Day 043 - 01 Nov 94 - Page 05


     
     1        relevant to the cross-examination of Mr. Green.  Leaving
     2        aside the question of why we have not had them before, can
     3        I please ask that we are given them now; and may I have
     4        your Lordship's leave, if necessary, to talk to Mr. Green
     5        about them over the adjournment?
     6
     7   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  Yes.  What I propose to do, insofar as there
     8        is late production of documents, either side to be at
     9        liberty at a convenient moment to consult their witnesses
    10        in relation to those documents.  That applies to you, as
    11        well.  But I would like to be told in open court that it is
    12        proposed to do that, so that if there is any objection from
    13        the other side it can be raised.
    14
    15   MR. RAMPTON:  That is why I raised it now, my Lord.  The other
    16        thing I should say is this, that so far as evidence of
    17        Mr. Hawkes is concerned, those documents which were served
    18        at the end of yesterday's hearing are, in effect, a
    19        considerable extension to the evidence of Sue Dibb; they
    20        are no more than that, so far as I can tell.  How far she
    21        can prove the factual statements which they contain, I am
    22        not presently sure.  It is for that reason that before
    23        Mr. Hawkes is recalled, I should wish the opportunity to
    24        enquire into the factual basis of what is asserted in some
    25        of those documents, because they raise questions which are
    26        not in Miss Dibb's original statement.
    27
    28   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  Yes.  The only difficulty I see in relation
    29        to that -- and I will wait and hear what you have to say --
    30        it has never been necessary for cross-examination that you
    31        are in a position to call admissible evidence to establish
    32        that which you put to the witness, provided you have some,
    33        what I will call, reasonably respectable basis of
    34        instruction for putting it.  Indeed, even that rule is
    35        partly reliant upon the code of conduct of the Bar rather
    36        than any strict rule of procedure and that members of the
    37        Bar are not supposed to put things which they do not have
    38        some basis for thinking might be right, which is a very
    39        general approach.  But I will hear what you have to say in
    40        due course in relation to that.
    41
    42   MR. RAMPTON:  I might as well say it now.  That is not the
    43        position, so far as I understand it, because Miss Dibb is
    44        coming to give evidence and, if she is able to give
    45        admissible evidence about these things, they are things
    46        I need to deal with in my own evidence.
    47
    48   MR. JUSTICE BELL:  But, on the other hand, if there has been a
    49        report in some publication -- at the moment, I would have
    50        thought the Defendants are entitled to put it to the 
    51        witness.  The witness may say, "No, I know of no basis for 
    52        that" or "I positively disagree with it."  Then, unless the 
    53        Defendants establish it by admissible evidence, it goes
    54        from the case, evidentially, wherever else it may go.  But
    55        they are entitled to put that point, are they not?
    56
    57   MR. RAMPTON:  They are entitled to put it, yes.  It is simply
    58        unfortunate if the witness, if he had been given proper
    59        notice, could have dealt with it; because he has not, he
    60        cannot.

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