Hitchens v Zurich Australia Ltd

Case

[2015] NSWSC 825

30 June 2015

No judgment structure available for this case.

Supreme Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: Hitchens v Zurich Australia Ltd [2015] NSWSC 825
Hearing dates:21-24, 28-31 July 2014; 4, 7, 8 and 11 August 2014
Decision date: 30 June 2015
Jurisdiction:Equity Division
Before: White J
Decision:

Judgment for the first defendant.

Catchwords: INSURANCE – duty of disclosure – concealment – waiver – fraudulent misrepresentation – claim by insured against insurer for damages – insured alleges that the insurer wrongfully repudiated two policies of insurance – whether insured’s answers to pre-contractual proposal form questions were knowingly false – whether insured’s answers breached his duty of disclosure – whether insurer waived compliance with the duty of disclosure – whether insurer was put on notice by a fair presentation of risk – held that: (1) the insured fraudulently misrepresented his medical history; (2) the insured fraudulently breached his duty of disclosure by failing to disclose his regular and extended use of strong opioid medication which were obtained from different doctors without advising any of them that he obtained medication from the others; (3) the insurer did not waive the duty of disclosure by failing to make further inquiries; (4) the insurer validly avoided the policies of insurance
Legislation Cited: Evidence Act 1995 (NSW)
Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth)
Marine Insurance Act 1909 (Cth)
Cases Cited: Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner [2008] HCA 57; (2008) 238 CLR 570
Asfar & Co v Blundell [1896] 1 QB 123
Briginshaw v Briginshaw (1938) 60 CLR 336
Carter v Boehm (1766) 3 Burr 1905; 97 ER 1162
Click here to enter text.Claude R Ogden & Co Pty Ltd v Reliance Fire Sprinkler Co Pty Ltd [1973] 2 NSWLR 7
Earl of Darnley v London, Chatham and Dover Railway (1867) LR 2 HL 43
General Accident Insurance Asia Limited v Sakr [2001] NSWCA 402; (2001) 11 ANZ Ins Cas 61-508
Greenhill v Federal Insurance Co Limited [1927] 1 KB 65
Jaggar v QBE Insurance International Ltd [2007] 2 NZLR 336
Liga Knitting Mills v Lombard Insurance Co Limited (1984) 3 ANZ Ins Cas 60-551
Orb Holdings Pty Ltd v Lombard Insurance Co (Australia) Limited [1995] 2 Qd R 51
Permanent Trustee Australia Co Ltd v FAI General Insurance Co Ltd [2001] NSWCA 20; (2001) 50 NSWLR 679
Prudential Insurance Co of America v Saxe 134 F 2d 16 (1943)
Twenty-First Maylux Pty Ltd v Mercantile Mutual Insurance (Australia) Limited [1990] VR 919
WISE Underwriting Agency Ltd v Grupo Nacional Provincial SA [2004] EWCA Civ 962; [2004] 2 All ER (Comm) 613; [2004] 2 Lloyd’s Law Rep 483
Texts Cited: Report on Insurance Contracts [1982] ALRC 20Click here to enter text.
Ewart, Waiver Distributed (1917) Chap IX
MacGillivray on Insurance Law, 7th ed
Professor Clarke, The Law of Insurance Contracts, 6th ed
Category:Principal judgment
Parties: Anthony Hitchens (Plaintiff)
Zurich Australia Limited (1st Defendant)
Chun Nary Quoe (2nd Defendant)
Representation:

Counsel:
B W Rayment QC with G Beauchamp and M J Gollan (Plaintiff)
J Gleeson QC with S Walsh (Defendant)

Solicitors:
Firths Compensation Lawyers (Plaintiff)
Turks Legal (Defendant)
File Number(s):2009/291452

Judgment

  1. HIS HONOUR:   On or about 1 December 2004 the plaintiff (Mr Hitchens) and the first defendant (Zurich Australia Limited (“Zurich”)) entered into two life insurance policies. One was called an Income Replacement Insurance Plus policy. Zurich agreed to provide income protection cover to Mr Hitchens of a monthly benefit of $7,500 if:

[S]olely as a result of a Sickness or Injury, while your Policy is in force and before [1 December 2034] the life insured:

   is … unable to generate at least 80 per cent of his ... Pre-Disability Income through personal exertion in his/her usual occupation, and

   is required to be under the regular care, and following the advice, of a Medical Practitioner.

The benefit was capped at an amount that would not exceed 75 per cent of Mr Hitchens’ Pre-Disability Income.

  1. Mr Hitchens and his then partner, Ms Quoe (the second defendant) also entered into a policy called “Term Life Insurance Plus” that covered them both in the event of death or Total and Permanent Disablement. (Ms Quoe is the second defendant. She was joined as a party only because she is a party to the Term Life Insurance Plus policy. No relief is sought against her and none claimed by her.) The policy provided insurance to Mr Hitchens of a benefit of $1,050,000 in the event of his suffering Total and Permanent Disablement. Relevantly, Total and Permanent Disablement was defined as follows:

(b)   The life insured is ‘Unable to Work’ through Sickness or Injury. ‘Unable to Work’ means that the Insured has been absent from active employment solely as a result of Sickness or Injury for an uninterrupted period of six consecutive months; and

If the life insured is covered for ‘Any’ Occupation TPD (as shown in the Policy Schedule), the life insured solely as a result of Sickness or Injury, is unlikely to ever work (for reward or otherwise) in his/her profession, business or similar occupation, or engage in any other occupation to which he/she is fitted by education, training and experience for the rest of his/her life.

  1. In the Income Replacement Insurance Plus policy “Injury” and “Sickness” were relevantly defined as follows:

Injury means an accidental injury caused by an event external to the body, occurring while the Policy is in force. Any Injury that is the direct or indirect result of elective or donor transplant surgery is excluded unless payable under the Elective Surgery Benefit.

Sickness means sickness or disease which first manifests itself after the Policy began. Any sickness or disease that is the direct or indirect result of elective or donor transplant surgery is excluded unless payable under the Elective Surgery Benefit.

  1. The Income Benefit payable under the Income Protection Policy was indexed according to the Consumer Price Index. (Definition of “Income Benefit”, “Insured Monthly Benefit” and “Pre-Disability Income” in clause 6.2.) Clause 2.1 of the Income Protection Policy provided:

We will continue to pay you the Income Benefit until any of the following event occurs:

the Sickness or Injury giving rise to the claim does not prevent the life insured earning his/her Pre-Disability Income from personal exertion in his/her usual occupation

the Benefit Period ends

your Policy ends

the death of the life insured

the life insured is no longer required to be under the regular care of a Medical Practitioner with regard to treatment for the Sickness or Injury, or is no longer under the regular care of a Medical Practitioner

the life insured is no longer following the treatment recommended by a Medical Practitioner at such intervals and frequency as will lead to a cure, alleviation, or minimisation of the condition causing your claim

  1. On 9 September 2007 Mr Hitchens suffered an accident at his home when using a power saw. He severed the second, third and fourth fingers of his right hand and a small section of his right thumb. The right index finger and the right middle finger had to be amputated to the proximal inter phalangeal joint (the middle joint). The right ring finger was amputated down to the distal inter phalangeal joint and a small section of the tip of the right thumb towards the distal phalanx was also amputated. Mr Hitchens claims that he has been totally and permanently disabled as a result of the injury and psychological problems caused by the injury, such that it is unlikely that he will ever be able to work in a similar occupation in which he was employed prior to his accident, or engage in any other occupation to which he is fitted by education, training and experience for the rest of his life. He claims that he is entitled to the payment of the benefit under the Term Life Insurance Plus policy for Total and Permanent Disablement.

  2. Mr Hitchens also claims that as a result of his accident he is prevented from earning his pre-disability income from personal exertion in his usual occupation and is required to be under the regular care of a medical practitioner with regard to treatment for the Sickness or Injury arising from the accident.

  3. Mr Hitchens contends that Zurich repudiated the Income Protection Policy by reducing fortnightly payments to him sometime after 19 November 2007 and before 8 May 2008, and ceasing to make payments to him from 8 May 2008. He says that, as he was entitled to do, he accepted Zurich’s failure to make payments as a repudiation of the Income Protection Policy and terminated the policy on 12 November 2009.

  4. On 19 August 2010 Zurich purportedly avoided both policies on the ground of misrepresentation and non-disclosure. By his amended statement of claim filed on 6 February 2013 Mr Hitchens purportedly accepted the repudiation of both policies as a termination of them.

  5. Mr Hitchens claims damages that would compensate him for the amounts that would be payable under both policies if they responded to his claim. He claims damages of $2,934,468 for the loss of benefits he claims are payable under the Income Protection policy and $1,276,281 and interest in respect of the sum claimed to be payable for Total and Permanent Disablement under the Term Life Insurance Plus policy.

  6. Mr Hitchens completed the proposal (called the life insured statement) on 8 August 2004. He was examined by a nurse, Ms Chloe Runeckles, who was employed by Lifescreen Australia, on 14 September 2004 and provided medical information to her at that time. The duty of disclosure was a continuing duty which extended until entry into the contract of life insurance. Both policies commenced on 1 December 2004.

Mr Hitchens’ Medical History

  1. Mr Hitchens was born in 1969. When he was 14 he underwent an operation to remove a melanoma from his left calf. In 1989 when he was aged 19 or 20 he underwent an operation for a groin dissection involving the removal of lymph nodes on the left side of the groin because the cancer had metastasised.

  2. A consequence of the removal of those lymph nodes was that from 1989 Mr Hitchens suffered from lymphedema and cellulitis in the left leg. Lymphedema would cause the leg to swell. Cellulitis was the result of a bacterial infection that was treated with antibiotics. Sometimes Mr Hitchens was hospitalised so that the antibiotics could be administered intravenously.

  3. On 10 April 1996 Mr Hitchens was involved in a motor vehicle accident. He was deliberately run over by a work colleague. He suffered injury to his right knee and to his neck and elbows, as well as impact to the back of the skull. He was diagnosed as also suffering from reactive depression as a result of the incident. On 24 April 1996 a consultant psychologist, Mr Alec Jones diagnosed Mr Hitchens as suffering an acute stress disorder as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th ed of the American Psychiatric Association (“DSM-IV”). Mr Jones reported that Mr Hitchens was suffering severe reactive depression due to continuing pain.

  4. On 1 May 1996 Dr Karen Oswald of the Balmoral Street, Hornsby Medical Centre referred Mr Hitchens to an orthopaedic surgeon. She advised that:

Mr Hitchens has presented for continuing psychological assessment after the motor vehicle incident. He has completed tests and been under observation for a period exceeding a total of seven hours on two occasions. He is currently suffering Acute Stress Disorder as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th ed of the American Psychiatric Association …

Mr Hitchens’ physical pain, including neck and shoulder spasms, is being severely exacerbated by psychophysiological response creating reactive depression. …

  1. On 3 May 1996 Mr Hitchens underwent a right knee arthroscopy. He also suffered damage to his left leg. He was provided with a Zimmer splint for his left leg in early May 1996. Records of the Balmoral Street, Hornsby Medical Centre record an attendance on 7 May 1996 in which Mr Hitchens was complaining not only of lymphedema, but also of spasms in his left leg.

  2. On 13 May 1996 Mr Hitchens’ mother, a registered nurse, wrote to Mr Jones concerning her son’s condition. She reported that Mr Hitchens remained very depressed, mainly due to on-going headache and muscle spasms affecting his neck and shoulders. She reported that he was currently taking Valium (for neck spasms), Endone (for pain), and Prozac (for depression). In his oral evidence Mr Hitchens asserted that he did not know that he was taking Prozac.

  3. Mr Hitchens was referred to a chiropractor, a Mr Matthew Long, at the Wahroonga Centre for spine-related disorders. On 21 June 1996 Mr Long reported, amongst other things:

At the moment Mr Hitchens is seeing a psychologist, Mr Alec Jones, to help his [sic] cope with his current situation. He does relate anxiety attacks and he feels that the psychological aspect of his condition is inhabiting [sic] his recovery. Mr Hitchens related a history of malignant melanoma at the age of 14. He underwent a groin dissection and was later operated on for a secondary malignancy in his lymph nodes. Mr Hitchens is currently taking a variety of medications, including Valium and Endone. He is also taking Prozac and has apparently taken a variety of anti-inflammatories, although he cannot recall the specifics of these.

Mr Hitchens frequently described how his current complaints had affected him psychologically, and for this he is seeking counselling with Mr Alec Jones. It appears to me that Mr Hitchens’ symptoms may well be augmented to a degree by this distress (something which Mr Hitchens agreed with), and at this stage the nature of his symptoms is such that manual treatment would be difficult. He would most probably benefit from an appropriate in-patient rehabilitation program at Mt. Wilga …

  1. Mr Hitchens was admitted to Mt Wilga Private Hospital on 26 June 1996 for two weeks’ rehabilitation. It appears from his discharge summary that he was provided with physiotherapy and cognitive behavioural therapy which included breathing techniques and visualisation techniques for the management of his pain. It appears from the discharge summary that Mr Hitchens had had a series of falls at home preceding his admission which had resulted in injury, including laceration to the head requiring suturing and an increase in medications, including Valium. On discharge his medications included five milligrams of Endone to be taken three times a day and Prozac, 40 milligrams to be taken daily.

  2. In November 1996 Dr Mervyn Cross performed a right knee reconstruction.

  3. On 17 February 1997 a physiotherapist, Ms Joan Lawlor, reported to Dr Oswald that the right knee was stable since surgery and was not causing Mr Hitchens distress. She reported on treatment for Mr Hitchens’ neck and headache problem and noted that neck pain and headaches had escalated since his return to work as had his intake of Endone to control the pain. She reported that in her opinion there was a 50 per cent physical component to Mr Hitchens’ headaches as well as a significant central neural component and that Mr Hitchens was currently depressed, lethargic, sleeping a lot and too tired to go to the gym.

  4. Mr Hitchens received continued treatment during 1997 for the results of the motor vehicle incident. On 1 October 1997 Mr Jones reported to Dr Oswald that Mr Hitchens was suffering, amongst other things, an adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood, and this was apparently aggravated by a medication dependency (on Endone and Codeine). In respect of medication dependency Mr Jones reported:

Medication Addiction - Causation

As a direct result of his physical and psychological pain, Mr. Hitchens became addicted to Endone and other pain management drugs, including Codeine often self-prescribing. This was not dissimilar to his conduct just prior to entering Mount Wilga Rehabilitation Hospital in 1996. It is undoubted that the physical pain at that time was very real. However, due to the trauma Mr. Hitchens was unable to psychologically manage the pain in his badly injured leg as well as his neck. The latter was badly swollen for many months.

Notwithstanding efforts by medical personnel at this Centre he continued to obtain various medications from February to April 1997. These included retail shelf products. He was required to undergo closer scrutiny when medical and psychological practitioners becoming aware that he was sourcing medication ‘outside’ the Centre.

Much of his anxiety was also due to the appeal by the vehicle driver against her sentence. This matter was settled on August 18, 1997. Mr. Hitchens has since reduced his medication voluntarily. He stopped taking Endone for a period of two weeks, using only Codeine up until September 24, 1997. On that date he suffered a severe migraine and began taking the Endone again. He is now on two Endone tablets a day.”

  1. In February 1998 Mr Hitchens attended a three-week ADAPT pain-management program at the Royal North Shore Hospital. The program was described as providing cognitive behavioural therapy that included physical upgrading and medication withdrawal and training in the self-management of pain. At the commencement of the program Mr Hitchens’ medications were recorded as including one 5mg tablet of Endone taken twice daily. At the end of the program his medications were stated to be nil. The director of the program reported that Mr Hitchens had had difficulties in returning to work which were thought to be related not simply to his pain, but more likely to anxiety. He was offered psychological follow-up therapy at the Pain Management Research Centre after the program, but this was not taken up.

  2. The director of the ADAPT program recommended on 5 March 1998 that Mr Hitchens should avoid recommencing the medications that had ceased. However, the Balmoral Street Medical Centre provided Mr Hitchens with a prescription for antibiotics and for Endone on 16 March 1998 and again on 5 April 1998. The records of that centre show that a prescription for Endone was “reluctantly written” on 5 April 1998, that a request for Endone was refused on 24 April 1998, but a prescription was “reluctantly written” on 16 May 1998. The doctor’s notes for 16 March 1998 record that cellulitis had started the previous day. The notes of 16 May 1998 record Mr Hitchens reporting a flare-up of neck pain and “three days of agony”. Thereafter, scripts for Endone were regularly written, i.e. on 3 June, 17 July, 17 August, 6 October, 1 November and 4 December 1998. In 1999, the number of scripts for Endone reduced to nine, but in 2000, 30 scripts were written. In 2001 there were 38 scripts for an oxycodone analgesic.

  3. On 1 March 1999 Dr Cross reported to Dr Oswald. He referred to a “three months post ACL reconstruction of his right knee”. The same letter said that Mr Hitchens had had a lot of problems with his left leg over the last 18 months which included six months of hospitalisation, but he could be confident with regards to his right knee.

  4. In 1997, 1998 and 1999 Mr Hitchens obtained prescriptions for Endone from the Balmoral Street Medical Centre. In those years he occasionally attended a medical centre at Chatswood, but he was not prescribed Endone at that time from the Chatswood Medical Centre. Mr Hitchens’ psychiatrist, Dr Robert Hampshire, said that medications of Tramal and the analgesics Oxycontin and Endone should only be used for acute pain for days going into weeks at the most.

  5. From about June 2000, Mr Hitchens began obtaining prescriptions for Endone not only from the Balmoral Street Medical Centre, but also from the Chatswood Medical Centre and a medical centre at Strathfield. Thus on 22 May 2000 he was prescribed Endone from the Balmoral Street Medical Centre for cellulitis. A standard prescription for Endone is for twenty 5 milligram tablets. The recommended dose is five milligrams every six hours.

  1. On 6 June 2000 Mr Hitchens obtained a prescription of Endone from the Strathfield Medical Clinic. He was prescribed Endone at the Chatswood Medical Centre on 11 June 2000. On 16 June 2000 Dr Osen of the Strathfield Medical Clinic provided Mr Hitchens with a prescription for Endone (5mg). He noted that Mr Hitchens was to see the surgeon Mr Merv Cross on 26 June 2000 in relation to his left knee. On 20 and 25 June 2000 Mr Hitchens obtained prescriptions from the Chatswood Clinic for Endone. On 25 June 2000, the doctor at the Balmoral Street Medical Centre made a note of a telephone call received from a Dr Harrison from the Chatswood Medical Centre to clarify that Mr Hitchens had been requesting Endone from a different surgery.

  2. In cross-examination Mr Hitchens agreed that at this time he was going to different clinics to get Endone prescriptions and continued to do so throughout the balance of 2000. The prescriptions obtained by Mr Hitchens for oxycodone (that is, Endone) declined from 30 and 38 in 2000 and 2001 respectively, to 15, 20 and 7 in 2002, 2003 and 2004. However, in 2002 he commenced taking Tramadol under the trade name Tramal. From January 2002 the prescriptions were for tablets containing either 100mg or more commonly 200mg of Tramadol. The usual instruction was for one tablet to be taken twice daily and 20 tablets were prescribed on each occasion. Thus, each prescription should have supplied sufficient tablets for 10 days. In 2002 Mr Hitchens was prescribed Tramadol on 20 occasions in addition to being prescribed oxycodone on 15 occasions. In 2003 he was prescribed Tramadol on 26 occasions in addition to being prescribed oxycodone on 20 occasions. In 2004 he was prescribed Tramadol on 18 occasions in addition to being prescribed oxycodone on seven occasions.

  3. Mr Hitchens said that he took Endone when he suffered from severe or strong pain, or on occasions might take that drug where he suffered from a dull pain which was not severe, but for which he needed a breakthrough. Tramadol is classified as a narcotic analgesic and is used in the management of moderate to severe pain. Mr Hitchens said he used it to deal with pain that was less severe than pain for which he took Endone. He regarded pain that may have lasted a day or more as potentially long-term pain for the relief of which he would take Endone.

  4. Mr Hitchens denied that he was or now is addicted. He said that his understanding of addiction as explained to him by his mother, a registered nurse, was that an addiction to pain medication would arise if the person took the medication when they did not need it, but in his case he took the pain medication when he did need it.

  5. Mr Hitchens admitted that he did not tell the doctor at one medical centre that he had visited or was going to visit another medical centre to get another prescription of the same drug. For example, he agreed that in 19 days in November 2000 he visited five medical clinics, four of which gave him a prescription for Endone and two of which prescribed Endone with a repeat. He agreed that he did not tell any of the medical practitioners that at about the same time he was going to other doctors and getting Endone. He agreed that he believed that to do so would reveal the extent of his Endone consumption and he would not be prescribed more. Notwithstanding this admission, he denied deliberately having withheld information from the doctors. I do not accept that denial. The denial is damaging to Mr Hitchens’ credit.

  6. There were repeated instances of similar behaviour. Mr Hitchens agreed that in 2002, 2003 and 2004 there was barely a day that he was not taking either Endone or Tramal, or both. He agreed that each time he took that medication it was as a result of pain he was suffering from lymphedema or cellulitis.

