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Chaina v Presbyterian Church (NSW) Property Trust (No. 16) [2013] NSWSC 1494 (25 October 2013)
Last Updated: 4 November 2013
Case Title:
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Chaina v Presbyterian Church (NSW) Property Trust (No. 16)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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8, 9, 14, 15 and 16 October 2013
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Decision Date:
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25 October 2013
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Jurisdiction:
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Common Law
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Before:
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Davies J
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Decision:
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On the Plaintiffs' Notice of Motion filed 8 October 2013 I make these
orders:
1. The report of Professor Graham Dowling dated 4 August 2006 be
admitted as evidence in the proceedings;
(2) The Plaintiffs are permitted
to serve and rely upon the following reports in reply: (a) Report of Dr Van
Dyke 8 October 2013; (b) Report of David Redfern of 26 September
2013;
(3) The Plaintiffs are not permitted to serve or rely upon the
following reports in reply: (c) Professor Roger Layton; (d) Professor
Graeme Dowling 12 August 2013;
(4) In relation to the following reports
in reply the Plaintiffs are only permitted to rely on those parts of the reports
which respond
to the Defendant's 2013 reports from Dr McDonald and Dr
Wynn-Hatton: (e) Sam Daniel dated 7 October 2013; (f) Dafta Pty Ltd dated
October 2013; (g) Dr Peter Richardt dated 27 September 2013
(5)
Reserve consideration of prayer 4;
(6) Otherwise dismiss the Plaintiffs'
Notice of Motion.
On the Defendant's Notice of Motion filed 3 September
2013 I make this order:
The following reports not be admitted into
evidence:
(a) Dr Fong report dated 2 May 2012; (b) Dr Eduard Smulders
reports dated 24 February 2010 and January 2012; (c) Kuo-Rann Lai report
dated 2 March 2010; (d) Dr Lothar Motitschke report dated 18 March
2010; (e) Dr Peter Richardt report dated 19 December 2011; (f) The balance
of the report of John Matheson dated 7 October 2005; (g) Ralph Moyle report
dated 25 July 2012; (h) Dafta Pty Limited undated report. (i) Section 5.0
paragraphs 175 to 235 of the report of Pitcher Partners dated 31 August
2012
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Catchwords:
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EVIDENCE - expert evidence - early determination - application to reinstate
rejected evidence - need to reconsider earlier judgment
- power to re-open and
re-hear - whether misapprehension of fact or law PROCEDURE - application to
serve further expert reports after trial well advanced - whether a re-casting of
the case - case management
principles - no explanation for delay in serving
reports DAMAGES - loss of chance - absence of evidence of value of chance -
whether court must do its best to assess damages
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Interlocutory applications
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Parties:
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Mathew Chaina (First Plaintiff) and ors Presbyterian Church (NSW)
Property Trust (First Defendant) and ors
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Representation
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- Counsel:
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Counsel: Mr A Dawson (Plaintiffs) R Stitt QC, G L Turner & H
Stitt (Defendants)
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: In person (Plaintiffs) Curwoods Lawyers
(Defendants)
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File Number(s):
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2002/69354
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JUDGMENT
- This
judgment concerns two related Motions one brought by the Defendant and one by
the Plaintiffs, both consequent upon my judgment
in Chaina v Presbyterian
Church (NSW) Property Trust (No. 13) [2013] NSWSC 1057.
- The
Defendant's Motion seeks an order pursuant to s 192A Evidence Act 1995
that the evidence of the following witnesses of the Plaintiffs not be
adduced:
(a) Dr Fong report dated 2 May 2012;
(b) Dr Eduard Smulders reports dated 24 February 2010 and January 2012;
(c) Kuo-Rann Lai report dated 2 March 2010;
(d) Dr Lothar Motitschke report dated 18 March 2010;
(e) Dr Peter Richardt reports dated 19 December 2011 and 9 August 2012;
(f) Dr Jim Van Dyke report dated 26 January 2010 and undated report served
June 2012;
(g) The balance of the report of John Matheson dated 7 October 2005;
(h) Associate Professor David Trende report dated 25 October 2006;
(i) Ralph Moyle report dated 25 July 2012;
(j) Rick Millar report dated 27 July 2012;
(k) Sam Daniel report dated 5 June 2012; and
(I) Dafta Pty Limited undated report.
- By
a letter dated 19 September 2013 the Defendant gave notice that it wished to add
the report of Deborah Cartwright of Pitcher Partners
dated 31 August 2012 to the
above list of reports.
- The
Plaintiffs' Motion asks for leave for the Plaintiffs to serve and rely upon
supplementary reports from:
(a) Dr Jim Van Dyke;
(b) Professor Roger Layton;
(c) Professor Grahame Dowling;
(d) Dr Eduard J Smulders; and
(e) Ms Deborah Cartwright of Pitcher Partners.
- It
further seeks that the report of Professor Dowling of 4 August 2006 be admitted
into evidence.
- The
Motion also seeks that the Plaintiffs be granted leave to serve expert reports
in reply from the following persons:
(a) Dr Jim Van Dyke;
(b) Professor Roger Layton;
(c) Professor Grahame Dowling;
(d) Mr Sam Daniel;
(e) Dafta Pty Ltd;
(f) Mr David Redfern of BASF Australia Ltd; and
(g) Dr Peter Richardt.
- A
further order for leave to rely on an affidavit of Dr Dennis Fong sworn 2
November 2009 was not pursued. Finally, the Plaintiffs
sought an order that the
expert evidence by the parties' witnesses be given current concurrently in
accordance with r 31.35 UCPR and Practice Note SC CL5.
- The
Plaintiffs' Motion was supported by an affidavit sworn by Mrs Chaina which
annexed a number of supplementary reports she had obtained
from various of the
Plaintiffs' expert witnesses. I shall refer to these reports when dealing with
the issues for which they were
put forward.
- The
Plaintiffs were represented on the hearing of these Motions by Mr Dawson of
counsel.
- In
my judgment in Chaina (No. 13) I determined that the evidence the
Plaintiffs intended to read concerning the testing of the proposed new products
to be marketed
by Proton did not justify the assumptions made by Professor
Layton and Professor Dowling in their reports. Similarly, I found that
the
conclusions of a number of other experts were based on the correctness of the
same assumptions with the result that the evidence
of Professors Layton and
Dowling and the other experts identified should be rejected. The result of that
determination, as I noted
at [212], was that the Plaintiffs were seemingly
confined to proving losses based only on the historical trading of Proton and
Deluxe
and that there was no evidence to support a loss of opportunity case
beyond historical projections.
- The
present Motion by the Defendant assumes the correctness of my judgment in
Chaina (No. 13). The Defendant submits that the rejection of the reports
and parts of the reports dealt with in Chaina (No. 13) necessarily leads
to the conclusion that the evidence which I have described as the testing
evidence is no longer relevant to any
issue in the proceedings. That is because
the effect of the rejection of the reports dealt with in Chaina (No. 13)
results in the Plaintiffs no longer having a loss of opportunity case based upon
the new formulae developed by Mr Chaina. Similarly,
the opinions expressed in
the reports of Mr Matheson, Associate Professor Trende, Ralph Moyle, Rick
Miller, Sam Daniel, Dafta Pty
Ltd and Pitcher Partners no longer have relevance
because they are all concerned with a loss of opportunity case based upon those
formulae.
- The
Plaintiffs' Motion does not accept the correctness of Chaina (No. 13). In
the first instance the Plaintiffs wish to argue that I fell into error in
reaching the views I did about Professor Dowling's
and Professor Layton's
evidence. Professor Dowling dealt with the industrial products and Professor
Layton dealt with the domestic
products. The Plaintiffs, in any event, want to
lead further evidence in chief by the experts as well as evidence in
reply.
- By
reason of what is sought in each of the Motions it is convenient to deal with
the Plaintiffs' Motion first. If that Motion is successful
in permitting either
a review of Chaina (No. 13) or by the provision of supplementary reports
or both it would be likely to be unnecessary to consider the Defendant's
Motion.
- There
are three substantive questions to be answered to determine the Plaintiffs'
Motion. They are these:
(1) Should the Plaintiffs be permitted to argue for the readmission of
Professor Dowling's report of 4 August 2006 and the whole or
parts of Professor
Layton's reports?
(2) Should the Plaintiffs be permitted to serve supplementary reports from
the experts specified in prayer one of the Motion?
(3) Should the Plaintiffs be permitted to serve expert reports in reply?
Legal principles
- In
Autodesk Inc v Dyason (No 2) [1993] HCA 6; (1993) 176 CLR 300 the High Court was
dealing with an application to vacate a judgment given and orders made on the
grounds that, without fault on their
part, the applicants were afforded no
opportunity of being heard on three stated questions. Mason CJ said (at 301 -
303):
The exercise of the jurisdiction to reopen a judgment and to grant a
rehearing is not confined to circumstances in which the applicant
can show that,
by accident and without fault on the applicant's part, he or she has not been
heard. It is true that the jurisdiction
is to be exercised with great caution
having regard to the importance of the public interest in the finality of
litigation. It is
equally true, as this Court said in Wentworth v. Woollahra
Municipal Council that "(g)enerally speaking, it will not be exercised
unless the applicant can show that by accident without fault on his part he
has
not been heard."
But these statements do not exclude the exercise of jurisdiction to reopen a
judgment which has apparently miscarried for other reasons,
at least when the
orders pronounced have not been perfected by the taking out of formal orders. So
much was acknowledged by Brennan,
Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ. in Smith v.
N.S.W. Bar Association when their Honours said "if reasons for judgment have
been given, the power is only exercised if there is some matter calling for
review". It is sufficient to give three examples. In In re Harrison's
Share under a Settlement orders were set aside following a decision
of the House of Lords which overruled authorities on the basis of which the
orders had
been made. In New South Wales Bar Association v. Smith the New
South Wales Court of Appeal reconsidered orders previously made in view of an
argument that the Court had mistakenly assumed
that particular evidence had not
been given at earlier hearings. And, in Pittalis v. Sherefettin a judge
recalled orders the day after they were made upon determining that he had "erred
in a material matter in his approach to
the case".
These examples indicate that the public interest in the finality of
litigation will not preclude the exceptional step of reviewing
or rehearing an
issue when a court has good reason to consider that, in its earlier judgment, it
has proceeded on a misapprehension
as to the facts or the law. As this Court is
a final court of appeal, there is no reason for it to confine the exercise of
its jurisdiction
in a way that would inhibit its capacity to rectify what it
perceives to be an apparent error arising from some miscarriage in its
judgment.
However, it must be emphasized that the jurisdiction is not to be exercised for
the purpose of re-agitating arguments already
considered by the Court; nor is it
to be exercised simply because the party seeking a rehearing has failed to
present the argument
in all its aspects or as well as it might have been put.
What must emerge, in order to enliven the exercise of the jurisdiction,
is that
the Court has apparently proceeded according to some misapprehension of the
facts or the relevant law and that this misapprehension
cannot be attributed
solely to the neglect or default of the party seeking the rehearing. The purpose
of the jurisdiction is not
to provide a backdoor method by which unsuccessful
litigants can seek to re-argue their cases.
- At
307 Mason CJ reiterated what appears at the end of the above passage as follows:
As I have said, the jurisdiction to reopen is not to be exercised simply for
the purpose of giving a party the opportunity to present
a case to better
advantage.
- It
is to be noted that no application has been made by the Plaintiffs that I should
vary or set aside my judgment in Chaina (No. 13). The principal reason
for that appears to be the submission by the Plaintiffs that all that Chaina
(No.13) did was to provide an evidentiary ruling, and that such evidentiary
rulings can be reconsidered at any time in a trial in the light
of changed
circumstances.
- However,
the judgment in Chaina (No. 13) was more than "just an evidentiary
ruling". It arose out of a contested hearing lasting a day. I reserved my
judgment.
- In
Chaina v Presbyterian Church (NSW) Property Trust (No. 6) [2012] NSWSC
1476 I set out some principles associated with the exercise of the power under s
192A at [7]-[11]. Those principles are relevant when considering both of the
present applications.
- Further,
in paragraphs 16.108 to 16.109 of ALRC 102 (which led to the enactment of s
192A) the following appeared:
The power to give advance rulings carries significant benefits in relation to
the efficiency of trials. It allows counsel to select
witnesses and prepare for
trial with greater certainty. Without such a power, tactical decisions,
particularly in relation to character
evidence are based on speculation ... It
is therefore recommended that the uniform Evidence Acts should be amended so as
to provide
the court with the express power, in civil and criminal proceedings,
to give advance rulings in relation to the admissibility of
evidence and other
evidentiary questions. This power should extend to evidentiary questions arising
out (sic) uniform Evidence Acts
and other laws affecting the admissibility of
evidence.
- The
Explanatory Memorandum to the Commonwealth amending Act said at para
242:
The power to give advance rulings carries significant benefits in promoting
the efficiency of trials. It allows counsel to select
witnesses and prepare for
trial with greater certainty. Without such a power, tactical decisions,
particularly in relation to character
evidence, are based on speculation.
- I
endorse the sentiments in those extracts.
- It
may be accepted that what was determined by Chaina (No. 13) were
evidentiary rulings. The rulings form part of a formal judgment of this Court
albeit that judgment is an interlocutory one.
I accept, in the light of Mason
CJ's judgment in Autodesk, that even a final judgment may be reviewed or
re-opened if the Court proceeded on a misapprehension as to the facts or the law
and
that the misapprehension cannot be attributed solely to the neglect or the
fault of the party seeking the rehearing. On the other
hand, I also accept that
the jurisdiction to reopen is not to provide an unsuccessful litigant with the
opportunity to reargue the
case.
- In
Brimaud v Honeysett Instant Print Pty Ltd (1988) 217 ALR 44 McLelland J
discussed applications to set aside and re-litigate issues leading to both final
and interlocutory orders.
- Having
noted that interlocutory orders create no res judicata or estoppel and that the
court retains jurisdiction to set aside, vary
or discharge an interlocutory
order, his Honour said that the rationale of the principles associated with res
judicata, issue estoppel
and abuse of process apply even in the case of
interlocutory orders. He went on to say (at 46):
It would be conducive to great injustice and enormous waste of judicial time
and resources if there were no limit on the power of
a party to have any
interlocutory application or order relitigated at will.
The overriding principle governing the approach of the court to interlocutory
applications is that the court should do whatever the
interests of justice
require in the particular circumstances of the case. In giving effect to that
general principle, and in recognition
of the public and private interests
earlier referred to, rules of practice have been developed in accordance with
which the discretionary
power of the court to set aside, vary or discharge
interlocutory orders will ordinarily be exercised. Not all kinds of
interlocutory
orders attract the same considerations. For present purposes one
may put to one side orders of a merely procedural nature (as to
which see for
example Wilkshire & Coffey v Commonwealth (1976) 9 ALR 325) and
injunctions (or undertakings) made or given by agreement and without contest
"until further order" (as to which see for example
Warringah Shire Council v
Industrial Acceptance Corp (unreported, SC (NSW), McLelland J, 22 November
1979).
In the present case I am dealing with an interlocutory order of a substantive
nature made after a contested hearing in contemplation
that it would operate
until the final disposition of the proceedings. In such a case the ordinary rule
of practice is that an application
to set aside, vary or discharge the order
must be founded on a material change of circumstances since the original
application was
heard, or the discovery of new material which could not
reasonably have been put before the court on the hearing of the original
application: see Woods v Sheriff of Queensland (1895) 6 QLJ 163 at 164-5;
Hutchinson v Nominal Defendant [1972] 1 NSWLR 443 at 447-8; Chanel Ltd
v F W Woolworth & Co [1981] 1 All ER 745 ; [1981] 1 WLR 485; Adam P
Brown Male Fashions v Philip Morris [1981] HCA 39; (1981) 148 CLR 170 at 177-8 ; [1981] HCA 39; 35 ALR 625
at 629-30; Butt v Butt [1987] 1 WLR 1351 at 1353; Gordano Building
Contractors Ltd v Burgess [1988] 1 WLR 890 at 894.
- In
Hillston v Bar-Mordecai [2002] NSWSC 477 Bryson J said at [13] that
Brimaud was a decision which had often been followed and had shaped the
court's practice.
- It
may be noted that the ability to re-open the case (or here, adduce further
expert evidence) rests on a discretion in the Court.
- In
Aon Risk Services Aust Ltd v Australian National University [2009] HCA
27; (2009) 239 CLR 175 the issue concerned the right to amend and the effect
that that would have upon the trial of the proceedings. However, what flows
from
the decision has a wider impact on the way litigation is conducted and the
decisions which parties make in the course of the
proceedings. That in turn
involves consideration of case management principles.
- In
that regard the Court considered the authority of Queensland v J L Holdings
Pty Ltd [1997] HCA 1; (1997) 189 CLR 146. French CJ said in Aon:
[30] It might be thought a truism that "case management principles" should
not supplant the objective of doing justice between the
parties according to
law. Accepting that proposition, J L Holdings cannot be taken as
authority for the view that waste of public resources and undue delay, with the
concomitant strain and uncertainty
imposed on litigants, should not be taken
into account in the exercise of interlocutory discretions of the kind conferred
by r 502
[of the ACTSC Rules]. Also to be considered is the potential for
loss of public confidence in the legal system which arises where a court is seen
to
accede to applications made without adequate explanation or justification,
whether they be for adjournment, for amendments giving
rise to adjournment, or
for vacation of fixed trial dates resulting in the resetting of interlocutory
processes.
- The
joint judgment noted at [53] that the solicitor for the party applying to amend
did not offer any explanation for the need to
amend.
- The
joint judgment said this:
[103] The fact that an explanation had been offered for the delay in raising
the defence was regarded as a relevant consideration
in J L Holdings.
Generally speaking, where a discretion is sought to be exercised in favour
of one party, and to the disadvantage of another, an explanation
will be called
for. The importance attached by r 21 to the factor of delay will require that,
in most cases where it is present,
a party should explain it. Not only will they
need to show that their application is brought in good faith, but they will also
need
to bring the circumstances giving rise to the amendment to the court's
attention, so that they may be weighed against the effects
of any delay and the
objectives of the Rules. There can be no doubt that an explanation was required
in this case.
[104] The salient features of the application for leave to amend in this case
were, as Lander J pointed out in his dissent, that the
amendments sought to
introduce new and substantial claims; they were so substantial as to require
Aon, in effect, to defend again,
as from the beginning; the application was
brought during the time set for the trial of the action and would result in the
abandonment
of the trial if granted; and there was a question whether costs,
even indemnity costs, would overcome the prejudicial effects on
Aon if the
litigation to this point was not productive of an outcome.
[105] The primary judge was in error in failing to recognise the extent of
the new claims and the effect that amendment would have
upon Aon. His Honour was
in error in failing to recognise the extent to which the objectives of r 21
would not be met if the amendments
were allowed. The known ill-effects of a
delayed determination, which informed the purposes and objectives of the Rule,
were present.
Rule 502(1) read with r 21 did not provide an unfettered
discretion to grant leave to amend. The objectives of r 21 were to be pursued
in
the exercise of the power conferred by r 502(1). The fact that ANU's new claims
were arguable was not itself sufficient to permit
amendment and could not
prevail over the objectives of r 21. A "just" resolution of the proceedings
between ANU and Aon required
those objectives to be taken into account.
...
[109] Whatever was the reason for the delay in applying for the amendment,
none was provided. There was no mistake of judgment, such
as that to which Bowen
LJ referred [in Cropper v Smith (1884) 26 Ch D 700], which might be
weighed against the effects of the delay, effects which r 21 required to be
taken seriously into account.
[110] The primary judge was mistaken as to the extent of the new claims and
what would be required of Aon if they were permitted and
the matter effectively
re-litigated. His Honour incorrectly elevated the fact that the claim was
arguable to a level of importance
it did not have. His Honour failed to
recognise the importance of the objective stated in r 21, of the timely disposal
of the proceedings.
The exercise of the power conferred by r 502(1) miscarried.
The application should have been refused.
[111] An application for leave to amend a pleading should not be approached
on the basis that a party is entitled to raise an arguable
claim, subject to
payment of costs by way of compensation. There is no such entitlement. All
matters relevant to the exercise of
the power to permit amendment should be
weighed. The fact of substantial delay and wasted costs, the concerns of case
management,
will assume importance on an application for leave to amend.
Statements in J L Holdings which suggest only a limited application for
case management do not rest upon a principle which has been carefully worked out
in
a significant succession of cases. On the contrary, the statements are
not consonant with this Court's earlier recognition of the effects of delay, not
only upon the
parties to the proceedings in question, but upon the court and
other litigants. Such statements should not be applied in the future.
[112] A party has the right to bring proceedings. Parties have choices as to
what claims are to be made and how they are to be framed.
But limits will be
placed upon their ability to effect changes to their pleadings, particularly if
litigation is advanced. That is
why, in seeking the just resolution of the
dispute, reference is made to parties having a sufficient opportunity to
identify the issues they seek to agitate.
[113] In the past it has been left largely to the parties to prepare for
trial and to seek the court's assistance as required. Those
times are long gone.
The allocation of power, between litigants and the courts arises from tradition
and from principle and policy. It is recognised by the courts that the
resolution of disputes serves the public as a whole, not merely the parties to
the proceedings.
[114] Rule 21 of the Court Procedures Rules recognises the purposes of
case management by the courts. It recognises that delay and costs are
undesirable and that delay has deleterious
effects, not only upon the party to
the proceedings in question, but to other litigants. The Rule's objectives, as
to the timely
disposal of cases and the limitation of cost, were to be applied
in considering ANU's application for amendment. It was significant
that the
effect of its delay in applying would be that a trial was lost and litigation
substantially recommenced. It would impact
upon other litigants seeking a
resolution of their cases. What was a "just resolution" of ANU's claim required
serious consideration
of these matters, and not merely whether it had an
arguable claim to put forward. A just resolution of its claim necessarily had
to
have regard to the position of Aon in defending it. An assumption that costs
will always be a sufficient compensation for the
prejudice caused by amendment
is not reflected in r 21. Critically, the matters relevant to a just resolution
of ANU's claim required
ANU to provide some explanation for its delay in seeking
the amendment if the discretion under r 502(1) was to be exercised in its
favour
and to the disadvantage of Aon. None was provided.
- What
is made clear in those paragraphs is the significance of the Act and Rules which
govern the procedure of the Court. In this Court
it is sections 56 to 58
Civil Procedure Act 2005 which govern decision-making. I have particular
regard to the matters set out in s 58(2).
- It
is, of course, necessary to apply what is said in Aon by analogy because
what is sought here is not leave to amend but leave to serve further expert
reports including reply reports and
leave to re-visit various matters including
the way the Defendant's application that I determined in Chaina (No. 13)
was argued by the Plaintiffs.
(1) Re-tender of Professor Dowling's and Professor Layton's reports
(a) Professor Dowling
- The
Plaintiffs sought to re-tender Professor Dowling's report of 4 August 2006 in
two ways. First, they argued that without receiving
any further evidence I
should reconsider the determination I made by reason of submissions now put
forward by them about Professor
Dowling's report. Secondly and alternatively,
the Plaintiffs said that I should receive a supplementary report of Professor
Dowling
of 3 October 2013 and a report of Dr Van Dyke of 1 October 2013. Each of
those reports seeks to explain the earlier one by the same
expert and, in the
case of Professor Dowling, seeks to point out how I formed the wrong view of
Professor Dowling's earlier report.
- This
second method of challenge necessarily involves the need for the Plaintiffs to
obtain leave to rely on further expert reports.
I deal later in this judgment
with the reasons for concluding further reports should not be
permitted.
- For
those reasons and other reasons more particular to the new report of Professor
Dowling (to which I will come) I do not consider
that I should have regard to
Professor Dowling's report of 3 October 2013. The issue of whether Professor
Dowling's original report
should be re-admitted should be determined only by an
examination of that report alone in the light of the submissions made about
it.
- In
support of their submissions that I should simply re-visit my earlier
determination on the admissibility of Professor Dowling's
reports the Plaintiffs
say that on a proper analysis of the report of 4 August 2006 he did not proceed
on an assumption of the superiority
of all of the Plaintiffs' products. Rather,
he was concerned with the overall package of industrial products, and his
conclusions
were supported by the report of Dr Van Dyke, particularly Dr Van
Dyke's conclusion that the product range as a whole was the best
product range
that he had seen around: Chaina (No. 13) at [101].
- The
Plaintiffs took me to various parts of Professor Dowling's report to submit that
I misconstrued what he was saying. In particular,
my attention was drawn to what
appears in paragraphs 17(e) and (g), 31, 45 and the four scenarios in paragraphs
46 to 49 of that
report. I note in that regard that I specifically considered
paragraphs and 31 and 45 in Chaina (No. 13) at [34]-[36].
- Paragraph
17 relevantly provides:
(e) Purchasing in these markets is often more "professional" than in consumer
markets (e.g., via requests for tenders and contracts
for supply), and it is
evaluated by performance reviews of the function and efficiency of products and
services.
...
(g) Competition among suppliers in industrial markets is based primarily on
the functional superiority and value for money of their
products. A service
component often accompanies this mix. Its role can be to 'fit' the products to
the unique requirements of the
customer (pre-sale) and/or to help to evaluate
and fine-tune product performance (post-sale). The combination of 'product and
service'
relative to 'price' is often referred to as the supplier's customer
value proposition. Innovation (both in the products and the process
of their
application and use) can be a driver of a strong customer value proposition.
- Mr
Dawson argued that a reading of Professor Dowling's report makes clear that he
does not isolate the products and assume their superiority.
Instead he treats
product and service together and relates it to price to speak of what he calls
the "customer value proposition"
(see at paragraph 17(g)).
- In
paragraph 44 Professor Dowling says that to estimate the likely sales he
describes four different business scenarios. These scenarios
use as their
starting point Professor Dowling's table of what he calls his 4Ps and 3Cs. The
first such P is "Product (incl service)".
I made specific reference to two
entries in this column in Chaina (No. 13) at [35] and [36]. From those
entries I concluded that Professor Dowling had assumed superiority for the
products.
- Mr
Dawson drew my attention in particular to what appears in paragraph 46 which
says this:
Scenario 1 is based on circumstances where implementation of the
growth strategy is plagued by a significant problem with any of the factors
identified in the column of the table labelled "Product" in paragraph 45. This
would result in either product or service quality
problems for existing
customers and result in a temporary decline in sales. After service to existing
customers is returned to its
previous level, the business would then continue on
as before.
He submitted that this demonstrates that, at least for this scenario,
Professor Dowling has not assumed that the products are superior
but rather has
assumed that the products may not be superior at least for a temporary period
until what he describes as "service
to existing customers" is returned to its
previous level.
- The
Defendant submitted that a proper reading of scenario 1 still involves an
assumption of general superiority of the products over
the whole of the range.
Reference was made to paragraphs 17(e) and (g), 21, 30, 31, 40, 41 and 45 of his
report. The Defendant further
submitted that a reading of Professor Dowling's
new report of 3 October 2013 demonstrates that Professor Dowling is endeavouring
to change the approach to superiority he adopted in his first report which, the
Defendant said, assumed simply the superiority of
the products.
- I
have carefully re-read Professor Dowling's report in the light of the
submissions made. Although I read the whole report for the
purpose of the
judgment in Chaina (No. 13) my attention was not drawn particularly to
some of the paragraphs to which I have now been taken. Nor had the distinction
been made
between what is required for a successful domestic line of products
and a successful line of industrial products.
- Issues
of service, distribution and price are said to be of much greater significance
for industrial products as well as the need
to meet the particular requirements
of a customer. Further, service cannot be divorced from the product. The overall
quality of the
range is important rather than whether each and every product in
the range is superior to those of the competitors. That was said
to highlight
the significance of Dr Van Dyke's conclusion (in his original report) that the
product range as a whole was the best
product range he had seen
around.
- I
do not find Professor Dowling's report easy to understand. There is a certain
ambiguity in what appears in the table at paragraph
45 and the four scenarios he
discusses at paragraphs 46 to 49 especially scenario 1. What scenario 1 seems to
suggest is that the
product itself may not be superior for a short time but at
some point it achieves (or resumes) superiority. That does appear to assume
the
superiority of the products as the starting point.
- Further,
to the extent that "Product" is said to include service it is not immediately
apparent how any assumption about superiority
of service can ever be proved.
Testing to show superiority of a product is one thing, proving that service is
superior is necessarily
subjective. The Plaintiffs say that the issue of service
is a factual matter and that it is not appropriate to determine that issue
until
the end of the case when all the evidence is in and final submissions have been
made about the evidence. In that regard the
Defendant had drawn attention to all
of the evidence about dissatisfied customers prior to 1999. That, however, adds
weight to the
Plaintiffs' submission that proof of service superiority must
await the end of the trial.
- Whilst
the difficulty with Professor Dowling's report has been brought about to some
extent by the manner in which Professor Dowling
has expressed himself, because I
am left with a doubt about whether he did make the superiority assumption I
consider that my conclusion
in Chaina (No. 13) at [37] that the proof of
assumption rule had not been satisfied by Professor Dowling was, for the
purposes of the s 192A application,
not justified. That does not, however, lead
necessarily to the conclusion that that part of my earlier judgment should be
altered
to re-admit Professor Dowling's report. Discretionary considerations
must be dealt with. I will consider those later in this
judgment.
- I
do not consider it is appropriate to have regard to the supplementary report of
Professor Dowling of 3 October 2013 to decide whether
or not I erred in reaching
the view I did in Chaina (No. 13) concerning his report and I have not
done so. There are a number of reasons for this. First, the October 2013 report
undoubtedly
contains additional material that was not available in Professor
Dowling's report of August 2006. That aspect runs up against a problem
I will
deal with at greater length later in the judgment concerning the receiving of
further expert evidence.
- Secondly,
the report responds to reports of Anne Lenagan dated 20 December 2012, Dr
McDonald dated 21 December 2012 and Bruce Dunbar
dated 20 December 2012 which
are not currently before the Court (except for a very limited purpose which I
will discuss) and which,
significantly, had no part to play in the determination
in Chaina (No. 13). Thirdly, and associated with each of the two earlier
matters, Professor Dowling links the new material in his October 2013 report
and
the material in the Defendant's reports to explain why he says my analysis and
construction of his earlier report is wrong.
- Fourthly,
it is not the role of an expert witness to critique a judgment concerning a
report that witness has prepared with a view
to getting the Court to change its
mind about the earlier report. The approach taken by Professor Dowling in this
report is clearly
demonstrated by paragraph 2 of the report under the heading
"Instructions" which says:
The Plaintiffs have asked me to review the determination of Justice Davies as
to the effects of the assumption that I made in my original
and first
supplementary reports about the superiority of Proton's products in my estimate
of economic loss.
- The
expert's role is simply to present the expert's opinion in the manner required
by principles in Makita (Australia) Pty Ltd v Sprowles [2001] NSWCA 305;
(2001) 52 NSWLR 705 and the Expert Witness Code. If there is to be a critique of
a judgment, whether in an appropriate application to vary an earlier
judgment or
on an appeal from the judgment, that role is peculiarly that of counsel based
upon evidence which may include evidence,
but not submissions, from the expert.
- Accordingly,
I have not taken into account what appears in the supplementary report of
Professor Dowling of 3 October 2013.
(b) Professor Layton
- In
relation to the domestic products, the way the Plaintiffs argued the matter
shifted somewhat from the first time Mr Dawson addressed
me to the final
position that was put. Initially the Plaintiffs accepted that proof of the
domestic products claim involved "not
simply moving forward with the case as it
is presently articulated". They submitted that what would be sought would be
that Professor
Layton would be asked to prepare a supplementary report which
would proceed on the basis that some but not all of the products had
been found
to be superior. Their fallback position was that, as far as the laundry and
dishwashing products were concerned, there
was other evidence (both material
already in evidence at the trial, and also supplementary reports from Dr
Smulders) which demonstrated
the superiority of those products.
- However,
when Mr Dawson came to address in what was supposed to be his submissions in
reply to Mr Stitt he put forward two further
bases upon which he said the
superiority assumption was made out. What had been put earlier were, at this
point, said to be fallback
positions.
