She was 41 weeks along when she went into labour in November 2006.
As planned she called her midwife.
Her labour was strong, and when her midwife arrived at her house she detected foetal heart sounds of between 140 and 158 beats per minute.
She trusted this midwife.
It was just as she wanted – in her home – a place of calm of peace.
A place of trust.
By 2pm she was fully dilated. Her soon to be born son’s head high.
For the next four-and-a-half hours she laboured.
The legal term, in the Supreme Court judgement, for this four-and-a-half hour period has been coined “protracted and complex”.
You can only imagine what the ‘non-legal’ phrases used would have been.
A protracted and complex labour ensued.
To stick with the legalese the “plaintiff’s head” (that would be the newborn baby) descended slowly and, apparently, in a variety of positions.
Louise Hall, covering this story for Fairfax, writes that he was delivered at 6pm, when “thick meconium was noted.”