Peter Hunt
Principal
The Personal Injury Commission (PIC) published its decision in Toomey v Insurance Australia Limited t/as NRMA Insurance [2024] NSWPICMP 209 on 26 April 2024.
The Claimant was injured in a motor accident on 19 November 2021. The accident was at low speed and the Claimant was wearing a seatbelt across her right shoulder.
In order to establish an ongoing entitlement to statutory benefits and an entitlement to common law damages, the Claimant had to establish that the accident caused non-threshold injuries within the meaning of Section 1.6 of the Motor Accident Injuries Act 2017 (MAIA).
By the time the dispute progressed to the Review Panel, the Claimant alleged two non-threshold injuries:
The Insurer, however, argued that these injuries were not caused by the November 2021 motor accident.
The Claimant’s pre-accident GP records demonstrated:
Post-accident, the Claimant underwent five scans of her right shoulder which measured the right supraspinatus tear at a variety of lengths. The most recent scan revealed that the partial tear had progressed to a full thickness tear.
With regard to the left shoulder, the SLAP tear was first noted in August 2023, close to two years after the November 2021 motor accident.
A Medical Assessor certified that the accident only caused the Claimant threshold injuries. The Claimant successfully sought referral to the Review Panel.
At the outset, the Review Panel confirmed that the onus was on the Claimant to satisfy the Panel, on the balance of probabilities, that the accident caused her non-threshold injuries (see Lynch v AAI Limited [2022] NSWPICMP 6 and Briggs v IAG Limited [2022] NSWSC 372).
The Review Panel determined that the Claimant did not discharge the onus, with respect to her right shoulder, for the following reasons:
The Review Panel determined that the Claimant also failed to discharge the onus, with respect to her left shoulder, for the following reasons:
As such, the Review Panel affirmed the original Assessor’s finding that the accident only caused the Claimant threshold injuries.
The decision in Toomey confirms, again, that the onus is on the Claimant to demonstrate, on the balance of probabilities, that the accident caused non-threshold injuries. If the Claimant fails to discharge that onus then a finding will be made that the Claimant only sustained threshold injuries and the Claimant will not be entitled to either ongoing statutory benefits or common law damages.
This case is a good example of how a thorough review of the available evidence is required to determine whether both the medical and the non-medical tests for causation are satisfied. That is, whether the accident could cause the alleged injury (medical test) and whether the accident did cause that injury (non-medical test).
When considering the right shoulder injury:
The Review Panel adopted a similar approach when assessing the cause of the Claimant’s left shoulder SLAP lesion.
If you have a query relating to any of the information in this case note, or would like to discuss a similar matter of your own, please don’t hesitate to get in touch with CTP Insurance Principal, Peter Hunt, today.