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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 >> Hinson v Hare Realizations Ltd (2) [2020] EWHC 2386 (QB) (07 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/2386.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2386 (QB) |
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High Court Appeal Centre Birmingham
On appeal from the Walsall County Court
Order of Miss Recorder McNeill dated 27 February 2020
County Court case number: D40YM394
Appeal ref: BM00051A
Priory Courts, 33 Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
JAMES HINSON |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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HARE REALIZATIONS LIMITED (2) |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
for the Claimant/Appellant
Mrs Vlora Smedley (instructed by DWF Law LLP) for the Defendant/Respondent
Hearing dates: 13 July 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: this judgment was handed down by the Judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be at 10.30am on 7 September 2020.
MR JUSTICE MARTIN SPENCER :
Introduction
The background facts
i) The trial listed for 27 February 2020 be vacated and be relisted for a two-day trial;
ii) The case be reallocated to the multi-track (having previously been on the fast-track);
iii) The Claimant be given permission to rely upon Mr Watson's report, with Ms Martin to continue as the Defendant's expert.
The draft order attached to the application also provided for further directions to be given. I would comment that it was somewhat presumptuous of the Claimant's solicitors to assume that, if the Claimant was given permission to rely upon the report of Mr Watson, that the Defendants should be forced to rely upon the report of Ms Martin as the Defendants' expert, she having been previously instructed on a joint basis: the Defendants might have sought permission to rely on their own, different expert.
"The above timeline illustrates three key points:
i) The Claimant has purposefully withheld their intentions from the Defendant,
ii) The Claimant has taken unfair advantage of court resources and procedure
iii) The Claimant has exhibited disregard for the integrity of the single joint expert."
The decision of Miss Recorder McNeill QC
"30. In exercising my discretion as to whether to grant the claimant's application to adjourn the trial, I must give effect to the overriding objective of dealing with cases justly, and at proportionate cost, taking into account all the circumstances and applying the guidance in Bulic.
31. I accept that the evidence of the single joint experts in this case, Mrs Martin, were central to the case and of a technical nature. It was necessary or appropriate for me to determine on this application the merits of her expert opinion, when compared with that of Mr Watson.
32. There was some force in the claimant's submission that Ms Martin's evidence was not supported by the sort of detailed calculations that are often seen in this type of report and which are shown in Mr Watson's report. I accepted that the claimant had lost confidence in Mrs Martin and would be aggrieved if this case was permitted to proceed because the claimant would then lose the benefit of a claim which might have reasonable prospects of success. The low value of the claim was relevant in exercising my discretion but was not conclusive.
33. I accepted that the claimant had lost confidence in Mrs Martin for a genuine reason and, on balance, that the reason was a good reason. This case was, however, very far from the sort of case where the single joint experts' opinion is obviously lacking in cogency or displays a clear lack of analysis or even partiality. On the face of the two reports, it is perfectly possible that the judge at trial would prefer the evidence of Mrs Martin, I cannot say.
34. Looking at this application in the light of the overriding objective, I take into account that this case was ready to proceed in November 2019 and was postponed only because of a lack of judicial availability. I further take into account that in December 2019 the case was postponed because the claimant was not available. It is reasonable to assume that on both those dates the parties were ready to proceed. The application to vacate was being made only on the third occasion of listing.
35. Mrs Martin is an expert with an appropriate expertise from a well-known firm of experts whose name was put forward by the claimant. There is no explanation as to why a complete list of part 35 questions could not have been asked of Mrs Martin at a much earlier stage so that answers could have been provided in time not to jeopardise this trial date. I note that the first replies were received on 3 October 2019.
36. This is a relatively low value case in which very considerable cost has already been incurred, not least because of earlier postponements, and where the costs of the trial would be very substantially increased if the case proceeded with two experts as a two day multi-track case.
37. I do not read Bulic as requiring the grant of an application to adjourn, however late it is made, solely because a single joint experts' report is essential to the case, of a technical nature and a party has lost confidence in the expert for good reason. There was no application to adjourn the trial in Bulic. In assessing the balance of grievance, the claimant will be aggrieved at not being able to rely on evidence which might enable him to win his case; but the defendant will also have a strong sense of grievance if this low value case is adjourned for the third time, on the date of trial, with the inevitability of the defendant incurring further very considerable costs, where the single joint expert was proposed by the claimant and where her evidence may well be preferred to that of Mr Watson if the case went to trial.
38. Taking into account all the above matters, in my discretion I refuse the application to vacate and, it follows, the claimant's application to rely on Mr Watson's evidence."
The Claimant's Arguments on Appeal
"6. On 20 December 2019 and during discussions with a noise expert in a separate claim, it was brought to the Claimant's solicitors' attention that although the PERA Survey of Noise in Engineering Workshops (1996) set out typical machine shops noise levels in the range of 77–87 dB(a) that:
1) Due to the date of its publication, it did not have regard for short periods of noise exposure from the use of short periods of high intensity noise such as compressed air lines to blow away swarf for example;
2) The noise levels in the PERA report would be, for example 2-3 dB(a) higher in a typical machine shop, if noise exposure from the use of short periods of high intensity noise such as compressed air lines to blow away swarf was included;
3) This would mean the typical machine shop's noise levels were in the range 80-90 dB(a); and
4) A total of 75 machine operators using different machines and compressed air lines throughout the working day was not the 'typical' machine shop referred to in the PERA Survey of Noise in Engineering Workshops (1996) in any event.
7) This is, of course, very technical information and was not known by the Claimant's solicitors at the time part 35 questions were raised of the SJE. Indeed this was not known by the Claimant's solicitors prior to the trials on 5 November 2019 and 9 December 2019, both vacated."
What this showed was that, serendipitously, the Claimant's solicitors learned as a result of seeing the expert in a different case that there were aspects of Ms Martin's report which were capable of challenge on a different basis and that the Claimant's solicitors acted promptly in seeking to put further part 35 questions to Ms Martin based on this new information. Having received those part 35 responses, the solicitors were then quick to instruct Mr Watson and then made their application to adjourn promptly once Mr Watson's report was available. Thus, although it was unfortunate that the application had been made only three days before the trial, Mr Ahmed submitted that there could be no reasonable criticism of Claimant's solicitors and they could not be "blamed" for delay. He did accept, though, that neither the court, nor the Defendant, had been informed of the Claimant's intention to instruct Mr Watson.
The submissions of the Respondent on Appeal
Discussion
"… where a party sensibly agrees to a joint report and the report is obtained as a result of joint instructions in the manner 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."
In my view, the words "subject to the discretion of the court" are important. As Eady J said in Bulic's case, the Court of Appeal did not intend to apply any straitjackets to the court. Eady J said:
"15. … In referring simply to requiring a 'good reason' [Lord Woolf] was clearly recognising the need for flexibility. What is a 'good reason' in one case may prove quite inadequate in another. None of these judicial observations, made in the context of applying broad principles to very specific factual circumstances, should detract from the breadth of the court's discretion from the general terms in which the guidance was given in the earlier cases."
"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."
In Bulic's case, Eady J emphasised the importance of the overriding objective and Judge MacDuff's reference to the "overall justice to the parties". He pointed out that what represents justice between the parties will be very fact sensitive so that it may be distracting to focus too analytically on the reasoning in other cases, however authoritative where the facts were not truly comparable.