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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hall & Anor v Motor Sport Vision Ltd & Ors [2002] EWCA Civ 702 (1 May 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/702.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 702 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
SHEFFIELD DISTRICT REGISTRY
(His Honour Judge Bullimore)
Strand London WC2 Wednesday, 1st May 2002 |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JACKSON
____________________
(1) CHARLES HALL | ||
(2) APEX RACING LIMITED | ||
Claimants/Part 20 Defendants/Appellants | ||
- v - | ||
(1) MOTOR SPORT VISION LIMITED | ||
Defendant/Part 20 Claimant | ||
(2) WILLIAM EDWARD HALL | ||
Third Part 20 Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
appeared on behalf of the Appellants.
MR DAVID CAVENDER (Instructed by Herbert Smith, Exchange House, Primrose Street, London EC2A 2HS)
appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday, 1st May 2002
(1) failed to provide the claimant with a raceworthy and/or safe car; and
(2) failed to provide a mechanic of the claimant's choice.
"14.FPA did not have any records or drawings as to how the car should be prepared. In addition, they did not maintain records as to what should be checked after every test or race nor check lists or torque settings for components such as nuts and bolts. I would have expected all these steps to be undertaken in the interests of safety.
15. FPA did not undertake crack testing (to ensure that parts were not damaged) or lifeing of important parts. Some parts are so vital to the car that they should always be replaced after a certain time, in any event. This did not occur. In addition, second-hand parts were sometimes used to prepare the 98 cars for the 99 sessions without the relevant testing. Again, I believe that this failure to undertake such routine checks and replace worn or "lifed" parts jeopardised safety irresponsibly and unnecessarily."
"As chief engineer at Fortec [that is his company] I am responsible for the engineering and preparation of all Fortec cars. I am also responsible for the race day set-up on all our Formula 3 and Renault TOCA Sport 2000 cars."
"I am informed that FPA used parts from previous seasons without maintaining a record of the history of the part and without crack-testing. These practices would be wholly unacceptable in Fortec (and I believe in any comparable motor-racing team) as they unnecessarily expose the car and drivers to risk of component failure."
"However, my main reason for refusing this application is this: the Claimants say that all this comes upon them out of the blue and it is no fault of theirs that it was not known about. The Defendants assert roundly that they should have had it in mind before. In my view, on the evidence that there is, Bill Hall is not just a successful businessman who wants to further his son's racing ambitions. Both having regard to the statements that he has put before the court and what has been said by counsel on behalf of the Claimants, he is an experienced racing driver, who knows his way about the motor racing world. I am quite satisfied that this case has been forwarded with him as the guiding hand. Throughout the period to which the litigation relates he has asserted how he saw things going wrong, which the Defendants and the mechanics failed to rectify, or were themselves doing wrongly. He has always asserted the car was not being properly prepared and set up, that adjustments were badly made, and in some instances the Defendants' failures resulted in an unsafe condition of the car, which obviously was to be used at high speeds.
In his submissions Mr Hunter went further, and the matter is helpfully set out in the transcript which has been prepared and arises at pages 19, 20 and 21. Mr Hunter was asserting to me that:
`The Claimants had no idea that during Charles' time at Formula Palmer Audi', which is the Defendant's concern, `those tests had not been carried out', in regard to safety, crack testing and the like.
He went on:
`If they had suspected that, of course, they would have investigated it, but they did not. So to suggest that somehow they should have divined that this was the case and then gone and sought evidence to support it is, in my submission, unreasonable.'
I then asked him:
`Is it conceded or asserted that they knew -- that is the Halls -- that the proper practice in regard to racing cars was to carry out such tests and to keep such records?'
Mr Hunter began to respond. I did not think he quite grasped what I was asking about, so I asked for elucidation of this
`...is it being said by your clients "Well, of course, we always knew there ought to be crack testing and lifeing and these records ought to be kept and we had always assumed those things were done. Now we discover they have not been done", or is it being said by them "Well, of course, despite our involvement in racing, we did not know what the proper practices were in regard to testing and record-keeping, but now we know these things ought to have been done and we have discovered that they were not done"?'
Mr Hunter roundly said:
`It is the former.'
He then referred to the experience of both the Halls, and in regard to the father, William, he said that he had run a racing team very much like Formula Palmer Audi. Charles also knew about crack testing and lifeing of parts. They were familiar with what other teams did. I then put the point to him:
`But they never enquired into any of this, despite their unhappiness allegedly with the Defendants and their belief that things were not being properly prepared, and bolts were dropping out, and all the rest of it?'
