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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Moore-Bick v Mills [2020] EWHC 618 (Admin) (27 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/618.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 618 (Admin), [2020] ACD 55 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SIR MARTIN MOORE-BICK |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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MR GARETH MILLS |
Respondent |
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THE RESPONDENT did not appear and was not represented.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MOSTYN:
Introduction
"The chairman may by notice require a person, within such period as appears to the inquiry panel to be reasonable—(a) to provide evidence to the inquiry panel in the form of a written statement;(b) to provide any documents in his custody or under his control that relate to a matter in question at the inquiry;(c) to produce any other thing in his custody or under his control for inspection, examination or testing by or on behalf of the inquiry panel."
"A claim by a person that—(a) he is unable to comply with a notice under this section, or(b) it is not reasonable in all the circumstances to require him to comply with such a notice,is to be determined by the chairman of the inquiry, who may revoke or vary the notice on that ground."
"(1) Where a person—(a) fails to comply with, or acts in breach of, a notice under section 19 or 21 or an order made by an inquiry, or(b) threatens to do so, the chairman of the inquiry, or after the end of the inquiry the Minister, may certify the matter to the appropriate court.(2) The court, after hearing any evidence or representations on a matter certified to it under subsection (1) may make such order by way of enforcement or otherwise as it could make if the matter had arisen in proceedings before the court."
"On the other hand, although the court must only act after hearing any evidence or representations on the matter certified by the Chairman, the court will bear in mind that where tribunals have been given the statutory task to perform and exercise their functions with a high degree of expertise so as to provide coherent and balanced judgment on the evidence and arguments heard by them, that does make those tribunals better placed to make a judgment than the court on the need for particular information to be brought before it. In this case the chairman has taken all the detailed steps and analysis outlined in Section 21 of the 2005 Order. Whilst it may well be that recognition of this does not go as far as the concept of `curial deference' to decisions of specialist administrative bodies in the context of judicial review proceedings adumbrated by the Supreme Court in Ireland in Henry Denny and Sons (Ireland) Ltd v Minister for Social Welfare (1998) 1 IR 34 and Sekou Camara (Applicant) v Minister for Justice Equality and Law Reform and Others Irish Times Reports 25 September 2000, nonetheless I consider Mr Larkin was entitled to invoke in aid of his case the widely cited words of Lord Woolf MR in R v Lord Saville of Newdigate ex parte A (2000) 1 WLR 1855 at 1865H paragraph 31 when he said of the Saville Inquiry:'It is accepted on all sides that the Tribunal is subject to the supervisory role of the courts. The courts have to perform that role even though they are naturally loathe to do anything which could in any way interfere with or complicate the extraordinarily difficult task of the Tribunal. In exercising their role the courts have to bear in mind at all times that the members of the Tribunal have a much greater understanding of their task than the courts…'Thus the court in coming to a decision does not write on a blank page. It is this factor which distinguishes this hearing from a de novo appeal. The decision of the Chairman of the Inquiry, having followed the steps set out in Section 21 of the 2005 Act, must carry weight and I must be wary of interfering with or complicating the task of Lord MacLean."
I agree entirely with that statement.
• 1) advising on the suitability of products such as Kooltherm K15.• 2) leading the technological and process developments of products by maintaining and expanding certifications.
• 3) reviewing and recommending improvement actions relating to the performance, installation and testing of products.
• 4) assessing product performance and identifying installation document problems.
• 5) offering technical expertise in design and development of product testing.
"After making contact with Gowlin [Kingspan's solicitors], they have still not made any of the information from my time working for Kingspan Insulation Ltd available, therefore due to the timescales, I have had to base the statement below on the limited information I can remember of [ sic , semble off] hand, without reference to any written records. I would emphasise that does require trying to remember specifics of conversations or e-mails which range from a minimum of 6 years ago and go up to nearly 20 years ago. I have numbered the items below to correspond to the question numbers…"
And then he gave answers, without any documents, to questions 1-22. Questions 23-89 were not addressed at all. He concluded his email by saying:
"I will send additional answers for the other queries during my next session at the library tomorrow."