- Mr
Dawson said that his principal approach was that I should simply readmit
Professor Layton's evidence because of what Professor
Layton said in his third
report of 11 July 2012, prepared after he had seen the reports of the testing
experts. Professor Layton
said this at paragraph 9:
In my opinion the information contained in the documents listed in paragraph
13 provided by Drs Smulders, Fong, Richardt and Lai confirms
the initial
assumption noted in paragraph 5 above in regard to the laundry, dishwashing and
household cleaning products. The information
contained in the documents,
provided by Drs Lai and Motitschke confirms a similar assumption of superior or
equal performance in
comparison with competing products in the toiletries, and
cosmetics market. The expert Report provided by Mr. Ben Wheaton confirms
that
the higher concentrations, specialised packaging, and use of natural resources
would have created substantial advantages in
terms of reduced costs and
increased margins. He went on to note that "the products contain strong
environmental features and these
would have contributed to increased sales,
particularly from 2007 onwards." Taken as a whole, these Reports confirm the
initial assumption
contained in paragraph 5 above with respect to each of the
four markets considered, and the conclusions reached in my first and
supplementary
reports remain unchanged.
- The
Plaintiffs submitted that a rejection of that opinion "is getting very
dangerously close to a credit finding".
- I
disagree. The issue is not one of credit concerning Professor Layton's belief.
The issue remains as being whether the testing evidence
proved that the products
were superior. That is for objective determination by the Court - not based on
the belief of an expert who
initially assumed its correctness. Professor Layton
is a marketing expert, not a chemist. His third report simply confirms, contrary
to the Plaintiffs' submission, that Professor Layton's opinion was given on the
basis of the superiority assumption. That assumption
has not been proved or
supported by anything contained in this third report. He does not have the
expertise to do that.
- The
Plaintiffs accepted that, if I did not determine that Professor Layton's third
report brought about the result that all of his
reports should be readmitted
(based on the submission that the third report affirmed the validity of the
superiority assumption),
the testing evidence did not demonstrate that the
cleaning products were superior and that the superiority assumption could not be
supported for that category of product.
- Mr
Dawson's second basis for arguing that Professor Layton's reports (except that
part dealing with the cleaning products) should
be re-admitted was that
Professor Layton had not made the superiority assumption in relation to
dishwashing products and toiletries,
and that there was other evidence to
demonstrate the superiority of the laundry products.
- As
far as the dishwashing products are concerned the Plaintiffs pointed to what
appears in paragraph 142 of Professor Layton's first
report where he said
this:
While the cleaning superiority of the Proton Technology dishwashing detergent
range would have been asserted in the marketing and
advertising (Assumption
no.2), in my opinion, it is likely that this would have been perceived by
consumers as matching similar claims
made by existing entrants.
Mr Dawson submitted that Professor Layton was testing the receipt of the
dishwashing products by the way they were perceived by consumers
and not by
virtue of any assumption of superiority.
- Attention
was also drawn to part of paragraph 143 which said:
Assuming that the Proton Technology product would have offered one or more
significant consumer benefits compared to Finish and Morning
Fresh, possibly in
effectiveness (Assumption no.2), convenience, safety or environmental concerns
(Domestic Business Plan p8), in
my opinion, Proton Technology with continued
advertising and promotional support might have achieved around 10% of the
concentrated
powder tablet market, falling to 6% after one or two years, or
around 2% initially falling to 1.2% of the total market.
- It
seems likely that "Assumption no.2" is what is contained in paragraph 20 of his
report because it is the second of the assumptions
that Professor Layton sets
out and it was the second assumption he was instructed to make. Paragraph 20
reads:
The chemical composition of the products in the Product List was such that
the products were superior at cleaning the goods to which
they were applied when
compared with products with which they would have been in competition in
2001.
- However,
the perception by consumers says nothing about whether the products were, in
fact, superior or not as the case may be. Professor
Layton made it clear
(paragraph 20) that he made the superiority assumption. If there were any doubt
that he may have been modifying
that assumption by what appears in paragraph 142
he reaffirmed the assumption expressly in relation to dishwashing products in
his
third report. At paragraph 5 he set out the assumption as
follows:
The chemical composition of the laundry, dishwashing and household
cleaner products in the Product List was such that the products were superior at
cleaning the goods to which they were
applied when compared with products with
which they would have been in competition in 2001. (emphasis added)
- I
have set out at [56] above Professor Layton's general conclusion in this third
report. In addition he said this in paragraph 13
headed Dishwashing
products:
Taken as a whole these findings support the initial assumption that I was
asked to make in paragraph 5 above. Timing would have been
critical as noted in
my first report in paragraphs 142 and 143 as the innovative technologies
envisaged by Proton Technology entered
the marketing (sic) 2001 and later.
- That
paragraph makes clear that paragraphs 142 and 143 were concerned with timing. It
is also the case, of course, that Proton would
not have been able (legally) to
make the superiority claims in marketing and advertising unless they were true.
That reinforces the
view that Professor Layton was indeed proceeding on the
superiority assumption in paragraphs 142 and 143.
- The
position with regard to toiletries is not so clear. Professor Layton dealt with
toiletries in his second report of 4 August 2006.
Under the heading
"ASSUMPTIONS" he said this:
4. With the letters of instructions, you provided me with a number of
assumptions that I am to assume as facts for the purposes of
this Report. I have
also made a number of my own assumptions in undertaking the analysis and
reaching my conclusions and opinions
set out in this Report. Where these
assumptions are in addition to those set out in the letters of instructions, I
have stated these
assumptions at the relevant points in this Report.
The assumptions provided with the letters of instructions and upon which I
rely in this Report are set out below. The assumptions
relate to the following
product category:
Toiletry and cosmetics (liquid hand soap, shampoo, conditioner, shower gel
and skin care products).
5. Proton Technology's new toiletries and cosmetics products are the
toiletries and cosmetics range of products listed on pages 6,
7 and 8 of the
March 1999 "New domestic enzyme products" product list ("Product List").
6. The launch of the toiletries and cosmetics products in the Product List
would have followed the launch of the laundry, dishwashing
and household
cleaning products.
7. The toiletries and cosmetics products would be sold through retail grocery
(supermarket) and pharmaceutical outlets throughout
Australia.
8. There would have been sufficient production facilities and supplies of raw
materials to produce the toiletries and cosmetics products
and production of
sufficient volumes of those products to meet anticipated sales.
9. The toiletry and cosmetics products would be priced so as to fall within a
premium price range, but remain ''-competitive" with
main competitors in that
premium price range.
- It
is necessary, at this point, to say something about the history of the
instructions provided to Professor Layton. He was first
engaged by Malleson
Stephen Jacques. His instructions were contained in a letter dated 10 February
2005. He was asked to express
his opinion in respect of the following
question:
Taking into account the enclosed factual assumptions and other materials you
consider relevant, what is your opinion of the likely
annual sales volume
and/or, if possible, the equivalent market share (in percentage terms) that
probably would have been achieved
by Proton had it proceeded with its proposed
domestic product launch, in the following categories:
(a) laundry (liquids, powders, tablets, capsules);
(b) kitchen products (concentrated dishwashing - hand and
machine, oven cleaner);
(c) household general (concentrated window cleaner, concentrated surface
cleaners)
- Annexed
to the letter of instructions was a document entitled "ASSUMPTIONS TO BE MADE BY
PROFESSOR R LAYTON". That document relevantly
read:
The assumptions relate to the following product categories:
· laundry products (liquids, powders, capsules, tablets, fabric
softener)
· kitchen products (concentrated dishwashing (hand and machine), oven
cleaners)
· general household cleaning products (concentrated surface cleaners,
window cleaners)
Assumptions
1 By March 1999 Proton Technology had developed a new product range which
were listed in the enclosed March 1999 "New domestic enzyme
products" product
list ("Product List").
2. The chemical composition of the products in the Product List was such that
the products were superior at cleaning the goods to
which they were applied when
compared with products with which they would have been in competition in
2001.
...
- I
have not set out all of the assumptions Professor Layton was asked to make but I
note that they consisted of nine paragraphs. Those
assumptions were set out in
Professor Layton's first report in paragraphs 19 to 25. In some cases he has
modified the wording of
the assumptions but assumption 2 in the above extract
was reproduced precisely as paragraph 20 in his first report. It may be noted
that the assumptions were said to relate to the three categories of laundry
products, kitchen products and general household cleaning
products.
- Subsequently
the Plaintiffs instructed Sarvaas Ciappara. On 16 August 2005 they wrote to
Professor Layton referring to his engagement
by Mallesons. The letter went on to
say:
Would you please also provide the requested opinion in respect of the
following additional category of products:
(d) Toiletry and cosmetics (liquid hand soap, shampoo, conditioner, shower
gel and skincare products).
...
We remind you of the Expert Witness Code of Conduct previously provided to
you. In particular, if you rely on any facts, matters or
assumptions informing
your opinion, please ensure that these are clearly stated in your report.
(emphasis added)
The "requested opinion" was that set out in [68] above which took account of
the assumptions provided to him with that letter.
- Subsequently,
Sarvaas Ciappara sent a further letter to Professor Layton on 10 January 2006.
This letter was not available to me at
the hearing of the Defendant's August s
192A application nor was it put into evidence until the third day of hearing of
the present
Motions. Mr Stitt QC said, and I accept unreservedly, that this
letter had never before been produced to the Defendant's lawyers
in the matter.
- The
letter relevantly said this:
We refer to our letter dated 16 August 2005 which requests your opinion of
the likely annual sales, volume and/or, if possible, the
equivalent market share
(in percentage terms) that probably would have been achieved by Proton
Technology had it proceeded with its
proposed domestic product launch in respect
of the additional category pf products, being the toiletry and cosmetics (liquid
hand
soap, shampoo, conditioner, shower gel and skin care products) category.
In providing your opinion, please make the following assumptions regarding
the toiletry and cosmetics product category:
1. The new products are the toiletries, arid cosmetics range: of products
listed on pages 6, 7 and 8, of the enclosed document entitled
"New domestic
enzyme products" dated March 1999.
2. The launch, of the toiletries and cosmetics products in the Product List
would have followed the launch of the laundry, dishwashing
and household
cleaning products.
3. The toiletries and cosmetics products would be sold through retail grocery
(supermarket) and pharmaceutical outlets throughout
Australia.
4. There would have been sufficient production and distribution facilities
and supplies of raw materials to produce the toiletries
arid cosmetics products
and production of sufficient volumes of those products to meet anticipated
sales.
5. The toiletry and cosmetics products would be priced so as to fall within a
premium price range, but remain competitive with main
competitors in the premium
price range.
- The
letter was never annexed to the second report of Professor Layton as the letter
of 16 August 2005 had been.
- It
can been seen that paragraphs 5 to 9 in the second report reproduce exactly the
five assumptions set out in the letter of 10 January
2006 ([67] above).
- The
Plaintiffs submitted that nowhere in this report does Professor Layton set out
the superiority assumption.
- It
may be accepted that what appears in paragraph 4 of this second report ([67]
above) is ambiguous. First of all Professor Layton
refers to the
letters of instructions containing assumptions. The letter of 16
August 2005 from Sarvaas Ciappara asked him to prepare "the requested opinion"
in relation to the fourth category (toiletries and cosmetics) and made reference
to the letter of Mallesons which annexed assumptions
including the superiority
assumption.
- Then
Professor Layton makes a distinction between assumptions given to him and his
own assumptions and says:
Where these assumptions are in addition to those set out in the letters of
instructions, I have stated these assumptions at the relevant
points in this
report.
Somewhat inconsistently he then says:
The assumptions provided with the letters of instructions and upon which I
rely in this report are set out below
and he then goes on to set out only the five assumptions contained in the
letter of 10 January 2006.
- The
Plaintiffs pointed to that last statement and to the setting out of the five
assumptions from the 10 January 2006 letter to submit
that the superiority
assumption was not made by Professor Layton when preparing this report. However,
Professor Layton's conclusion
in his third report ([56] above) makes it clear
that he did make the superiority assumption in relation to the toiletries and
cosmetic
products. This is reinforced by the letter of instructions for this
third report which, having noted the earlier report and the testing
reports
received, said this:
3.4 Accordingly, you are briefed to provide a Supplementary Expert Report
that revisits the findings of your report in light of the
Further Expert Reports
and confirms whether the assumptions that you originally relied on are valid or
invalid. Once this is done,
you are then briefed to assess whether the findings
of your existing Expert Reports have changed or not, in light of your findings
as to the assumptions.
- Professor
Layton then provided the conclusion ([56] above) and, in relation to toiletries
and cosmetic products, the conclusion is
further reinforced by paragraph 15 in
that third report headed "Toiletries and Cosmetics" where Professor
Layton says this:
Dr Motitschke agrees [with Dr Lai], noting that the ingredients are still
used today, and the proposed formulations will have been
premium products in
1999. In my view the assessments noted above confirm the validity of the
assumption made in paragraph 5 above
[the superiority assumption] and I do not
wish to change my findings regarding overall sales and share.
- The
Plaintiffs submitted that that statement of Professor Layton's was made in error
because paragraph 5 does not in terms refer to
the toiletries and cosmetics. I
do not agree that Professor Layton has made an error in that regard particularly
in the context of
his references to Dr Lai's and Dr Motitschke's findings and in
the light of what appears in paragraph 9 of the third report. In my
opinion
Professor Layton made the superiority assumption in respect of the
toiletries.
- The
Plaintiffs' third basis for the re-admission of Professor Layton's reports in
relation to the laundry products, the dishwashing
products and the toiletries
was that there was existing evidence that validated the superiority assumption.
That testing evidence
was largely from Mr Chaina as found in exhibits 102 and
103 but also included testing by CIBA, AAFS testing and Clariant
testing.
Mr Chaina's expertise
- The
evidence involving Mr Chaina related to testing and utilising what were
described as EMPA swatches. What appears in exhibits 102
and 103 were said to be
the results of the testing using EMPA swatches.
- Whilst
it is true that exhibits 102 and 103 contain the results of Mr Chaina's EMPA
swatch testing, understanding what was involved
in the testing as well as the
test results involves accepting Mr Chaina as an expert witness. Ultimately, Mr
Dawson appeared to accept
that it would be necessary to demonstrate that Mr
Chaina had the necessary expertise if this evidence was to be accepted. This was
evident from the terms of a draft affidavit of Mr Chaina that Mr Dawson
initially tendered in support of this basis for the admissibility
of Professor
Layton's report on the laundry products. (Mr Dawson subsequently submitted that
a further affidavit from Mr Chaina was
not necessary.) It is also evident from
evidence in parts of Mr Chaina's Statements such as paragraph 64 of his
Statement of 8 February
2010 (exhibit C1).
- In
Chaina v Presbyterian Church (NSW) Property Trust (No. 7) [2013] NSWSC
139 I gave evidentiary rulings pursuant to s 192A Evidence Act in
relation to the Statements of Mr and Mrs Chaina.
- In
relation to the evidence of Mr Chaina I rejected portions of his Statements
because it had not been established that he was an
expert, particularly in light
of the concession made that he did not have the qualifications that he had
earlier claimed. I held
that there were three problems with the expert evidence.
First, his expertise had not been established on the evidence. Secondly,
he had
not acknowledged the Expert Witness Code nor agreed that he was bound by it.
Thirdly, he had not complied with the requirements
of r 31.27 UCPR which,
following Makita, sets out what it is expected will be found in an expert
report.
- As
a result of submissions made to me on the hearing of the present Motions I
consider that I was in error to the extent that his
evidence would have been
rejected simply because he had not acknowledged the Expert Witness Code and
agreed to be bound by it. I
note in passing that submissions were never made by
the legal advisors acting on behalf of the Plaintiffs at the time I considered
the s 192A application in relation to these Statements that there was no
necessity for acknowledgment of the Expert Witness Code.
Nevertheless, I
consider that it is not necessary for Mr Chaina to acknowledge that Code by
reason of the definitions in r 31.18
and the provisions of r 31.23(3).
- Rule
31.18 provides that an expert:
in relation to any issue, means a person who has such knowledge or experience
of, or in connection with, that issue, or issues of
the character of that issue,
that his or her opinion on that issue would be admissible in evidence.
- On
the other hand, an expert witness:
means an expert engaged or appointed for the purpose of:
(a) providing an expert's report for use as evidence in proceedings or
proposed proceedings, or
(b) giving opinion evidence in proceedings or proposed proceedings.
