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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Pearson v. J. Ray McDermott Diving International Inc [2006] ScotCS CSIH_39 (20 June 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSIH_39.html
Cite as: [2006] CSIH 39, [2006] ScotCS CSIH_39

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Osborne

Lord Abernethy

Lord Nimmo Smith

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] CSIH 39

A1007/00

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD OSBORNE

 

in

 

RECLAIMING MOTION

 

in the cause

 

ALAN PEARSON

Pursuer and Reclaimer;

 

against

 

J. RAY McDERMOTT DIVING INTERNATIONAL INC.

Defenders and Respondents:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: S Di Rollo, Q.C., Ross; Balfour & Manson, Edinburgh

Alt: G Hanretty, Q.C., Miss Dowdalls; HBM Sayers, Glasgow

 

20 June 2006

 

[1] In this action, commenced by a summons signetted on 3 May 2000, the pursuer and reclaimer sought damages from the defenders and respondents for personal injuries said to have been sustained in an accident, which occurred on or about 6 May 1997, when the pursuer was engaged in the course of his employment with the defenders as a diver or life support technician in the course of a diving operation aboard Derrick Barge 27 in the Panna Field in the Arabian Sea, west of Bombay. In due course, a proof took place over several days, following which, by interlocutor dated 18 February 2004, the Temporary Lord Ordinary sustained the defenders' second and third pleas in law and assoilzied the defenders from the conclusions of the summons. Against that interlocutor the pursuer has reclaimed.

[2] The pursuer has lodged grounds of appeal. For present purposes it is necessary to mention only ground 3, which is headed "Apparent bias". That ground of appeal is in the following terms:

"A motion was made in the course of the proof that Temporary Lord Ordinary should disqualify himself on the grounds of apparent bias. Although the Temporary Lord Ordinary records that a motion was made [paragraph 41] he does not record the detail of the submission on behalf of the pursuer nor does he record the reasons for rejecting the motion. The reasons for that motion were

1. Inappropriate eye contact with Senior Counsel for the defender

throughout the proof.

2. The Temporary Lord Ordinary permitted the pursuer to be cross-

examined for an inordinate length of time having regard to the issues in this case. He was put through an unacceptable ordeal which merely created confusion rather than assisting with testing credibility and reliability. On several occasions objection was taken to the manner and content of questions in cross-examination but at no point was it curtailed by the court.

3. Inappropriate questioning of witnesses including expert witnesses

(Mr. Grosch, Mr. Foxworthy and Mr. Davies). His Lordship went far beyond seeking to clarify matters but carried out investigations of his own. These appeared to be with a view to undermining the case being made by the pursuer. Several of the witnesses (Mr. Davies, Mr. Grosch and the pursuer's wife) commented after completing their evidence that the Temporary Lord Ordinary was clearly against the pursuer.

4. Obvious rejection in the course of evidence in chief of the pursuer's

expert in relation to the diving operation. Such evidence was very important to the pursuer's case. In the course of evidence the pursuer's expert made very serious and highly relevant criticisms of the defenders' diving operation and yet the Court's reaction was to question the relevance of that evidence. The way in which the pursuer became involved in the operation, the lack of information given to him before and during the operation, the importance of giving him specific and detailed instructions, the number of persons working at the material time, were all issues that had been foreshadowed in the pleadings and about which the pursuer was examined in detail. They were also matters in respect of which the material produced by the defenders supported the account given by the pursuer (which material the pursuer could not have known existed before he made the allegations he had consistently made). Mr. Grosch's evidence on all of these points is critical yet the Temporary Lord Ordinary was immediately dismissive of that evidence. The obvious hostility to such evidence was particularly inappropriate having regard to the stage the case had reached. The Temporary Lord Ordinary had not heard all of the factual evidence at that stage.

5. A conversation with the macer at the end of examination in chief of the

pursuer to the effect that 'We will see how he gets on in cross-examination'.

It is submitted that the Temporary Lord Ordinary's conduct as set above (sic) was such as to cause a reasonable person sitting in Court and knowing the relevant facts to think that he might well be biased in favour of the defenders. In the circumstances this Court should make its own findings in relation to the evidence on the basis of the transcript."

[3] It was indeed the case that, during the course of the proof and as narrated at page 986 and following of the transcript of proceedings, a motion was made on behalf of the pursuer to the Temporary Lord Ordinary which purported to be brought under Rule of Court 36.13. Since a motion under that Rule of Court requires to be brought in the Inner House, the motion was in fact incompetent. However, it was treated as a motion to the Temporary Lord Ordinary that he should recuse himself from further involvement in the proof and was entertained as such. This motion was refused without reasons being given for that decision. It appears that no interlocutor was pronounced by the Temporary Lord Ordinary reflecting his decision. Following the proof, the Temporary Lord Ordinary issued an Opinion, dated 18 February 2004 in which he referred to the motion mentioned above. He narrates simply that it was "refused as inappropriate". In paragraph [41] of his Opinion, the Temporary Lord Ordinary narrated his view as to the effect of Mr. Grosch's evidence. In relation to a certain line of questioning the Temporary Lord Ordinary narrates as follows:

"When that matter was pursued, the Court attempted to ascertain from Mr. Grosch how that mattered in the context of the accident under consideration. The question provoked an outburst from counsel, apparently on the view that it was an inappropriate question for the Court to ask the witness. The Court had also asked questions of Mr. Foxworthy (see below), and Mr. Davies, the employment consultant. Counsel presented an argument the following day asking that I should remit the matter to the Inner House under Rule 36.3 (sic) on the footing that there was an appearance of bias on the part of the Court. In fairness to Mr. Grosch, he had been instructed on a remit to give an opinion on the diving operation. This he had proceeded to do, as noted, on an erroneous basis of fact and on a misapprehension of the law but there was not and never could be any input from him on the precise circumstances of the particular accident."

