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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Crofter Properties Ltd. v. Genport Ltd. [2000] IEHC 175 (2nd May, 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2000/175.html Cite as: [2000] IEHC 175 |
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1. I
am being asked to make discovery in respect of three classes of third party
discovery against eircom [Judge then read out the three classes sought from the
Notice of Motion].
2. The
Defendant already has the records from January 1993 to November 1994. I should
only order discovery where the documents are relevant to the matters in issue
in the pleadings. I do not think what happened between June 1992 and December
1992 is an issue in the proceedings. The counterclaim is quite specific. It
makes a claim for injurious falsehood etc. and particulars are given of various
phone calls between January 1993 and November 1994. It is quite specific as to
that. There is no claim in respect of any of these torts for the period between
June 1992 and December 1992.
3. The
defence pleads relief against forfeiture by the plaintiff and again the
pleading can be seen to be quite specific. The matters relied upon are either
the facts as found in the earlier High Court proceedings (which had not been
determined at the time the Defence was delivered) or the findings on foot of
the counterclaim in these proceedings. But the counterclaim has no relevance to
the period June 1992 to December 1992.
4. Therefore
on that ground alone the Defendant is not entitled to the discovery sought at
paragraph (a) of the notice of motion.
5. I
would also add that the Defendant has known for some time, and certainly for
something in the region of a year, of the alleged calls to the South East
Regional Crime Squad alleged during the period June 1992-December 1992 and no
attempt was made prior to the issue of this motion on the 10th April 2000 to
seek this discovery and this case was listed for some time for the 16th May
2000. The case is due to resume hearing in two weeks time.
6. This
is an application for a discovery order which is over half way through and the
evidence has been given two or three years ago by Ms. Devine that she did not
make the phone calls. The Defendant therefore knew that inferential evidence
would be necessary. The Defendant has known for some time that there were calls
in 1992 but
7. With
regard to the discovery sought at paragraphs (b) and (c) the question of delay
is even more relevant. The original discovery order was made in March 1996 and
the amended Defence and Counterclaim was delivered in March 1996, over four
years ago. Discovery of the matters sought at paragraphs (b) and (c) could have
been sought long ago at any time since then. Nothing has materially changed to
indicate why the Defendant didn’t seek this type of Discovery four years
ago, which would have alerted the Defendant to this discovery except possibly
the desire to contradict the Defendant’s own witness Caroline Devine and
that evidence has been known for some three years.
9. In
any event, I am not convinced it will make much difference to the case but it
would cause difficulty for the Plaintiff Evidence has already been given on
behalf of the Defendant of calls from June 1992 onwards and that Mr. Tunney and
Ms. Devine were the persons in charge of the telephones. The Plaintiff would
have to consider the records of the other phone calls made on around sixty days
which could be hundreds or thousands of calls and I think this could create
serious problems for the Plaintiff with the hearing due to resume in two weeks.