Day 048 - 08 Nov 94 - Page 04
1 I can see that there may well be argument at the end of the
2 day as to what weight should be attached to it -- firstly,
3 just in itself; and, secondly, in so far as it is in
4 conflict with anything which any of your witnesses say.
5
6 If it reassures you, nothing happened yesterday which
7 surprised me in any way. In some cases where expert
8 witnesses are called, they seek to support their statement
9 or their opinion by reference to articles which have been
10 written. In other cases, they just rely entirely upon
11 their own training, specialised education, knowledge and
12 experience -- be they engineers giving evidence in a road
13 accident case as to how fast a vehicle was likely to have
14 been going, or doctors who have specialised in a particular
15 area who have years of experience of treating disease, or
16 accountants who are telling one what the financial or tax
17 consequence of certain facts or certain figures are.
18
19 When you come to call Miss Dibb -- I tried to illustrate it
20 the other day. I can see, when you call Miss Gallatley,
21 that she is very much going to speak from her own
22 experience. When you come to Miss Dibb, or have called
23 anyone who seeks to support a view which they have come to
24 uphold by saying, "There was research carried out by MORI,
25 or by some other body", or, "I have read a paper written by
26 someone who has made a particular study of this topic, and
27 I share the view which they have expressed", then it is
28 only right that we see the paper, book, article, whatever
29 it is, to which they have referred.
30
31 But, at the end of the day, it all comes down to a question
32 of the weight one attaches to a particular witness's
33 statement, and you can point at one thing or another. You
34 can say: "Well, he is unlikely to have known that from his
35 own experience and he did not refer to any source of
36 information to support it" -- as an example.
37
38 MS. STEEL: I think that would be -- I do not know -- the area
39 of doubt, then, where someone may be basing what they are
40 saying on things that they have read, but they are not
41 explicitly saying that.
42
43 MR. JUSTICE BELL: One thing you could do, if you have this
44 point in mind -- and, certainly, with any witness in the
45 future you can consider it -- you can say: "Do you state
46 that of your own knowledge and experience, or are you
47 relying upon something you have read somewhere"; and if the
48 answer is the former, there we are, and you can pursue that
49 if you want: "Well, what is the basis of your knowledge
50 and what actual experience of that point have you had?" If
51 it is the latter, you are perfectly entitled to say:
52 "Well, we need to look at that document to check whether
53 you have made a proper interpretation of it."
54
55 MS. STEEL: All right. Thank you.
56
57 MR. MORRIS: Just while we are on this general area, we were
58 also a bit concerned over the pressure that we are
59 currently under, partly because of the documentation, but
60 also because this week, effectively, we have five different