Day 097 - 06 Mar 95 - Page 05


     
     1        with your Lordship's, of course they are not.  My clients
     2        naturally want to see an end to this case as soon as is
     3        reasonably possible.  I have a duty to my clients to
     4        achieve that as nearly as I possibly can.
     5
     6        Obviously -- I do not have to say this to your Lordship but
     7        it maybe the Defendants ought to know it -- it is unique,
     8        in my experience, that an application of this kind should
     9        be made with information supplied in full to the Judge
    10        which is not supplied to the opposite party.  That is not
    11        an argument that I would like to make in these particular
    12        circumstances.
    13
    14        On the one hand, I have the difficulty that litigation is a
    15        known cause of stress in almost every case, particularly
    16        where one or other or both of the parties is a human being
    17        rather than a corporation.  It is a very well-known
    18        phenomenon.  On the other hand, I would, undoubtedly, have
    19        to agree with your Lordship that there have been times when
    20        one has noticed that Ms. Steel's composure, if I can put it
    21        like that, has not been what one would wish to see.
    22
    23        I say that for this reason.  McDonald's have no wish to win
    24        this case by any but proper and fair means.  If they won it
    25        in a position where one of the litigants was able to say
    26        that they have not been able to present a proper defence
    27        because they have been unwell, that would not be
    28        satisfactory to McDonald's either.
    29
    30        So, my Lord -- I really have to say that I am in your
    31        Lordship's hands -- of course, I am not happy about having
    32        more than the quite substantial and very unusual breaks
    33        that we have already had in this case.  Equally, however,
    34        I have no wish to achieve what one might look at the end of
    35        the case as something of a hollow victory, nor would I wish
    36        Ms. Steel's, as it were -- I do not mean this in any
    37        offensive way at all -- health to pack up during the
    38        currency of the case.
    39
    40   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  No, it seems to me there are two further
    41        things I can say.  I do not think the words she has
    42        preferred not to read out actually add anything of
    43        substance to ---
    44
    45   MR. RAMPTON:  I accept that.
    46
    47   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  -- what she has actually read in chambers.
    48        Certainly, none of it affects the merits of the case one
    49        bit.  I do not think the words which she has preferred not
    50        to read out add anything or take anything away from any 
    51        application she might make or any resistance you might 
    52        offer for asking for more time for rest, as it were. 
    53        I think, quite apart from not wanting anyone to fall ill
    54        for any reason whatsoever (which is, I have to say, the
    55        most important factor of the lot), if one is hard-headed
    56        about it and looks at the conduct of the case, it would
    57        hardly help matters if someone fell ill.
    58
    59   MR. RAMPTON:  Quite, I agree.
    60

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