  7. Mr Hitchens’ use of Endone declined in 2004. In January 2004 he was prescribed Endone once by the Strathfield Clinic and was prescribed Tramal on three occasions from the Strathfield Clinic. In February he was prescribed Tramal once from the Strathfield Clinic. In March he was prescribed Endone once by the Five Dock Medical Centre and Tramal once by the Strathfield Clinic. In April he was prescribed Tramal on two occasions from the Strathfield Clinic. In May he was prescribed Tramal on one occasion and Endone on one occasion from the Strathfield Clinic. In June he was prescribed Tramal on one occasion from the Strathfield Clinic. In July he was prescribed Endone once from the Five Dock Medical Centre. He was prescribed Tramal on two occasions from Strathfield and on one occasion from Chatswood. In August he was prescribed Tramal on one occasion from Strathfield and one occasion from Chatswood. In September he was prescribed Endone and Tramal on one occasion from Strathfield and one occasion from Chatswood. He was prescribed Tramal from Strathfield in October 2004 on two occasions and Endone from Strathfield on one occasion. In November he was prescribed Tramal on one occasion from Strathfield.

  8. In 2004 Mr Hitchens visited a clinic at Leichhardt, for apparently the first time. He visited the Leichhardt Clinic on 8 and 9 September 2004 and 26 October 2004. He was not then prescribed Tramal or Endone.

  9. In 2004, up to 8 August 2004, Mr Hitchens was prescribed Tramal on 11 occasions and Endone on four occasions. It cannot be assumed that Endone was taken four times a day. His prescriptions were for it to be taken PRN, that is, as required. The pattern of prescribing in 2004 prior to the completion of the proposal form on 8 August 2004 suggests that at that time Mr Hitchens was taking Tramal or Endone something less than every day, unless he had a stockpile of medication from the previous year. In 2003 Mr Hitchens had been prescribed Tramal on 26 occasions and Endone on 20 occasions which would be about a year’s supply if taken every day.

  10. Mr Hitchens was warned by the Chatswood Clinic in July and September 2003 about the long-term use of analgesics and about the drugs’ addictive properties. He received repeated warnings or advice from the Strathfield Clinic about the potentially addictive properties of the drugs. However, the doctor whom he was seeing most regularly in 2004, Dr Alexakis of the Strathfield Clinic, did not consider that Mr Hitchens was addicted to the drugs. On the other hand, he was unaware that Mr Hitchens was obtaining supplies not only from the Strathfield Clinic, but also elsewhere.

  11. Mr Hitchens suffered from chronic lymphedema and cellulitis in his left leg. Notes of the Strathfield Clinic dated 20 July 2000 refer to his having a week off for the condition. A note of Strathfield Clinic of 10 August 2000 states:

Due to go to lymphedema clinic – infective bad three years, 20 hospitalisations prescription given for Endone, Diclocil”.

  1. A note of 30 September 2000 records Mr Hitchens as having been to a lymphedema clinic two weeks earlier. This did not stop his travelling to Africa in November that year. He was provided with a pump and a garment for the leg.

  2. A note of the Chatswood Medical Centre of 18 May 2001 referred to a flare-up of new cellulitis over the previous two days and the leg being too sore for him to wear a stocking on it. A note of 28 May 2001 refers to his suffering from cellulitis for the seventh time in four and a half months and an increase in lymphedema. There were repeated references in the medical notes to Mr Hitchens’ suffering from cellulitis and lymphedema which involved regular attendances at medical clinics. A medical certificate from a Dr Simpson of 4 May 2002 stated that Mr Hitchens suffered lymphedema of his left leg and that he had recurrent cellulitis and carried antibiotics for urgent therapy and a limited supply of Tramal for recurrent severe pain. There are numerous references in the medical notes of 2001 and 2002 to his taking Endone or Tramal to deal with pain associated with his lymphedema and cellulitis. A note of the Chatswood Medical Centre on 29 August 2002 referred to a long-term discussion of pain management and that Mr Hitchens would need to reduce his dosage slowly over time and use other methods for chronic pain relief. On 25 September 2003 a doctor at the Chatswood Medical Centre recorded advice to Mr Hitchens to attend a pain clinic to deal with the pain from his lymphedema and the giving of a warning about addiction. A note of 28 September 2003 of the Chatswood Medical Centre recorded that he had attended a pain clinic without much benefit in respect of the chronic lymphedema in his left leg and suffered chronic pain from it.

  3. The notes of the medical centres record 10 attendances in 2000 at the Balmoral Street Medical Centre in respect of cellulitis, three attendances in 2000 at the Chatswood Medical Centre for the same condition, seven attendances in 2000 at the Strathfield Medical Centre for the same condition, and two attendances at the Five Dock Medical Centre for the same condition: a total of 22 attendances. The notes record nine attendances at the Balmoral Medical Centre in 2001 for the same condition, six attendances at the Chatswood Medical Centre in that year for that condition, and eight at the Strathfield Medical Centre: a total of 23 attendances. In August 2001 Mr Hitchens was admitted to hospital for four days and treated with intravenous antibiotics for cellulitis. In 2002 there were six attendances at Chatswood Medical Centre, eight at Strathfield, three at Balmoral Street, and one at Five Dock, the records of which referred to his recurrent cellulitis in his left leg.

  4. In 2003 Mr Hitchens attended the Strathfield Medical Centre on 13 occasions. Some clinical notes refer to his lymphedema or cellulitis. Prescriptions for Endone or Tramal or both were provided on all occasions and these were prescribed for the pain described by Mr Hitchens associated with cellulitis or lymphedema. In the same year he attended the Chatswood Medical Centre on eight occasions and obtained the same prescription medicines.

  5. On 25 September 2003 Mr Hitchens was advised to attend a pain clinic and cautioned in relation to his becoming addicted to Tramal. The doctors at the Chatswood Clinic had stopped prescribing Endone, but, unbeknownst to them he got it from other clinics. In 2003 Mr Hitchens attended the Five Dock Medical Centre on three occasions on which he was prescribed Endone as well as other medications. In that year he attended the Balmoral Street Medical Centre on seven occasions and received prescriptions for Endone and Tramal.

  6. On 5 January 2004 the Strathfield Medical Centre provided Mr Hitchens with a referral to the Royal North Shore Hospital pain clinic. He did not attend the pain clinic. In 2004, up to 8 August 2004, he attended the Strathfield Medical Centre on 11 occasions and was prescribed Tramal, or Tramal and Endone. In 2004, up to 8 August 2004, he attended the Five Dock Medical Centre twice and was prescribed Endone. In the same period he attended the Chatswood Medical Centre on one occasion and was prescribed Tramal.

  7. Mr Hitchens had further surgery to his right knee on 28 May 2004 at the Mater Hospital. It was a short procedure involving admission and discharge on the same morning. The procedure was described in the records of the hospital as “arthroscopy, removal of loose body, condroplasty and notchplasty – right knee”.

Completion of proposal form: 8 August 2004

  1. Mr Hitchens and his then partner, later wife, Ms Nary Quoe, used the services of a financial planner, a Mr Desmond Roll, in arranging their insurance. On 15 June 2004 Mr Roll provided Mr Hitchens with a copy of a product booklet prepared by Zurich which included a copy of an application form to be completed by a proponent seeking life insurance. The parts of the form relevant to the present proceedings were left to Mr Hitchens to complete. Ms Quoe gave evidence to the effect that much of the form was completed in Mr Roll’s presence, but I do not accept that evidence. I accept Mr Roll’s evidence to the contrary which is confirmed by the statement made by Mr Roll on the form that “after appointment client wished to complete application form in their own time and then send it to me”. On the basis of his usual practice Mr Roll said that he believed that he took Mr Hitchens through each page of the application and pointed to each section that he had to complete and said words to the effect: “You are applying for insurance. You understand that you need to answer these questions truthfully and accurately”. Mr Hitchens completed the form and signed it on 8 August 2004. He sent it to Mr Roll who received it on 25 August 2004.

  2. Mr Roll recalled that Mr Hitchens told him that he had been injured in a motor vehicle accident in 1996 and had explained that it was a deliberate attempt by another person to run him over at his previous employer’s workplace. He had no recollection of Mr Hitchens’ having told him at any time that he suffered stress as a result of a court case in connection with the motor vehicle accident. Nor did he have any recollection of Mr Hitchens’ telling him about suffering pain, or from any medical condition, or that he was taking medication. Mr Roll gave evidence, on which he was not cross-examined and which I accept, that if he had been told that Mr Hitchens had ongoing pain, or had a medical condition, or was taking medication he would have told him to write it down in the application. Mr Hitchens said that he had numerous phone calls with Mr Roll about what information needed to go into the form, without explicitly saying what information he gave Mr Roll about his medical history. I doubt that anything explicit was disclosed to Mr Roll.

  3. In cross-examination Ms Quoe said that at the meeting with Mr Roll on 15 June 2004 she and Mr Hitchens discussed the fact that Mr Hitchens was continuing to suffer from pain in his leg as a result of his lymphedema and was continuing to take Endone and Tramal for the pain he suffered. Ms Quoe gave oral evidence after Mr Roll gave evidence. She had sworn an affidavit in support of Mr Hitchens’ case. She did not give evidence to that effect in her affidavit. Her affidavit did not deal with the topic of the meeting with Mr Roll. In cross-examination Mr Roll was asked whether Mr Hitchens spoke about cancer. He had no recollection of that. He was not asked about any discussion about Mr Hitchens’ taking strong pain medication as a result of his lymphedema (or at all). I infer that Ms Quoe had not conveyed the substance of what she said in evidence about this to Mr Hitchens’ solicitor or counsel. I am not satisfied that such a discussion as claimed by Ms Quoe took place. If it did, Mr Roll would have said that Mr Hitchens should write it down on the application.

  4. The application was considered by an underwriter at Zurich, Ms Sarah Cosier. Zurich arranged for Mr Hitchens to be examined by a nurse employed by an independent company called Lifescreen Australia. That examination took place on 14 September 2014. The nurse in question, a Ms Chloe Runeckles, completed a report as to her examination of Mr Hitchens and completed details which can be inferred were provided to her by Mr Hitchens in respect of some aspects of his medical history. However, Ms Runeckles was not called to give evidence and counsel for Mr Hitchens submits that no inference adverse to Mr Hitchens can be drawn from the report prepared by her.

  5. It is common ground that Zurich was not entitled to avoid the policy on the ground of non-disclosure or misrepresentation unless the non-disclosure or misrepresentation was fraudulent. If a failure to disclose or a misrepresentation were not made fraudulently Zurich would not be entitled to avoid the policy because more than three years had passed since the contract of insurance was entered into (Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), s 29(2) and (3)). Zurich did not press a claim that the contracts of insurance had been varied in 2007 and that it avoided the contracts within three years of the variation.

