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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Curtiss & Ors v Zurich Insurance Plc [2022] EWHC 1749 (TCC) (01 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2022/1749.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1749 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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ANGELA DENISE CURTISS and others | Claimants | |
-and- | ||
(1) ZURICH INSURANCE PLC | ||
(2) EAST WEST INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED | Defendants |
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Ms Fiona Sinclair QC and Mr Tom Asquith (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the First Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE KEYSER QC:
"2.1 The purpose of a trial witness statement is to set out in writing the evidence in chief that a witness of fact would give if they were allowed to give oral evidence at trial without having provided the statement."
"3.1 A trial witness statement must contain only – (1) evidence as to matters of fact that need to be proved at trial by the evidence of witnesses in relation to one or more of the issues of fact to be decided at trial, and (2) the evidence as to such matters that the witness would be asked by the relevant party to give, and the witness would be allowed to give, in evidence in chief if they were called to give oral evidence at trial and rule 32.5(2) did not apply.
3.2 A trial witness statement must set out only matters of fact of which the witness has personal knowledge that are relevant to the case, and must identify by list what documents, if any, the witness has referred to or been referred to for the purpose of providing the evidence set out in their trial witness statement. The requirement to identify documents the witness has referred to or been referred to does not affect any privilege that may exist in relation to any of those documents.
3.3 A trial witness statement must comply with paragraphs 18.1 and 18.2 of Practice Direction 32 ….
(Paragraph 18.1 of Practice Direction 32 requires a trial witness statement to be in the witness's own words, if practicable, and to be drafted in the witness's own language and in the first person; paragraphs 18.1(1) to (5) and 18.2 set out further requirements; …)
3.4 Trial witness statements should be prepared in accordance with – (1) the Statement of Best Practice contained in the Appendix to this Practice Direction, and (2) any relevant court guide, for which purpose, in the event of any inconsistency, the Statement of Best Practice takes precedence over any court guide."
"5.1 The court retains its full powers of case management and the full range of sanctions available to it and nothing in paragraph 5.2 or paragraph 5.3 below confines either.
5.2 If a party fails to comply with any part of this Practice Direction, the court may, upon application by any other party or of its own motion, do one or more of the following – (1) refuse to give or withdraw permission to rely on, or strike out, part or all of a trial witness statement, (2) order that a trial witness statement be re-drafted in accordance with this Practice Direction or as may be directed by the court, (3) make an adverse costs order against the non-complying party, (4) order a witness to give some or all of their evidence in chief orally."
For brevity's sake I shall not recite relevant passages in the Statement of Best Practice, though I have them in mind.
The purpose of the new Practice Direction is not to change the law as to the admissibility of evidence at trial: per Sir Michael Burton GBE, sitting as a Judge of the High Court in Mad Atelier International BV v Manes [2021] EWHC 1899 (Comm), [2021] 1 WLR 5294 (at [9]); rather it is to eradicate the improper use of witness statements as vehicles for narrative, commentary and argument."
In the Lifestyle Equities case, at [11], Mellor J picked out two particular matters appearing from the Mansion Place case and from the judgment of HHJ Stephen Davies in Blue Manchester Ltd v Bug-Alu Technic GmbH [2021] EWHC 3095 (TCC) to the effect (i) that parties who use the Practice Direction as a means of indulging in unnecessary trench warfare are liable to be criticised and penalised in costs and (ii) "that whilst the court will be astute to strike out offending parts of a trial witness statement it will not do so where that is not reasonably necessary." To similar effect, in the Anan Kasei case Bacon J referred to the requirements of the Practice Direction and continued at [14]:
"Breach of these requirements may lead the court (among other sanctions) to strike out part or all of a witness statement, or order that a witness statement be redrafted. In other cases, however, the appropriate course will be for the court to place less (or no) weight on witness evidence or parts of that evidence which fails to comply with the requirements of the Practice Direction."
Finally, I mention three passages in the judgments that say something about the approach a party might take if it considers that the opponent has failed to comply with the Practice Direction. First, in the Mansion Place case, O'Farrell J said:
[49] Where a party is concerned that another party has not complied with the Practice Direction in any particular respect, the sensible course of action is to raise that concern with the other side and attempt to reach agreement on the issue. Where that is not possible, the parties should seek the assistance of the court, by application for a determination on the documents or at a hearing. However, this should be done at a time and in a manner that does not cause disruption to trial preparation or unnecessary costs. The court does not wish to encourage the parties to engage in satellite litigation that is disproportionate to the size and complexity of the dispute. Often, the judge will be best placed to determine specific issues of admissibility of evidence at the trial when the full bundles and skeletons are before the court.
