Day 030 - 03 Oct 94 - Page 05


     
     1        statements were.  Cross-examination on the two original
     2        statements, had the evidence-in-chief followed their
     3        format, would have been a simple matter for the reason
     4        that, for the most part, it seemed to us that the evidence
     5        of these two gentlemen accorded with the opinions of our
     6        own experts.
     7
     8        It now appears that there is considerable water between
     9        these two gentlemen and Dr. Arnott and Professor
    10        Wheelock.  For that reason, we submit it is right, in the
    11        interests of justice, that I should have the opportunity
    12        of submitting these materials to our experts, discussing
    13        them with our experts and basing my cross-examination on
    14        the outcome of those discussions.
    15
    16        That it should come to this pass is highly regrettable.
    17        I cannot believe that we have any blame in the matter.  If
    18        there is an inconvenience to the Defendants' witnesses
    19        because they have to come back to court to be
    20        cross-examined, the Defendants have only themselves to
    21        blame for that.
    22
    23   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  If I saw merit in what you said about you
    24        having time to take instructions and consider the matter
    25        before you cross-examine, would it be better to go ahead
    26        and hear the evidence-in-chief before you do that to avoid
    27        as much as possible the need to have more time to take
    28        further instructions of the evidence-in-chief?  I say that
    29        because if the Defendants were represented by solicitors
    30        and counsel, the proofs of their witnesses would have been
    31        prepared to some extent, great or small, depending on a
    32        number of factors at the instance of, for instance, the
    33        solicitors who would say:  "We would like you to deal with
    34        this; you need not bother to deal with that", and so on.
    35
    36        I anticipate, though I may be completely wrong, that to
    37        some considerable extent the Defendants' witnesses have
    38        been left to get on with producing their own statements.
    39        I may be wrong about that, but it seems a fair surmise at
    40        this moment.  When that happens, one knows from
    41        experience, when the witness gets into the witness box
    42        matters are canvassed in evidence-in-chief which are not
    43        canvassed in the disclosed statement because at that stage
    44        the litigant in person does that which the solicitor would
    45        have done in the first instance, saying:  "We would like
    46        you to deal with this".
    47
    48        If all that sounds fairly sensible, there might be some
    49        merit in hearing the witnesses in-chief and then -----
    50 
    51   MR. RAMPTON:  I was not proposing to ask your Lordship to defer 
    52        the witnesses in their entirety unless it be for their own 
    53        convenience.  It is much better -- I agree with your
    54        Lordship -- that they should give their evidence-in-chief,
    55        that I am allowed by your Lordship to defer my
    56        cross-examination until a time when the witnesses can come
    57        back to court for that purpose, as Dr. Arnott did, and
    58        leave it like that.  At least we shall not waste the whole
    59        of the next three days if they give their
    60        evidence-in-chief.

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