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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Fawcett & Ors v TUI UK Ltd [2023] EWHC 400 (KB) (15 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/400.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 400 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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(1) SUSAN LORNA FAWCETT Suing as administratrix of her late husband, ROY FAWCETT (Deceased) (2) AIMEE LOUISE ALLEN (3) JAMIE ELKALEH |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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TUI UK LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers
5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
[email protected]
MR A WIJEYARATNE (instructed by Kennedys Law) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
DEXTER DIAS KC :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Introduction
Ground 1 – lack of expertise
"A party seeking to adduce expert evidence on a particular issue must ensure that the proposed expert has the necessary experience in order to be regarded as an expert in that issue to advise the court…"
"… expertise is acquired by doing the thing in question, usually over many years."
"The bar to be surmounted in order to count as an expert is not particularly high, the degree of expertise going largely to the weight to be given to the evidence rather than its admissibility."
(emphasis provided)
"The academic and practical experience of the author in the Dominican Republic is based upon a combination of case-specific enquiries and his collective experience of Dominican Republic standards in practice in that country since 1999 and before that in the field of forensic engineering from 1981 onwards, invariably working in the native Spanish language. "
"Post-investigation assignments to develop improvements and troubleshoot ongoing problems involving locations, equipment and construction features as part of multi-disciplinary project teams working with lawyers, architects and other project professionals across the Dominican Republic;
"Long term technical research studies, programmes and projects including input of practical experience into standards development;
"Advising on and contributing to tourist establishment risk assessments as well as devising and implementing updated safety provisions based on local Dominican Republic standard, custom and practice;
"Observation of Tourism Ministry inspections and certification processes under Law 541 and legislation arising from that as well local custom and practice"
"1.7 All of the elements of local standard cited in this report are within the specialist working knowledge and experience of the author through his investigative work and post investigative assignments working singly or in combination with lawyers, architects, engineers,
hoteliers and/or excursion organisers within the country.
…
"1.10 In this specific investigation, the author is familiar with the practical application of the legislative and other standards (including customs and practice) as well as having first-hand experience of the conduct of snorkelling activity practice. In addition, on one
occasion in 2013 in the Dominican Republic, while investigating a snorkelling incident, the author was present during an unannounced inspection of the activity by the Tourism Ministry and witnessed at first hand the content of that inspection."
"My work on local standards in relation to underwater activities was then first applied outside Spain in Mexico in 1994, in Mauritius and the Maldives in 1998 and in the Dominican Republic in 2001."
"You must not consult others in order to educate yourself in areas in which you are not expert."
"Standards related to adventure tourism in the Dominican Republic are very limited, there is not much regulation in the area."
Ground 2: Mr Magner not identifying the relevant Dominican Republic standards
Ground 3: expressing opinions outside areas of expertise
"… as a question of weight rather than admissibility, particularly since there is no clear point at which an expert's specialised knowledge and experience ceases to inform and give some added value to the expert's opinions. It is a matter of degree … the proper course is for the whole document to be put before the court and for the judge at trial to take account of the report only to the extent that it reflects expertise and to disregard it in so far as it does not…"
"It is my experience that many experts report views on matters on which it is for the court to make its decision and not for an expert to express a view. No modern or sensible management of a case requires putting the parties to the expense of excision; a judge simply ignores that which is inadmissible."
Ground 4: failure to maintain impartiality
" The Defendant's local standards expert, Tom Magner, is well-known to my firm as an engineering expert who is frequently appointed by Defendants to provide expert engineering evidence in defence of foreign package holiday claims brought against tour operators."
"Mr Magner's report breaches its duty of impartiality and more seriously by repeatedly expressing the opinion that the excursion provider appeared to comply with local standards."
Then further at para.25:
"It is submitted that in Mr Magner's opinion the evidence on which he relies establishes that the excursion was fully compliant with the relevant DR local standards is demonstrably wrong."
(1) Ms Heathcote's point may be factually accurate. But her direct experience of Mr Magner does not preclude his having wider experience than she has previously encountered;
(2) An expert expressing an opinion on the ultimate matter for the court (a) happens not infrequently and (b) is not in the circumstances of this case a credible basis to mount an allegation of witness impropriety. If indeed these points constitute overreaching, the judge can ignore it. My experience is that courts handle expert witnesses situated at every point of the spectrum between dispassionate and disinterested objectivity to impermissible and over-exuberant partiality. It will be a question for the trial judge where on that forensic spectrum Mr Magner falls and whether, as Mr Young submits, he is a "partial advocate", offering advocacy under the "guise of expertise";
(3) The fact that the conclusion "demonstrably wrong" is ultimately a matter for the assessment of the trial court taking into account the totality of evidence. It is clear that Mr Magner is not constitutionally prone to being pro-defendant because as his curriculum vitae makes clear at B97, his instructions are split: 54% for claimants and 46% for defendants;
(4) As to the audit findings, that strikes me as being a legitimate valid line of cross-examination and challenge to Mr Magner at trial. I do not see how it is a basis for the wholesale exclusion of his evidence. If Mr Magner has indeed misconstrued an audit report, this is alternatively explicable as an error on his part. But to say this is evidence of the serious allegation of bias seems to me to be unsustainable – and forensic overreach in itself. Of course, he can be taxed about all of this when he is cross-examined.
Disposal
(1) The application is dismissed;
(2) Costs must follow the event.