  6. Counsel for Mr Hitchens submitted that if he failed to make a required disclosure or made any material misrepresentation, nonetheless he was not guilty of fraud. Mr Hitchens also contends that to the extent to which he failed to answer questions or gave obviously incomplete answers, there was no misrepresentation or non-disclosure by him and Zurich waived the duty of disclosure as to the matters in question (Insurance Contracts Act, ss 21(3) and 27). He contends that Zurich was on notice of:

(a)   the cancer he suffered;

(b)   the consequences of his motor vehicle accident in 1996;

(c)   the lymphedema and cellulitis which he suffered;

(d)   the pain medication he took; and

(e)   the treatment he had received at medical centres he had attended.

  1. Mr Hitchens contends that because Zurich was on notice of those matters and failed to make inquiry of medical practitioners who had treated him, it thereby waived the duty of disclosure in relation to such matters. For this contention Mr Hitchens relies on s 21(2)(d) of the Insurance Contracts Act.

  2. Sections 21, 23, 26, 27 and 29 relevantly provide:

21 The insured’s duty of disclosure

(1)   Subject to this Act, an insured has a duty to disclose to the insurer, before the relevant contract of insurance is entered into, every matter that is known to the insured, being a matter that:

(a)   the insured knows to be a matter relevant to the decision of the insurer whether to accept the risk and, if so, on what terms; or

(b)   a reasonable person in the circumstances could be expected to know to be a matter so relevant.

(2)   The duty of disclosure does not require the disclosure of a matter:

(a)   that diminishes the risk;

(b)   that is of common knowledge;

(c)   that the insurer knows or in the ordinary course of the insurer’s business as an insurer ought to know; or

(d)   as to which compliance with the duty of disclosure is waived by the insurer.

(3)   Where a person:

(a)   failed to answer; or

(b)   gave an obviously incomplete or irrelevant answer to;

a question included in a proposal form about a matter, the insurer shall be deemed to have waived compliance with the duty of disclosure in relation to the matter.

23 Ambiguous questions

Where:

(a)   a statement is made in answer to a question asked in relation to a proposed contract of insurance or the provision of insurance cover in respect of a person who is seeking to become a member of a superannuation, retirement or other group life scheme; and

(b)   a reasonable person in the circumstances would have understood the question to have the meaning that the person answering the question apparently understood it to have;

that meaning shall, in relation to the person who made the statement, be deemed to be the meaning of the question.

26 Certain statements not misrepresentations

(1)   Where a statement that was made by a person in connection with a proposed contract of insurance was in fact untrue but was made on the basis of a belief that the person held, being a belief that a reasonable person in the circumstances would have held, the statement shall not be taken to be a misrepresentation.

(2)   A statement that was made by a person in connection with a proposed contract of insurance shall not be taken to be a misrepresentation unless the person who made the statement knew, or a reasonable person in the circumstances could be expected to have known, that the statement would have been relevant to the decision of the insurer whether to accept the risk and, if so, on what terms.

27 Failure to answer questions

A person shall not be taken to have made a misrepresentation by reason only that the person failed to answer a question included in a proposal form or gave an obviously incomplete or irrelevant answer to such a question.

29 Life insurance

Scope

(1)   This section applies where the person who became the insured under a contract of life insurance upon the contract being entered into:

(a)   failed to comply with the duty of disclosure; or

(b)   made a misrepresentation to the insurer before the contract was entered into;

but does not apply where:

(c)   the insurer would have entered into the contract even if the insured had not failed to comply with the duty of disclosure or had not made the misrepresentation before the contract was entered into; or

(d)   the failure or misrepresentation was in respect of the date of birth of one or more of the life insureds.

Note:   If subsection 27A(1), (3) or (4) applies to the contract of life insurance, different remedies may be available to the insurer in respect of each separate contract of life insurance that is taken to exist by virtue of the relevant subsection.

Insurer may avoid contract

(2)   If the failure was fraudulent or the misrepresentation was made fraudulently, the insurer may avoid the contract.

(3)   If the failure was not fraudulent or the misrepresentation was not made fraudulently, the insurer may, within 3 years after the contract was entered into, avoid the contract.

…”

Proposal Form

  1. The relevant part of the proposal form is called “Life Insured’s Statement”. It contained a statement in bold type that to avoid delays in processing the application the proponent should make sure that he or she fully answered all questions relevant to the application. The duty of disclosure under s 21 of the Insurance Contracts Act was set out, namely, that the proposed insured had a duty to disclose to the insurer every matter within his or her knowledge that he or she knew, or could reasonably be expected to know, was relevant to the insurer’s decision whether to accept a risk of the insurance and, if so, on what terms, but that that duty did not require disclosure of a matter that diminished the risk to be undertaken by the insurer, was common knowledge, which the insurer knew, or, in the ordinary course of its business, ought to know, or as to which compliance with the duty of disclosure had been waived.

Question 1

  1. Pages 12-19 of the form dealt with medical matters. Section 2 of that part of the form was headed “Doctor’s details”. Question 1 asks:

Do you have a ‘usual doctor or medical centre’?

  1. Mr Hitchens answered that question, “No”. Under question 1 the form asked for:

Details of doctor/centre you usually visit, or the last doctor/centre attended if you do not have a ‘usual’ medical attendant.

  1. This was left blank. The form asked for the name of the doctor or centre, contact details including telephone number and address and asked “How long have they known you?”, and “When was your last consultation?”. It asked for details of the last consultation. This part of the form under the question numbered 1 was left blank. That is to say, Mr Hitchens provided no details in respect of the last doctor or medical centre he attended.

  2. Zurich contends that the answer to question 1 was knowingly false. It contends that at the time he completed the form Mr Hitchens did have a usual doctor and a usual medical centre. In the 12 months up to 12 August 2004 he had attended the Strathfield Medical Centre on 18 occasions, whereas he had only been to the Chatswood Medical Centre three times, the Balmoral Street Medical Centre twice, and the Five Dock Medical Centre twice. Mr Hitchens denied that he knew when he was applying for insurance that his usual medical centre was Strathfield. He said in re-examination that the reason he answered question 1 “No” was that he was going to so many medical centres, he did not consider himself to have a usual doctor. That answer is explicable if a different timeframe is adopted to determine whether a particular doctor or medical centre was his usual doctor. If a longer timeframe than one year is taken, say three or four years, then there is an approximate equivalence in Mr Hitchens’ attendance at Balmoral Street, Chatswood and Strathfield.

  3. Mr Hitchens did not complete the balance of this part of the form that required the specification of the details of the last doctor or centre attended if he did not have a usual medical attendant. Although the requirement to provide those details was not expressed as a question, but as a request or direction, counsel for Zurich accepted that s 21(3) applies whether a requirement for the provision of information is posed as a question or as a request, instruction or direction. In my view, this concession is correct. The form could as easily have made the request for information by posing a series of questions, namely:

(a)   If no, who was the last doctor or medical centre on whom you have attended?

(b)   What is the telephone number and address of such doctor or centre?

(c)   How long have they known you?

(d)   When was your last consultation?

(e)   What was the reason for your last consultation?

(f)   What were the results of the consultation?

(g)   What degree of recovery have you had since your last consultation?

  1. The form seeks the same information both by asking questions and by requesting the provision of information. Whether expressed interrogatively or not, the form is to be taken as raising a series of questions. As Mr Hitchens failed to provide an answer as to the last doctor or centre he attended and failed to provide the requested details as to that consultation, Zurich is taken by s 21(3) to have waived compliance with the duty of disclosure in relation to the matter about which the question was asked. That matter was Mr Hitchens’ last medical consultation. His failure to answer that part of the form does not result in Zurich’s having waived the duty of disclosure in any wider respect.

Question 2

  1. Question 2 was:

Have you had reason to visit any other doctor in the last two years?

  1. Mr Hitchens answered that “Yes”.

  2. The form then asked for the date of the consultation or consultations. Two boxes were provided for that purpose. They were left blank. The failure to complete the boxes entailed a waiver only of any duty to disclose the dates of his consultations with other doctors in the last two years. It is not a waiver of any duty to disclose the frequency or number of such consultations.

  3. The form then sought the name and address of the doctor, that is, “any other doctor [visited] in the last two years”, the reason for such visit or visits, the results of such visit or visits, and the degree of recovery. Mr Hitchens answered this part of the form by writing against the request for the “name and address of doctor”:

Name:      Medical centres

Address:   Numerous

  1. He answered the balance of the request as follows:

Reason – stitches/antibiotics

Results       ________

Degree of recovery [left blank]      ”

  1. Mr Hitchens pleads that by being on notice that he had attended numerous medical centres and by failing to make inquiry of the medical practitioners who had treated him, Zurich waived disclosure in relation to the treatment he had received at the medical centres he had attended.

  2. The answer provided by Mr Hitchens to question 2 as to his reason for attending other doctors in the past two years was substantially false. Obtaining antibiotics, and on one occasion having stitches, was a reason for Mr Hitchens’ having attended medical centres in the previous two years. But the more important reason, and the occasion for far more frequent attendance, was the obtaining of strong pain relief for lymphedema and cellulitis. Mr Hitchens admitted that when filling out the form he knew that over the preceding two years he had on many occasions attended a doctor as a result of significant pain for lymphedema and cellulitis, and to obtain prescription pain relief. He denied that he made a conscious decision not to state that as the reason for his attendances. I do not accept that denial.

  3. In re-examination Mr Hitchens gave the following evidence in relation to his answer to question 2:

Q. I just want you now to look at question 2 and have you had reason to visit another doctor in the last two years to which you have said ‘Yes’ and then I want to take you down to the reason ‘Stitches/antibiotics’?

A. Yes.

Q. Do you have any recollection of why you wrote ‘stitches/antibiotics’ under ‘reason’ in relation to that question?

A. (No answer)

Q. Can you tell us why you might have done that?

A. Yeah, look, it was one other reason, it was a reason other than my lymphedema and cellulitis that I went to a medical centre so I was just trying to highlight that, yes, stitches and antibiotics.”

  1. Counsel for Mr Hitchens submitted that this was a rather perplexing answer. Mr Hitchens appears to say that in answering question 2 he intended to refer to what was out of the norm, and thus gave the answer about stitches and antibiotics as the reason for attending another doctor in the last two years. That is not a plausible construction of the question asked. Mr Hitchens said that he answered “No” to question 1 because he did not have a usual doctor or usual medical centre, but was going to so many medical centres. If he answered question 2 as if it were asking about treatment given by doctors or medical centres who were not his usual doctor or medical centre, that would indicate an attempt so to construe the form as to avoid giving answers that would fairly disclose his medical condition. But question 2 could not reasonably or honestly have been so construed. However the matter is approached, the answer given to the request in question 2 for the reason for Mr Hitchens’ visits to a doctor in the last two years is substantially false.

  2. Zurich did not conclude that Mr Hitchens’ sole reason for visiting numerous medical centres over the previous two years was to obtain stitches and antibiotics. The underwriter at Zurich who considered the application, Ms Sarah Cosier, conceded in cross-examination that she would not have understood that the stated reason for visits to numerous medical centres in the previous two years, namely “stitches/antibiotics” was the sole reason. She surmised that that stated reason would have been the reason for Mr Hitchens’ last consultation, but she had no recollection of her actual thought processes.