- In
that regard, whilst it is asserted that Mr Chaina is an expert he
is not an expert witness because he was not engaged or appointed
for the purpose of providing an expert's report or giving opinion
evidence.
- The
definition of expert's report is:
a written statement by an expert (whether or not an expert witness in the
proceedings concerned) that sets out the expert's opinion
and the facts, and
assumptions of fact, on which the opinion is based.
By that definition expert evidence contained in a Statement of Mr Chaina
would be an expert's report.
- However,
r 31.23 requires only an expert witness to comply with the Code of
Conduct but subrule (3) allows the Court to admit the report even if the Code
has not been complied with.
On the other hand, r 31.27 applies to an
expert's report and not only to the report of an expert
witness.
- There
is no doubt that an interested party can give expert testimony: Sydney South
West Area Health Service v Stamoulis [2009] NSWCA 153 at [17]- [47] and
[200]-[225]. The precise distinction between expert and
expert witness in r 31.18 was not adverted to in that case.
However, the view appears to have been that a person who is an expert
that is giving evidence in his own case would ordinarily be expected to comply
with the duties arising from an acknowledgement of
the Code - see particularly
at [46]-[47] and [211].
- Hence,
a failure to acknowledge the Code by Mr Chaina would not necessarily mean his
expert evidence was inadmissible.
- On
the other hand, r 31.27 sets out what must be contained in an expert's
report (and an expert's report includes a written
statement giving expert opinion such as is contained in Mr Chaina's Statements
if he is an expert). What is contained in Mr Chaina's Statements
about the carrying out of the tests would not appear to comply with r 31.27
particularly
paragraphs (b) and (c).
- As
mentioned above, in Chaina (No. 7) I rejected various parts of Mr
Chaina's statement on the basis that he was giving expert evidence and his
expertise had not been
established. I said in respect of a number of paragraphs
or portions of paragraphs that they were rejected with leave to the Plaintiffs
to apply for them to be reinstated if Mr Chaina's expertise was established. In
particular, in paras [32] and [35] I noted that Mr
Chaina's expertise had not
been established and that I would consider the admissibility of evidence if he
was found to be an expert.
- That
judgment was delivered on 1 March 2013. The hearing commenced on 4 March 2013.
For the whole of the first tranche of the hearing
during which Mr and Mrs Chaina
gave their evidence the Plaintiffs were represented by Mr Maconachie QC and Mr J
Sharpe of counsel
instructed by Berrigan Doube solicitors.
- At
no time was any attempt made to have Mr Chaina determined to be an expert, nor
was any attempt made to re-tender the parts of his
evidence rejected on the
basis that he was not an expert. Significantly, on the second day of the hearing
Mr Maconachie QC tendered
the various statements of Mr Chaina which I had ruled
on in Chaina (No. 7). He also tendered a fresh statement of Mr Chaina
dated 1 March 2013 that became exhibit E in the proceedings. There was no
attempt
in exhibit E to demonstrate Mr Chaina's expertise.
- I
also consider it is relevant to have regard to exhibit AA1 on the Motion which
was the transcript of Mr Chaina's academic record
at the Sydney Institute as at
1 March 2013. That transcript shows that Mr Chaina had failures against ten
subjects including two
failures for Analytical Chemistry 1, two failures for
Organic Chemistry 1, two failures for Unit Operations, two failures for Applied
Physical Chemistry and a failure for each of Laboratory Techniques 1 and
Mathematics 1.
- Mr
Chaina's evidence about this is found in paragraph 46 of his Statement of 8
February 2010 where he said:
I enrolled in a certificate in chemistry at the Sydney Institute, Ultimo in
about 1980. I attended courses at that facility from about
1980 to 1984. These
courses were paid for by Colgate Palmolive. While I continued to learn a great
deal from the study that I underwent
at this time my examination results were
not impressive as it was often case that I did not attend examinations.
- It
is difficult not to infer from that course of events that a forensic decision
was taken by experienced counsel acting on behalf
of the Plaintiffs not, in the
circumstances, to put forward Mr Chaina as an expert witness. The circumstances
included most significantly
the fact that Mr Chaina had dishonestly maintained
until August 2009 that he had qualifications that would otherwise have made him
an expert but that at that time he acknowledged that he did not have those
qualifications. A forensic decision not to have him determined
to be an expert
witness is readily available in those circumstances.
- The
fact that the Plaintiffs obtained the Sydney Institute transcript on or about 1
March 2013, that the hearing commenced on 4 March
2013 and that no attempt was
made to have Mr Chaina accepted as an expert witness considerably strengthens
the inference that a forensic
decision was taken not to do so.
- Mr
Chaina was cross-examined at length but he was not cross-examined about his
expertise. Mr Stitt QC says, and I accept, that he
did not do so because Mr
Chaina was not put forward as an expert. The decision not to put him forward as
an expert is precisely the
sort of decision that the High Court was dealing with
in Aon. It would not be in the interests of justice at this stage of the
trial now to permit the Plaintiffs to change their approach. I
am reinforced in
that view by the absence of any explanation for the failure to have him accepted
as an expert at an earlier time.
- In
any event, I am not satisfied in all the circumstances that the evidence now
sought to be put forward by the Plaintiffs justifies
the conclusion that Mr
Chaina has the expertise necessary to conclude that exhibits 102 and 103
demonstrate that the laundry products
are superior.
- Mr
Dawson relied upon paragraphs 24 - 226 of Mr Chaina's statement of 8 February
2010 to show that there was "an extraordinary amount
of evidence" about Mr
Chaina's scientific ability and experience". In fact, I dealt with a large
portion of these paragraphs in Chaina (No. 7). In particular, some of
this evidence was allowed to enable Mr Chaina to demonstrate his expertise - see
at [25]-[26]. Various other
parts of these paragraphs were rejected as expert
evidence but leave was given to reinstate them if Mr Chaina's expertise was
demonstrated.
- What
appears on the Sydney Institute transcript is a strong indication that Mr Chaina
does not possess the expertise he claims. He
may have worked for long periods in
industries involving the sort of products his companies have produced but the
evidence is not
sufficient to reach a conclusion that he has the expertise he
claims.
- In
all the circumstances, I would not determine that Mr Chaina should be accepted
as an expert even if I considered it appropriate
to allow the Plaintiffs to make
such an application at this late stage of the proceedings.
- I
do not consider that what appears in Exhibits 102 and 103 speaks for itself. The
information contained in those exhibits does not,
without expert evidence to
explain the testing and the results, demonstrate that the laundry products
concerned are superior. What
is contained in paragraph 64 of Mr Chaina's
Statement of 8 February 2010 and paragraph 19(b) of Mrs Chaina's Statement of 29
January
2010 does not fill the gap. There is no explanation, for example, of how
a spectrophotometer works or what the readings are that
are spoken
about.
- The
other documents sought to be relied upon (CIBA testing, AAFS testing and
Clariant testing) are not in evidence except on the present
motion. If the
documents are put forward as expert evidence they do not in any sense comply
with Makita nor the Expert Witness Code. In the case of the CIBA
documents it is not even apparent from the document who performed the test let
alone their qualifications to do so and to express the opinion in the
document.
- There
is a further difficulty in the Plaintiffs relying on testing carried out by Mr
Chaina that became Exhibits 102 and 103. The
Plaintiffs say that Exhibits 102
and 103 demonstrate that all of the products there tested are superior to the
competitors' products
against which they were tested. That is not what the
testing experts retained by the Plaintiffs say. I have set out their evidence
in
detail in Chaina (No. 13). My conclusions on that evidence are at [126]
and [127] of the judgment. In putting forward Exhibits 102 and 103 the
Plaintiffs are
effectively saying that the evidence of those experts should be
disregarded to the extent that it does not match
the results Mr
Chaina achieved. It is inappropriate for a party, having put forward these
experts, to impugn their evidence in that
way.
- That
is particularly so in these proceedings. Until August 2009, when the Plaintiffs
acknowledged that Mr Chaina did not have the
qualifications he claimed, the case
was largely being run on the strength of his evidence to prove the superiority
of the products.
It was only after that acknowledgement that the testing experts
were engaged to provide the evidence that it was recognised could
not be given
by Mr Chaina. Not only would it be inappropriate for the Plaintiffs to impugn
their own expert witnesses in this way,
it would amount to re-casting of their
case from what was served in the testing experts' reports from 2010
onwards.
- The
Plaintiffs are therefore obliged to fall back on the obtaining of further
reports from Dr Smulders (as was apprehended by Mr Dawson)
or some other expert
to show that the laundry and dishwashing products and the toiletries are
superior. Thereafter, it would be necessary
to obtain a supplementary report
from Professor Layton which dealt only with the products that were found to be
superior.
(2) Should further reports be allowed?
(a) Domestic products
- The
Plaintiffs' proposal is that Professor Layton will prepare a report that works
on the assumption that some but not all of the
products are superior and will
then provide his opinion concerning market share in a similar fashion to what he
previously did on
the assumption that all products were superior. The Plaintiffs
say that this is not a recasting of their case because all of the
products now
found to be superior fell within the larger group of products that Professor
Layton had earlier dealt with.
- The
Plaintiffs drew attention in particular to what was said by Heydon J in
Dasreef Pty Ltd v Hawchar [2011] HCA 21; (2011) 243 CLR 588 at [124] to
justify why they should be able to serve further material in the light of
Chaina (No. 13). Heydon J said:
[124] From the point of view of the tendering party, it is desirable that the
admissibility of expert opinion evidence tendered by
that party be clear by the
moment when the case for that party closes. It is undesirable that expert
opinion evidence admitted in
that party's case should later be held - perhaps as
late as the time of judgment - to be subject to such doubts about its weight
that it lacks utility. It is undesirable that its admissibility be in suspense
until a time after the tendering party's case has
closed. If the admissibility
of expert opinion evidence which is tendered and conditionally admitted is not
finally ruled on until
after the case for the tendering party is closed, and the
evidence is then rejected, or its weight has become so questionable that
it is
useless, the tendering party may have lost an opportunity to repair the position
before its case closed, either by calling
further witnesses or tendering further
documents, or by recalling witnesses who had already been in the box. The
capacity of tendering parties who are the prosecution or the plaintiff to reopen
their cases rests on a discretion in the court
which may not be favourably
exercised; their capacity to tender evidence in reply is constricted by
fairly strict rules, particularly in criminal cases. (emphasis added)
- The
Plaintiffs submitted that the timing of the application by the Defendant leading
to the judgment in Chaina (No. 13) was important in that regard. If the
Defendant had brought its application some time after all the Plaintiffs' expert
reports had
been served but before the trial commenced there would have been
ample time for the Plaintiffs to seek to supplement its case in
the way it now
seek to do. In that way, it is said, the lateness of the Plaintiffs' Motion
should not be held against them.
- In
my opinion, what the Plaintiffs are seeking to do, despite their assertions to
the contrary, is to recast their case to limit the
evidence in relation to
superiority to some but not all of the domestic products. Moreover, the limiting
exercise is not carried
out by reliance only on existing evidence concerning the
testing of the products. It is also reliant on what are said to be reports
that
will be prepared.
- The
Plaintiffs sought to support the more limited case by reliance on some
additional material, including a supplementary report from
Dr Smulders dated 30
September 2013, and by what is contained in exhibits 102 and 103.
- Dr
Smulders' supplementary report commences by saying this:
Results of a series of laundry and cleaning detergency performance tests of
different product samples based on formulations developed
by Proton Technology
(referred to as PT hereafter) in 1999 were made available to me by the
Plaintiffs Mr and Mrs Chaina from Sydney,
NSW, Australia in September 2013. The
tests I will refer to were conducted by various persons and institutes in
Australia and Germany.
The results were obtained from testing the detergency and
cleaning performance of PT products versus different laundry and cleaning
products available on the competitive market in Australia. The tests were
conducted following Australian Standards.
In the following I will provide my opinion on the outcome of these test
results (as submitted to me) with special view on the comparison
of the
detergency and cleaning performance of PT products vs. that of competitor market
products and with special regard to the superiority of PT products as
derived and judged from the performance test results.
Also, supplementary to my Expert Report of 2010, I will take a closer look at
the market chances of those individual PT formulations
from the file "Domestic
Product Formulations and Manufacturing Documentation" showing their
superiority of performance versus competitor products.
- A
little later on in the introduction to this report he says
this:
The report is based exclusively on the test results submitted and statements
made therein. For the purposes of this report, I have
assumed these results and
statements to be correct.
- Dr
Smulders does not identify in his report by which persons and by which
institutes in Australia and Germany the tests were conducted.
When I adverted to
that difficulty during the hearing Mr Dawson accepted that it would be necessary
to obtain a further report from
Dr Smulders.
- A
comparison of what Dr Smulders found in his report of 24 February 2010 and his
conclusions in the supplementary report suggests
that his conclusions of
superiority in the supplementary report are entirely based upon the unspecified
testing that he refers to
in the introduction to that report. In a few cases the
superiority was said to be able to be claimed because the product was unique
in
1999. It is also apparent that Dr Smulders has changed his opinion so that, on
the basis of this unspecified testing, he now considers
products to be superior
that he had not so considered in his original report.
- It
appears that some of the testing relied upon by Dr Smulders in his supplementary
report was testing conducted by Mr Chaina that
became exhibits 102 and 103. The
Plaintiffs also wish to rely (as I have noted) on testing by CIBA, AAFS and
Clariant. I have already
held that that evidence is not in admissible
form.
- The
position is, therefore, that the Plaintiffs wish to rely on a report from Dr
Smulders (not yet completed) which in turn relies
upon other expert evidence,
not in proper form, including what amounts to expert evidence from Mr Chaina who
I have determined is
not an expert. In turn, that report of Dr Smulders will be
sent to Professor Layton who will then prepare a report on the assumption
of the
superiority of the products enumerated by Dr Smulders. This will involve three
of the four categories (laundry products, dishwashing
products and toiletries)
and there will be some products in each category that are not judged to be
superior.
- It
is difficult to see in those circumstances how what the Plaintiffs intend to do
is not an attempt to recast their case. Previously
that case was that all
products were superior which would result in the Plaintiffs achieving a certain
percentage share of the market.
A case based on the superiority of some but not
all of the products must be a different case. One can reasonably infer that the
percentage
share of the market that Professor Layton will say could be achieved
will differ from his previous conclusions.
- Mr
Dawson's submission that the need for the Plaintiffs to obtain further reports
by reason of the timing of the Defendant's August
s 192A application must be
seen in the context of the whole hearing. The first tranche of the hearing (a
six week period) commencing
4 March 2013 was for the purpose of hearing the lay
evidence. As it transpired the whole of that time was taken up with the evidence
of Mr and Mrs Chaina.
- At
the time the second tranche was fixed (19 March 2013) it was thought that all
the expert evidence would be dealt with in that tranche
with a break before
addresses. By the time the first tranche finished it had become clear that more
time would be needed to accommodate
the expert evidence that was unlikely to be
completed in the second tranche. It seemed likely that the second tranche would
consist
of the remaining lay witnesses (and efforts were being made to limit
those) and the psychiatrists.
- At
a directions hearing on 10 July 2013 before Hoeben CJ at CL Mr Stitt QC said
that what he proposed "when we sort out the argument
about these lay witnesses,
is to raise a point about the expert witnesses". Mr Stitt produced a schedule
which formed the basis of
the s 192A application that resulted in Chaina (No.
13). This schedule was served on the lawyers then acting for the
Plaintiffs.
- When
the second tranche commenced on 15 July 2103 Mr Stitt QC raised with the Court
the schedule concerning the expert witnesses.
He said he wished to flag the
matter and at an appropriate time have it dealt with. He handed a copy of it to
Mrs Chaina and he said
(T 1597):
Your Honour, the relevance of raising it at this stage is to indicate clearly
that the plaintiffs' own case and the plaintiffs' own evidence does not
rise to the level necessary to establish the assumptions which were made by the
witnesses. (emphasis added)
- I
then explained the nature of the application to the Plaintiffs and asked them to
respond to the schedule. They asked for "as long
as possible" to do so but I
directed that any response be provided by 9 August 2013. Subsequently Mrs Chaina
asked if she could simply
address matters orally without preparing a written
response and I agreed to that course. The application was then heard on 8 August
as soon as the remaining lay evidence and the psychiatric evidence (except the
evidence of Dr Phillips who was not then available)
had
concluded.
