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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Calden v Dr Nunn & Partners [2003] EWCA Civ 200 (19 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/200.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 200 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Judge Grenfell
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BROOKE
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
____________________
JOHN CALDEN (Administrator of the Estate of Amanda Calden) | Claimant/ Respondent | |
and – | ||
DR NUNN & PARTNERS | Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Paul Sheridan (instructed by Stamp Jackson Proctor) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke :
"… in particular, to enable a speedy resolution of this case management issue in the light of impending trial window 5th-23rd May 2003 and history of previously vacated trial windows; and to enable the trial to be conducted in accordance with the pre-trial orders in accordance with Part 29.9 of the Civil Procedure Rules."
"When the matter came before another deputy district judge in the September, it was clear that the experts had not met, the meeting having been postponed in the first place and then unilaterally cancelled by the defendants' solicitors. The Listing Questionnaires make remarkable reading. There is no reference to the forthcoming trial window, then only 2 months away. The defendants' solicitors were saying that details of their experts' availability would be brought to the September case management conference. The clear inference I draw from the Listing Questionnaires is that there was a general assumption that the trial window would be vacated. At the hearing the matter appears to have simply been dealt with by way of a consent order, with the Order to follow. The parties' advisers seem to have ignored the mandatory provision of Part 29.5(1)(e) Civil Procedure Rules: 'A party must apply to the court if he wishes to vary the date which the court has fixed for … the trial period'.
In the minute of Order, which reproduced the draft Order submitted by the parties' solicitors, there was no mention of vacating the trial window and of greater concern there was no fresh trial window set. It is unclear whether there was any active judicial case management at this stage."
"Most importantly at no stage, not even now, has either of the defendants' experts expressed the view that their agreement in July 2002 cannot stand. No application was made to the court under Part 35.14 for further directions in respect of that experts' agreement, which would have been appropriate, if they felt that their agreement was fundamentally flawed. The best that can be said is that they may well now wish to go back on their agreement in the light of Professor Stamp's opinion.
However the matter is dressed up, there is no escaping the inference that the defendants now wish to reopen their own experts' agreement reached without reservation in July 2002. This runs entirely counter to the Overriding Objective and the duties imposed on the parties by Part 1 Civil Procedure Rules in the following specific respects ..."
"The defendants' difficulty is that their advisers were responsible for the failure of the court's direction that the experts meet. When it was clear to them, as they thought, that the experts could not properly meet by the ordered time, it was all the more important for the defendants' advisers to seek the court's guidance if they felt that for any genuine reason the meeting set in July 2001 could not go ahead, and to return to the court for an extension of the timetable. Instead they adopted a practice which to my mind is becoming prevalent in the field of personal injury litigation, that of one party instructing its experts at the last minute not to go ahead with a fixed meeting or conference. The direct result, in my view, was the loss of the trial window and the postponement of the meeting for a year. It is an irony that in early correspondence the defendants' solicitor was forcibly arguing that 2002 was too late for a trial. This litigation has taken the kind of leisurely path that is reminiscent of the days before the Civil Procedure Rules."
"Because I do not believe the trial window can be maintained, if I accede to the application, I am satisfied that the prejudice and pressure of further delay likely to be caused to the claimant makes it yet another reason why it is [not] just to allow the application at this late stage. In my view, such a postponement could not be properly compensated by an order for costs. The Court, in any event, has now allotted time for the trial of these issues.
The defendants and their advisers have had every opportunity to approach this case on a sensible basis. This case cried out for a single joint expert on histopathology, which was the course suggested in the first place by the claimant's solicitors. Why the defendants' solicitors argued so strenuously against the need for such evidence appears to be attributable to the views of the same experts who appeared to be prepared to accept the findings of Professor Wright at the July 2002 meeting.
It is contrary to sound case management that a party be allowed to reopen the agreement, which was reached without reservation between experts, unless a good reason is demonstrated. It is not a good reason to do so when no complaint of any substance has been made of the experts' meeting and no application has been made for further directions under Part 35, until some 6 months down the line a new histopathology report is produced which is said fundamentally to alter the basis of the experts' agreement.
Professor Mansel in his letter appeared to explain his and Dr Vernon's position at the meeting on the basis that there was no 'independent' pathology opinion. I remind myself, however, that Professor Wright reported in the clear understanding that his primary duty was to the court to provide an independent expert opinion. His report had been available to both parties for some considerable time without demur. In my judgment, it runs counter to the principles of the overriding objective to allow a party that realises at such a late stage in a case as this that it wishes to challenge an expert's opinion, which was expressly regarded by other experts as a perfectly respectably held opinion, by seeking further evidence of its own.
In my view, the only fair way in which to deal with this undesirable situation is to permit the defendants to submit written questions to Professor Wright, the substance of which are agreed or further approved by the court."
Duty to restrict expert evidence
35.1. Expert evidence shall be restricted to that which is reasonably required to resolve the proceedings.
Experts – overriding duty to the court
35.3 (1) It is the duty of an expert to help the court on the matters within his expertise;
(2) The duty overrides any obligation to the person from whom he has received instructions or by whom he is paid.
Written questions to experts
35.6 (1) A party may put to –
(a) an expert instructed by another party; or
(b) a single joint expert appointed under rule 35.7,
written questions about his report.
Court's power to direct that evidence is to be given by a single joint expert
35.7 Where two or more parties wish to submit expert evidence on a particular issue, the court may direct that the evidence is to be given by one expert only.
Expert's rights to ask court for directions
35.14 (1) An expert may file a written request for directions to assist him in carrying out his function as an expert.
"In a substantial case such as this, the correct approach is to regard the instruction of an expert jointly by the parties as the first step in obtaining expert evidence on a particular issue. It is to be hoped that in the majority of cases it will not only be the first step but also the last step. If, having obtained a joint expert's report a party, for reasons which are not fanciful, wishes to obtain further information before making a decision as to whether or not there is a particular part (or indeed the whole) of an expert's report which he or she may wish to challenge, then they should, subject to the discretion of the court, be permitted to obtain that evidence."
It would have been very much better if this course had been adopted from the outset in relation to the histopathology evidence, as the claimants' advisers wished.
Note: This judgment was delivered orally in court from a prepared text. Laws LJ in a very brief judgment agreed. The Master of the Rolls also agreed, even more briefly. The text of what they said will be available soon from the official shorthandwriters.
LORD JUSTICE LAWS: I agree entirely. I would just particularly wish to endorse with respect what my Lord has said about the conduct of the defendant's solicitor and the importance of the authority of the designated single judge being maintained.
THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS: So would I.