  3. The vice of the answer is in what it concealed, namely that the principal reason for Mr Hitchens’ visit to numerous medical centres for the previous two years was to obtain prescriptions for strong pain relief for lymphedema and cellulitis.

Question 5

  1. Section 3 of this part of the form was headed “Personal Habits”. It was divided into five questions. Question 5 asked:

Do you take medication, drugs, stimulants, sedatives or tranquilisers or have you done so in the last five years? If ‘yes’ give details.

  1. Mr Hitchens answered that question “Yes” and in the box for the provision of details wrote, “Pain Medication – result of motor vehicle accident”. He pleads that this put Zurich on notice that he took pain medication and by failing to make inquiry of medical practitioners who had treated him, Zurich waived the duty of disclosure in relation to the pain medication he took.

  2. The answer did not identify whether the pain medication taken was the kind of medication that could be obtained over the counter, such as paracetamol or aspirin, or whether it was pain medication only obtainable on prescription which might include strong medication such as the opioid analgesics that Mr Hitchens was taking. Counsel for Mr Hitchens points out that the question was apt to cover both prescription and non-prescription medications and the reference to drugs, stimulants, sedatives and tranquilisers would suggest that an affirmative answer to question 5 could well cover prescription medications. On the other hand, Zurich says that when the answers to question 2 and question 5 are read together it can be seen that at least in respect of the previous two years the pain medication referred to in the answer to question 5 was apparently not prescription medication, as otherwise it should have been referred to in the answer to question 2 asking for the reason for attendances on the doctors referred to in the answer to that question.

  3. Zurich also submits that the statement that the pain medication referred to in the answer was a result of the motor vehicle accident was false, or when read with other information provided, was deliberately designed to minimise the impact of the answer on a reader. The answer is to be read in conjunction with other answers given about the motor vehicle “accident”. Thus in section 7 under the heading “Medical Background” Zurich asked 33 questions about the proponent’s medical history. Question 11 asked whether the proponent then had or ever had had tendonitis, tenosinovitis, RSI or regional pain syndrome? Mr Hitchens answered that question, “Yes” and against the requirement to provide details including date, condition, name and address of doctor/hospitals, treatment, results, length of time off work, answered “motor vehicle impact 10/4/96 – deliberately hit by vehicle. Knee reconstruction and various soft tissue injuries. 6-12 months off work.” In answer to question 18 in section 7 which asked whether he had had an ECG, x-ray, CT or MRI scan, Mr Hitchens said that he had had an MRI scan and x-ray as a result of motor vehicle accident. Mr Hitchens answered “Yes” to two questions for which he was directed to complete a medical questionnaire. Those were questions whether he then had, or had ever had:

27.   Any disease of, or injury to, the neck or spine including back strain, disc disorder, lumbago, fibrositis, sciatica, neuritis or other non-specific back pain?

28.   Any injury, deformity or disease involving any joint or limb?

  1. Section 11 was a medical questionnaire to be completed if the proponent answered yes to any part of section 7 where he was instructed to complete a medical questionnaire. In that section Mr Hitchens identified the injury or complaint as being an injury or complaint to or in respect of “neck/knee pain”. The date of onset was identified as 10 April 1996 (the date of the motor vehicle accident). The part of the body affected was disclosed as “neck/right knee”. The cause was identified as his having been hit by a motor vehicle deliberately. The date of “your last attack” was identified as 1997. He was asked, “what treatment have you received”, and answered “knee reconstruction, neck physiotherapy”. He was asked, “what treatment are you currently receiving and how often?”, and answered “nil”. He said that he had been off work from 10 April 1996 to June 1997 and had been admitted to hospital for the complaint for five days in April 1996, one month in June 1996 and two days in 1997. He identified the hospitals to which he had been admitted as the Hornsby Hospital, the Mt Wilga Private Hospital and the Mater Hospital, and identified Dr Cross as the doctor who had provided treatment. He said again that an MRI and an xray was performed. He identified the date of the test as in 1996. He was asked, “When did you last consult your doctor for this?”, and answered “1998”. He left blank questions as to the name and address of the doctor last consulted “for this”. He said he was fully recovered in respect of the complaint. He said he did not need to complete another medical questionnaire. Hence, he did not fill in another part of the form which would have been available to provide information concerning any other condition or illness. He provided additional information on a separate sheet as follows:

Injuries sustained from being hit by a motor vehicle deliberately caused damage to right knee, right elbow and soft tissue neck issues. Resulted in approximately 12 months off work. Treatment included, right knee reconstruction, right elbow aspiration, extensive physiotherapy on neck. No other impact to current lifestyle apart from odd headache. No other impact to working commitments.

Treatment – Mt Wilga Private Hospital - neck

- Dr Merv Cross - knee

Hornsby Hospital – elbow/knee

  1. Zurich submitted that the impression conveyed is that the pain medication referred to in the answer to question 5 said to be as a result of the motor vehicle accident was taken in connection with the “odd headache”, but that odd headache did not impact his current lifestyle and he had fully recovered from the injury. Counsel for Mr Hitchens submitted that nonetheless Zurich was put on notice that Mr Hitchens did have continuing odd headaches eight years after the accident and was therefore put on notice to inquire what was the pain medication that was being taken. I deal with these matters further below.

Lymphedema and Cellulitis

  1. Mr Hitchens also answered “Yes” to a question as to whether he then had or had ever had cancer, a tumour, cysts or growth of any kind. In respect of that question he said:

maligna [sic] melanoma within groin 1989 – complete groin disection [sic]. Sydney Melanoma Unit no impact to work – 3 months’ treatment – no other conditions apart from mild lymphedema left leg.

  1. He also answered “Yes” to a question “Have you had any blood test, urine test or bowel screening?”, and gave as the details in respect of that matter “Cancer treatment/infections – cellulitics [sic]”.

  2. The form did not require Mr Hitchens to complete section 11, being the medical questionnaire, in relation to the affirmative answers to those questions. The medical questionnaire was filled out in relation to the complaint of neck or knee pain because Mr Hitchens had answered “Yes” to two questions where the form did direct the completion of the medical questionnaire.

  3. Accordingly, Mr Hitchens did not fail to answer the questions in the medical questionnaire in relation to cancer, lymphedema and cellulitis. Mr Hitchens provided further information in relation to cancer and lymphedema as a further response to section 7. He said:

No other required treatment from cancer treatment 15 years ago. Suffer from the odd lymphedema. Treatment several years ago has declined significant lymphedema. Has not caused any impact to work commitment.

  1. Zurich says that Mr Hitchens’ description of his lymphedema as being mild and from his suffering only the “odd lymphedema” was deliberately false. Counsel for Mr Hitchens says the answer was substantially true; that the medical records showed that Mr Hitchens’ lymphedema in 2004 was significantly better than it had been several years previously and that in contrast to the position several years previously, his lymphedema could be described as mild. In my view, Mr Hitchens’ statements that he suffered mild lymphedema and the odd lymphedema misrepresented the extent of his condition. The sentence “Treatment several years ago has declined significant lymphedema” does not make grammatical sense but an experienced underwriter called by Zurich, Mr Michael Molesworth, acknowledged that it could indicate to a reasonable underwriter that he had had significant lymphedema in the past. That does not detract from the message conveyed that Mr Hitchens’ then current condition of lymphedema was mild and he suffered only the odd lymphedema.

Questions 25 and 33

  1. Mr Hitchens answered “No” to a question whether he then suffered or had ever suffered “25. Lethargy, chronic fatigue, chronic pain syndrome, glandular fever or fibromyalgia?” That answer is not shown to be false because it is not shown that chronic pain syndrome is the same thing as frequent pain.

  2. Mr Hitchens also answered “No” to the question:

33.    Do you intend or believe you may need to seek advice or treatment from a doctor or other health professional for any current health problem[s], or have you any symptoms of ill health or disability not already stated in this application?

  1. Prima facie, the answer to question 33 was false. Mr Hitchens had an ongoing need to seek advice and treatment, in the form of prescription pain medication and antibiotics for his lymphedema and cellulitis. However, he was not cross-examined on this answer.

Depression or other mental or nervous condition: Question 24

  1. Mr Hitchens answered “No” to a question whether he then had or had ever had “24. Depression, stress, anxiety, panic attacks, behavioural disorder or other mental or nervous condition?

  1. As noted earlier in these reasons Mr Hitchens had been diagnosed with a stress disorder by a psychologist, Mr Jones. Mr Hitchens said that he was unaware of that diagnosis. I do not believe that evidence. Disbelief of Mr Hitchens’ denial would not itself justify a finding that the diagnosis had been communicated to Mr Hitchens, but the inference is overwhelming that Mr Hitchens was aware of that diagnosis. He saw Mr Jones for about two years. He made a claim for compensation arising from his having been hit by the motor vehicle in 1996. It can be inferred from the advice given by Mr Jones to his solicitor that the claim included a claim for compensation for psychological injury. He reported such a psychological injury to his physiotherapist or chiropractor, Mr Long. I do not think it probable that Mr Hitchens would have forgotten, or would not have turned his mind to, these circumstances when he answered the question in the proposal form as to whether he suffered depression, stress, anxiety, panic attacks, behavioural disorder or other mental or nervous condition. It is clear that Mr Hitchens read this section of the form as asking not only about his current state of health, but about previous conditions. That is clear from the fact that he answered the questions by referring to his medical history. It would therefore be no answer to say that he understood the insurer only to be asking as to whether or not he then suffered from depression, stress, anxiety, panic attacks, behavioural disorder or other mental or nervous condition. Nor did Mr Hitchens give evidence that that was how he read and answered the question.

  2. No question of waiver arises in relation to this answer.

Authorities for Zurich to obtain medical information

  1. The booklet containing the application form which included the Life Insured’s Statement, also contained four authorities to be signed by the life insured addressed to “Dear Doctor” (but without naming a doctor) authorising the doctor to release to Zurich details of the proponent’s medical history. Mr Hitchens did not sign those authorities when he submitted the application to Mr Roll to be forwarded to Zurich. On 25 August 2004 Mr Roll’s firm returned the authorisations to him for signature advising that the underwriters were unable to assess the application until the form had been signed. Mr Hitchens signed the authorities. Zurich received the application from Mr Roll on 27 August 2004.

Zurich’s consideration of proposal

  1. Ms Cosier had no recollection of the particular application. She gave evidence, which I accept, that she handled about 20 such applications per day and that each application would take about 15 minutes to be analysed. It appears from the evidence of an underwriter called by the plaintiff that the processing of about 20 applications for life, income protection and TPD insurance by an underwriter per day was typical of the industry at the time.