- It
does not seem to me that the Defendant's application with respect to the expert
evidence could have been made before the completion
of the Plaintiffs' evidence.
The superiority of the Plaintiffs' products was asserted by the Plaintiffs in
their evidence and, as
Mr Chaina made perfectly clear on a number of occasions
during the argument on the application, he instructed the lawyers to instruct
the experts that the assumption to be made was that the products were
superior.
- The
approach of the Defendant that the application had to await completion of the
Plaintiffs' lay evidence is entirely consistent
with the present practice of the
Court that, ordinarily lay evidence will be given first so that experts can, if
required, modify
their evidence and particularly any assumptions they have made
in advance of that evidence.
- The
criticism of the timing of the application has no basis. I note further that if
the Defendant had not made the s 192A application
and had simply addressed the
matter of the assumptions in final submissions it would then have been too late
for further evidence
to be led to support the Plaintiffs' case. In that way the
Plaintiffs have not been disadvantaged by the way the matter has
proceeded.
- The
issue is not the "holding of the lateness of the Plaintiffs' motion against
them" as Mr Dawson put it. The issue is whether the
time has now passed for the
Plaintiffs to serve further evidence. That depends upon the history of the
matter and the stage the proceedings
have reached. It may be noted that in the
passage from Dasreef to which the Plaintiffs referred (at [114] above)
Heydon J said that the capacity of tendering parties to re-open their case rests
on a discretion of the court which may not be favourably
exercised.
- It
is at this point that discretionary aspects must be considered.
Discretionary considerations
- Up
until August 2009 (as I have noted) the proceedings were conducted based on the
supposed qualifications possessed by George Chaina
in science and in business.
- The
disclosure in August 2009 that Mr Chaina did not have those qualifications
resulted in an application by the Plaintiffs to change
the way the Plaintiffs
proved their case. The matter is conveniently summarised in the judgment of
Hoeben J in Chaina & Ors v The Presbyterian Church (NSW) Property Trust
& Ors (No 3) [2009] NSWSC 1243:
[25] A significant development occurred in August 2009 when Messrs McLachlan
Thorpe apparently learned that Mr Chaina did not have
any university or other
academic qualifications. This resulted in them advising the solicitors for the
defendants that "the plaintiffs
will not be asserting at the hearing that the
second plaintiff, George Chaina, had, at any relevant time, any university
qualifications."
Submissions
[26] The company plaintiffs submitted that the orders which they sought would
not change their claim or the way in which it was pleaded.
What was being sought
was the opportunity to prove that claim in a way different to that which had
been used to date. Instead of
relying entirely upon the observations and
opinions of Mr Chaina, the company plaintiffs wished to rely upon the
observations of
approximately 40 laypersons. Instead of relying upon the
opinions of Mr Chaina, the company plaintiffs wished to rely upon the opinions
of two experts, Mr Williams
and Mr Van Dyke.
[27] The evidence of Mr Williams, an industrial chemist, goes to support
the assertion of the superior performance of the domestic products.
Most other
expert evidence, and therefore the viability and productivity of the business,
depends upon that proposition being established. The evidence of Mr Williams
goes essentially to establishing the assumptions upon which previous expert
opinion concerning the domestic
products has been based.
[28] The evidence of Mr Van Dyke is along similar lines. His speciality is in
industrial product performance. It is intended that
his evidence will perform
the same function in respect of the industrial products as that of Mr Williams
in respect of the domestic
products.
[29] The company plaintiffs accept that if their application is successful,
it will take until the end of February 2010 at the earliest
before this
additional lay and expert evidence will be available. They accept that
inevitably further delay will occur while the
defendants endeavour to meet this
new material.
[30] The company plaintiffs seek to justify the application on the following
bases.
[31] They accept that considerable delay has already been incurred in
providing important information such as the product formulae
and details of
manufacturing processes and of what manufacturing plant and equipment was
available in 1999. They submit that it was
not possible to obtain the expert
opinions of Mr Williams and Mr Van Dyke until the product formulae were
obtained. Delays have occurred
in that process for the reasons previously
referred to, particularly the health of Mr Chaina.
[32] Messrs McLachlan Thorpe also frankly submit that they disagreed with the
approach followed by those lawyers previously preparing
the matter for the
company plaintiffs. In particular, they disagreed with the assumptions upon
which other expert evidence depended
being established almost entirely by the
evidence of Mr Chaina as set out in his statement of September 2005.
[33] They submit that the risks inherent in that approach have now eventuated
as a result of the revelations of August 2009 that Mr
Chaina does not have
university or other academic qualifications. If, as they anticipate, Mr Chaina
will be heavily cross-examined
as to credit, the assumptions upon which
previously obtained expert evidence depends may not be capable of being
established. They
now seek to establish those matters by other means, i.e. the
additional lay and expert evidence.
[34] The company plaintiffs submit that unless they are allowed to adduce
this additional evidence, they may well not be able to establish
their case.
They accept that to some extent this is a problem of their own making, or at
least the result of an approach taken by
the previous legal advisers. They
submit that they do have a real and substantial case to put before the Court and
as a matter of
justice, they should be allowed to adduce appropriate evidence in
order to establish that case. (emphasis added)
- Even
before that judgment on 23 November 2009 orders had been made by Hoeben J on 9
June 2009 as follows:
5. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve any further evidence including any
statement by George Chaina and/or collaborative witnesses
in support of
assertions of superior qualities of any of the Plaintiffs' products on or before
11 August 2009.
6. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve any manufacturing expert evidence on
or before 11 August 2009.
- As
a result of his judgment in Chaina (No 3) Hoeben J varied order 5 made on
9 June 2009 as follows:
(2) Order 5 made by the Court on 9 June 2009 is to be varied by:
(a) Extending the time for compliance for the service of any further
statement of George Chaina in support of assertions of superior
quality relating
to the company plaintiffs' domestic products.
(b) Extending the time for compliance for the service of any further
statements of corroborative witnesses in support of assertions
of superior
quality relating to the company plaintiffs' domestic products.
(c) Extending the time for compliance for the service of any expert evidence
relating to performance and manufacture of the company
plaintiffs' domestic
products.
(3) To the extent necessary, the company plaintiffs have leave to file and
serve the evidence set out in paragraphs 2(a) - (c).
(4) The company plaintiffs have leave to file and serve expert evidence
relating to the performance and manufacture of the company
plaintiffs'
industrial products.
(5) The company plaintiffs are to prepare a draft timetable in relation to
the provision of the above evidence and to serve same on
the solicitors for the
defendants by 4pm on Friday, 27 November 2009.
- On
9 December 2009 his Honour then made these orders:
1. Orders 1 (b) and 2 made by the Court on 9 June 2009 be varied by extending
the time for service to 14 September 2009.
2. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve any further statement of George
Chaina in support of assertions of superior qualities of any
of the Plaintiffs'
products on before 24 December 2009.
3. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve any further statements of
corroborative witnesses in support of assertions of superior qualities
of the
Plaintiffs' domestic products on or before 24 December 2009.
4. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve witness statements of any further lay
witnesses from whom they intend to adduce evidence in
relation to the company
Plaintiffs' claims on or before 29 January 2010.
5. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve expert evidence relating to
performance and manufacture of the company Plaintiffs' domestic
products on or
before 26 February 2010.
6. The Plaintiffs are to file and serve expert evidence relating to
performance and manufacture of the company Plaintiffs' industrial
products on or
before 29 January 2010.
- The
matter was listed for further directions on 5 March 2010. On that day the
Plaintiffs sought and were granted a further extension
to serve the expert
reports other than the marketing expert reports until 1 April 2010.
- Reports
were obtained from Dr Smulders, Dr Lai, Dr Motitschke and Dr Van Dyke within the
time limited and I assume in the Plaintiffs'
favour that they were served in the
time limited.
- It
is difficult to discern precisely what was happening in relation to the
preparation of the trial in 2010 and 2011. Certainly there
were interlocutory
applications of various sorts.
- On
17 April 2012 the matter again came before Hoeben J for directions. The
transcript relevantly reads:
[STITT:] Your Honour, I want to hand to you in a moment a chronology which
sets out the unhappy history of this matter but one of
the things which your
Honour will see on page 17 is that on 4 March 2011 Berrigan Doube advised that
all medical and lay witness
statements have been served. However they went on to
say that they were in the process of obtaining up dated experts' reports from
the experts. We have never seen them. They said that it would take six months.
That was in March 2011.
...
[HIS HONOUR:] I'm going to direct this at you Mr Fermanis. At the moment,
leaving aside the admissibility of the 50 plus lay statements
to which reference
has been made, when do you anticipate that you will be in a position to close
your case in the sense that all
expert documents will have been served, or
expert reports?
FERMANIS: If I might address your Honour as to where my client's position has
been with respect to the experts. Those who instruct
me, given the time that has
passed since the reports were first served on the defendant, have undertaken a
process of obtaining some
supplementary updating reports. This unfortunately has
taken much longer than anticipated by those who instruct me.
HIS HONOUR: Just pausing there. Mr Stitt says, with some force I might add,
that as of March of last year an assertion was made in
correspondence that
within six months the expert material was going to be available. Now, 13
months have passed and you are about to tell me I anticipate that we are going
to have to wait some further amount of time. When are we going to expect
this material?
FERMANIS. If I might have a moment to obtain instructions from those who
instruct me
Those who instruct me tell me no more than three months to finalise the
expert evidence.
H!S HONOUR: Just so we understand where we are going, what expert evidence
are we talking about? Who and what form is it going to
take?
FERMANIS: There are three aspects to the expert reports. The first of those
existing expert reports, there is Dr Smoulders (sic).
HIS HO'NOUR: Pausing there, is every existing report going to be updated?
FERMANIS: No, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: Which ones are going to be up dated?
FERMANIS: The expert report of Dr Smoulders (sic), the expert report of
Professor Leighton (sic), I might address your Honour in a
moment about
Professor Dowling. There is a Dr Wever, the medical expert. We anticipate
obtaining a supplementary updating report
as to the Chainas' condition.
Professor Dowling has, on my instructions, retired and my solicitors have
gone to great steps in order to obtain an updating report
from him. My
solicitors have met some difficulty.
HIS HONOUR: I suppose he is still alive. Given the length of this case that
is an achievement.
FERMANIS: He is still alive however he has retired and getting alternatives
to that report is unpalatable and difficult at best.
HIS HONOUR: You are going to have to duchess Professor Dowling and see if you
can get him along.
FERMANIS: Dr Fong as I understand will be providing an updating report. There
was a single formula which Dr Fong had some difficulties
in preparing so my
instructing solicitors have retained Dr Rickard (sic) who is a technical
expert.
HIS HONOUR: This will be a new report, I'm going to come to that. If you can
deal with the updating reports so Mr Stitt or those behind
him can make a note
of that, then I want to look at the new reports.
FERMANIS: He is a technical expert instructed to look at the formula. On my
instructions that report has been finalised and should
be in a position to be
served in two weeks.
In terms of a further new report is Wheaton Beer. He is an environmental
consulting expert who is retained to draft a report on the
plaintiffs' products
and environmental credentials. I am instructed this report is also being
finalised and should be in a position
to be served on the defendants within two
weeks. I can inform the court I have not seen these reports either.
HIS HONOUR: We will see what comes up.
FERMANIS: Rick Millar of ME Engineering who is a manufacturing expert to
assess the plaintiffs' ability to manufacture the products
in a volume and
efficiency required for launch and relaunch. There will be an updated report
from Professor Van Dyke. It is anticipated
that Professor Van Dyke will supply
his updated report within two to four weeks to Mr Millar who will then provide
his report within
two to four weeks.
There is a further report of two experts, Mr David Cowey and Dr David Gregory
who act as raw material costing experts. This report
is anticipated to be
finalised within two to four weeks. There have been two economic loss reports
prepared by Robyn (sic) Humphreys
of Moore Stephens accounting.
HIS HONOUR: Are they new or updated?
FERMANIS: Updated reports. It is anticipated, Pritchard (sic) Partners and
Price Waterhouse Coopers have been retained to provide
a further economic loss
expert report following the finalisation of the remaining expert material.
HIS HONOUR: That sounds like a new report, is it?
FERMANIS: That is a new report, yes. Two separate reports. So on my
instructions those are the expert reports.
HIS HONOUR: Some of those you think will be ready within two to four weeks,
all of them will available to Mr Stiffs team within three
months.
FERMANIS: Yes. (emphasis added)
- His
Honour then made this order:
I direct the personal Plaintiffs and the corporate Plaintiff (sic) to serve
all of the expert reports upon which they wish to rely
on or before 4pm on 31
July 2012. In making that order I add this qualification. I do not wish all of
those reports to be served
on that particular date. The intention of making that
order is that as expert material becomes available in a state where it can
be
served it should be served so that those reports which the plaintiffs' counsel
has identified as being likely to be served or
available to be served within two
to four weeks should in fact be served as soon as those reports become available
to enable the
defendant to deal with them in a more efficient and expeditious
way.
- It
is not clear on what dates the reports were served but I note the following
reports obtained after that time:
(a) Dr Fong: 2 May 2012;
(b) Dr Van Dyke: June 2012;
(c) Sam Daniel: 5 June 2012;
(d) Professor Layton: 11 July 2012;
(e) Professor Dowling: July 2012.
(f) Ralph Moyle: 25 July 2012;
(g) Rick Millar: 27 July 2012;
- When
the matter came back for directions before Hoeben JA (as his Honour then was) on
2 August 2012 counsel for the Plaintiffs said
that there were four reports
outstanding being that of Dr Richardt and the reports of the financial loss
experts who were said to
be Moore Stephens Accounting, Price Waterhouse Coopers
and Pitcher Partners. The transcript discloses the following:
HIS HONOUR: I'm going to have to get a clear indication. You stay on your
feet, Mr Stitt. Mr Cheng, I take it that the financial reports
- I'll use this
general description. That the documents from your three experts relating to
financial matters for which you seek
an extension of time to 31 August will
provide a full quantum of the claim of the various plaintiffs.
CHENG: Yes it will.
STITT: Well they haven't to date, your Honour, they haven't to date.
HIS HONOUR: No, no I appreciate that I'm just --
STITT. Those reports don't even go close to that.
HIS HONOUR. But I'm assuming these three financial ones - now is that the
case? You tell me in open court, it's all being recorded.
CHENG: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: And if those documents don't do that or if they only go part of
the way, what I'm minded to do is to bind you to those
documents and you'll be
restricted to them and I will not let you go outside them. Do you understand
what I'm saying?
CHENG: Yes, I do your Honour and my instructions are that these three reports
are the culmination of every other expert in assessing
the financial loss that
the plaintiffs have incurred.
HIS HONOUR: And the other problem is this, it's a significant extension of
time you're seeking, it's a further five weeks beyond that which you're
allowed. Every time you get an extension of time, the amount of time
available to the defence decreases. If it's taken you this long to get
your
expert material together one can only say in fairness it's probably going to
take the defence the same amount of time to do
that work. I know l sound like a
broken record and Mr Stitt will through his hands in the air but you cannot
continue to keep getting these extensions of time. Enough is enough and if
material is not available as has been promised by 31 August, again, I'm going to
seriously consider saying
well if it's not there you can't rely upon it, you run
this case on what you got. Do you understand?
CHENG: That's understood, your Honour, yes, yes.
HIS HONOUR: So somebody had better sit on these experts and say get that
report out because if the report isn't there and in the hands of Mr Stitt
by 31
August or in the hands of Mr Stitt's solicitors, we can't rely upon it and we'll
have to run our case on what we have, do you
understand what I'm saying?
CHENG: Yes, I do. (emphasis added)
- Ultimately
the Plaintiffs served reports from Dr Richardt of 9 August 2012, Pitcher
Partners of 31 August 2012 and Robin Humphries
of 31 August
2012.
- That
material demonstrates the extraordinary delays on the Plaintiffs' side in
serving its expert reports after the Plaintiffs were
allowed to recast their
case entirely in 2009. It also demonstrates the indulgence the Plaintiffs were
given time and again to complete
their expert evidence.