No other mention is made by the temporary Lord Ordinary of the motion referred to above, or his reasons for its refusal.

[4] In the light of the foregoing background, when the pursuer's reclaiming motion came before us, we expressed certain concerns relating to procedural problems which, in our view, had been created by ground of appeal 3, and had to be resolved. While some of the points raised in ground 3 might be capable of determination on the basis of an examination of the printed evidence, others certainly could not. We considered that in the latter category were points 1 and 5 and maybe point 4, in ground 3.

[5] We were of the view that the allegations made in those parts of ground 3 amounted to allegations of breach of the judicial oath - actual bias - not simply apparent bias. In any event, we considered that, if they were to be insisted in, they could not be dealt with on the basis of assertion and counter-assertion made by counsel. There might require to be some form of independent investigation into the matters alleged. We indicated to parties that although these matters had been touched upon in the debate before the Temporary Lord Ordinary on the pursuer's motion to him, this court would be most reluctant to reach any final conclusion on any of the allegations in ground 3, without affording to the Temporary Lord Ordinary the opportunity of responding to them specifically. We considered that any other course would be quite unfair to him, in a context in which his integrity had been put in issue.

[6] We also had formed the view that the foregoing matters were inextricably associated with what might be called the merits of the appeal, since, in the final paragraph of ground 3 the court was invited to "make its own findings in relation to the evidence on the basis of the transcript". To do that, in our opinion, would amount to a major departure from the normal approach taken by this court in appeals involving issues of fact, exemplified in a series of well-known cases. It was our view that, until the validity, or otherwise, of the points raised in ground 3 of the grounds of appeal was determined, it could not be decided how this court should approach the factual findings of the temporary Lord Ordinary and the evidence in the case. In the situation outlined, we invited parties to make submissions to us on the procedure which ought to be adopted in the reclaiming motion, having regard to the unusual nature of ground of appeal 3.

[7] There followed a full discussion of the issues which we had raised with parties. The position adopted on behalf of the pursuer was that the court could proceed to hear the reclaiming motion without further ado, that it should discard the factual findings of the Temporary Lord Ordinary and make its own findings on the basis of the transcript of evidence at the proof. Emphasis was placed on the fact that the Temporary Lord Ordinary had not given reasons for his refusal of the pursuer's motion that he should recuse himself. It was contended that, in effect, the Temporary Lord Ordinary had already been given an opportunity to explain the criticisms which had been made of his conduct of the proof, of which he had declined to avail himself by issuing no reasons for his decision to refuse the motion. The position adopted on behalf of the pursuer was that the Temporary Lord Ordinary had not furnished the pursuer with a fair hearing but that this court could correct that situation. Despite the terms of ground 3.2, alleging confusion caused by his questioning of the pursuer, it would be possible for this court to take that course. Senior counsel for the pursuer accepted that, if this court were not prepared to deal with the reclaiming motion, to the extent that it was based on ground 3, without the comments of the Temporary Lord Ordinary, the reclaiming motion could not proceed. He continued to maintain that what was involved in this case was an allegation of apparent bias, not actual bias.

[8] Senior counsel for the defenders did not address us in detail in relation to the allegations made in ground of appeal 3. He submitted that, in the light of the pursuer's failure to proceed with a motion to the Inner House under Rule of Court 36.13 and having regard also to the fact that counsel for the pursuer did not further address the Temporary Lord Ordinary on the matters concerned later in the proof, the pursuer should be held to have waived his right to insist in ground of appeal 3. Furthermore, he submitted that there was a strong presumption that a judge who had taken the judicial oath acted in accordance with it. The onus was on the pursuer to rebut that presumption. Nothing in ground 3 had that effect.

[9] Having carefully considered the submissions made to us, we remain of the opinion that the allegations made in ground 3 are, in part, allegations of actual bias. However, we are of the view that ground of appeal 3 has to be treated as a single ground, since, in respect of all of the matters contained in it, it is contended that this court should follow the unusual course of making its own findings in fact in relation to the evidence, on the basis of the transcript, in effect discarding the Temporary Lord Ordinary's factual findings. We have reached the conclusion that, in the light of the serious allegations which are made in ground 3, we cannot properly make a decision in relation to this ground of appeal without obtaining from the Temporary Lord Ordinary a detailed report on all of the points which are made in that ground of appeal. To facilitate his compilation of such report, it would be appropriate for the Temporary Lord Ordinary to have access to the transcript of the proceedings. In our view, only he can respond to those parts of ground 3 that cannot fully be explored by reference to the record of proceedings. Having reached that conclusion, we considered that it was inevitable that the diet for the reclaiming motion should be discharged.

[10] Since we cannot anticipate what the Temporary Lord Ordinary's report may contain, we are unable to reach any firm conclusion as to what further procedure may be necessary in this case. However, we do not exclude the possibility that some factual enquiry may be necessary into some or all of the matters raised in ground 3.

[11] When the Temporary Lord Ordinary's report becomes available, the case should appear in the By Order roll, so that a discussion of appropriate further procedure may be undertaken. All matters of expenses arising out of the subject-matter of this Opinion are reserved.

 


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