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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Gregory & Anor v Moore & Ors [2019] EWHC 2430 (Ch) (23 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2430.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2430 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) Phillip David Gregory (2) William John Wilkins |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Julianna Moore (Formerly known as Ganna Ziuzina) (2) Irene Hayman Pring (on her own account and as executor of the estate of Basil John Pring) (3) Shaughan Pring (as executor of the estate of Basil John Pring) |
Defendants |
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Leslie Blohm QC (instructed by Stephens Scown LLP) for the Second and Third Defendants
(The Claimants did not appear at the hearing)
Hearing dates: 4 September 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
(1) The trial of the claim under section 1(2) of the Forfeiture Act 1982 is in a window commencing on 11 November 2019 with a time estimate of 10 days. Disclosure and exchange of witness statements have taken place in accordance with the order made on 3 August 2018.
(2) That order made provision for expert evidence in the following way:
"(18) The parties having identified the potential need for expert evidence from a road traffic accident analyst and cell phone location analyst, the issue as to whether expert evidence is required will be permitted shall be adjourned. Any party seeking such expert evidence shall make application to the court within 28 days of the conclusion of the second inquest alternatively no later than 4PM on 29 March 2019, whichever is the earlier."
(3) When my judgment was handed down on 6 September 2018, the second inquest[1] into Barry Pring's death was due to take place in early 2019. It will not now take place until after the trial of this claim. The Family will not therefore be able to benefit from any evidence that the Coroner is able to obtain from the authorities in Ukraine. It follows that the date by which an application for permission to rely on expert evidence should have been made was 29 March 2019. No application was made by that deadline.
"The First Defendant stated in interview with the Ukrainian police that after returning to the apartment at about 2am on 17 February 2008 she remained there for the remainder of the morning. The statement was untrue and false. Between approximately 3am and 5am the First Defendant had returned to the village of Shpitki which is approximately 3 to 4 kilometres from Milla. The First Defendant had also been in the vicinity of Shpitki on 10 and 13 February 2008. It is to be inferred that the First Defendant travelled and retuned to Shpitki in the aftermath of the incident in order to meet the driver of the Volkswagen Jetta."
"- After receiving and studying the printing information about the incoming and outgoing calls from the number of a phone, which was used by Ganna Ziuzina was found that a few days before the event, Ganna visited the Shpitki village … including the night of February 14, 2008. The above village was located about 5 to 7 kilometers from the crime scene in Zhitomir city direction. Immediately after the crime, Ganna announced that she felt bad and about 2.00 of February 17, 2008 went home, but during the time period from 3.00 to 5.00 of February 17, 2008 she was visiting Shpitki Village for unknown reasons.". [sic]
(1) The applicable provisions of the Ukranian Criminal Procedure Code and the normal approach to a criminal investigation in Ukraine including the type of documents that record steps in the investigation in Ukraine.
(2) The approach in Ukraine to producing evidence of location based upon the location of a mobile telephone and who normally analyses the data.
(3) What data is needed for the purposes of identifying the location of a mobile phone user, the degree of expertise that is required and the likely accuracy of the information derived from the analysis.
(1) paragraph 7.21 of the witness statement of Oleg Myhajlovych Salenko ("Mr Salenko") should be struck out and the Family be precluded from adducing the maps to which he refers; and
(2) the Family should be precluded from producing at the trial a document described as "Minutes of Document Review Dated 22 August 2012" which, along with other documents, is the subject of a hearsay notice served by the Family on 12 April 2019.
Access to the file of the Ukranian prosecuting authorities
Mr Salenko's witness statement
"7.21 Anna Ziuzina was near the scene before and after Barry Pring's death.
I found out this information from the police investigator, Roman Dovzhenko, who was investigating the circumstances of Barry Pring and who I often met in April – May 2008. During this time, I produced various maps and annotated these to mark the whereabouts of [Ms Moore] after Barry was killed. The maps were produced based on information that I got fro [sic] the police investigator Roman Dovzhenko, who was investigating the circumstances of Barry Pring at that time, with whom I used to meet often in April – May 2008."
Minutes of Document Review ("the Protocol")
"Analyzing [sic] the indicated printouts for the period from 06.01.2008 to 24.02.2008 it can be concluded that [Ms Moore] most often was at [an address in Kiev]."
This is followed by an analysis of use of the phone in the early hours of 17 February 2008 which is consistent with the observation made in the Letter of Request about Ms Moore's presence in the village of Shpitki shortly after Barry Pring's death. There is nothing to suggest that particular expertise was required to make the compilation and there is no assessment on the face of the protocol of the relative strengths of a signal from the respective base units. The analysis appears to have involved no more than extracting data from the records provided by the mobile phone company and compiling them in a chronological form.
The Law
"(i) If opinion evidence is tendered and the evidence is of an expert qualified to give expert evidence within section 1(1)[4] of the Civil Evidence Act 1972, then it is prima facie admissible, even if tendered in hearsay form, by a combination of section 1(1) of the 1972 Act and section 1(1) of the 1995 Act.
(ii) That admissibility is not affected by the provisions of CPR Part 35 unless the report is the report of an expert within the meaning of CPR35.2(1). If the report is outside the purview of 35.2(1), then CPR Part 35 has no bearing on the question of its admissibility.
(iii) An example of opinion evidence which falls outside 35.2(1) is the report of the AAIB in Rogers v Hoyle itself. In that case, the AAIB was not instructed by the parties and the report was not commissioned for the purposes of the proceedings.
(iv) Therefore, evidence by an expert who was not instructed by one of the parties to the proceedings in which it is sought to be adduced, or was not instructed for the purpose of those proceedings, does not fall within CPR Part 35, and permission to adduce it is not required."
"Expert evidence is admissible under section 3 of the Civil Evidence Act 1972 in any case where the court accepts that there exists a recognised expertise governed by recognised standards and rules of conduct capable of influencing the court's decision on any of the issues which it has to decide and the witness to be called satisfies the court that he has a sufficient familiarity with and knowledge of the expertise in question to render his opinion potentially of value in resolving any of those issues."[5]
"Call siting evidence can be powerful evidence. But it is not capable of locating a phone with pinpoint accuracy and it has other limitations."
"31. It is therefore common place for the prosecution to adduce expert evidence as to whether, and if so to what extent, the fact that a mobile phone call was routed through a particular cell site is consistent with the phone and therefore its user being at a particular location at the time of the call. Such expert evidence often explains that mobile masts may be angled in one direction but not another and that range and extent of coverage varies from cell site to cell site and be affected by topographical features such as hills or tall buildings. Expert evidence often also explains that a mobile phone making a call in a particular location may be served by more than one cell site and the question may therefore arise as to which of the relevant sites provided the strongest signal and most likely to have transmitted a call from that location. Where expert evidence is given on this topic, it generally involves the witness having conducted a survey at the relevant location, using specialist equipment capable of showing the comparative signal strengths of the cell sites concerned."
Paragraph 7.21 of Mr Salenko's witness statement
The Protocol
Conclusions
Note 1 The verdict of unlawful killing at the first inquest was quashed. [Back] Note 2 As they are described in the Family’s disclosure. [Back] Note 4 The reference to section 1(1) of the 1972 Act must have been intended to refer to section 3(1) of that Act because section 1(1) is no longer in force. [Back] Note 5 This formulation echoes the classic test of admissibility provided by the South Australian Supreme Court in R v Bonython (1984) 38 S.A.S.R. 45 at [45] per King CJ. [Back]