Although paling in comparison to amount awarded for care, the general damages award in this case was the highest award in Australian dollars by a Tasmanian court.
The plaintiff’s damages were assessed over a reduced life expectancy to age 68, with the Court relying on statistical expert data and evidence presented from the U.S.
To account for his role in the incident, the Court applied a 20% discount for the plaintiff’s contributory negligence in circumstances where he exhibited “unruly, uncooperative and antagonistic” behaviour in the lead up to the incident, and the plaintiff ought to have appreciated that he was risking his own safety by returning to the scene to continue the confrontation and throw a punch at the guard.
To the discounted award, the Court allowed a further AUD 1.55 million for administration costs, for a total AUD 12.49 million net compensation, which will be held by the state’s Public Trustee to invest and administer for the plaintiff’s care over his lifetime.
Foreboding Future Awards
Whilst large damages awards are not uncommon in personal injury cases involving brain injuries or child sexual abuse, there does appear to be a general upward trajectory in the amount awarded for compensation across various heads of damages, in particular, general damages. This has become prevalent where the circumstances of the case permit the judge or the jury to sidestep the limitations and caps that would otherwise have been imposed under the state’s applicable civil liability regime.
Time will tell whether verdicts such as the first two outlined above herald permanent change in the institutional abuse landscape and increase in the level of damages that plaintiffs in abuse claims can expect to receive at hearing.
Indeed, if unsuccessful, the foreshadowed appeals may also set new precedent for what (larger) damages awards are considered reasonable damages in Australia for historical abuse actions, which may well encourage abuse survivors to bypass the National Redress Scheme, under which compensation is capped at AUD 150,000, in preference for litigating their claims through the court system.
The Kneale verdict and its foreshadowed appeal also has implications for other AFL clubs and the League in general, given the awareness of other potential historic abuse cases connected to football clubs (such as those reported at the St Kilda and Geelong clubs) and the likelihood that few of these clubs, if any, would have held insurance covering and responding to the periods and acts in question.