BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> JWilliamson v. The Advocate General For Scotland [2006] ScotCS CSOH_17 (03 February 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_17.html
Cite as: [2006] CSOH 17, [2006] ScotCS CSOH_17

[New search] [Help]


 

OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 17

 

PD408/05

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MACPHAIL

 

in the cause

 

JOHN WILLIAMSON

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

THE ADVOCATE GENERAL FOR SCOTLAND

 

Defender:

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Pursuer: McEachran, Q.C.; Digby Brown S.S.C.

Defender: K. Campbell; Morton Fraser

 

 

3 February 2006

 

Introduction

 

[1] This is a motion for commission and diligence in an action of damages for personal injuries brought under the new Chapter 43 of the Rules of the Court of Session. The action arises from a shooting accident which occurred when the pursuer, who was serving with the Royal Air Force as a senior aircraftsman, was attending a course at Otterburn Camp and was engaged in a target firing exercise. A round fired from another senior aircraftsman's rifle struck the barrel of the pursuer's rifle, causing it to shatter, and a fragment of metal from the rifle penetrated the pursuer's right eye.

[2] The motion is in two parts. The first part, which is unopposed, seeks commission and diligence for the inspection and photographing of the pursuer's rifle. The second part seeks commission and diligence to recover certain documents. The specification contains four calls. The second call is unopposed. I shall deal in turn with the first, third and fourth calls.

 

Call 1

[3] In paragraph 2 of the statement of claim the pursuer makes averments about the circumstances of the accident and further avers:

"The defender carried out an internal enquiry into the circumstances of the pursuer's accident. The defender is called upon to lodge a copy of the report of the said enquiry in process and a failure to do so will be founded upon."

The report has not been lodged. Answer 2 of the defences, which throughout are in skeletal form, is, "Not known and not admitted." The defender's counsel frankly conceded that the defences were not adequate and he stated that the defender proposed to seek leave to amend. He made it clear, however, that an inquiry had been carried out and that the defender regarded the report of the inquiry as confidential.

[4] Call 1 is in these terms:

"1. The report of the internal Unit Inquiry carried out into the circumstances of the pursuer's accident and the injuries in respect of which the summons in this cause was issued and relevant to the matters all as contained and more fully specified in the statement of claim."

Counsel for the defender submitted that this call should be refused. The inquiry had been held in terms of section 135 of the Army Act 1955 and the Board of Inquiry (Army) Rules 1956 (SI 1956, No 630). Reference was also made to section 135 of the Air Force Act 1955 and the Board of Inquiry (Air Force) Rules 1956 (SI 1956, No 579). The scope of such an inquiry was potentially very wide-ranging. The inquiry in this case had begun about two months after the accident and the report had been prepared over a period of some 17 months. It contained the responses of a number of persons to structured questions; it included as annexes certain documents prepared for the purposes of the inquiry; and it also contained comments outwith the subject-matter of the inquiry by skilled service personnel, and comments and conclusions by officers in the line of command. It was plain, having regard to that material, that a number of purposes had been served by the inquiry: there was a fact-finding element; there was an opportunity for lessons to be learned; and, having regard to the nature of the events giving rise to the inquiry, the material prepared might reasonably be expected to inform proceedings of any kind, including the present proceedings. Thus the report was more than a de recenti record of the recollections of eye-witnesses: it was a complex document which served a number of purposes. It fell within the law of post litem motam, the elements of which had been explained in Young v National Coal Board 1957 SC 99. Reference was also made to More v Brown & Root Wimpey Highland Fabricators Ltd 1983 SLT 669 and Hepburn v Scottish Power plc 1997 SC 80.

[5] Counsel for the pursuer submitted that the question was, What was the status of the report? Any incident on a Ministry of Defence firing range set up the necessity for a board of inquiry which was carried out under Army regulations, not in a situation of post litem motam. It was not accepted that the inquiry was held with a view to litigation. It might be necessary to hear the evidence of the person who had held the inquiry. The instruction to the board of inquiry should be produced so that the Court could see its terms and the matters referred to it, in order to ascertain whether it had anything to do with litigation.

[6] In my opinion this call must be refused. The general rule is familiar and is not challenged, and it is not suggested that the report falls within the single exception to the rule which relates to reports by employees present at the time of the accident and made to their employers at or about the time of the accident. In More the Court approved the formulation of the general rule and the exception in Johnstone v National Coal Board 1968 SC 128 where Lord President Clyde said (at page 133):

"In our opinion the basic principle in Scots law regarding reports and records of accidents prepared by or on behalf of one side is that they are not recoverable under a specification of documents by the other side."

