Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Movement at the station ... Judges messing with the priestly defendants ... Pell-mell ... Elaborate, if eye-glazing, events mark the arrival of the Apple Isle's new CJ ... Slow shuffle at the top of the Federales delayed ... Celebrity fee dispute goes feral ... Dogs allowed in chambers ... Barrister slapped for pro-Hamas Tweets ... India's no rush judgments regime ... Goings on with Theodora ... More >>

Politics Media Law Society


Pale, male and stale ... Trump’s George III revival … Change the channel … No news about George Pell is the preferred news … ACT corruption investigation into the Cossack and Planet Show gets closer to the finishing line … How to empty an old house with a chainsaw ... Read on ... 

This area does not yet contain any content.
Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

Rome is burning ... Giorgia Meloni's right-wing populist regime threatens judicial independence ... Moves to strip constitutional independence of La Magistratura ... Judges on the ramparts ... The Osama Almasri affair ... Silvana Olivetti reports ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


The Charities Commission provides details of the staggering amounts of loot in which the College of Knowledge is wallowing ... Little wonder Bell CJ and others are on the warpath ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

Letter from London ... T.S Eliot gets it wrong ... Harry cleans up in a fresh round with Murdoch's hacking hacks ... All aboard Rebekah Brooks' "clean ship" ... Windy woman restrained from further flatulent abuse ... Trump claims "sovereign immunity" to skip paying legal costs of £300,000 ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt reports from Blighty ... Read more >> 

"Creative Australia is an advocate for freedom of artistic expression and is not an adjudicator on the interpretation of art. However, the Board believes a prolonged and divisive debate about the 2026 selection outcome poses an unacceptable risk to public support for Australia's artistic community and could undermine our goal of bringing Australians together through art and creativity."

Statement from Creative Australia following its decision to cancel Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino as the creative team to represent Australia at the Venice Biennale 2026, February 13, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Damien Carrick ... For 23 years Carrick has presented the Law Report on ABC Radio National ... An insight into the man behind the microphone ... Law and media ... Pursuit of the story ... Pressing topics ... Informative guests ... On The Couch ... Read more >> 


Justinian's archive

The Saints Go Marching In ... Cash cow has to claw its way back to the LCA's inner sanctum ... Stephen Estcourt cleans up in Mercury settlement ... Amex rides two horses in expiring guarantee cases ... Simmo bins the paperwork ... Attorneys General should not come from the solicitors' branch ... Goings On from February 9, 2009 ... Read more >>


 

 

« A.J. Brown | Main | What about my little mate? »
Saturday
Apr022011

McCabe litigation took 10 years in two states

Richard Ackland recalls the torturous trail of the McCabe litigation ... Clayton Utz in the frame ... Settlement soon after retrial and discovery ordered by VicSupremo Stephen Kaye

Rolah McCabe: "iniquity' infected her caseA 10-year battle in the tobacco wars ground to an exhausted end on Thursday. The Rolah McCabe personal injuries case against British American Tobacco in Australia was settled on confidential terms and, judging by the body language of the McCabe family, they were quite delighted by the outcome.

After a verdict in her favour by the Victorian Supreme Court in April 2002, which awarded damages of close to $700,000, Rolah McCabe died of lung cancer brought on by a long addiction to BAT's products.

The trial judge, Justice Geoffrey Eames, had made some bold decisions. He struck out the tobacco company's defence, finding that it had failed to comply with his orders for discovery and it had conducted a policy of document destruction.

Further, he said BAT's legal firm, Clayton Utz, had been one of the main architects of advice to destroy incriminating documents, and this was done under the Orwellian ''document retention policy''.

Naturally, BAT and Clayton Utz were not going to take that sort of finding lying down and the case moved to the Victorian Court of Appeal, which overturned Eames's findings, set aside the damages and ordered a new trial.

One element of the appeal judges' reasoning was that in circumstances where there was no formal commencement of proceedings it was not improper to destroy documents. However, there must nonetheless have been an expectation that other cases against BAT could soon commence in Australia.

The case was now conducted in the name of Rolah McCabe's daughter, Roxanne Cowell. The High Court refused her special leave to appeal.

In August 2006 there was a dramatic development. The solicitor Christopher Dale told Jack Rush, QC, counsel for McCabe at the trial, he had reports of an investigation by Clayton Utz of its lawyers who worked on BAT's defence.

Dale had been a partner of Clayton Utz and a member of the committee that did the inquiry.

The review found that to keep material out of the hands of the plaintiff, documents had been improperly destroyed. There were findings against two partners of the firm. One was said to have given evidence that was ''potentially perjurious'' and another had improperly frustrated the discovery process. Both have since left Clayton Utz.

After the settlement: Leon Zwier with Jamie McCabe, his girlgriend Erin Charles and Peter Gordon (right)

In late October 2006 articles detailing the findings of Clayton Utz's investigation found their way into The Sunday Age and The Age.

This fired off another frantic round of litigation and the action moved to the Supreme Court of NSW, where BAT sought to stop Fairfax newspapers publishing more of the incriminating material.

Justice Paul Brereton granted an interim injunction. Proceedings were also commenced against Peter Gordon and Slater & Gordon, solicitors for McCabe. Undertakings were sought from everyone, including Dale, that the internal review not be disseminated or published.

Later it was found that Brereton had acted as a barrister for one of the BAT companies in earlier proceedings that sought to prevent a former tobacco lawyer giving evidence against the company.

This set off applications for Brereton to disqualify himself, yet he clung onto it for almost three more months.

Ron Merkel appeared for Slater & Gordon and submitted that ''tobacco companies need to maintain concealment through claims of legal professional privilege - for the purposes or frustrating the process of law itself''. By November 2006 Fairfax and The Age settled with BAT.

The following February Brereton disqualified himself from hearing the injunction against Peter Gordon and others. He sent the whole thing back to Melbourne, where it knocked around the Victorian Supreme Court until Thursday.

What the McCabe estate sought from the court were orders that Clayton Utz's internal review showed an ''iniquity'' in the way the appeal was conducted and that iniquity should defeat BAT's claim that the documents were privileged and should not be used to reopen the case.

By this stage Leon Zwier, from Arnold Bloch Leibler in Melbourne, had taken over the estate's case and for the past four years ran it pro bono.

Enormous pressure had also been building, with BAT seeking costs against the estate of about $2 million. However, ultimately the catalyst for settlement was the arrival of Justice Stephen Kaye.

After years of legal bickering about form and procedure and documents he said a trial should take place and ordered discovery, including discovery of Clayton Utz's documents.

The heat was back on the tobacco defendants. There was a good deal of unfortunate conduct by their lawyers that would not play well at a trial.

Occasionally, just occasionally, the media can play a positive part in righting a wrong. It did in this case, largely thanks to The Age and The Sunday Age.

The case might also give hope to young lawyers that there is a world beyond the pain of commercial law and that great public law issues allow the possibility of a more creative life.

From The Sydney Morning Herald, News Review, April 2, 2011

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.