  2. Ms Cosier gave evidence to the effect that in accordance with her usual practice she would have read the application and noted the disclosures made. She gave evidence to the effect that in accordance with her usual practice she would have considered the following factors to be relevant, namely, that:

(a)   there had been no recurrence of the malignant melanoma since 1989;

(b)   the treatment for lymphedema appeared to have been successful and that Mr Hitchens suffered from only the odd lymphedema;

(c)   that the effects of the motor vehicle accident in 1996 appeared to have been resolved, save for the odd headache and there had been no time off work as a result of the accident since 1997; and

(d)   that Mr Hitchens was not continuing to receive medical treatment in respect of these conditions.

  1. I accept that evidence.

  2. Although she had no recollection of the particular application Ms Cosier speculated that she would have taken the reference to pain medication to be a reference to Mr Hitchens’ taking an occasional painkiller such as aspirin or paracetamol.

  3. Ms Cosier deposed that she would have declined Mr Hitchens’ application had she been aware of Mr Hitchens’ medical history. The guidelines provided by Zurich’s reinsurer included that income protection cover be declined if there were a history of present drug dependence, or drug dependence within the previous seven years, or evidence of an anxiety disorder associated with substance abuse or depression however long ago this occurred, or evidence of severe depression or depression in association with drug abuse. Ms Cosier deposed that had full disclosure of Mr Hitchens’ medical history been made she would have noted that he obtained regular scripts for Endone and Tramal, sometimes within days of his last script, which would have indicated a high need for pain relief. The history of his attendances at different medical centres to obtain prescriptions for pain medication would have raised the prospect of “doctor shopping” and hence the prospect of his having developed a dependency on the medications, or alternatively that he had significant on-going pain and had not fully recovered from his injuries. She would have noted, amongst other things, that Mr Hitchens had been diagnosed and treated for a depressive order, variously described, including acute stress disorder, severe reactive depression and had been diagnosed as anxious for a number of years following the accident and had been prescribed Prozac.

  4. This evidence was not challenged. Rather, Ms Cosier was cross-examined with a view to establishing that enough information was disclosed on the proposal form that should have led a reasonable prudent underwriter to require the provision of further information from Mr Hitchens’ doctors. This was directed to the issue of waiver dealt with below.

  5. Ms Cosier discussed the application with another member of the underwriting team and decided to request a medical evaluation and blood tests. Ms Cosier thought she would have taken that decision because the application revealed some continuing, albeit minor, symptoms.

Events before examination by Lifescreen Australia nurse

  1. On 30 August 2004 Zurich advised that it would require Mr Hitchens to have certain blood tests for cholesterol, HIV, and hepatitis B and C, and also to undergo a medical examination by a paramedic from a company such as Lifescreen Australia. A request for the examination was made to Lifescreen Australia it seems on 31 August 2004. The health evaluation request stated that, “nurse to provide full details of the injuries sustained in the accident.

  2. The medical examination of Mr Hitchens took place on 14 September 2004 by a registered nurse, Ms Runeckles. Between the date Mr Hitchens signed the proposal form (8 August 2004) and that examination, two things of note occurred. On 20 August 2004 Mr Hitchens attended the Chatswood Medical Centre and advised the doctor there that he had felt a nodule in his left abdomen one week previously. He was given a referral to a specialist, Professor Thompson of the Sydney Melanoma Unit. Given that Mr Hitchens had a melanoma excised in 1984 and there had been secondary cancers removed in 1989, the appearance of what felt like a nodule in his left abdomen was a matter of concern.

  3. Mr Hitchens attended the Sydney Melanoma Unit on 30 August 2004. Professor Thompson reported that he could find no evidence of a recurrence of melanoma. He detected a “firm subcutaneous nodule” that “felt like a lipoma”. In layman’s terms, this is a fatty lump. Professor Thompson reported to the Chatswood Medical Centre that he had arranged a biopsy “to exclude the remote possibility that it was a melanoma metastasis.” Mr Hitchens gave evidence (which I accept) that he was told at the time that the lump was nothing to be concerned about.

  4. A subsequent biopsy confirmed that the lump was not a recurrence of his cancer. However, the results of the biopsy had not been obtained at the time of Mr Hitchens’ examination by Ms Runeckles.

  5. I do not accept that the failure to disclose the subcutaneous lump and the fact that a biopsy was still outstanding at the time of his examination by Ms Runeckles involved a relevant breach of the duty of disclosure. I accept Zurich’s submission that the possibility, even if remote, of a recurrence of a cancer in the form of the subcutaneous lump was a matter that a reasonable person would consider to be relevant to the insurer’s decision whether to accept the risk. Had the contract of insurance been entered into when the results of the biopsy were still unknown, then I accept that the duty of disclosure would have been breached. (I do not say that such a breach would have been fraudulent.) But the contract was not entered into until 1 December 2004. The results of the biopsy were known well before then. They showed no malignancy. The lump was benign. It did not affect Mr Hitchens’ health. The position is the same as it would have been had the lump been detected, diagnosed and a biopsy taken and the results provided before the application form was submitted in August 2004. The presence of a fatty lump with no malignancy would not have been a matter that required disclosure.

  6. The only relevance of the non-disclosure of the lump and the fact that the results of the biopsy were outstanding at the time Mr Hitchens was examined by Ms Runeckles is that his failure to make mention of it might indicate a less than frank approach to the insurer. However, because of the assurance Mr Hitchens had been given by Professor Thompson I do not draw that adverse inference from his failure to mention the lump, as distinct from the extent of the disclosure of his other medical conditions and medical history.

  7. The second episode that assumed significance at the hearing was that on 8 September 2004 Mr Hitchens suffered an injury when riding his bike. He suffered a deep laceration to his right elbow that was sutured under local anaesthetic at the Leichhardt Medical Centre. A note there read, “needs antibiotics”. Also on 8 September 2004 Mr Hitchens attended Strathfield Medical Centre at 6.31pm and received prescriptions of Endone and Tramal. On 9 September he again attended the Leichhardt Medical Centre and was given a prescription for Keflex (an antibiotic) and Panadeine Forte. It is unclear whether his attendance at Strathfield at 6.31pm was before or after his bike accident and attendance at Leichhardt.

Report of Lifescreen Australia nurse: Ms Runeckles

  1. The suggested significance of these events relates to information given by Mr Hitchens to Ms Runeckles on 14 September 2004. The form she completed provided for the insertion of the “Name and address of Usual Medical Attendant”. It appears from the form she completed that she initially wrote “N/A”. This was crossed out. Then she wrote “Balmain”. This was crossed out. Then she wrote “Leichhardt Medical Centre”. Against a line “State how long he/she has been your Doctor” Ms Runeckles wrote “N/A – 1st visit”. Against the line “Date, reason and outcome of last consultation” she wrote “stitches to L [sic] elbow”.

  2. Mr Gleeson QC for Zurich submitted that having received a script for Endone and Tramal from Strathfield Medical Centre on 8 September, it should be inferred that Mr Hitchens’ reason for going back to the Leichhardt Medical Centre on 9 September to obtain a prescription of Panadeine Forte, and the reason for his refraining from asking for a prescription of Endone and Tramal from Leichhardt, was that when the forthcoming Lifescreen examination took place Mr Hitchens would have the name of a doctor to provide who was “clean”, that is, would not inform the insurer that he was taking prescription narcotic analgesics.

  3. While this is a possible scenario, there is an alternative explanation consistent with Mr Hitchens’ attending the Leichhardt Medical Centre on both days for genuine purposes without any intention to deceive the insurer. It is not possible to say whether the bike accident occurred before or after the attendance at Strathfield at 6.31pm on 8 September. It may well have occurred later. Mr Hitchens lived in Leichhardt. It is quite possible, indeed I think it probable, that he attended the Leichhardt Medical Centre after his bike accident because it was closer to home. It appears he was told to come back the following day because he needed antibiotics. He did so. Presumably he complained about pain in his elbow and was prescribed Panadeine Forte. I would infer consistently with Mr Hitchens’ other evidence that he did not tell the doctor at Leichhardt that he had been prescribed Endone and Tramal the day before, but that does not mean that he went to Leichhardt and obtained the prescription for Panadeine Forte with the intention of providing a false trail as to his medical condition in case the insurer made inquiries.

  4. Zurich submitted that Mr Hitchens falsely told Ms Runeckles that his usual medical centre was Leichhardt. This was not a particular of Zurich’s claim of misrepresentation. In any event, Ms Runeckles did not give evidence. It is clear from the following answer that she was told that the visit to Leichhardt was the first visit that Mr Hitchens had made to that medical centre. It is more likely that he proffered the name of Leichhardt in answer to a question asking who was the last doctor he had visited. There is no basis for saying that that statement was inaccurate.

  5. Ms Runeckles recorded in response to a question which asked, “Strained back, sciatica, whiplash, spondylitis or any other form of back or spinal trouble?”, the following answer:

Whiplash – 10/4/96 – 3-6 months, chiropractor and physio. Fully recovered, no other treatment.

  1. This answer does not detract from the disclosure made on 8 August 2004 that Mr Hitchens suffered from the odd headache as a result of the injury suffered on 10 April 1996. On the other hand, when read with the proposal form of 8 August 2004, it confirms that there was no significant qualification to Mr Hitchens’ statement that he had fully recovered from the effects of those injuries.

  2. In response to the question “Cancer, cyst, naevi or tumour of any kind?”, Ms Runeckles recorded:

Cancer. Malignant melanoma in 1989. Groin dissection – fully recovered. No other treatment required.

  1. Again, this answer does not detract from the information given on 8 August 2004 that Mr Hitchens suffered from the odd lymphedema and suffered from mild lymphedema. Ms Runeckles was not called and Mr Hitchens said that he could not confirm what he said to Ms Runeckles. If Mr Hitchens told Ms Runeckles the information which appeared in the answer in response to her question as to whether he had suffered cancer, cysts, naevi or a tumour of any kind, then the statement that he had fully recovered from the groin dissection and no other treatment was required would not have been true, having regard to the fact that Mr Hitchens continued to suffer lymphedema and cellulitis which were the results of the groin dissection. He had previously disclosed that he was or had suffered from cellulitis, that he continued to suffer lymphedema which he described as odd and mild and as having declined significantly from what it had been in the past. If Mr Hitchens said that no other treatment was required that would not have been true because Mr Hitchens continued to receive prescriptive pain medication for ongoing moderate to severe pain as a result of the cellulitis and lymphedema that were the result of the groin dissection. But because Ms Runeckles was not called, Mr Hitchens’ counsel could not question her on the accuracy of the answers she recorded. Where fraud is alleged it must be distinctly proved. I do not think that Zurich has established that Mr Hitchens misrepresented his condition to Ms Runeckles.