- Section
58 CPA mandates that in deciding whether to make any order or direction
for the management of proceedings including any order of a procedural
nature the
Court must seek to act in accordance with the dictates of justice. In
determining the dictates of justice the Court must
have regard to ss 56 and 57
of the Act and may have regard to a number of matters identified in s 58(2). It
seems to me that matters
in sub-paragraphs (ii), (iv) and (vi) are all relevant
to the detriment of the Plaintiffs on this application. Further, the way the
proceedings have been conducted, not only by reason of the delays on behalf of
the Plaintiffs but also by the need to recast their
case completely in 2009,
means that the Plaintiffs have not properly complied with their duty under s
56(3) having regard also to
s 57(1).
- There
are some further considerations.
- The
Motions were argued for four and a half days. The bulk of the time was taken up
with the Plaintiffs' Motion. The arguments that
were put to me by the Plaintiffs
were not put at the hearing of the August s 192A application. The only
explanation given for that
was that the Plaintiffs were then unrepresented.
Although I raised this matter with Mr Dawson, he had neither any evidence nor
explanation
for why the Plaintiffs were unrepresented, nor why, if Mr Dawson was
able to be engaged to argue the present Motions, he or some
other lawyer could
not have been engaged to argue the August s 192A application.
- Although
allowance needs to be made for unrepresented litigants the Court cannot operate
on the basis that rules and procedures will
be applied in one way for litigants
who are represented and another way for those who are not.
- During
the course of these proceedings the Plaintiffs have been represented by six, and
maybe more, firms of solicitors and by a large
number of counsel including
Senior Counsel. I was informed by counsel retained by the last firm of
solicitors who were instructed
on the day the second tranche of hearing was to
commence that his instructing solicitors' retainer had been terminated by the
Plaintiffs.
- In
all of those circumstances, little consideration can be given to the fact that
the Plaintiffs were unrepresented when the August
s 192A application was heard
by me.
- The
present Motion by the Plaintiffs seems to me to be nothing more than the
provision of "a back door method by which [the Plaintiffs]
can seek to reargue
their case" or it is for the purpose of giving the Plaintiffs "the opportunity
to present a case to better advantage":
Autodesk at 303 and
307.
- Furthermore,
in relation to the claim concerning the domestic products what is put forward is
a different case from that which had
earlier been put forward. That case was
that all the Plaintiffs' products were superior. It is now accepted that that
claim cannot
be made for the cleaning products and that, if further reports are
not permitted, not all of the products in the other categories
can be claimed to
be superior. That is a very different case from the earlier one put forward.
From the point of view of evidence
of market share and sales volumes the changed
case is likely to be critical. The obtaining of the further evidence will
necessarily
involve delay which in turn necessarily causes prejudice to the
Defendant.
- I
do not, however, consider that the prejudice will be of the magnitude put
forward by the Defendant. The Defendant submitted that
if the Plaintiffs were
permitted to recast their case to prove the superiority of some but not all of
the domestic products it would
be necessary for the Defendant to go back to the
following experts for supplementary reports:
(a) Anne Lenagan: a specialist in marketing and market research;
(b) July Pascoe: an expert in marketing, product handling and product
development;
(c) Steven Walsh: a buyer for supermarkets;
(d) Bruce Dunbar: former chief executive with Ecolab who deals with
industrial products
(e) Professor Chatonsky: a finance expert who deals with the raising of
venture capital;
(f) Mr Turitello: an expert on discount and interest rates;
(g) Mr Finney: a forensic accountant.
- In
addition, it was suggested that the Defendant might have to go back to Dr Frank
McDonald and Dr Paul Wynn-Hatton, but it was accepted
that that may not be so.
- These
reports are not in evidence but Mr Dawson took me to certain parts of them to
show that these experts have not prepared them
on the basis of the superiority
assumption.
- A
reading of the reports of the above experts shows that only one of those experts
has provided their opinion on the assumption of
the superiority of the
Plaintiffs' products. Rather, these experts have expressed the opinion that the
products do not have the qualities
claimed for them by the Plaintiffs. In that
regard I note:
- the report of
Anne Lenagan of 8 February 2008 at paragraphs 2.6, 2.73, 3.3.6, 3.12, 4.11,
5.14, 6.29, 6.37 and 7.4;
- the report of
Julie Pascoe of 30 January 2013 section C3 noting that she was not asked to make
any assumptions but to rely solely
on her own opinion as to the likely
commercial viability of the domestic business plan and noting her opinion on
page 75 concerning
the unlikelihood of the assumptions made by Professor Layton;
- the report of
Steve Walsh of 15 February 2013 at paragraphs 29 and 32 to 35;
- the report of
Bruce Dunbar of 20 December 2012 at pages 15 and 16;
- the report of
Dominic Quartullo of 29 August 2008 at page 21;
- the report of
Warwick Finney dated 1 September 2008 at paragraphs 3.14 and 3.20;
- the report of Dr
Frank McDonald dated 21 December 2012 at pages 5 and 6;
- the report of Dr
Wynn-Hatton dated 21 December 2012 (consisting of 127 pages) at page 7;
- the report of Dr
Wynn-Hatton dated 21 December 2012 (consisting of 160 pages) at page 10; and
- the report of Dr
Wynn-Hatton dated 10 April 2013 at page 3.
- Since
none of these experts prepared their reports on the assumption of superiority of
all the products but, rather, gave their opinions
on the basis that the products
were not superior, it is difficult to understand why it would be necessary to go
back to those experts
for them to provide an opinion on the basis that some but
not all of the products were superior. It appears from those reports that
the
Defendant's case involved at all times a challenge to the Plaintiffs' case that
their products were superior. That case would
still be available to the
Defendant if the Plaintiffs' new case was superiority of some but not all of
their products. If the Defendant
now wished to run a case accepting the
superiority argument but, presumably, avoiding it by other evidence, that would
be a new approach
by the Defendant that had not been brought about by the
Plaintiffs' recasting of their case.
- The
only one of the Defendant's experts who appears to have given his opinion based
on the assumption of superiority is the report
of Professor Chatonksy of 3 June
2008. In his Executive Summary it says this:
3. It is possible that the Chaina Group could have been considered an
attractive equity investment opportunity by one or several VCs,
given:
(a) the assumed strength and uniqueness of the products developed;
...
- He
then thought it was unlikely that the Group would have been able to raise
significantly more than $8.6 million (he thought the
chances were at around five
to ten per cent) but he went on to say:
6. I note that the above comments rely heavily on the assumption that the
products developed by the Chaina Group are indeed unique
and substantially
superior to the competition. Based on the information provided, I am unable to
test this particular assumption.
Therefore, my opinion on this subject is a
provisional one.
- The
evidence that led to his conclusions and that is relevant to the issue of the
assumptions is to be found in paragraphs 63 - 65
of his report.
- I
accept, therefore, that it would be necessary for the Defendant to obtain a
supplementary report from Professor Chatonsky if the
Plaintiffs' modified case
on the domestic products is allowed to be put forward. There is undoubted
prejudice of cost and delay if
that course needs to be
followed.
- A
further matter for consideration is the effect a more limited case would have on
the reports of other experts retained by the Plaintiffs.
In Chaina (No.
13) I held that the reports of John Matheson, Wheaton Beer, Alan Stevenson,
Pitcher Partners and Robin Humphreys were affected by rejection
of the
superiority assumption. Although the Plaintiffs only seek, in the present
motion, (relevantly for this purpose) leave to serve
a supplementary report from
Pitcher Partners it is likely that they would also need supplementary reports
from the other experts
I have mentioned. Nevertheless, even if it is only a
further report from Pitcher Partners which is needed, that in itself would
involve
delay, and it would be surprising if the Defendant did not need to
respond to any such further report.
- There
can be little doubt that the case put forward up to the present time (of
superiority of all the products) was put forward on
clear instructions from the
Plaintiffs. It was for that reason that the superiority assumption was given to
both Professor Dowling
and Professor Layton. For reasons which I have given,
Professor Dowling seems not to have provided his report only on the basis of
that assumption. On the other hand Professor Layton has done
so.
- This
is precisely the issue referred to by the joint judgment in Aon at
[112]:
A party has the right to bring proceedings. Parties have choices as to what
claims are to be made and how they are to be framed. But
limits will be placed
upon their ability to effect changes to their pleadings, particularly if
litigation is advanced. That is why,
in seeking the just resolution of the
dispute, reference is made to parties having a sufficient opportunity to
identify the issues they seek to agitate.
- The
Plaintiffs made no allowance in the expert reports they put forward for any
other finding than that their products would be superior.
They knew by no later
than 31 August 2012 that the testing evidence did not validate the superiority
assumption. No application was
made in 2012 or at any time up until the present
Motion to serve further evidence on the more limited basis that is now sought to
be put forward. Such an application, if made earlier than now, may not have been
successful in the light of the history of the proceedings.
However, at the
advanced stage the proceedings have now reached it is not consistent with ss
56-58 CPA nor with Aon to permit the service of further
reports.
(b) Industrial products
- The
discretionary considerations discussed above in relation to the domestic
products applies equally to the industrial products with
one
exception.
- I
concluded earlier that I may have misapprehended what Professor Dowling had
assumed when he prepared his reports. I accept the Plaintiffs'
submission that
what is discussed in Professor Dowling's report makes it inappropriate to
determine the assumption issue until the
end of the trial. In that regard it
seem to me that I must apply a test similar to that in General Steel
Industries Inc v Commissioner for Railways (NSW) [1964] HCA 69; (1965) 112 CLR 125 when I
am excluding evidence on the basis put forward by the Defendant.
- I
am entirely satisfied that the test is satisfied with respect to the domestic
products for the reason given earlier. However, the
matters mentioned in [45],
[47] and [48] above mean that I cannot be certain that the Plaintiffs' case on
the industrial products
is unarguable. There is, for example, a disputed factual
question concerning the level of service that was provided by the Plaintiffs
to
their customers before 1999.
- As
noted earlier, I did not take into account the supplementary reports of
Professor Dowling and Dr Van Dyke when considering whether
to re-admit Professor
Dowling's reports. I also consider, for the reasons I have given above in
respect to the domestic products,
that the Plaintiffs should not be permitted to
rely on supplementary reports for the industrial products.
- The
only remaining consideration in respect to the industrial products is whether I
should maintain the rejection of Professor Dowling's
reports because the
arguments raised at the hearing of the present Motion were not raised at the
hearing of the August s 192A application.
- I
have had particular regard to what Mason CJ said in Autodesk at 303.
Whilst I consider that the present case falls very close to those whose
reopening would be refused on the basis of the principles
there stated, the
interests of justice mean that I should reopen my earlier judgment and re-admit
Professor Dowling's reports. I
do so because I am not satisfied that I was
correct on my analysis of Professor Dowling's reasoning and because there is no
prejudice
to the Defendant if the status quo ante is restored in relation to his
report. The evidence discloses that the launches of the domestic
and industrial
products were to be separate. Different considerations apply to marketing of the
industrial products compared with
the domestic products.
- Further,
where I have concluded that the equivalent of a General Steel test has
not been satisfied with regard to Professor Dowling's evidence (and, therefore,
to the whole of the Plaintiffs' industrial
products case) I consider that it
would be an error to preclude the Plaintiffs from arguing that they have proved
from all of the
evidence that the assumptions that Professor Dowling seems to
have made have been validated.
- To
the extent that some of the Plaintiffs' other experts have considered matters
relevant to the two proposed launches together, that
may provide a problem for
the Plaintiffs in trying to separate the matter relevant only to the industrial
products. However, that
is a problem which the Plaintiffs would have been
required to confront at the end of the trial where no s 192A application had
been
made in relation to the expert evidence.
(3) Expert reports in reply
- The
reports sought to be put forward in reply cannot be grouped into one category.
It is necessary, therefore, to consider each of
the reports.
(a) Dr Jim Van Dyke
- This
report became available during the hearing of the Motions. The instructions
noted by Dr Van Dyke are these:
The writer has been instructed to comment on:
* The table with the 16 Disputed raw Materials from the report by Dr
McDonald.
* To draw attention to other raw materials that have been brought up
previously by other experts, where I have documents that show
their availability
before 2000.
(b) Professor Roger Layton
- The
proposed report was not available at the time of the hearing of the
Motions.
(c) Professor Graeme Dowling
- Professor
Dowling had prepared a supplementary report dated 12 August 2013 which was said
to be in reply to the following reports
of the Defendant's
experts:
(a) Report of Anne Lenagan dated 20 December 2012;
(b) Report of Dr McDonald dated 21 December 2012;
(c) Report of Bruce Dunbar dated 20 December 2012.
(d) Sam Daniel
- By
the time of the hearing of the Motion, although not at the time the Mrs Chaina's
affidavit in support of the Motion was sworn,
this report was available. It is a
report dated 7 October 2013 and it is expressed to be a response to the report
of Dr Frank McDonald
of 21 December 2012.
(e) Dafta Pty Ltd
- This
report was available by the time of the hearing of the Plaintiffs' Motion
although not at the time Mrs Chaina's affidavit was
sworn. It is dated October
2013 and the report was said to be for the following purpose:
I have been asked to prepare a report aimed at proving or disproving the
availability of certain types of chemicals and chemistries
to the Australian
detergent and personal care markets prior to the tragic death of the son of
George and Rita Chaina in 1999. The
Chaina's (sic) have used the products listed
in section 10, titled "disputed raw materials".
- The
report does not say that it is the response to any particular report served by
the Defendant.
(f) David Redfern of BASF Australia
- This
report is in the form of a letter to George Chaina dated 26 September 2013. The
best indication to what the report is directed
is to be found in the second
paragraph of the letter which says this:
I have reviewed the list of products that you have requested information
regarding availability of the products in the global market
prior to 1999. I can
confirm the following in relation to each BASF product and Huntsman product that
I have been directly responsible
for marketing or competing against at that time
either as a BASF Australia Ltd (BASF) employee or a Huntsman Corporation
Australia
(Huntsman)/Orica Australia Pty Ltd) employee.
The report does not say that it is in response to any particular report.
(g) Dr Peter Richardt
- This
report is dated 27 September 2013. It is said to be in response to the reports
of Dr Frank McDonald dated 21 December 2012 and
2 July 2013 and the report of Dr
Paul Wynn-Hatton of December 2012. Dr Richardt says also that he has been asked
to discuss the list
of raw materials that were apparently unavailable in 1999
and to compare the reports of the Plaintiffs' expert witnesses assessing
the
performance of the domestic cleaning products.
Recent procedural history
- Before
determining which, if any, of these reports should be allowed, it is necessary
to say something further about the more recent
history of the proceedings.
- I
noted at [146] above that on 2 August 2012 Hoeben JA directed a final cut off
date for the service of the Plaintiffs' reports in
chief. I noted the dates of
those reports and I assume in favour of the Plaintiffs that they were served by
31 August 2012.
- The
proceedings were then before Hoeben JA for Directions on 18 September, 24
September and 3 October 2012. No orders were made other
than in relation to a
proposed mediation. It does not appear that further orders were sought in
relation to the preparation of the
hearing including any order for service of
the Defendant's expert reports nor reports in reply.
- The
matter came before me for Directions on 5 and 13 November, and 3 and 7 December
2012. On none of those occasions was the issue
of expert evidence in reply
raised although the Plaintiffs were represented by solicitors and counsel.
- The
matter was then before me for Directions and 1 and 25 February 2013. By 25
February 2013 Mr Maconachie QC and Mr J Sharpe of counsel
appeared for the
Plaintiffs. On neither of those occasions was the question of expert reports in
reply raised.
- The
hearing commenced on 4 March 2013 and at no time until the present Motion was
the issue of expert reports in reply raised except
on two occasions in July 2013
which I will mention presently.
- At
the hearing of the Motions the Plaintiffs referred to an email from Mrs Chaina
to her then solicitor, Mr Cooper at Berrigan Doube,
dated 23 January 2013 and
his reply of 24 January 2013. Mrs Chaina's email said this:
Will our expert witnesses be answering the Defendant's expert witness
statements they have just served? ...
- The
response was this:
Our experts will not be answering the Defendant's experts in written form,
however, they will respond to this evidence during the
cross examination
process.
As mentioned by David Baran, the experts will most likely be required to "hot
tub" in order to provide the Court with a joint report.