In More the Court said (at page 671):

"It is perfectly true that the general rule has always been understood to apply to reports and records prepared by or on behalf of one side or the other after a real likelihood of a claim and a disputed question of liability has emerged. The particular form of the general rule which has been adopted since 1957 has simply reflected recognition by the courts that in modern conditions there are few, if any, accidents, and especially industrial accidents, which do not immediately give rise to a real likelihood of a dispute about liability, and that in the interests of certainty it must now be recognised that confidentiality ought to attach to all records and reports of investigations made after an accident has occurred.

In Hepburn the Court observed (at page 86):

"The general rule requires the court to make a judgment as to whether or not the document which one party seeks to recover has been prepared in anticipation or in development of the case of the other party who has instructed preparation of the document. [...] What the court has to do is to make a judgment as to the true character of the document."

[7] I consider that that dictum in Hepburn was not intended to cast any doubt upon the formulation of the general rule in Johnstone and More. The report obviously falls within that formulation of the rule. It is in any event clear from the explanations given by the defender's counsel that among the purposes for which the report of the board of inquiry was prepared was the collection of material which might be of use in the event of a dispute about liability for the accident. It is unnecessary to contemplate following the unusual course adopted in Hepburn where the judge of first instance heard evidence. The fact that the board of inquiry was convened in the exercise of a discretion conferred by statute is in my view nothing to the purpose, and it is unnecessary to inspect any document setting out the matters referred to the board. The report is plainly a report of an investigation made on behalf of those represented by the defender after the accident had occurred. Accordingly, following the general rule, I am bound to refuse call 1.

 

Call 3

[8] In paragraph 4 of the statement of claim the pursuer avers that the targets were operated by remote control and were activated on the instructions of the supervising officer, Flight Lieutenant McGregor. He also avers that the safety supervisor on the exercise was Flight Sergeant Plaskett. Call 3 is in these terms:

"3. All papers, records, certificates, reports, instructions, memoranda, written statements, written communications or other documents in the hands of the defenders or anyone on their behalf in order that extracts may be taken therefrom at the sight of the Commissioner of all entries therein showing or tending to show (a) the range procedure or procedures in force at Otterburn Camp and relative to the target firing drill exercise in which the pursuer was involved at the time of the accident referred to more fully in the statement of claim and (b) the qualifications of Flight Lieutenant McGregor and Flight Sergeant Plaskett relevant to the planning, implementation, supervision and running of the target firing drill in which the pursuer was involved at the time of the accident referred to more fully in the statement of claim."

[9] The defender's counsel submitted that there was no basis for this call in the pursuer's averments on record. There was as yet no decision as to the degree of specification a party required to give in a Chapter 43 action relative to the recovery of documents. While there was no need for "screeds of averments", the other party was entitled to an indication of where his opponent's case was going. Here, there were several possible approaches to the issue of liability: that the other aircraftsman had been negligent in firing his rifle; that there had been some defect in the way in which the particular exercise had been conducted; that there had been some defect in the way in which the firing range had been organised; and that there was some question as to the qualifications or training of the supervising officer and the safety supervisor.

[10] Counsel for the pursuer stated that the pursuer's agents had sought information from the Ministry of Defence and had been told that the report of the board of inquiry was confidential. The pursuer's expert had advised that there was a question whether those in charge of the exercise had had the proper qualifications. The expert had also advised that it had almost certainly been contrary to the range rules to carry out line firing, the method averred on record. That was very dangerous, and procedures would have had to be set out. Call 3(a) sought production of documents setting out those procedures, while call 3(b) sought information about the supervisors' qualifications. It would not have been appropriate to introduce these matters into the pleadings by way of averments beginning "Believed and averred". Chapter 43 required only brief averments and limited grounds of fault. The relevance of documents sought to be recovered should be dealt with by way of ex parte statements to the court at the hearing of the motion for commission and diligence.