  2. In answer to the question “Arthritis, rheumatism, gout, tendonitis, repetitive strain injury or any disorder of the joints or muscles?” Ms Runeckles recorded an answer “knee reconstruction – 1996 – no further problems.” There was no evidence that it was not true to say, as at 14 September 2004, that Mr Hitchens had no further problems as a result of the knee reconstruction. It would not have been true to say that he had not had any problems arising from the knee reconstruction after 1996 because he had had further surgery on the knee in 2000 and in May 2004. However, as I do not know at what period of time the question was asked, I do not conclude that the answer given by Mr Hitchens to Ms Runeckles in relation to that question was not true.

  3. In answer to a question “Motor car or any other accident, work, sport or recreational injury?”, Ms Runeckles recorded an answer, “Pushbike accident – 1999 – nil injuries. Knee reconstruction – 1996 (football injury. 10 years ago) MVA – whiplash – 1996.” She had previously recorded the stitches given at the Leichhardt Medical Centre. No material “other accident” was raised in the course of the evidence. The answer provided to this question was not a misrepresentation.

  4. In answer to the question “Do you, or have you ever, taken drugs or any medication on a regular basis? If yes, what type and reason.” Ms Runeckles recorded the answer, “No”. Mr Hitchens said that he could not confirm that the question was asked and answered in the way recorded. He did not deny it. Ms Runeckles was not called. If the question were asked and the answer recorded were given by Mr Hitchens, then the answer would have been false. But as Mr Hitchens’ counsel had no opportunity to cross-examine Ms Runeckles and there was no explanation for her not being called, I cannot conclude that the question was asked in the same terms as appears on the form or that the simple answer as recorded was given.

  5. In answer to the question “Do you contemplate seeking medical advice, undergoing any investigation or treatment or having any operation in the near future?”, Ms Runeckles recorded the answer, “No”. Again, I cannot be satisfied that the question was asked and was answered by Mr Hitchens in the way set out on the form. In any event, it is not clear what the form meant by the expression “near future”. It might be within the next week or two. If the question were asked as written on the form, it has not been established that Mr Hitchens interpreted the question in a way that meant that the answer given was false, even though I infer that Mr Hitchens did intend to make further visits to his doctors to obtain further prescriptive pain medication with about the same regularity as he had hitherto in 2004. That is, sometimes once a month and sometimes two or three times a month.

  6. Question 18 asked “Have you required medical treatment, including surgery, for any illness or injury not mentioned above?”. Ms Runeckles recorded the response, “Tonsillectomy – 1972”. This answer is not one of the particulars provided by Zurich of its allegation that Mr Hitchens misrepresented his condition to Zurich by providing the information to Ms Runeckles that was recorded in the Lifescreen report.

  7. Ms Cosier reviewed the report from Lifescreen Australia. She recorded the following in her underwriting notes:

Rec’d medical:

Whiplash 1996, 3-6 months, 1 x chiro & physio, full recovery

Malignant melanoma 1989, groind [sic] dissection, full recovery

Knee reconstruction 1998, no further problems

Build wnl

Nurse notes full power in limbs, nil tremor or muscle wastage, fine motor intact – doesn’t req additiona [sic] reports as all injuries over 5 years old

Note melanoma > 15 yrs ago – discuss with cmo for opinion.

  1. Ms Cosier had a discussion with Zurich’s chief medical officer about the melanoma. On 24 September 2004 she recorded that he had advised that cover should be granted on ordinary rates.

  2. On 24 September 1996 Mr Roll was advised by Zurich that Mr Hitchens’ application had been accepted at standard rates for Term, TPD and Trauma cover, but the Income Replacement policy would be subject to the indemnity option, due to Mr Hitchens’ being newly self-employed.

  1. Mr Hitchens gave evidence that when he completed the proposal form he was not in any way depressed. He was working hard. He was playing sport. He was proposing to marry and have children. A number of friends gave evidence to the effect that they observed no signs of depression or anxiety or any other psychological issue. Thus, a Mr Paap said that he had known Mr Hitchens since 1998. They played cricket together and had lived together as flatmates in 1999 and 2000. Mr Paap deposed that Mr Hitchens seemed a jovial and up-beat type of person who had physical health issues, but he seemed to put up with those and lived a normal life. He was outgoing and exhibited no indications of depression, anxiety or any other psychological issue. This evidence was not challenged and I accept it. But it does not meet Zurich’s case. Zurich does not contend that when the proposal form was completed in 2004 Mr Hitchens was suffering from depression or other mental or nervous condition. The question on the proposal form asked not only about his then current mental condition, but his past mental condition. Mr Hitchens did not say that he read the form as only asking about his then current medical condition.

  2. I conclude that Mr Hitchens’ answer to this question was knowingly false.

  3. In para [84] I have concluded that, prima facie, Mr Hitchens’ statement that he did not believe that he might need to seek advice or treatment from a doctor for any current health problems was false. However, if specifically asked about the answer to question 33 he might have proffered a reason for answering the question “No” which, if accepted, might negate fraud. The allegation of fraud in relation to each alleged misrepresentation needed to be put specifically to Mr Hitchens. I do not find that his answer to question 33 was a fraudulent misrepresentation.

  4. I have found that Mr Hitchens failed to comply with his duty of disclosure by not disclosing his ongoing consumption of Endone and Tramal and the fact that he had been and was in the habit of obtaining prescriptions for those drugs from different doctors without advising one that he was getting a prescription for the drugs from another.

  5. This is not a finding that Mr Hitchens breached his duty of disclosure by failing to disclose that he was addicted to those drugs. Mr Hitchens denied that he was addicted. Dr Alexakis did not consider that he was addicted to them. Mr Hitchens said that he took them because he needed pain relief, not because he was dependent on them. In 2004 he had reduced his use of Endone. Mr Hitchens’ use of Tramal (Tramadol) went from 20 prescriptions in 2002 to 26 in 2003 and then reduced to 18 in 2004.

  6. Counsel for Mr Hitchens submitted that this was a more benign drug that did not have the same issues to the patient’s becoming dependent on the drug as arose in the case of Endone. That submission is supported by the opinion of Professor Starmer. Professor Starmer does refer to some Swedish studies commenting on the occurrence of Tramadol dependence in association with other analgesic treatment and to the possibility of a dependent syndrome developing in susceptible patients. However, this is not the point.

  7. It is true that Mr Hitchens disclosed that he was taking pain medication. He wrote:

Pain Medication – result of motor vehicle accident.

Mr Hitchens submits that this answer was accurate. His use of Endone started in 1996 and was a result of a motor vehicle accident.

  1. Elsewhere in the form he described the motor vehicle accident as giving rise to a knee reconstruction and various soft tissue injuries. He said the treatment he received as a result was knee reconstruction and neck physiotherapy. He said he was not currently receiving any treatment for that. Nowhere on the form did he disclose that the motor vehicle accident had worsened his lymphedema and that he was continuing to take pain medication for the lymphedema. He did not disclose the type of pain medication that he was taking or the frequency of use. Although that use was lower in 2004 than it had been between 2000 and 2003 it was still substantial. Although he denied that he was addicted to Endone or Tramal, he had been warned about the risk of dependence on Endone and he had taken steps to obtain the drugs from more than one doctor knowing that each doctor was ignorant of the prescriptions written by another. Counsel for Mr Hitchens submitted that this only indicated that he was stockpiling the drugs in case of need when he could not readily obtain a prescription and did not indicate an excessive consumption of the drugs. It is impossible to draw a conclusion one way or the other. Mr Hitchens did not provide such an explanation. But the point is not significant. Mr Hitchens suffered chronic pain between 2000 and 2004 and he agreed that in that period there were not many months that he did not suffer pain to such a degree as to have to attend on a doctor and ask for prescription medication. He said that it never stopped his working, playing sport or living life.

  2. In my opinion Mr Hitchens sought to minimise the impact of his disclosure that he was taking pain medication by saying only that it was the result of the motor vehicle accident and not saying that it was for the purpose of treating lymphedema or cellulitis, and then by minimising his description of the lymphedema he suffered and by confining his description of the effects of the motor vehicle accident to a knee reconstruction and soft tissue injury. I think his failure to refer to the nature and extent of the pain medication he was taking was deliberate and the form was carefully prepared to seek to reduce the likelihood of the insurer asking more questions. In my view the concealment of these material matters was deliberate and fraudulent.

  3. I am satisfied that Mr Hitchens’ failure to satisfy his duty of disclosure was deliberate and that he knew that the false or misleading answers were false or misleading. In reaching that conclusion I am fully conscious of the seriousness of the finding and the need for convincing evidence. I remind myself of the principles in Briginshaw v Briginshaw (1938) 60 CLR 336 at 361-362 and of s 140(2) of the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW). But the contrast is striking between the depiction of Mr Hitchens’ medical condition in the proposal form and the medical records showing a dependence on strong analgesics to cope with pain, and his concealment of his consumption from his doctors.

  4. It follows that Zurich was entitled to avoid the policies on the grounds of fraudulent misrepresentation and fraudulent non-disclosure.

Disablement

  1. On 4 September 2007, a few days before the injury to his hand, Mr Hitchens consulted a neurologist, Dr Ronald Joffe, pursuant to a referral. Mr Hitchens had developed severe right-sided trigeminal neuralgia that triggered spasms of severe pain.

  2. Mr Hitchens’ psychiatrist, Dr Robert Hampshire, reported on 15 July 2010 that Mr Hitchens then suffered pervasive and severe depression following his injury, and suffered from panic attacks. He reported that pain was a pervasive and all-consuming symptom for Mr Hitchens and that he was currently taking very high amounts of a strong narcotic oral analgesic, Endone, which was of a concern to both Dr Hampshire and Mr Hitchens’ general practitioner. Dr Hampshire opined that Mr Hitchens had a substance abuse disorder and a pain disorder of both psychological and organic causality. At that time Dr Hampshire said that in his opinion Mr Hitchens’ prognosis was extremely poor and it was implausible that he would ever work again, unless there were a change in his current psychiatric state, which was unlikely.

  3. On 25 March 2013 Dr Hampshire reported that Mr Hitchens continued to suffer from a post-traumatic stress disorder in the moderate to severe range, but it had reduced in intensity and severity since he had previously seen Mr Hampshire in 2010 and February 2011. He reported that Mr Hitchens was suffering from a major depressive disorder which was perhaps marginally less severe than when Dr Hampshire previously saw him. He still diagnosed Mr Hitchens as suffering from a pain disorder and that pain dominated his clinical presentation. The pain had its causality in an organic basis being the tops of the amputated fingers on the right hand with a contribution from his trigeminal neuralgia. There was also a psychological causality to the pain disorder with his depression. The more severe his pain, the more depressed Mr Hitchens became and conversely, the more depressed Mr Hitchens was, the less able he was to tolerate pain and more inclined to take increasing amounts of analgesia and anti-convulsants. Dr Hampshire continued to diagnose him as suffering from an iatrogenic substance abuse disorder, being to the narcotic, oxycontin. An iatrogenic disorder is one caused or produced by the diagnosis or treatment by a physician.