It will be during this
process, and any further cross-examination, where their response to the
Defendant's expert reports will be
provided. I can imagine that you and George
would prefer written evidence as this will provide you with a chance to review
what is
being said, however, that part of the case has finished and there would
be serious penalties associated with trying to put fresh
expert reports on at
this stage.
...
- The
reference in that email to there being be serious penalties for trying to put
fresh expert reports on is an unusual reference
in that context since it is
likely that penalties would only have been incurred if it was intended to serve
further evidence in chief.
- Nevertheless,
that was the approach taken by the Plaintiffs' lawyers including (it would seem
from the email) the advice of counsel.
- In
any event, at no time whilst Mr Maconachie QC and Mr Sharpe were briefed, nor
when two further firms of solicitors were instructed
and at least three further
counsel briefed after the end of the first tranche of hearing was any
application made to serve expert
evidence in reply.
- The
Plaintiffs now submit that the dictates of justice require that the Plaintiffs
be given the opportunity to serve expert evidence
in reply so that the issues
can be identified, condensed and crystallised for determination. Such reply
evidence, it was submitted,
could only assist the Court and, for that matter,
the Defendant because the evidence would leave a far clearer picture of the
areas
of dispute between the experts.
- In
my opinion, it is not appropriate at this late stage to permit the Plaintiffs to
serve evidence in reply to the Defendant's experts
that were served in 2012.
Whatever the explanation is for Berrigan Doube's response to Mrs Chaina's email,
the fact is that decisions
were made by legal advisors acting on behalf of the
Plaintiffs. From the time of that email to the present Motion by the Plaintiffs,
the Plaintiffs have been represented by three firms of solicitors and numerous
counsel including two Queen's Counsel. No explanation
has been provided beyond
the email of 24 January 2013 for why directions in relation to the service of
expert reports in reply were
not served at an earlier time.
- It
seems clear from Mr Cooper's email that there must have been discussions about
the evidence in reply between the Plaintiffs, Mr
Cooper and Mr Baran of counsel
because the email says "As mentioned by David Baran ...".
- In
my opinion, the evidence on the Motion to justify leave to serve reports simply
in reply to the Defendant's experts' reports of
2012 is
inadequate.
- I
will now deal with the reports in reply that are sought to be served.
(a) Dr Jim Van Dyke
- A
perusal of this report indicates that it deals almost entirely with the 16
Disputed Raw Materials. This arose chiefly from the cross-examination
of Mr
Chaina and the subsequent reports by the Defendant's experts. Although it is
very late in being served I do not consider that
the Defendant is thereby
prejudiced.
(b) Professor Roger Layton
- This
does not arise because I have determined that Professor Layton's evidence is not
admissible.
(c) Professor Graeme Dowling
- This
report is said to be in response to three of the Defendant's 2012 reports. For
the reasons given in [188] to [200] above this
report should be
rejected.
(d) Sam Daniel
- It
appears to me that the bulk of this report is simply a reply to Dr McDonald's
report of 2012. However, the issue of the availability
of chemicals seems to be
discussed to some extent. The parties did not address me in any detail about
this report.
- To
the extent that the report is simply a response to Dr McDonald's 2012 report I
will not allow it to be relied upon for reasons
given in [188] to [200] above.
To the extent that the report might be a reply to the reports of Dr McDonald and
Dr Wynn-Hatton of
2013 it should be permitted to be relied upon. The parties
should address me further to identify the parts of the report that I will
allow.
(e) Dafta Pty Ltd
- This
report may well be in a similar category as the report of Sam Daniel. It does
not purport to be a response to any particular
report of the Defendant.
- No
detailed submissions were addressed to me about this report. It was simply
submitted that the report contained reply material in
addition to the 16 raw
materials issue. The parties should address me further to identify which parts
of this report, if any, are
admissible as being a reply only to the reports of
Dr McDonald and Dr Wynn-Hatton of 2013.
(f) David Redfern
- I
note that Mr Redfern has already given evidence in the proceedings. His
statements are exhibits T1 and T2. He was cross-examined
on 22 July 2013.
- In
his affidavit of 6 July 2006 Mr Redfern acknowledged the Expert Witness Code and
provided his qualifications that justified his
giving expert evidence. In his
affidavit he discussed his employment at Huntsman Corporation Pty Ltd, a raw
materials supplier supplying
pre-mixed chemicals to companies engaged in the
cleaning industry. He detailed his dealings with Mr Chaina including the fact
that
Mr Chaina obtained some chemicals from Huntsman.
- I
note that the Defendant's expert reports prepared in response to Mr Chaina's
cross-examination are these:
(a) Report of Dr Paul Wynn-Hatton dated 10 April 2013;
(b) Report of Dr Paul Wynn-Hatton dated 9 May 2013;
(c) Report of Dr Frank McDonald dated 5 June 2013; and
(d) Report of Dr Frank McDonald dated 2 July 2013.
- These
reports were all filed and served before Mr Redfern gave evidence. No attempt
was made to lead from him the evidence that is
now sought to be led in the
proposed report. Even if the proposed report is in response to the Defendant's
2013 reports (and that
is not immediately apparent from a reading of the report)
no explanation is provided about why this evidence has not been put forward
at
an earlier time.
- On
16 July 2013 during the second tranche of the hearing Mr Stitt QC raised the
issue of his obligations under the rule in Browne v Dunn. He said that
his side had put on expert evidence directed to the chemical or science issue
and nothing had been filed in reply.
Shortly afterwards this exchange occurred
(T1735:35 - T1736:28):
THIRD PLAINTIFF: Your Honour, Mr Stitt was saying about our experts replying
to their experts and the process I believe was started
by the lawyers. Do I have
to ask them to put statements on or just to reply or do I have to do anything
for that?
STITT: It's too late.
HIS HONOUR: I think we are past the time for that now. I understood that all
of the experts' reports were on. That means served.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: We served them by last year and then they put their reports
on as far as a couple of weeks ago, McDonald's was put
in this July.
HIS HONOUR: That's specifically in response to the evidence Mr Chaina gave.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: Okay. Do - do I have to ask them to put any statements or
reports on at all for any of them?
HIS HONOUR: Well, that is a matter for you, Mrs Chaina, but I think there
might be some difficulty because all of this expert evidence
was supposed to
have been completed.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: Okay. I - I just don't know. That's why I am asking. Okay,
so I don't have to do anything with that?
HIS HONOUR: Well, I am not saying that you don't but I think you will have to
take some advice about that. I haven't read the reports
of those involved in the
chemistry side of this because we haven't got to that yet. My understanding is
you put your reports on,
the defendants put their reports on and that's where it
was left, except that Dr McDonald, I think, prepared the report specifically
to
answer Mr Chaina's evidence that was given.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: And there was another one from Dr Wynn-Hatton as well.
HIS HONOUR: Is that right? Yes.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: Okay.
HIS HONOUR: Mr Stitt, if there was to be some answer to those reports, I
think it would be difficult for you to resist that.
STITT: If it is confined to that, of course, your Honour, yes. I wouldn't
argue to the contrary.
It may be noted that that was the week before Mr Redfern gave his evidence.
- On
23 July 2013 the following exchange occurred (T1990:42 -
1991:22):
THIRD PLAINTIFF: The other thing is, your Honour, Mr Stitt earlier on said
that we did not - our lawyers did not put reports on in
reply to their expert
reports. And I wasn't aware that you know, about that because the lawyers were
taking care of it at the time.
And I don't know whether it's a time finish that
we can't put any more regarding the expert reports from December; is that
correct,
that they put on?
HIS HONOUR: All of the reports are supposed to be on by now.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: Well, some of them, your Honour, were put on after we gave
evidence like Dr McDonald and Dr Wynn Hatton and a couple
of expert reports.
HIS HONOUR: And you can respond to those.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: Okay. So, if I get an expert, one of my experts to respond
to those, I can do that?
HIS HONOUR: Yes. Well, I think that was agreed, wasn't it?
STITT: Yes, it was, your Honour.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: So, I can write to the expert, or I can telephone the expert
and ask them to do a report in a similar manner to what
they did beforehand?
HIS HONOUR: Yes; in answer to those two recent reports.
THIRD PLAINTIFF: So, I can provide them with that report and say, "Comment on
it"?
HIS HONOUR: Yes.
- No
explanation has been provided about the late provision of this report of Mr
Redfern. However, it seems only to deal with the availability
of chemicals in
1999 - a matter that arises from the cross-examination of Mr Chaina. It is
relatively confined in its substance.
I will give leave to the Plaintiffs to
rely upon it.
(g) Dr Peter Richardt
- Parts
of this report respond to reports of Dr McDonald of 21 December 2012 and Dr
Wynn-Hatton of December 2012. For reasons given
in [188] to [200] above those
parts of this report should not be permitted to be relied upon. Another section
comments upon Dr McDonald's
report of 2 July 2013. Although no explanation has
been provided for why this report has only just been served I consider that it
should be permitted to the extent that it responds to Dr McDonald's July 2013
report.
- A
further section provides comment on 18 raw materials unavailable in 1999. it is
likely that that section of the report arises out
of the cross-examination of Mr
Chaina. No detailed submissions were made in respect of this report. I will hear
the parties further
in relation to that section of the report but I can indicate
that if that section is in response to Mr Chaina's cross-examination
and the
Defendant's 2013 reports it will be permitted to be relied upon.
- The
further section of the report (section 12) is entitled "Comment on Performance
Comparisons of Proton Products Compared to Competitors".
It is apparent from
reading this section of the report that this is fresh material that amounts to
evidence in chief. It is not permitted
to be relied upon.
Defendant's Motion
- The
outcome of the Plaintiffs' Motion, dealt with above, is that the Plaintiffs'
case in respect of the industrial products will proceed
with Professor Dowling's
report of 4 August 2006 being re-admitted. It follows that the report of Dr Jim
Van Dyke dated 26 January
2010 will be relevant because the Plaintiffs will use
it as support for the conclusions reached by Professor Dowling.
- The
Defendant seeks also that an undated report of Dr Van Dyke's served June 2012
not be adduced. This report has never been placed
before the Court.
- As
far as the domestic products are concerned the outcome of the Plaintiffs' Motion
is that the reports of Professor Layton of 21
October 2005, 10 February 2006 and
11 July 2012 remain inadmissible. Further, the Plaintiffs are not permitted to
recast their case
to serve reports consistent with some but not all of the
domestic products being found to be superior. The issue is then which of
the
other reports that are set out in [2] and [3] above should also not be adduced
in evidence.
- In
support of its submission that the remaining expert evidence should not be
adduced the Defendant relied upon Sydney Attractions Group Pty Ltd v Fredrick
Schulman (No. 2) [2013] NSWSC 1153. The Defendant submitted, following that
decision, that there was simply no evidence remaining which would enable the
Court to assess
the damages based on a loss of opportunity case.
- In
that case, Sackar J said:
[48] Even if the plaintiff is correct that the defendant has made a
submission from which, on the basis of some legal principle, he
cannot now
resile, it remains necessary to articulate precisely what it is to which the
defendant is bound. In this case, the defendant
was certainly not in my view
asserting that the figure for Skywalk Capital Expenditure should be taken to be
$3,798,820. The defendant
was simply stating that, of all the evidence
available, the Rider Hunt estimate was the "best evidence", albeit also
inadequate.
For the reasons which follow, even if the court accepts the
defendant's submission that the Rider Hunt estimate of $3,798,820 is
the "best
evidence" available, that does not assist the plaintiff.
[49] The defendant submits that this is not a case where the court should
simply "do the best it can" to estimate Skywalk Capital
Expenditure, for the
reasons that the nature of the amount to be proven permits precise calculation
(unlike for example a foregone
commercial opportunity which involves
speculation), and the material on which such proof would be based is exclusively
within the
plaintiff's camp. The principle articulated in cases such as Paino
v Paino [2008] NSWCA 276; (2008) 40 Fam LR 96 and McCrohon v Harith [2010] NSWCA 67
would not apply where there is a paucity of evidence which it was in the power
of the plaintiff to supply.
[50] The plaintiff could have, but failed to, call relevant employees of the
major contractors or of the subcontractors who physically
undertook or
supervised the construction of Skywalk, or to tender contract documents
specifying in some detail the scope of works
undertaken, or to even brief a
quantity surveyor after the event of construction to provide an estimate of the
value of the actual
work undertaken, provided it could be sufficiently
accurately identified, which was another problem the plaintiff confronted.
Clearly,
there is significantly better evidence that could have been, but was
not, obtained. The comments made in McCrohon v Harith [2010] NSWCA 67 by
McColl JA (Campbell JA and Handley AJA agreeing) are particularly relevant (at
[118]-[124], some citations omitted):
[118] There are cases in which courts will estimate damages despite a dearth
of evidence. The basic principle was explained in Commonwealth v Amann by
Mason and Dawson JJ as follows:
[M]ere difficulty in estimating damages does not relieve a court from the
responsibility of estimating them as best it can ... Where
precise evidence is
not available the court must do the best it can: Biggin & Co Ltd v
Permanite Ltd [1951] 1 KB 422, per Devlin J at 438.
[119] Devlin J's complete statement was: "[W]here precise evidence is
obtainable, the court naturally expects to have it. Where it
is not, the court
must do the best it can." After referring to this statement with apparent
approval in New South Wales v Moss [2000] NSWCA 133; (2000) 54 NSWLR 536 (at [72]) Heydon
JA added:
As McPherson J said in Nilon v Bezzina [1988] 2 Qd R 420 at 424: "The
degree of precision with which damages are to be proved is proportionate to the
proof reasonably available". The courts
on occasion cite in related contexts
Bowen LJ's related but stricter observation in Ratcliffe v Evans [1892] 2
QB 524 at 532-3, an injurious falsehood case:
'... As much certainty and particularity must be insisted on ... in ... proof
of damage, as is reasonable, having regard to the circumstances
and the nature
of the acts themselves by which the damage is done.'
...
[120] In JLW (Vic) Pty Ltd v Tsiloglou [1994] VicRp 16; [1994] 1 VR 237 (a claim for
damages for alleged misleading representation inducing entry into a lease)
Brooking J reviewed the principles concerning
the circumstances in which a court
may assess damages notwithstanding a lack of evidence. His Honour [accepted]
"the amount of the
damage must be proved with certainty, but this only means as
much "certainty" as is reasonable in the circumstances". His Honour
distinguished cases ... where "[t]he nature of the damage may be such that the
assessment of damages will really be a matter of [permissible]
guesswork" from
cases where "precise evidence is obtainable", where guesswork is not
permissible...
[122] In Troulis v Vamvoukakis [1998] NSWCA 237 Gleeson CJ (Mason P
and Stein JA agreeing) referred to Tsiloglou with approval as setting out
the principles governing the approach a court should take when there had been a
failure by a party carrying
the onus to establish the extent of damage suffered
as a result of a breach of contract or tort... Gleeson CJ held that in such
circumstances
there were "limits to the lengths to which a court may properly go
in 'doing the best it can' to assess damages". His Honour observed
that the case
did not involve damages which were "inherently difficult to quantify, or which
involve[d] estimating a risk, or measuring
a chance, or predicting future
uncertain events." ...
[123] Gleeson CJ concluded in substance, that where the damages were
susceptible of evidentiary proof, and there was "an absence of
the raw material
to which good sense may be applied ... [j]ustice does not dictate that ... a
figure should be plucked out of the
air."
[124] In Placer (Granny Smith) Pty Ltd v Thiess Contractors Pty Ltd
[2003] HCA 10 ... Hayne J (Gleeson CJ, McHugh, and Kirby JJ agreeing) postulated
that there may be a distinction between cases where a plaintiff
cannot adduce
precise evidence of what has been lost (in which "estimation, if not guesswork,
may be necessary in assessing the damages
to be allowed") and cases where,
although apparently able to do so, the plaintiff has not adduced such evidence.
His Honour suggested
that references to "mere difficulty in estimating damages
not relieving a court from the responsibility of estimating them as best
it can"
might be more apt in the former rather than the latter class of case.
