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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Davies v Global Strategies Group ( Hong Kong) Ltd. & Anor [2010] EWCA Civ 648 (13 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/648.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 648 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE BURNETT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR ANTHONY MAY)
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
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DAVIES (ON HER OWN BEHALF AND AS ADMINISTRATIX OF THE ESTATE OF JULIAN DAVIES DECEASED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GLOBAL STRATEGIES GROUP ( HONG KONG ) LIMITED AND ANOTHER |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court )
Mr Robert Jay QC Mr Matthew Boyle (instructed by Clyde and Co Llp) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Anthony May:
"80. Both Mr Arnold and Mr Perl recognised the increased risk of attack by small arms fire after the contract was signed. The defendants' consideration of the question of installing bullet resistant windscreens was a response to that risk. The question of their ability was, as I have found, explored by those on the ground in Northern Iraq. That question included consideration of whether screens could be found and also whether the equipment and skills necessary to install them were available in Northern Iraq. I am satisfied that had they been available (in that broad sense) they should have been installed. The essence of the evidence of both Mr Arnold and Mr Perl was that screens could not have been installed. That was the information coming from Bukkehave. There is no evidence to suggest that the subsidiary reasons given by Mr Arnold (concern about weight and the possibility that insurgence would adapt their methods of attack) were fully though through or determinative of the issue. No doubt weight would have been an issue if the screens were available."
"Dr Braslavsky submits that the failure of the defendants to call Mr Daniel (with whom Mr Arnold had conversations) and the other staff who directly investigated the availability of windscreens is fatal to the defendants' case. He submits that this is evidence they should have called and the failure to do so results in an adverse inference in the face of Mr Robson's assertion that such windscreens were available. Whilst I have concluded that there is a good reason for Mr Daniels absence as a witness (see [4] above) there is nothing beyond the fact that Messrs Spencer and Woodward have left the defendants' service to explain why they had not given evidence on this issue. It is not clear whether any attempt was made to find them. The fact that they had moved on provides some explanation, if not a wholly satisfactory one, for their absence.
82. Yet the defendants have not remained silent in the face of the suggestion that bullet resistant windscreens should have been fitted before 24 June 2004. Both Mr Arnold and Mr Perl have given evidence that the issue was discussed. Both have said that the issue was explored by those on the ground in Northern Iraq with Bukkehave and the result of that exploration was passed on to them. There is independent documentary evidence that Bukkehave were indeed the organisation concerned with the maintenance of the vehicles used in Operation Northstar. There is also documentary evidence that suggests that the availability of even routine spares was limited in Northern Iraq at the time.
83. It is not appropriate to draw an adverse inference against the defendants on this issue. Rather I have to evaluate evidence from both sides which is unsatisfactory. A proper criticism of the evidence given by Mr Arnold and Mr Perl is that it is in effect hearsay evidence. Those who could give direct evidence have not been called and so the detail of their investigations is not before the court and has not been cross examined. It is worth repeating that Mr Arnold's evidence was that Bukkehave was suggesting it could not be done. So had Mr Spencer and Mr Woodward been called they would have been relaying information gleaned from people within that organisation. I have earlier concluded that I accept both Mr Arnold and Mr Perl to tell the truth about this issue. As with the question of collars, there is an evidential burden on the defendants to explain why bullet resistant windscreens were not installed. Here the evidence has been adduced. The court's task is to evaluate the competing evidence to determine whether screens probably were or were not available and capable of being fitted at the time. On the one hand, the defendants caused inquiries to be made of the organisation responsible for maintaining the vehicle. The message that came back was that it could not be done. Against this the evidence of Mr Robson that after writing his report he explored through Google the practicalities of installing bullet resistant glass to a Toyota Landcruiser. Through this mechanism he discovered the thickness of such screens and their weight. It is also through a Google search made towards the end of 2008 that Mr Robson was able to assert such screens were available in 2004.
In many respects Mr Robson's evidence is extraordinary. The issue of the availability of bullet resistant windscreens in Iraq in the spring of 2004, and the availability of people to fit them in Northern Iraq was of obvious importance in the case. It was a central feature of Mr Arnold's written evidence of 13 June 2008. It is not covered in Mr Robson's report, nor was it dealt with by him in the joint report of the experts. No supplementary report was ever provided on this issue. The evidence did not emerge in Mr Robson's short evidence in chief rather it was produced during cross examination by Mr Jay. Anyone can do a Google search. This evidence was not expert evidence at all. It might have been given by anyone. Mr Robson printed nothing from the internet that he found through his Google search, nor does it appear that he made any notes. His evidence was completely lacking in specificity and its source is invisible. Whether his information amounted to anything more than that in 2004 bullet resistant windscreens were generally available for Toyota Landcruisers was unclear. The defendants have not contended otherwise. Mr Robson did not given any details of from whom they were available. He gave no evidence that such windscreens were readily available in Iraq or, if not, how long it would take to get them. He did not explain that they were available off the shelf or whether, as with armoured vehicles on Mr Hayes' account, they were made to order. He did not deal with the practicalities of fitting such windscreens, readily accepting that he was not qualified to do so.
Whilst it might be objected that the defendants' evidence on windscreens is not of high quality it is, in my judgment, rather more concrete than that given by Mr Robson. There is no reason to suppose that those who dealt directly with Bukkehave failed to pass on the essence of the advice they were given. I am satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable to fit a bullet resistant windscreen to the Toyota Landcruiser in which Mr Davies was travelling before the fatal attack. It follows that the claimant has not established any causative breach of duty on the part of the defendants."
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Order: Appeal dismissed