The answer is essentially that they did not enquire into it.
Now, it seems to me that to say that the penny suddenly dropped when Mr Angeloni turned up in September is really not good enough. Here we have a very experienced man in the field, who knows what the proper practices are said to be, who is very anxious about safety issues, knows the importance of proper records being kept, faced with incidents which are said to make his son's car unsafe, and he does not insist on getting the records that he believes will be kept and ought to be kept.
It is further asserted that the matters which are complained of are the very sort of thing that records, check lists and so on would have prevented happening. It is simply not good enough to say the Defendants' aggressive posture on disclosure put the Claimants off. The Claimants have professional advisors of the highest calibre, and Bill Hall is no shrinking violet himself. In my view the Claimants ought to have had this line of enquiry well in mind from the beginning. In fact, they did not and simply failed to pursue it.
If there is some suggestion that the previous solicitors were at fault, then I do not think the Claimants can leave it all to them. They had specialised knowledge, they assert, about what went on and ought to go on in this field of life, and they ought to have made sure proper enquiry was made. If the matters now raised are as important as alleged, it is impossible to understand how the Defendants' alleged failures have not been highlighted from much earlier. There is fault about the lateness of the issues being raised and plainly, in my view, it falls on the Halls. This is the fifth attempt, I think, in two years to get their pleading right, and it is extraordinary that it has not been raised before.
Further, I am influenced to a degree, I am bound to say, by this consideration. I think it is at least arguable that this is all a variant on the initial assertions of unraceworthiness and lack of safety in the car. It is just moving matters back one stage as to why that alleged state of affairs may have occurred. There are obviously issues of remoteness and causation between record-keeping and things going wrong on the track, and it is perhaps not right to address those now, but I do not think they are going necessarily to be easy to overcome.
I conclude, therefore, that the matters now being raised were well capable of being raised before. Either the Claimants knew of these alleged failures and decided not to go down that line; alternatively, they knew what procedures should be followed and failed to discover and assert that the Defendants were failing to follow them. The only effort that was made for specific disclosure, as far as I know, was to see CVs of all the mechanics and the winter work sheets, rather than those documents which might have related to the time when Charles was actually driving the car."
"I am informed that FPA used parts from previous seasons without maintaining a record of the history of the part and without crack-testing. These practices would be wholly unacceptable."
"Similarly we consider that the `winter work sheets' are directly relevant to the issues in this matter. Whilst it is your case that the bolts in the left hand side of the cross member simply dropped out, it is our case that the bolts were never in fact fitted. It is for this purpose that we require sight of the winter work sheets and again unless these documents are disclosed to us within 7 days of the date of this letter we will make the appropriate application to the Court."
"We are instructed that our client has no such documents to disclose."
"JUDGE BULLIMORE: Despite all his experience himself running teams and all the rest of it he has never asked: `Where are the records for looking after these motor cars? Where are the check lists like pilots have before they take off?' He has never done that?
MR HUNTER: Well, your Honour, he went down that route by making his specific discovery application.
JUDGE BULLIMORE: But he wanted the CVs of all the mechanics.
MR HUNTER: Yes.
JUDGE BULLIMORE: Well, that hardly bore on the issue of the records in relation to the individual vehicles.
MR HUNTER: At that stage it did. What he asked for was two categories: the CVs of all the mechanics and the winter work sheets. Now the winter work sheets would at least in part have fallen within this category of missing documentation described by Mr Angeloni."
"`But they never enquired into any of this, despite their unhappiness allegedly with the Defendants and their belief that things were not being properly prepared, and bolts were dropping out, and all the rest of it.'
The answer is essentially that they did not enquire into it."
"Furthermore, Roger Cowman [he, I think, is a representative of the plaintiffs] was told by phone after the race by one of the senior engineers that a `rose' joint in one of the push rods was stripped. This apart from having potential fatal consequences meant that the shock absorber on this push rod would only work in `Bump' and not in `Rebound'."
"Rose joints should not be allowed to get anywhere near being stripped or worn out. If there was a lifeing procedure in place, that would not happen."
(1) the amendments involved a dramatic departure from the claimants existing case;
(2) the costs of the litigation, which were already disproportionate, would be vastly increased;
(3) the trial, which was due to start on the day of the claimants' application, would be substantially delayed;
(4) the proposed amendments related to matters about which the claimants were, or should have been, alerted at a much earlier date.