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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> BR v BR [2024] EWFC 11 (30 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2024/11.html Cite as: [2024] EWFC 11 |
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SITTING AT THE ROYAL COURTS OF JUSTICE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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BR |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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BR |
Respondent |
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Harry Oliver KC and Charlotte Hartley (instructed by Payne Hicks Beach LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17 January 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peel :
Introduction
The background
The proceedings
Single Joint Expert ("SJE"): the rules
"Where two or more parties wish to put expert evidence before the court on a particular issue, the court may direct that the evidence on that issue is to be given by a single joint expert".
"This Practice Direction applies to financial remedy proceedings and other
family proceedings except children proceedings…"
"Wherever possible, expert evidence should be obtained from a single joint expert instructed by both or all of the parties" [emphasis added].
"25.54 The fifth basic rule is that wherever possible expert evidence should be obtained from an SJE instructed by both or all of the parties".
"One reason why so much forensic acrimony was generated, with the consequential burgeoning of costs, was that the Deputy District Judge at the first appointment on 9 November 2012 permitted each party to have their own expert to value the husband's business interests, notwithstanding the terms of Part 25 FPR which clearly stated then (and even more strongly states now – see PD 25D para 2.1) that a SJE should be used "wherever possible". Not "ideally" or "generally" but "wherever possible".
i) Wherever possible, a SJE should be directed rather than giving permission for two or more experts to be solely instructed. This is the default position.
ii) The bar for departing from the default position is set high. A high degree of justification is required to persuade the court to do so.
i) It will usually be cheaper to instruct one, rather than two, experts.
ii) All experts have an overriding duty to the court, expressed at FPR 25.3 as follows:
"(1) It is the duty of experts to help the court on matters within their expertise.
"(2) This duty overrides any obligation to the person from whom experts have received instructions or by whom they are paid".
Notwithstanding this clear expression of duty to the court which binds all experts, the SJE has the inestimable advantage over a solely instructed expert of being truly independent. The solely instructed expert may (whether consciously or subconsciously) be partisan to a lesser or greater degree, because they take instructions from one party, are given information by them, build up a relationship with them and are paid by them to prepare reports and give evidence in conflicted litigation. The SJE by contrast is likely to be less susceptible to bias (conscious or subconscious) towards either party.
iii) The SJE prepares a report in accordance with one joint letter of instruction, jointly provided information and one series of joint questions. By contrast, two separate experts, instructed by two different parties, may receive different instructions, different information and different questions. They are subject to less oversight by the court than the SJE whose remit, instructions and provision of information are ultimately to be decided by a judge if the parties do not agree. There is a significant risk that the court will be faced with reports which are not just different in their conclusions, but based on different information, questions and instructions.
iv) Nothing prevents either or both parties from instructing shadow experts to assist in (for example) drafting the joint letter of instruction, or raising questions of the SJE once the report has been received. It is common at trial for the SJE, if required to give evidence, to be cross examined by counsel for one or both parties with the benefit of input from shadow accountants.
v) Questions can be asked of the SJE after provision of the report: FPR 25.10. These give the parties the opportunity to explore areas which they consider have not been properly addressed.
vi) Should either or both parties be dissatisfied with the SJE report, it is open to them to make a Daniels v Walker application for permission to adduce their own expert evidence. I appreciate that this may lead to additional expert evidence, but experience suggests that in many cases parties are content, broadly, to accept the SJE's opinion, and those cases where there is a legitimate justification for additional sole expert evidence will be rare. It does not therefore automatically follow that to instruct a SJE will inevitably lead in due course to three experts (the SJE and two sole experts). Occasionally, one party will seek to rely on the SJE, and the other will reject the SJE's conclusions. In that case, if permission for the dissatisfied party to obtain their own expert is granted, there will be two experts. In those rare cases where both parties secure permission for their own expert, it may nevertheless remain helpful for the court to have the benefit of independent SJE evidence at trial. I am therefore unpersuaded that the court should routinely assume a gloomy prognosis about the future trajectory of expert evidence even before the SJE route has been explored.
vii) Instruction of a SJE will usually enable that expert to decide what documents they need and request them. It is commonplace to include in any court order a direction that the parties cooperate with requests for information made by the SJE. That is usually the most practical way to deal with issues about what is sometimes the vexed issue of company disclosure. Appointing a SJE will therefore usually remove the need for lengthy questionnaires addressed to company matters; these can be left to the SJE.
viii) Finally, whenever the court is considering expert evidence, issues of costs and proportionality arise. These are likely to be particularly pertinent in lower value cases, but even in the so called "big money" cases, the court must keep them in mind.
This case