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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Ryan v. Connolly [2001] IESC 9 (31 January 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2001/9.html Cite as: [2001] 2 ILRM 174, [2001] 1 IR 627, [2001] IESC 9 |
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THE SUPREME COURT
64/2000
KEANE C.J.
MURPHY J.
McGUINNESS J.
BETWEEN:
DESMOND RYAN
Plaintiff
.v.
MICHAEL CONNOLLY AND ANNE MARIE CONNOLLY
Defendants
JUDGMENT delivered the 31st day of January 2001 by Keane C.J. [Nem Diss].This case raises again an issue which has concerned the courts on a number of occasions, i.e. the circumstances in which a defendant should not be permitted to rely on a defence under the Statute of Limitation which would otherwise be available to him. The facts are largely not in dispute. The plaintiff, who was riding his motor bicycle at the time, was involved in a collision with a motor car the property of the first named defendant at. Furbo Bridge in Co. Galway on the
(2)
"On recelpt ofyour reply and when our own investigation has been concluded, we shall advise you immediately as to our decision on liability. The above requests are made without prejudice to liability on our insured's part."
(3)
"With regard to the above matter we refer to previous correspondence and confirm that we have obtained a medical report on your client.
"We have concluded the damage claim direct with your client 's insurers, Norwich Union.
"Please advise if you are in a position to discuss settlement at this time.
The plaintiff's solicitor replied on the 24th July 1996, stating that they were awaiting an appointment for an up-to-date medical report and, as soon it came to hand, would be in touch with the insurance company. On the 13th March 1997, the insurance company wrote to the plaintiff's solicitors as follows:-"We await hearing from you."
(4)
"With regard to the above matter we refer to previous correspondence.
"Please advise if you are interested in discussing the case with us at this time.
No reply was apparently received to that letter and they wrote again on the 30th October 1997 as follows:-"We look forward to hearing from you."
"We refer to the above and to previous correspondence in connection with same.
There was also correspondence between the insurance company and the plaintiff's solicitor concerning an abortive medical examination, which it is unnecessary to refer to in detail. On the 27th January 1 998, the insurance company wrote as follows:-"Could you please advise if you are in a position to meet for settlement discussions at the October Galway High Court or alternatively the February 1998 Gaiway High Court."
(5)
That letter was apparently also not replied to and they wrote again on the 2nd July 1998 as follows:-"Could you please advise if you are in a position to meet for discussions at the forthcoming Gaiway High Court."
It should be noted that, at the stage when that letter was written, the limitation period of three years within which proceedings had to be instituted under the Statute of Limitations, 1957, had expired. On the 30th April 1999, the plaintiff's solicitors wrote to the insurance company and asked them to nominate a solicitor to accept service of proceedings. These proceedings were then instituted by way of a plenary summons on the 11th December 1998. A statement of claim was delivered on"Could you please advise if you are in a position to meet for without prejudice talks at the forthcoming Galway High Court sessions. "We have tried to phone your office on a number of times in relation to this matter but have been unable to get through."
(6)
"(3) Without prejudice to the foregoing the conduct and representations express and implied of the defendants herein, their servants or agents, from the time of notification of the motor collision of the 26th April 1995 up to the commencement of proceedings herein by plenary summons dated 1 11th December 1998 caused and induced the plaintiff to refrain from issuing proceedings with in the period prescribed by statute.
A preliminary issue was then directed to be tried as to"(4) By reason of the aforementioned conduct of the defendants, their servants or agents, the defendants are estopped from relying on the provisions of the Statute of Limitations 1957 as pleaded."
"whether the plaintiff's claim herein is or is not statute barred by virtue of the pro visions of's. 11
(7)
That issue was heard by Kelly J. in the High Court. He said that he considered that the essential issue which he had to determine was not whether the action was statute barred - it clearly was - but whether the defendants were precluded from standing on their legal rights by virtue of the circumstances which arose in this case. He determined that issue in favour of the plaintiff and the defendants now appeal to this court from his judgment and order. In an affidavit which was before the High Court, Mr. Dalton, the solicitor for the plaintiff, said that the correspondence from the insurance company indicated to him that the plaintiffs material damage claim had been concluded with his insurers directly and that the defendants' insurers were anxious to engage in settlement discussions. Mr. Dalton said that he had at all times considered this case to be one that would be settled with the insurance company once he was in a position to meet with them and that in those circumstances he refrained from issuing proceedings within the time prescribed by the statute. He said that a climate had been created by the defendants' insurers in which settlement of the case was anticipated when all the parties were ready to meet.(2,)(b,) of the Statute of Limitations 1957 (as amended,)."
(8)
It is clear that this rule has evolved because it is in the public interest that parties should be encouraged, so far as possible, to settle their disputes without resort to litigation. If parties were in the position that anything they said or wrote in the course of negotiations, even when expressly stated to be "without"Letters written and oral communications made during a dispute between the parties, which are written or made for the purpose of settling the dispute and which are expressed or otherwise proved to have been made 'without prejudice' cannot generally be admitted in evidence.
(9)
(10)
"Where one party has, by his words or conduct, made to the other a clear and unambiguous promise or assurance which was intended to affect the legal relations between them and to be acted on accordingly, and the other party has acted on it by altering his position to his detriment, it is well settled that the one who gave the promise or assurance cannot afterwards be allowed to revert to their previous legal relations as no such promise or assurance had been made by him, and that he may be restrained in equity from acting inconsistently with such promise or assurance. The representation, promise or assurance must be clear and unambiguous
(11)
Applying that general principle to the category of cases in which a defendant may be held to be precluded from relying on a defence otherwise available to him under the Statute of Limitations, the learned judge added;to found such an estoppel: see Bowen L.J at p. 106 of the report of Low v. Bouverie. (1891) 3 Ch 82."
In an earlier passage, Griffin J. had pointed out that, for the principle laid down in Low .v. Bouverie to apply, it was not necessary that the representation should be one "positively incapable of more than one possible interpretation ". A party seeking to rely on the principle cannot, in other words, rely on a strained or fanciful interpretation of the words used: he must show that it was reasonable in the circumstances for him to construe the words used by the other"If the defendants' insurers had made a clear and unambiguous representation (in the sense I have explained) that liability was not to be in issue, and the plaintiff's solicitor had withheld the issue of proceedings as a result, I would have held that the defendants were estopped from pleading the Statute of Limitations."
(12)
(13)
I cannot, with respect, accept that the first sentence in that passage accurately summarises what Mr. Dalton said in his affidavit. With"It therefore seems clear that the plaintiff's legal advisers did in fact infer as a result of that correspondence that the Statute of Limitations would not be raised against them. The net issue which I have to decide is whether it was reasonable to so infer. If it was, then it would follow that the attempt on the part of the defendant 's insurers to raise the Statute of Limitations would be inequitable."
(14)
(15)