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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mahboob v West Midlands Constabulary [2010] EWCA Civ 1509 (22 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/1509.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 1509 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WORSTER
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
and
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
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Mahboob |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Chief Constable of West Midlands Constabulary |
Respondent |
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Mr Martin Butterworth (instructed by West Midlands Police Legal Services) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay:
"What the fuck are you going to do about it? You're a racist."
"Has [the appellant] satisfied you that it is more likely than not that he was assaulted by PC Bissell by a) intentionally being kneed in the groin, b) being punched in the face by PC Bissell whilst seated in the second vehicle, c) by being intentionally choked whilst in the rear of the second vehicle?"
The answer to all those questions was "No". The third question was in this form:
"Has the defendant satisfied you that it is more likely than not that [the appellant] deliberately head-butted PC Bissell?"
The answer to that was "Yes". The unequivocal answers to those questions were what led to the dismissal of the action. The allegation of negligence was dismissed for other reasons.
Similar Fact Evidence
"Upon the Defendant stating through its Counsel that there are no substantiated or unsubstantiated disciplinary, criminal, and/or civil allegations against PC Bissell except regarding these proceedings, the Claimant's application for disclosure/inspection of similar fact evidence be dismissed."
"…the test of admissibility of similar fact evidence in a civil action was irrelevance only, namely that the material to be adduced was potentially prohibitive of an issue in the action; that where that test was met the judge with management of the litigation would then consider whether to admit the evidence, having regard to the overriding objective of achieving a correct result through the trial process that was fair to all parties, and would asses the potential significance of the evidence in the context of the case as a whole, weighing its potential prohibitive value against its capacity both to cause unfair prejudice and to increase disproportionately the length and complexity of the trial; that the judge would not admit the evidence unless satisfied that its probative cogency justified any risk of prejudice and, where it concerned collateral matters, that it would not distract attention from the central issues…"
"…I am bound to say when I first read Mr Shukat Ali's witness statement I could see very little of probative value. It is a single instance. The circumstances are quite different. It all takes place in an interview room at a police station, with a solicitor present and a tape running for part of it. The assaults are different in nature...
I am bound to say that I still find it hard to see how hearing evidence from Mr Shukat Ali is going to help the jury in the sense that it is going to give evidence that they might, if they believed it, consider what is alleged to have happened on 29 December 2004 more probable. I still find it hard to see how it is logically probative..."
"So far as those factors are concerned, it does seem to me that to introduce the evidence of Mr Shukat Ali is likely to distract the attention of the jury from the issues that lie at the heart of this case, which are did Mr Mahboob do anything to justify his arrest; was he assaulted by PC Bissell in the ways that have been alleged, and was he maliciously prosecuted?...
If Shukat Ali's evidence were admitted and cross-examined, no doubt evidence in rebuttal would be given by PC Bissell and perhaps by other witnesses, if they were available. We would embark on a second trial, something that happened three or four years ago, in different circumstances, involving a different person. It seems to me certain that that will distract the attention of the jury from the core issues in the case, and for that reason alone I would be against admitting this evidence. But, that is not the only matter I want to take into account.
Secondly, I have to gauge whether the potential probative value of the evidence outweighs its potential for causing unfair prejudice, but I think that has to be considered in the context of [...] delay and how is the defendant to respond to this."
A little later he said:
"…the problem would always be, in 2009, that there would be a substantial burden upon, in this case the Chief Constable, and getting evidence together to rebut Shukat Ali's allegation. We do not know whether the other witnesses and the other material is available. Of course, there has been little time to investigate that, but it may be that some of it is lost. Inevitably, recollections will have faded, and there is some force, I think, in what is said on behalf of the police about a need, even now, to make those enquiries and to see if that evidence is or is not available.
There will be a lengthening of the trial, and potentially quite a significant one, it seems to me, possibly of days. There may in the circumstances of this case, although I do not regard it as a decisive feature given in my overall view, there may have to be time taken to make those enquiries. I simply do not know what the position there, but when I come to weigh the potential probative value of this evidence against the potential prejudice it is not a case where I can begin to say that the probative value, or the potential probative value, outweighs the prejudice by a considerable margin. I am bound to say I think the balance falls the other way.
But, my essential concern on the second stage is that with a trial by jury, whether there are enough relevant core issues to consider, is likely to be distorted by the introduction of this sort of matter, and the attention of the jury is in my judgment certain to be distracted from the issues that they should focus on. This matter is essentially a collateral one..."
The Interview Transcript
"The test is is the evidence admissible, and I am bound to say I cannot at the moment see how the entire interview -- for that is what the application relates to -- becomes admissible, or even other parts of it, simply because there have been challenges to discreet parts of it put properly and dealt with by the claimant in circumstances where the interview document was not put in."
Re-examination then proceeded without any reference to the interview.
"A party who has called or intends to call a person as a witness in civil proceedings may not in those proceedings adduce evidence of a previous statement made by that person, except --
(a) with the leave of the court, or
(b) for the purpose of rebutting a suggestion that his evidence has been fabricated... "
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Lord Justice Jackson:
Order: Appeal dismissed