[11] The issue of the test to be applied in a Chapter 43 case where the court is asked to order the recovery of documents the call for which is not related to any specific averment is one of some difficulty. A somewhat similar problem arises in criminal proceedings where recovery is sought by an accused whose position has been formally stated without elaboration (McLeod v H M Advocate (No. 2) 1988 JC 67). The matter has not been deeply explored before me and I express the following views with diffidence. "The recovery of documents in a cause is allowed in order that the Court may be put in possession of documentary evidence bearing upon the issues of fact that have to be determined" (Paterson v Paterson 1919, 1 SLT 12). In an action of damages for personal injuries to which Chapter 43 does not apply, a commission and diligence may be granted after the record is closed in order to enable a party to recover for the purposes of the proof documents which have a bearing on the averments remitted to proof. In a Chapter 43 action, the summons may include a specification of documents in Form 43.2-B (rule 43.2(4)(b)), but the pursuer remains entitled to apply for a commission and diligence under rule 35.2 (rule 43.4(5)). In the present case the pursuer has taken the latter course after the lodging of the record and before the diet of proof on 7 March 2006. The question is whether the documents he seeks must be shown to have a bearing on the averments in his pleadings. If the answer is in the affirmative, call 3 must be refused.

[12] The pursuer's averments appear to me to comply with the requirements of rule 43.2(1). It provides:

"(1) The summons must be in Form 43.2-A and must have annexed to it a brief statement containing -

(a) averments in numbered paragraphs relating only to those facts necessary

to establish the claim; and

(b) the names of every medical practitioner from whom, and every hospital or other institution in which, the pursuer [ . . . ] received treatment for the personal injuries."

In response to the requirement in rule 43.2(1)(a) the pursuer has provided in paragraph 4 of his statement of claim a narrative of the circumstances of the accident. It is not said, and it could not be said in the pursuer's present state of knowledge, that there was any defect in the procedures or that Flight Lieutenant McGregor and Flight Sergeant Plaskett were not qualified to carry out their duties. In any event the Rules in Chapter 43 do not require a pursuer to make averments in support of a motion for commission and diligence. The pursuer has provided in paragraph 5 the details specified in rule 43.2(1)(b). As to paragraph 6, Form 43.2-A specifies:

"6. (State whether claim based on fault at common law or breach of statutory duty; if breach of statutory duty, state provision of enactment)."

The pursuer's paragraph 6 is in these terms:

"6. The pursuer's claim is based on the defenders' breach of their common law duty to take reasonable care for the pursuer's safety. The defender's averments in answer are denied."

In my opinion the pursuer cannot be criticised for not affording further specification of the ground or grounds of liability, because he has complied with the requirements of Form 43.2-A.

[13] As I have noted, there are no averments about the procedures in force or the qualifications of the two supervisors. It would be a curious result, however, if a pursuer, having observed the rules as to the contents of his pleadings, were to be denied a commission and diligence for which he was entitled to apply because he had not included averments which the rules did not require. It is obviously necessary to guard against the granting of a fishing or speculative diligence for the recovery of documents which a party hopes will disclose material for a case he has not averred in his pleadings when he has no reason to believe that the documents exist or that there is any foundation for the unpleaded case. It would therefore appear to be appropriate that the party seeking to recover the documents should explain to the court the basis on which he asks the court to make the order, why he believes the documents exist and how they would be likely to assist him to establish his claim. Here, counsel for the pursuer has stated that the basis on which the motion is made is information and advice from an expert about the safety procedures necessary for an exercise such as that in which the pursuer was injured, and about the need for those supervising such an exercise to be appropriately qualified. Counsel has also stated that information about those procedures and the qualifications of the supervisors would be likely to assist the pursuer's case that the defenders were in breach of their common law duty to take reasonable care for his safety. In my opinion counsel's explanations are satisfactory because they demonstrate that calls 3(a) and (b) are not speculative but are based on expert advice on important matters; and that if the advice is sound, the documents are likely to exist and, if recovered, to have a material bearing on the issue of liability. I shall therefore allow call 3.

 

Call 4

[14] Call 4 is in these terms:

"All papers, records, pamphlets, booklets, instructions, written statements, written communications or other documents in the hands of the defenders showing or tending to show (a) the circumstances in which a Unit Inquiry such as that undertaken after the pursuer's accident requires to be carried out (b) the nature, requirements and ambit of any such Unit Inquiry."

I was not addressed at any length on call 4. It follows from the views I have expressed relative to the board of inquiry that the documents called for should not be recovered. I shall therefore refuse call 4.

 

Result

[15] I shall accordingly grant the first part of the motion. As to the second part, I shall grant a commission and diligence in terms of calls 2 and 3, and refuse calls 1 and 4.

 

 

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_17.html