3(c) of the Personal Injury Commission Act 2020).
  • Although not determinative of causation, a lack of contemporaneous records of an injury will be a relevant factor, particularly if the contemporaneous records are detailed and are suggestive of "precision in questioning and recording".

Facts

The subject accident in GIO Insurance (Australia) Ltd v Taouk [2021] NSWPICMP 193 occurred on 20 May 2020 when the Insured vehicle collided with the rear of the Claimant's vehicle at low speed.

The claim was the subject of both a Minor Injury Dispute and Treatment Dispute. This case note will address the Minor Injury Dispute.

At first instance Medical Assessor Bodel diagnosed a right partial thickness tear of the supraspinatus tendon, and certified that the Claimant's right shoulder injury was a non-minor injury. He took a history that the Claimant was immediately aware of right shoulder girdle and right arm pain following the accident, and concluded that the tear was caused by the accident.

Assessor Bodel found that the injuries to the Claimant's cervical, thoracic and lumbar spine were minor injuries for the purposes of the Motor Accident Injuries Act 2017 ('MIA Act').

The Insurer successfully applied for a Review. The main issue in dispute was whether the Claimant's right shoulder injury was caused by the accident, and if it was, whether it was a minor injury for the purposes of the MIA Act.

The Insurer submitted that the first complaint of right shoulder pain was not made until two months post-accident, despite the Claimant having been examined on several occasions during this period.

The Insurer also submitted that had the Claimant sustained an acute trauma to his right shoulder, there would have been evidence of reduced range of motion, pain and reduced strength immediately following the accident.

There was also evidence that in early July 2020 the Claimant had been assaulted by up to 7 men.

The Review Panel Decision

As the examination findings of Assessor Bodel were not in dispute, the Panel considered that it was not necessary to undertake a physical examination of the Claimant. However, they did examine the Claimant via telephone in order to give him an opportunity to explain why there was no reference to a right shoulder injury until some months after the accident, and to afford procedural fairness.

At assessment with the Panel, the Claimant advised that he had told all of his doctors about his right shoulder problem following the accident, and that he was unsure why there was no record of these complaints until 22 July 2020.

The Review Panel acknowledged recent decisions such as Norrington v QBE (Australia) Ltd [2021] NSWSC 548 which had found that Review Panels and Medical Assessors had fallen into jurisdictional error by treating the lack of contemporaneous medical evidence as determinative of the issue of causation.

However, the Panel observed that the notes provided by the Ambulance Service and Hospital were detailed and suggested "precision in questioning and recording". Further, they observed that not only was there an absence of right shoulder problems, but the hospital records referred to there being no upper limb abnormality.

The Panel noted that the Claimant had not referred to a right shoulder injury in his claim form and considered that this was also a "factor relevant to whether a body part was injured". They further noted that the Claimant could not offer any explanation as to why this injury was omitted from his Claim Form.

They considered that the history given on re-examination, that his right shoulder complaints commenced immediately following the accident, was grossly inconsistent with the medical records and his own Claim Form.

At paragraphs 103-104 the Review Panel observed:

"The minor intrasubstance tear of the supraspinatus tendon, detected some three months after the accident with no reported problems from the right shoulder, was not considered to have resulted from the minor rear end collision, from which the biomechanical forces would have simply pushed the shoulders into the supporting car seat, was most unlikely to have caused anything and sometimes may cause a minor soft tissue injury.

The tear and degenerative changes shown on MRI may be found in shoulders with no history of trauma."

The Review Panel did not accept that the right shoulder was injured in the subject accident, or that the accident caused or contributed to the supraspinatus tear.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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