[51] I do not think this is a case where more precise evidence is not
available. Precise evidence, or at least better evidence, as
I see it, should
have been available before the court, given the monetary nature of the sum
sought to be proven. The plaintiff is
seeking to prove a certain type of
expenditure it incurred, and therefore the evidence by which the relevant
monetary sum is to be
proven is entirely in the camp of the plaintiff. The
exercise of determining the amount of Skywalk Capital Expenditure should not,
in
my view, involve proof of something which is inherently difficult to quantify,
or estimating a risk, or measuring a chance, or
predicting future uncertain
events. What has been provided is an estimate, prepared prior to construction,
providing a projection,
and which is unverified by any follow-up materials. In
these circumstances, I am unable to make a finding that the Skywalk Capital
Expenditure should be taken to be the figure estimated in the Rider Hunt
estimate.
- The
Plaintiffs submitted that what was said in Sydney Attractions is
distinguishable because that was not a case involving a loss of a chance or
opportunity. Indeed the Plaintiffs drew attention
to what Sackar J said at
[51]:
The exercise of determining the amount of Skywalk Capital Expenditure should
not, in my view, involve proof of something which is
inherently difficult to
quantify, or estimating a risk, or measuring a chance, or predicting future
uncertain events.
- The
Plaintiffs pointed to what was said by Stevenson J in BestCare Foods Ltd v
Origin Energy LPG Ltd (formerly Boral Gas (NSW) Pty Ltd) [2013] NSWSC 1287
at [43]- [47] where he reiterates the two-stage process involved in assessing a
loss of opportunity claim. The Plaintiffs submitted that the evidence
in the
present case demonstrates that there is a chance or opportunity of "not
speculative" or "not negligible" or "real" value.
At that point the second stage
is reached and, as Stevenson J said at [47]:
If I find that, probably, BestCare has lost a commercial opportunity or
chance (of "some", "not negligible" or "real" value), I must
then make an
assessment of that value. I must do that by "having regard to the possibility
that such an opportunity would have matured"
(the April CofA Judgment at [97]
per Ward JA).
- In
making an assessment of the value the Plaintiffs submitted that the top of the
range was represented by what is contained in the
report (relevantly) of
Professor Layton and the bottom of the range is zero. On that basis the
Plaintiffs submitted that the Court
must do the best it can to value the loss of
the chance even though there may be some uncertainty involved.
- This
submission appears to ignore what Stevenson J went on to say at
[47]:
But there must be a basis in the evidence for me to arrive at a figure for
the lost opportunity. What I cannot do is take a stab in
the dark; "justice does
not dictate that in such a case, a figure should be plucked out of the air"
(Troulis v Vamvoukakis [1998] NSWCA 237 at [29] per Gleeson CJ).
- Nevertheless,
the Plaintiffs submitted that the second stage of the process was one which
should not be undertaken on the present
application by the Defendant but at the
end of the hearing after all the evidence and submissions are completed. That,
the Plaintiffs
submitted, meant that the testing evidence and the reports from
the other experts should not now be excluded.
- In
my opinion it is appropriate to determine at this stage of the proceedings and
in the context of the present Motions if there is
any evidence relating to the
domestic products which could enable the second stage of the process to result
in a figure. If there
is not, then evidence concerned with the domestic products
would have no relevance to any issue remaining in the case.
- What
the Plaintiffs' testing evidence shows is that the Plaintiffs had developed a
number of products, some of which were superior
to, some of which were on parity
with, and some of which were inferior to, the products of competitors. In other
cases, some of the
products were at least unique for various reasons. Some of
the other Plaintiffs' experts show that the Plaintiffs could have developed
and
manufactured the products and raised some money to launch them. In those
respects it could be said that the Plaintiffs had lost
a chance or opportunity
to make money from these products.
- To
make money from the products the Plaintiffs needed to break into the market.
They had never been in the market for domestic products.
There needs to be
evidence that they would be able to do that. The only evidence that they could
break into the market and of the
share they would achieve was found in the
reports of Professor Layton that have been rejected. How the share of the market
would
translate into sales figures is to be found in the report of Pitcher
Partners which works on the assumption of the correctness of
Professor Layton's
reports (see report of Pitcher Partners paragraphs 180 to 185).
- Without
the evidence of Professor Layton there is simply no evidence of what market
share could be achieved nor how that would translate
into sales figures so that
a figure or range of figures could be placed on the loss to the Plaintiffs. Even
if the range is that
suggested by the Plaintiffs (the top being what is
contained in Professor Layton's report and, presumably, Pitcher Partners report
with the bottom being zero) it is not suggested how a figure would be calculated
within that range. There would need to be expert
evidence of what the lower
market share (if any) was achievable before sales figures were even considered.
Such expert evidence is
not be allowed because it involves a recasting of the
Plaintiffs' case.
- When
the Plaintiffs were proceeding on their case based upon the superiority
assumption they produced precise evidence of what they
say the chance or
opportunity was worth. This is not a case where the Plaintiffs cannot produce
the evidence and so the Court must
simply do the best it can. The reason there
is now no evidence is because the Plaintiffs are in the position where they
would need
to recast their case and obtain further evidence.
- In
those circumstances placing a figure on the lost opportunity would be a stab in
the dark or plucking a figure from the air where
the evidence was capable of
being produced.
- The
reports under consideration now fall largely into two categories. The first is
testing evidence of domestic products. The second
category is evidence that
relates to the market share evidence contained in Professor Layton's reports.
(a) The testing evidence
- This
evidence would appear to comprise the following reports:
(i) Dr Fong dated 2 May 2012;
(ii) Dr Eduard Smulders dated 24 February 2010 and January 2012;
(iii) Dr Kuo-Yann Lai dated 2 March 2010;
(iv) Dr Lothar Motitschke dated 18 March 2010; and
(v) Dr Peter Richardt dated 19 December 2011.
- There
was said to be a further report of Dr Richardt of 9 August 2012. Some reference
was made to that report during the course of
submissions but the report was
never before the Court.
- All
of these reports were obtained to support the superiority assumption that
Professor Layton made in his reports. I have held that
they did not support that
assumption. I have also held that the Plaintiffs were not entitled to recast
their case. There is no evidence
to justify a loss of opportunity case put on
the basis that the Plaintiffs products are superior.
- Accordingly,
the evidence in these testing reports is irrelevant to any issue remaining in
the case. They should therefore be rejected.
(b) Reports dealing with related matters
- It
is necessary to consider these reports individually.
(i) Report of John Matheson dated 7 October 2005
- In
Chaina (No. 13) I rejected paragraph 13 of this report because it was
based on the superiority assumption. The Defendant now seeks that the remainder
of the report not be adduced.
- As
I noted at [135] of Chaina (No. 13) Mr Matheson was asked to express an
opinion on whether or not the new domestic products proposed to be supplied by
the Plaintiffs
would have gained distribution with major Australian supermarkets
and the likely costs which would be incurred in that regard.
- The
whole of Mr Matheson's report is based on the superiority assumption as well as
other matters. In those circumstances the whole
of the report is irrelevant to
any remaining issue in the proceedings.
(ii) Associate Professor David Trende dated 25 October 2006
- This
is one of a number of reports which straddles the proposed industrial products
relaunch and the domestic products launch. Professor
Trende sets out his
instructions as follows:
6. I am instructed to prepare a report containing my opinion on whether or
not the Plaintiffs could have obtained finance of up to
$25 million in the
period from October 1999 to mid 2000 and, if so, the form/s in which the finance
would been available.
- It
is apparent that the raising of the money is not linked to one or other of the
launches. However, it is apparent from his report
that the domestic launch was
relevant to his conclusions. He said:
[68] The Chaina family had already successfully established and run a
chemicals business for many years prior to the events of October
1999. Their
proposed expansion into the domestic market was a natural next step,
particularly in conjunction with the development
of a new range of cleaning
products particularly suited to the domestic market. This background would be a
major advantage in Proton's
search for capital. ...
...
[70] The track record of successful product development, production and
marketing is a major plus in the plaintiffs' search for capital.
- In
addition, he said:
76. The second important element is whether the new business would be able to
earn its cost of equity capital. I understand that at
the time of the event
giving rise to this matter the Chainas had received a contract for purchase of a
property, including buildings
and equipment, for use in the domestic business.
- There
are two possible approaches to this report and reports which fall into this
category. The first approach is to say that the
report deals with the two
launches that were proposed and that since the case will not be proceeding for
the loss of opportunity
in relation to the domestic launch the whole of the
report should be rejected. The alternative approach is to allow the report into
evidence so that the Plaintiffs might be able to salvage some material from it
to support their case in the loss of opportunity for
the industrial
relaunch.
- Since
it is not possible to say at the present stage of the proceedings that the
Plaintiffs would have no chance of salvaging material
from this report for the
loss of opportunity case and the relaunch of the industrial products I do not
consider it is appropriate
to reject the whole of the report. Whilst I accept
that it will be difficult for the evidence in the report to support only the
industrial
relaunch further evidence may emerge when the relevant experts give
evidence. In that way, it cannot be said that the proposition
is unarguable.
(iii) Ralph Moyle dated 25 July 2012
- In
Chaina (No. 13) I set out at [148] part of the instructions given to Mr
Moyle. As paragraph 5.4 of those instructions shows, reference was made to
the
industrial launch as well as the domestic launch. Further, the documents
provided to Mr Moyle included the report of Professor
Dowling.
- However,
a reading of Mr Moyle's report gives a very clear indication that what he is
discussing are only the domestic products. That
appears particularly in the
lengthy table set out at pages 4 - 6 as well as the spreadsheet attached to the
report and referred to
on page 10 which is said to be for laundry and
dishwashing powders and liquids.
- It
is apparent, therefore, that the report is referable only to the domestic launch
and the loss of opportunity case in that regard.
In the circumstances it is no
longer relevant to any issue in the proceedings.
(iv) Rick Millar dated 27 July 2012
- This
report falls into the same category as the report of Associate Professor David
Trende. It straddles both the domestic products
and the industrial products.
- On
one level this report may remain relevant because an inference is open that if
the Plaintiffs were only to pursue the industrial
launch they would have a
greater capability of doing that alone than producing the products for both
domestic and industrial use.
- I
do not consider that this report should be rejected at this
stage.
(v) Sam Daniel dated 5 January 2012
- This
report is also in a similar category to that of Associate Professor Trende and
Mr Millar. It deals with the cost of ingredients
for both domestic and
industrial products.
- For
similar reasons it should not be rejected at this stage.
(vi) Dafta Pty Ltd
- This
report, as I noted in Chaina (No. 13) at [167], is concerned with the raw
materials for the domestic products only.
- Accordingly,
the report has no relevance to the remaining issues in the case and should be
rejected.
(vii) Pitcher Partners dated 31 August 2012
- The
objections to this report can be grouped as follows:
(i) The calculation of the loss of chance from the inability to launch the
domestic products and relaunch the industrial products;
(ii) The claims for loss in relation to the Strathfield and Ingleburn
properties;
(iii) The heads of damage set out on pages 3 - 5 of the covering letter;
(iv) The claim based on projection of profits from the existing business;
(v) Loss of value of the shares.
(1) Loss of opportunity case
- Ms
Cartwright deals separately with the relaunch of the industrial products and the
launch of the domestic products. The industrial
products are dealt with in
section 4 of her report, paragraphs 120 - 174. The domestic products are dealt
with in section 5 paragraphs
175 - 235.
- There
seems no relevant issue to which section 5 of the report can now go because the
evidence of Professor Layton has been rejected.
It is clear that Ms Cartwright
was dependent upon Professor Layton for her conclusions - see for example
paragraphs 180 - 185.
- Accordingly,
paragraphs 175 - 235 of this report should be rejected.
- Since
the loss of opportunity case for the industrial products is proceeding section 4
of the report is admissible.
(2) Loss in relation to the Strathfield and Ingleburn properties
- The
particular paragraphs objected to are paragraphs 243 - 248 of the report.
- The
Defendant provided written submissions in relation to the claim relating to
these properties. Whilst there is force in the submissions
made it seems to me
that the question of whether these losses is made out is a matter to be
determined when all of the evidence and
addresses are completed.
(3) Additional heads of damage
- Ms
Cartwright says in her covering letter:
I have been instructed to include the following additional heads of damage in
my report. I have been provided with this information
by Berrigan Doube and have
had no involvement in its preparation.
- What
follows is a schedule of what appears to be out of pocket expenses.
- It
goes without saying that unless there is proof that these amounts have been paid
and that they are causally related (as a matter
of law) to the breach of duty by
the Defendant they will not be recoverable. At the present time the table on
pages 3 - 5 represents
a convenient summary of what appears to be the
Plaintiffs' claim. I do not consider that the table is proof of those matters
but
I will not reject it at this stage.
(4) The claim based on the existing business
- The
Defendant submits that the evidence of George and Rita Chaina does not disclose
that they intended to maintain and develop the
existing business. Rather, all of
the evidence was to the effect that new products were being developed both in a
domestic and industrial
market.
- I
accept that the weight of the evidence tends to suggest that the Plaintiffs did
not intend to continue with the business as it had
been carried on from 1993 to
1999. However, a final determination of that matter needs to await the
completion of the evidence and
addresses in the matter. It is open to me to find
that, despite what the Plaintiffs say was their intention, it would only have
been
the existing business that continued. In that way it is a matter of fact to
be determined in the final judgment. It cannot be said
at this stage that the
part of the report dealing with the existing business is therefore irrelevant to
any issue.
(5) Devaluation of shares
- Ms
Cartwright deals with the devaluation of the shares held by Mr and Mrs Chaina in
the three companies in section 6 of the report
at paragraphs 236 - 242. This
section of the report is difficult to understand particularly as there is a
blank figure against the
total Ms Cartwright says she has calculated in
paragraph 239.
- The
Defendant in its written submissions said that I ruled in my judgment in
Chaina (No. 13) on 14 August 2013 that this claim by the natural
Plaintiffs was not recoverable as a matter of law. I made no such ruling. There
is certainly strong authority for the proposition: Gould v Vaggelas
(1985) 157 CLR 215 at 219-220; Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v Newman
Industries Ltd (No 2) [1982] 1 Ch 204; Chen v Karandonis [2002] NSWCA
412. However, I consider that I should not determine this claim on a preliminary
basis. Rather, it will be dealt with at the completion
of evidence and addresses
in the final judgment.
Conclusion
- On
the Plaintiffs' Notice of Motion filed 8 October 2013 I make these
orders:
(1) The report of Professor Graham Dowling dated 4 August 2006 be admitted as
evidence in the proceedings;
(2) The Plaintiffs are permitted to serve and rely upon the following reports in
reply:
(a) Report of Dr Van Dyke 8 October 2013;
(b) Report of David Redfern of 26 September 2013;
(3) The Plaintiffs are not permitted to serve or rely upon the following reports
in reply:
(c) Professor Roger Layton;
(d) Professor Graeme Dowling 12 August 2013;
(4) In relation to the following reports in reply the Plaintiffs are only
permitted to rely on those parts of the reports which respond
to the Defendant's
2013 reports from Dr McDonald and Dr Wynn-Hatton:
(e) Sam Daniel dated 7 October 2013;
(f) Dafta Pty Ltd dated October 2013;
(g) Dr Peter Richardt dated 27 September 2013
(5) Reserve consideration of prayer 4;
(6) Otherwise dismiss the Plaintiffs' Notice of Motion.
- On
the Defendant's Notice of Motion filed 3 September 2013 I make this
order:
The following reports not be admitted into evidence:
(a) Dr Fong report dated 2 May 2012;
(b) Dr Eduard Smulders reports dated 24 February 2010 and January 2012;
(c) Kuo-Rann Lai report dated 2 March 2010;
(d) Dr Lothar Motitschke report dated 18 March 2010;
(e) Dr Peter Richardt report dated 19 December 2011;
(f) The balance of the report of John Matheson dated 7 October 2005;
(g) Ralph Moyle report dated 25 July 2012;
(h) Dafta Pty Limited undated report.
(i) Section 5.0 paragraphs 175 to 235 of the report of Pitcher Partners dated
31 August 2012
- I
have reserved consideration of the matter of concurrent evidence until the
parties have had an opportunity to consider this judgment
and determine which of
the experts will now be called to give evidence.
- As
noted earlier in the judgment it will be necessary for the parties to address me
further on the reports in reply of Sam Daniel
dated 7 October 2013, Dafta Pty
Ltd dated October 2013 and Dr Peter Richardt dated 27 September
2013.
- On
the Plaintiffs' application I have made no order for costs until the parties
have had the opportunity to consider this judgment
and make further submissions
on costs.
**********
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