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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Bulic v Harwoods & Ors [2012] EWHC 3657 (QB) (18 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/3657.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3657 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM THE BRIGHTON COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SIMPKISS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ZVONKO BULIC |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) HARWOODS (2) SANTANDER CONSUMER (UK) PLC (3) JAGUAR CARS LIMITED |
Defendants/ Respondents |
____________________
John Brennan (instructed by Moran & Co) for the Defendants/Respondents
Hearing date: 29 November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
" … Where a party sensibly agrees to a joint report and the report is obtained as a result of joint instructions in the manner which I have indicated, the fact that a party has agreed to adopt that course does not prevent that party being allowed facilities to obtain a report from another expert or, if appropriate, to rely on the evidence of another 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 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 the 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."
Significance has been attached in the course of argument to the words "substantial case such as this" and also to the phrase "reasons which are not fanciful". Mr Brennan argues that Judge Simpkiss was entitled to hold that this case was not sufficiently "substantial", by comparison with the circumstances in Daniels v Walker, to justify Mr Cookson being disinstructed. Mr Murray, on the other hand, points to the phrase "not fanciful" in suggesting that the Judge applied too strict a test when assessing the Appellant's qualms about Mr Cookson's reasoning and expertise.
"Where a party requests a departure from the norm and makes what one can term a Daniels v Walker application, all relevant circumstances are to be taken into account but principally the court must have its eye on the overall justice to the parties. This includes what I have called the balance of grievance test. The application will only succeed in circumstances which are seen to be exceptional and to justify such a departure from the norm."
It was with reference to these words that Judge Simpkiss observed that Judge MacDuff was there setting out the "correct test to adopt" and that he did not regard it as being in any way inconsistent with the passage cited above from Lord Woolf's judgment.
" … The starting point is: unless there is reason for not having a single expert, there should be only a single expert. If there is no reason which justifies more evidence than that from a single expert on any particular topic, then again in the normal way the report prepared by the single expert should be the evidence in the case on the issues covered by that expert's report. In the normal way, therefore, there should be no need for that report to be amplified or tested by cross-examination. If it needs amplification, or if it should be subject to cross-examination, the court has a discretion to allow that to happen. The court may permit that to happen either prior to the hearing or at the hearing. But the assumption should be that the single joint expert's report is the evidence. Any amplification or any cross-examination should be restricted as far as possible. Equally, where parties agree that there should be a single joint expert, and a single joint expert produces a report, it is possible for the court still to permit a party to instruct his or her own expert and for that expert to be called at the hearing. However, there must be good reason for that course to be adopted. Normally, where the issue is of the sort that is covered by non-medical evidence, as in this case, the court should be slow to allow a second expert to be instructed."
"If, having agreed to a joint expert's report a party subsequently wishes to call evidence, and it would be unjust having regard to the overriding objective of the Civil Procedure Rules not to allow that party to call that evidence, they must be allowed to call it."
What represents justice between the parties will very much depend upon the facts of each case. For that reason, it can be distracting to focus too analytically on the reasoning in other cases, however authoritative, where the facts were not truly comparable. There are different factors to be taken into account and the importance of each is likely to vary according to the particular facts. For example, the saving of time and money is likely to assume greater significance in inverse proportion to the centrality of the issues. Where the court is concerned with a relatively "peripheral" issue, as in Kay, it is likely to be only in unusual circumstances that the services of a single joint expert will be dispensed with: see e.g. at [35]-[36].
(a) "In my opinion Mr Cookson shows a lack of understanding of the very basics of turbochargers and turbocharging and, from his interpretations, a lack of understanding of the combustion of fuels."
(b) "Mr Cookson's explanations demonstrate a clear lack of knowledge and understanding of the fundamental principles of operation of a diesel engine and of the differences between spark ignition (petrol) engines and diesel engines."
(c) "It appears that Mr Cookson is at times not clear himself regarding the properties of diesel fuel."