DAILY NEWS
Feb 18, 2015 4:26 PM
The
Court of Appeal for Ontario has overturned an earlier decision in a
lawsuit arising from an auto collision, finding that the defendants
breached the province's Rules of Civil Procedure in making a video of
surveillance of the plaintiff an exhibit - and cross-examining the
plaintiff on its contents - without having disclosed the existence of
surveillance in an affidavit of documents.
In a ruling released Tuesday, the province's appeal court set aside a
judgement of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. The appeal court
substituted a finding of liability against Stephen Corbett and St.
Lawrence Cement Inc., who were sued by Andrea and Giuseppina Iannarella
after a collision in February, 2008.
Andrea Iannarella was driving a pickup when he was rear-ended by the
Corbett, who was driving a concrete mixer, on Ontario Highway 427, in
stop-and-go traffic on a snowy evening.
"The jury found Mr. Corbett had not been driving negligently and the
action was dismissed on liability grounds," wrote Mr. Justice Peter
Lauwers, of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, of the original court
ruling in 2012. "Had liability been established, the jury would have
awarded general damages of $32,000 and $40,571 as damages for past
income loss, but would not have awarded damages for future income loss."
The trial judge also dismissed Iannarella's claim for non-pecuniary
damages "on the basis that the statutory 'threshold' for this type of
recovery" under Section 267.5 of Ontario's Insurance Act was not met.
The issues on appeal included the trial judge permitting the defendents to use surveillance evidence.
In overturning the trial jury and ruling the defendants liable, the
appeal court found Corbett "was plainly going too fast for the weather
and road conditions and could have avoided the collision accident by
exercising sufficient care."
Justice Lauwers also noted that during the trial, defence lawyers
played a video from surveillance of Iannarella and cross examined
Iannarella on its contents.
Court records indicate that excerpts of the video shown to the jury
"show Mr. Iannarella variously waving his left arm, carrying a garbage
bag, driving and turning the steering wheel with his left hand, reaching
with his left arm to the top shelf in a grocery store to retrieve an
item, and driving on a 400 series highway," Justice Lauwers wrote. The
defendants "claimed at trial that these activities are inconsistent with
Mr. Iannarella's self-reported limits on his functionality caused by
the collision."
The defendents contended that the plaintiffs were "not entitled to an
affidavit of documents or to surveillance particulars since they had
not sought the affidavit and had waived examinations for discovery
before the matter was set down for trial," noted Justice Lauwers.
But the appeal court found the defendants breached three sections of
the Rules of Civil Procedure: "rule 30.03(1) by failing to serve an
affidavit of documents; rule 30.07(b) by failing to disclose
surveillance conducted after the matter was set down for trial in an
affidavit of documents; and, inferentially, rule 31.09 obliging the
respondents to correct answers given on an undertaking ultimately
leading to the provision of surveillance particulars."
"The trial judge erred at the trial management conference," Justice
Lauwers added. "He ought to have ordered the respondents to serve an
affidavit of documents disclosing the surveillance or at least to
disclose such particulars as are ordinarily provided through a discovery
undertaking."
The other two judges hearing the appeal - Mr. Justice John Laskin and Mr. Justice William Hourigan - agreed.
They ordered a new trial on the issue of damages.
"Privileged documents must be included in a party's affidavit of
documents," Justice Lauwers wrote. "Under rule 30.03(2)(b), video
surveillance is typically identified in Schedule B to the affidavit of
documents as a privileged document. The plaintiff then has the
opportunity to seek full particulars of the surveillance from the
defence at examination for discovery; the 'particulars' of surveillance
that must be disclosed on request include the date, time and location of
the surveillance, as well as the nature and duration of the activities
depicted and the names and addresses of the videographers."
Source: http://www.canadianunderwriter.ca/news/auto-collision-lawsuit-defendants-use-of-video-surveillance-evidence-without-disclosure-in-affidavit/1003484801/?&er=NA
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