Day 082 - 01 Feb 95 - Page 03
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2 MS. STEEL: No.
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4 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, there is something I would wish to say.
5 I do not know whether I am right, may be not, but if
6 I detect in all of this some kind of indication that
7 Mr. North may be intending to depart from his script in
8 some respect which is material to Mr. Clark's evidence,
9 why, then we should have notice of it.
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11 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Yes, that is no different to the situation
12 with regard to anyone. If either party in the case, having
13 disclosed a statement of a witness they propose to call,
14 has reason to believe that the witness is going on to
15 something which is not in the statement, they really should
16 produce some written notice of it, however informal that
17 may be.
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19 MR. RAMPTON: I am not talking, my Lord, about matters of
20 detail. What I mean is if there is going to be any
21 significant retraction or contradiction of what is
22 presently in Mr. North's statement ------
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24 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Or if he is going on to an extra topic ---
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26 MR. RAMPTON: Or a different topic.
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28 MR. JUSTICE BELL: -- but that is a general comment with regard
29 to any witness. Thank you for coming back, Mr. Clark.
30 But, so as far I am concerned, there is no reason why you
31 or Professor Jackson need stay in court a moment longer.
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33 The only other thing I would mention is that when you are
34 applying your minds, after Mr. North has given evidence as
35 to whether you want evidence from Mr. Clark, give some
36 thought to whether evidence in the form of his disclosed
37 statement will suffice for your purposes. If it will
38 suffice for your purposes, and if you are content that the
39 whole statement goes in, you might for all I know be able
40 to agree with those who represent McDonald's that that
41 happens. So, instead of having a flurry of academic Civil
42 Evidence Act notices and counter notices about bits and
43 then the whole, it is just agreed by the parties that
44 I treat the whole statement as his evidence. Do you see?
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46 The question is what we do next. There is no other witness
47 arranged until Monday morning?
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49 MR. RAMPTON: No, my Lord, that is right, that is Mr. Atherton.
50 For once, my pessimism about the length of time the
51 witnesses will take has been misplaced, partly from, of
52 course, my decision not to call Mr. Clark. Mr. Morris has
53 produced a list of topics. I do not know that I am much
54 clearer about what they mean than I was yesterday. I do
55 not know if your Lordship has one?
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57 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Yes, I have.
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59 MR. RAMPTON: All I say about item (1) is that I would require
60 better notice and more specific notice of what is fit to be