The plaintiff appellant was injured at the respondent’s livestock mart, when a bullock owned by a third party collided with his left leg. The respondent denied vicarious liability for the injury and claimed contributory negligence by the plaintiff as he was standing in a part of the mart where animals were kept and through which they moved. The plaintiff issued proceedings and four years later delivered updated particulars of the injury. The particulars claimed that the appellant’s lower limb pain was likely caused both by his soft-tissue leg injury and by a compression of the nerves in his lower spine.
The respondent sought discovery of the appellant’s medical records requesting five years pre-accident records in the first category, and five months post-accident records in the second category. There was no response to this request. The defendant then issued a motion for discovery of the records. The plaintiff/appellant responded by agreeing to provide the 5-year pre-accident records but refusing the post-accident records. The motion for discovery proceeded to the High Court for the post-accident medical records. The motion was successful, but the plaintiff/appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal.
The late delivery of updated particulars of personal injury alerted the defendant-respondent to the possible link to the appellant’s pre-existing back condition.
The court considered case law on a plaintiff’s right to privacy over his medical records and when that right should be waived when suing for damages for personal injuries. The court also noted that such a request should only be refused in exceptional cases.
The Court of Appeal noted the trial judge’s comment that post-accident records are “invariably crucial” to every personal injury claim was an over-generalisation, and that “there is no category of documentation that is invariably crucial in every case within a particular area of litigation”.
The court noted that only in a few cases did the courts accept that the availability of alternative means of obtaining information precluded obtaining discovery.
The court distinguished between where they accepted that the availability of alternative means of obtaining information precluded obtaining discovery from a situation where a party contends that alternative mechanisms for obtaining information should be relied upon in lieu of discovery, but then declines to engage with those mechanisms or repeatedly opposes the use of them.
The court dismissed the reasons put forward by the appellant in resisting the discovery order for post-accident medical reports and accordingly, dismissed the appeal.
Egan v. Castlerea Co-operative Livestock Mart Limited [2023] IECA 240.
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