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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Royal Insurance (UK) Ltd v. AMEC Construction Scotland Ltd & Ors [2002] ScotCS 296 (21 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2002/296.html Cite as: [2002] ScotCS 296 |
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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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A2381/02
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OPINION OF T. G. COUTTS, Q.C. Sitting as a Temporary Judge in the cause ROYAL INSURANCE (UK) LIMITED Pursuers; against AMEC CONSTRUCTION SCOTLAND LIMITED AND OTHERS Defenders:
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Pursuers: Maclean; DLA
First Defenders: Howie, Q.C.; MacRoberts
Second Defenders: Bowie, Simpson & Marwick
21 November 2002
"1. All letters, faxes, notes, jottings, drawings, certificates, memoranda, invoices, delivery notes, analyses, records of samples, test results, approvals, applications, contracts, architects' instructions, minutes of site meetings, agendas, or any other documents of whatsoever type relating to the fill material inserted among the foundations and beneath the basement slab of the Words at 206-226/228 St Vincent Street, Glasgow referred to on Record ("the Works"), except insofar as prepared in contemplation of litigation, showing or tending to show the following:
a) the nature and source of the fill material placed among the foundations and beneath the basement slab during the course of the Works;
b) when and how the said fill material came to be delivered to the site of the Works and when and how it came to be incorporated into the Works;
c) whether or not the first defenders or anyone on their behalf asked the second defenders and/or the third defenders to approve the source of the fill material and/or the material itself and, if so, the nature of any steps taken by the second or third defenders to assess the fill material and their response to any such request."
"In a case where, after the commencement of proceedings, a party seeks a diligence for the recovery of documents it is, in my opinion, for him to show that they are necessary for the purpose of enabling him to make more pointed or more specific that which is already averred or to enable him to make adequate and specific replies to his opponent's averments. In short, what he must show is that the documents sought to be recovered are required to serve the purposes of the pleadings as those pleadings stand at the time the diligence is sought."
"In our opinion the test to be applied where the diligence is sought before the open record stage as described by Lord Cameron in Moore v Greater Glasgow Health Board, at p 131 (p 45) is one of necessity. The necessity for the recovery of documents at this stage has to be determined at the time when the diligence is being sought, not by looking into the future. The stage at which the diligence was sought in this case put this point sharply in issue. Defences had not yet been lodged, so the question had not yet arisen as to whether the pursuer was able to make adequate or specific replies to the defenders' averments."
"It appears to us that the Lord Ordinary attached insufficient importance to the question whether it was necessary for the documents called for by the pursuer to be recovered at this stage. The test in Moore shows that an order for the recovery of documents should be granted if this is necessary in order to enable the pursuer to plead her case. But in the present case the pursuer was in possession of sufficient information to enable her to set out in her summons an intelligible case in reasonable detail. She was able to identify with reasonable precision the respects in which she was proposing to show that the defenders were in breach of their duty to take reasonable care. In this situation we are of opinion that the appropriate step would have been to refuse the diligence until defences had been lodged so that they could be examined to see what points were truly in issue between the parties."