[50] In this case, these contested applications have taken a full day's hearing in court. The trial next week has a duration of three days. No criticism is made of the parties in this case in bringing this matter before the court, as it has highlighted the new Practice Direction and enabled the court to provide some guidance on the re-stated approach to witness statements. However, in future cases, serious consideration should be given to finding a more efficient and cost-effective way forward."
Second, in the Greencastle case Fancourt J said at [122]:
"It is not, in my judgment, convenient or appropriate to leave the dispute to sort itself out at trial. The whole purpose of Practice Direction 57AC is to avoid a situation where the witness statements are full of comment, opinion, argument and matters asserted that are not within the knowledge of the witness, which have to be disentangled at trial by protracted cross-examination. The purpose is to limit factual evidence to admissible and relevant evidence of facts within the witness's own knowledge (including correctly identified hearsay evidence) that a witness can properly give in relation to disputed issues of fact."
Third, In the Lifestyle Equities case Mellor J said at [98]:
"[I]n my view, before an application is brought seeking to strike out passages in a witness statement based on PD57AC, careful consideration should be given as to proportionality and whether such an application is really necessary. Indeed, in my view, an application is warranted only where there is a substantial breach of PD57AC (as, for example, in Greencastle). If there really is a substantial breach of PD57AC, it should be readily apparent and capable of being dealt with on the papers. That might provide a mechanism for dealing with objections in an efficient and cost-effective manner."
"The practice direction was not intended to encourage a party to perform a line by line analysis of a witness statement with a metaphorical scalpel in hand ready to object to or excise a sentence in a witness statement that might stray beyond the bounds of the practice direction, that would be inconsistent with the overriding objective for it would generate satellite litigation and cause the parties to incur unnecessary cost in protractive pre-trial skirmishing. That is particularly so in a case such as this where there is an inequality in the financial resources of the parties."
Statements of the Licensed Conveyancers
Statements of the Lenders
Statement of the Developer's Solicitor
- Paragraph 16 might perhaps be redundant, but Mr Grant submitted that it was "real world" background material. I agree and shall not strike it out.
- Paragraph 17: from the words "I have been shown a copy" (line 5) until the end of the paragraph shall be deleted. It is not relevant evidence.
- Paragraphs 18 to 23 inclusive shall be struck out. Much of it is no more than anodyne commentary, but it is precisely the sort of thing that we can do without. The later paragraphs include a deal of opinion as to the obligations imposed on Zurich; I do not need the witness to address those matters and it is not helpful that he should do so.
- Paragraph 27 (page 291): from the words "In my view this represented to the purchaser" until the end of the paragraph shall be deleted, because it is an immaterial and unhelpful comment.
- Paragraph 28, with some slight misgiving, I will allow to remain. I am not convinced that it is strictly compliant with the Practice Direction. But it shows the way that the developer's solicitor, who had to serve the notices to complete, approached the contract.
- Paragraph 33 (top of page 293) oversteps the mark. From the words "Mr Scott has shown me an article" to the end of the paragraph shall be deleted, as it is neither relevant nor useful.
- Paragraph 34: the opening two sentences are unobjectionable. However, from the words "Basically without this the conveyancer advising a purchaser would be potentially negligent" until the end of the paragraph the text is immaterial, irrelevant, inappropriate and speculative and I shall strike it out.
- Paragraph 35: the first half of the paragraph, until but not including the sentence commencing "My main concern", constitutes unhelpful comment and will be struck out.
- Paragraph 36 will be struck out as being irrelevant, save for the final sentence, which may also be irrelevant but at least has the merit of being factual and can be allowed to remain.
- Paragraphs 37 to 41: This entire passage constitutes commentary, comment and argument and ought not to be included. As no objection has been taken to paragraph 38, I shall permit that paragraph to remain. Otherwise, all of these paragraphs will be struck out.
"Stock phrases" in multiple statements
Statement of Mr Dummer