  4. In his report of 25 March 2013 Dr Hampshire said that Mr Hitchens’ chronic pain disorder, both of organic and psychological causality, continued to remain poorly controlled and he continued to suffer from an iatrogenic substance abuse disorder because of the medical efforts made in attempting to treat him. It was Dr Hampshire’s view that Mr Hitchens was totally and permanently disabled because of his injury and was unlikely ever to work in his profession or any similar business or similar occupation to which he had been trained. He was unable, in the doctor’s view, to generate at least 80 per cent of his pre-disability income through personal exertion in his usual occupation and he considered it probable that this would remain the case for the remainder of Mr Hitchens’ working life.

  5. On 14 July 2014 Dr Hampshire reported having had a prolonged psychiatric interview with Mr Hitchens on that day. Mr Hitchens continued to complain of severe pain in his hand and on the right side of his face from trigeminal neuralgia. He also reported having been admitted to the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital with a bowel condition which he reported his physicians had said was caused by the excessive use of opiates. Dr Hampshire reported that Mr Hitchens disputed that diagnosis. Dr Hampshire expressed concern about the quantity of Tegretol, an anti-convulsant, that Mr Hitchens was taking for his trigeminal neuralgia and his use of oxycontin and another analgesic, Lyrica. Dr Hampshire reported that it was not clear precisely what Mr Hitchens’ current analgesic use was as it appeared that he had numerous analgesic preparations kept at home, including Lyrica and Tramal and also the narcotic analgesics, Oxycontin, Targin and Endone, each of which was highly addictive and should only be used for acute pain for days, going into weeks at the most. Dr Hampshire said that Mr Hitchens was not compliant with medications and in his opinion self-medicated excessively. Mr Hitchens had been advised to re-attend a pain disorders clinic, but was resistant to doing so. He considered that Mr Hitchens was abusing his narcotic based analgesics and his dose of Tegretol and was non-compliant with medication. The fact that he had had three in-patient hospital admissions for bowel obstruction implied that he had been very excessive in his use of narcotic analgesics. Dr Hampshire considered that Mr Hitchens remained totally and permanently disabled to work at any level for which he had been trained or has workplace experience. His depression had reduced from the previous consultation and was not then dominating the clinical picture. Dr Hampshire considered that Mr Hitchens’ underlying psychiatric condition was a pain disorder of organic and psychological causality, along with an iatrogenic substance abuse disorder, being to narcotic analgesics and that his co-morbid panic attacks and depression varied in severity and intensity.

  6. There is no contrary medical evidence. Mr Hitchens was examined by other doctors at the request of Zurich, but Zurich did not tender other medical reports.

  7. Zurich contended that the doctors were dependent on Mr Hitchens’ accurately describing his pain and medical condition and that he had exaggerated his condition. Reports were provided by Dr Hampshire and by Mr Hitchens’ treating general practitioner, Dr Alexakis, in November and December 2010 to the effect that Mr Hitchens would not be capable of providing instructions to his solicitors if Zurich were given leave to amend its defence to raise an issue of fraud. In his report of 11 November 2010 Dr Hampshire sought to re-interview Mr Hitchens in the presence of his legal team. He proceeded gently to raise the matter with him at which point Mr Hitchens became overwhelmingly distressed, broke into tears, became extremely agitated and commenced to hyperventilate. He developed at least the onset of a panic attack with a marked tremor, an excess of sweating, chest pain and a feeling of light-headedness. Dr Hampshire found that Mr Hitchens was virtually unable to respond in a clear, concise and logical fashion to any questions put to him and may have moved to a dissociative state because the content of his speech revealed long, circuitous, rambling and over-inclusive statements that were delivered in an almost formally thought disordered manner. It was Dr Hampshire’s then opinion that Mr Hitchens was not capable of providing instructions on the issue of whether he had made fraudulent misrepresentations or fraudulent non-disclosure because that issue generated so much anxiety, and exacerbated traumatic symptomatology, that it grossly impaired Mr Hitchens’ cognitive functioning so that he could not provide meaningful instructions or make reliable statements where his integrity was in question.

  8. Nonetheless, leave to amend was granted. Mr Hitchens was cross-examined for the better part of three days. Most of the cross-examination dealt with Mr Hitchens’ medical condition before his completion of the proposal for insurance and the adequacy of his disclosure of that condition and what full statements in the proposal form. Until the very end of the questioning Mr Hitchens handled the cross-examination in a way which could not have been anticipated from the earlier medical reports. Apart from a short break in the afternoon of the first day of his giving evidence, Mr Hitchens handled the cross-examination reasonably well. His answers were for the most part responsive. He was articulate and appeared reasonably intelligent. It was not until the very end of his cross-examination that Mr Hitchens broke down. He did so after being asked questions directed to seeking to establish that he was able to work as an IT consultant, including by reference to his concentration, ability to read documents, ability to understand complex questions and stamina, that is, by reference to his performance in the witness box.

  9. Zurich submitted that because the opinions of Dr Alexakis and Dr Hampshire were dependent upon their acceptance of Mr Hitchens’ own descriptions of his suffering that his claim to have been permanently and totally disabled should be rejected unless he were accepted as an honest witness. There is some force to this submission. In concluding that Mr Hitchens was guilty of fraudulent representations and fraudulent non-disclosure it necessarily follows that I have not accepted him as a witness of truth. His demeanour as a witness did not inspire confidence. But I have discounted that in assessing his credibility. Mr Hitchens’ counsel submitted that he was a damaged individual and that is undoubtedly true. The question whether he has been totally and permanently disabled only arises if my conclusion that Mr Hitchens was guilty of fraud is wrong. I cannot and do not reason from the premise that because I have found Mr Hitchens to have been fraudulent, I could not accept his evidence as to the extent of his disability, and I should find that he deceived his doctors as to the extent of his disability.

  10. There was no cross-examination of Dr Hampshire, Dr Alexakis or Mr Hitchens to seek to establish that his subsequent performance as a witness showed that he had exaggerated his symptoms to Dr Hampshire and Dr Alexakis when they were asked to provide reports as to whether or not he would be capable of dealing with the issue of fraud if Zurich were given leave to amend its defence to raise that issue. Moreover, Mr Hitchens’ initial consultations with Dr Hampshire were simply as a patient and not for the purpose of Dr Hampshire’s providing an expert report to be used in court proceedings. Deception of his doctors for the purposes of this case would be fraud of a quite different order from the fraud of which I have concluded Mr Hitchens was guilty.

  11. For these reasons, in the absence of contrary medical opinion, I consider that notwithstanding that Mr Hitchens was able to deal with the defence of fraud and perform as a witness much better than would be expected from the earlier medical opinions, I should accept Dr Hampshire’s diagnosis that Mr Hitchens suffers from a pain disorder that is both organically and psychologically based as described in his reports, by reason of which it is probable that Mr Hitchens is totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of the definition. Mr Hitchens can use a computer but not for prolonged periods. He types with his little finger of his right hand. He avoids situations where he might be expected to shake someone else’s hand. Most significantly he is consumed by his pain associated with his loss of fingers and trigeminal neuralgia. He is also addicted to narcotic analgesics albeit that he does not recognise that addiction.

  12. Accordingly, had I concluded that Zurich was not entitled to avoid the policies on the ground of fraudulent misrepresentation and non-disclosure, I would have accepted that Mr Hitchens was entitled to recover, that is, that he had established his permanent disablement.

  13. Zurich did not contend that the policies do not respond because Mr Hitchens’ inability to work is not solely due to Injury and Sickness (as defined). The definition of Sickness in both policies is to a sickness or disease which first manifests itself after the policies began. Mr Hitchens’ psychological condition is a strongly contributing factor to his inability to work. A significant element of that psychological condition is his substance abuse disorder. Mr Hitchens suffered from a substance abuse disorder before the policy was entered into. Zurich relies upon the non-disclosure of that condition, amongst other grounds, as justification for its avoidance of the policies. It did not submit that because Mr Hitchens’ disability is contributed to by an illness which pre-dated the policy, the unlikelihood of his ever working was not solely the result of Sickness or Injury as defined, that is as a sickness which first manifested itself after the policy began.

  14. It is unnecessary to deal with questions of quantum and interest.

Zurich not precluded from avoiding for fraudulent misrepresentation or non-disclosure

  1. Counsel for Mr Hitchens submitted that it was not open to Zurich to avoid the policies on the ground of fraudulent representation and non-disclosure on 19 August 2010 because Zurich had already repudiated the income protection policy by reducing fortnightly payments to him after 19 November 2007 and by ceasing to make payments to him from 8 May 2008. Mr Hitchens purportedly terminated the policy by accepting Zurich’s alleged repudiation of it on 12 November 2009. Counsel submitted that an insurer’s right of avoidance is a right arising under or by virtue of the contract of insurance. They submitted that the right of avoidance is no longer available following a repudiation by the insurer which the insured has accepted so as to bring the contract to an end.

  2. The premise of the argument is that Zurich repudiated the contract and Mr Hitchens accepted the repudiation and terminated the contract. Even if that premise were established, it does not mean that the contract ceased to exist for all purposes. If Mr Hitchens had been entitled to terminate the contract by accepting Zurich’s alleged repudiation, the termination would have discharged the parties from future performance, but it would not have avoided the contract ab initio. Mr Hitchens relied on the fact of the contract having been made and allegedly repudiated to claim contractual damages. There is no reason that Zurich could not avoid the contract from its inception on discovering the grounds that entitled it to allege fraudulent misrepresentation and non-disclosure.

  1. In any event, I do not accept the premise of the submission. Zurich’s position communicated on 28 November 2008 was that it was investigating the accuracy of the disclosure of Mr Hitchens’ medical condition and was also investigating Mr Hitchens’ disclosure of his financial position. It sought the provision of financial information. It repeated the request on 23 December 2008, and again on 5 January 2009, 24 March 2009 and 5 May 2009. As at 9 November 2009 Zurich stated that the information requested by it on 28 November 2008 had still not been provided and that it needed that information in order properly to review Mr Hitchens’ file and determine his eligibility to continue to claim for benefits. It advised that it had not provided further claim forms because it was not in a position to continue with its assessment of Mr Hitchens’ claims. That remained the position on 12 November 2009.

  2. This does not indicate that Zurich had repudiated the contract at the time of Mr Hitchens’ purported acceptance of the repudiation.

Conclusion and orders

  1. By avoiding the policies from their inception Zurich was entitled to recover the payments made to Mr Hitchens under the income protection policy to the extent they exceeded the premiums paid. However, Zurich did not file a cross-claim to seek recovery of that amount.

  2. For these reasons I give judgment for the first defendant. I will hear the parties on costs.

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Decision last updated: 30 June 2015