BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Charnock & Ors v Rowan & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 2 (20 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/2.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 2 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM
HHJ Gore QC
7LV18468 / 8LV12546
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MANN
and
SIR STEPHEN SEDLEY
____________________
Charnock & Ors |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Rowan & Ors |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Frank Burton QC and Mr John Gruffydd (instructed by E. Rex Makin) for the 1st – 8th Respondents
Mr Kevin Grice (instructed by Goodmans) for the 9th and 10th Respondents
Hearing dates : 19th December 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stephen Sedley:
"7. It is at this point material for me to note and observe that Mr Shah was instructed on behalf of the Second Defendants to examine and provide a report on all 10 Claimants. He advances no substantive reasons for disbelieving the account of any individual claimant and he make no assertion that any of them are to be disbelieved, confining himself instead in some but not all cases neutrally to draw attention to 'a slight discrepancy' here (page F14 paragraph 61 re the First Claimant) or 'another discrepancy' there (page F37 regarding the Second Claimant) and sometimes he drew no attention to discrepancies that did exist in materials available to him, from which one infers that he thought them to be trivial"
"To obviate such difficulties in future, and to ensure that factual issues in medical cases are economically and efficiently tried, the following procedure should be adopted. First, a party who seeks to contradict a factually pleaded case on the basis of medical records or reports should indicate that intention in advance, either by amendment of his pleadings or by informal notice. Then, the opposite party must indicate the extent to which they take objection to the accuracy of the records. When the area of dispute is identified, a decision will have to be taken as to whether the records need to be formally proved …."
"13. In my judgment that is an unsatisfactory state of affairs and approach. The consistent thread of authority is to the effect that claimants whose honesty and integrity are being challenged in this way are entitled to be put on notice of both that fact, and the basis for it. It is now pure speculation whether Dr. Shiffman or Mr Nee would have said that what they record is their own summary of understanding of what the claimants told them rather than a verbatim account, or whether Mr. Shah would have accepted that all he dictated to each claimant in their presence was his findings on clinical examination (in which section that observation is always recorded) as opposed to the many paragraphs (often approaching 35 or so) extending to several pages (4 or 5) that Mr Higgins suggests were dictated in their presence. No-one has explored with any of the Claimants or witnesses how long it took Mr Shah to dictate to them 35 or so paragraphs in their presence as well as elicit a history and conduct a clinical examination, if indeed it was the case that that is what occurred.
14. Mr Higgins seeks to avoid the strictures of Denton Hall by distinguishing between cases where a party seeks to advance a record as evidence of the truth of its contents and cases such as these where a party 'merely' (his word) relies on the inconsistencies as undermining the credibility or veracity of the witness. I do not agree for several reasons. First, that ignores that what is here alleged is deliberate dishonestly of account and that is a very serious allegation of which witnesses are entitled to notice and particulars. Secondly, the relevant legislation, while acknowledging the different purposes for which previous inconsistent statements can be used, does not in fact lay down a different approach to the handling of such evidence dependant upon the purpose for which it is to be used (compare the generality of the provisions in section 2 and 3 dealing with admission, with the recognition of different purposes in section 6 (3) and (5) in each case of the Civil Evidence Act 1995). It is therefore a distinction of no value or utility. Thirdly, the inconsistent statements relied upon in Denton Hall were being used for both purposes and therefore the remarks about how that was to be done are as apposite for each of the purposes and not simply for one of them.
15. Accordingly when I come to weigh weight and veracity I will take into account that the matters relied upon by the Second Defendants have really only been put in cross-examination, not heralded in advance, and are based upon hearsay evidence that though admissible and admitted, has not been put in place with the proper formality demanded by the interests of justice as I have found them to be, which in my judgment significantly undermines the weight to be attached to these points."
"34. At the end of the day, I find for all of the Claimants for reasons that can be summarised as follows. Firstly, none of them struck me as essentially dishonest witnesses deliberately fabricating or exaggerating their accounts either of the accident or of its effects upon them. Secondly, while there were inconsistencies internally in different accounts they had given and between them also, none were so great as to cause me to regard their evidence with distrust or suspicion and indeed it would have been suspicious if there were no such inconsistencies. Thirdly, I accept that it is implausible that so many people went to the trouble and inconvenience of going to hospitals or doctors or clinics, sometimes more than once, if, as the Second Defendants suggest, there was nothing wrong with them. Fourthly, that is particularly true as regards the Ninth Claimant – it is implausible that she would dishonestly fabricate complaints voiced by her son and take him to hospital, thereby running the risk that he would say and be recorded to say something to the effect that no such accident had happened. Fifthly, for the reasons I have given, I am not satisfied that the Delta V issue is anything like as determinative as the Second Defendants wish it to be and I am fortified in that view by the agreed evidence of Mr Nee and Mr Shah. Sixthly, by accepting as I do, the essentially honesty of the claimants and their witnesses, I am satisfied that there was a sufficient jolt or shudder or shunt or jar, however it has variously been described, to have caused the symptoms of which complaint is made. Seventhly, I am fortified in that general view by the fact that Dr Shiffman on examination actually found signs as opposed to merely reporting symptoms of injury. Eighthly those conclusions seem to me to fit well with the acceptance by Mr Parkin that the impact was sufficient in his view to give rise to risk of contact injury, which was in fact suffered by the Tenth claimant."
"Mr Higgins submits in writing that his evidence should not be accepted because reference to dropping his paper was a late addition, his description of using his hands to steady himself was not consistent with his vigorous movement which itself was not consistent with 'resting' his hands on the bar in front, the discrepancy as to time to recovery was serious, the reference to pins and needles was a witness box attempt to finesse his difficulties, he did not mention back pain to Mr Nee, and he did not mention taking pain killers on the night to Mr Shah. However a close exanimation of exactly what he has said seems to me to demonstrate a consistent account save that back is not mentioned until he sees Dr Shiffman and the discrepancy as to time to recovery is described by Mr shah and Mr Nee as 'slight'. He mentioned pins and needles the next day at the hospital. He only mentioned the paper falling when asked by Mr Higgins what happened to it, as question I would not have expected to be regarded as material either by a solicitor taking a statement or a doctor eliciting a history, which is why that detail had not emerged before. He and all the Claimants protested at the difficult of trying to be exact about all of these detail now 3 years after the events. The contemporaneous or near contemporaneous accounts to the clinic and to Dr Shiffman impress me. There is in my judgment therefore nothing within the accounts given by the First Claimant to suggest that he is dishonestly exaggerating either his description of the accident or its effects upon him and no doctors have suggested otherwise. "
"What the doctor writes down as having been told him by the patient, as opposed to the opinion that he expresses on the basis of those statements, is not at that stage evidence of the making of the statement that he records."
All documents contained in bundles which have been agreed for use at a hearing shall be admissible at that hearing as evidence of their contents, unless –
(a) the court orders otherwise; or
(b) a party gives written notice of objection to the admissibility of particular documents.
Mr Justice Mann:
Lord Justice Gross: