Day 102 - 13 Mar 95 - Page 05
1 have the time to do that, I would imagine that there is
2 absolutely nothing wrong with that either.
3
4 MR. JUSTICE BELL: That may be so. I read Barlow's letter and
5 I read the voluntary particulars and I glanced at some of
6 the appendices. If you are saying this in order to say it
7 publicly, so be it but, as far as I am concerned, I am not
8 drawing any conclusions one way or the other until the
9 matter is formally raised with me in some respect.
10
11 MR. MORRIS: Just one final point: Mr. Rampton, I believe it
12 was on Friday or maybe Thursday, brought up that he was not
13 complaining about the word "murder" being used to describe
14 slaughter. I brought up that he had also said that he was
15 not concerned about using the word "torture" which was a
16 matter of opinion as well.
17
18 I found the reference to it. It is in the transcript of
19 October 3rd, which was day 30, page 2 line 49. It was in
20 the discussion or argument over the Plaintiffs' successful
21 amending of their Statement of Claim when Mr. Rampton said
22 on line starting 46: "We have conceded, as your Lordship
23 will remember, in opening that it is obviously a matter of
24 opinion whether the slaughter of animals for human
25 consumption might be regarded as inhumane or might properly
26 or fairly be called torture and so on and so forth. What
27 we are concerned about are the misdescriptions, as we see
28 them, of fact that the leaflet contains."
29
30 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, my recollection is I said a good deal
31 more than that in the course of argument. I think at some
32 stage in this case I actually made a distinction between
33 "murder" and "torture" on the basis that torture carries
34 an implied statement of fact about the state of mind of the
35 alleged torturer. I will not look for it now because
36 I think your Lordship has probably got better things to do
37 in court today. In due course I will find that passage.
38
39 MR. JUSTICE BELL: I have no doubt, when we have heard the
40 evidence and we come to speeches there will be some
41 argument about it.
42
43 MR. RAMPTON: That is right, my Lord, there will be. What one
44 might or not have said in the course of argument on
45 amendment is not going to be conclusive. It is a matter
46 for your Lordship at the end of the day whether, in the
47 circumstances, "torture", though in some senses may be a
48 question of opinion, may also carry with it an implication
49 of fact and, if so, whether the fact is justified.
50
51 MR. JUSTICE BELL: The order of events, you wanted to show a
52 film?
53
54 MR. RAMPTON: Yes.
55
56 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Can you remind me about that?
57
58 MR. RAMPTON: Yes. Last week, I think it was on Monday,
59 Ms. Steel disclosed a film made by a group of calling
60 themselves Animal Aid about the catching first of turkeys