6 May Case Updates Rajan Marwaha v Director of Border Revenue & Anor Revenue & Anor 06. Rules and Regulations, 11. Report Writing, 08. Working with Instructing Parties, 13. Experts Discussions and Joint Statements, 15. Giving Oral Evidence The Claimant claimed he had suffered a substantial loss due to the destruction of two consignments of poppy heads by the Defendants. The parties were given permission to rely on the written evidence of expert accountants. The Claimant made an application to the Court for the accountancy expert witnesses to give oral evidence at the trial and an application to adduce evidence prepared by his son.
30 April Case Updates Legal teams need to observe Expert’s fatigue & concentration Patent, 11. Report Writing, 14. Changing your opinion, 08. Working with Instructing Parties, 12. Responding to questions, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, 16. Criticism and Complaints, 17. Maintaining your professional edge This was a significant and well reported patent case which was determined in the Intellectual Property List within the High Court last autumn. The technical aspects of the case required significant expert input from the panel involved. The cross-examinations performed by leading Counsel for the parties were lengthy and complicated. This led to confusion over what evidence was given when the transcripts were re-visited on subsequent trial days. The case shows how consideration should be given to experts who are being cross-examined so not to overload them with questions and information on the stand.
8 April Case Updates Nothing short of a demolition of the expert's evidence Paediatrics, 11. Report Writing, 14. Changing your opinion, 13. Experts Discussions and Joint Statements, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, 16. Criticism and Complaints, Radiology The expert paediatrician in this case misidentified and confused twins when reading the primary medical disclose. This fundamental error was of seminal importance in this case because the twins had very different birth and post-birth experiences, with one being much weaker and more vulnerable than the other. The judge noted that the cross-examination of the expert was nothing short of a demolition of the expert’s evidence. LB Croydon v D (critical scrutiny of the paedeatric overview)
3 April Case Updates Is baldness a disease? 11. Report Writing, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, androgenetic alopecia, British Association of Dermatologists Mr Simon Britten, immediate past chair of the British Orthopaedic Association Medico-legal Committee, in his foreword to the forthcoming Expert Musculoskeletal and Orthopaedic Evidence, refers to how giving evidence one Monday in a case of tibial fracture, missed compartment syndrome and subsequent amputation, he was asked when he had last fixed a tibial fracture. Understandably, he said that the judge’s reaction to his answer ‘last Friday’ appeared to be a promising start. However, it is not a hard and fast rule that the healthcare expert should have experience, or recent experience, of performing the procedure or operation in issue. This case illustrates it. Advanced Hair Technology Ltd v Revenue and Customs (VAT - whether hair transplants to treat androgenetic alopecia are exempt supplies of medical care) [2025] UKFTT 241 (TC)
28 March Case Updates Navigating the excessive difference in valuations from two Expert Quantity Surveyors 06. Rules and Regulations, 11. Report Writing, 12. Responding to questions, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, 16. Criticism and Complaints, 17. Maintaining your professional edge The complexities of this case required both parties to engage expert quantity surveyors. Both sides approached their instructions to their expert from different angles which caused difficulties at trial. This explained why the valuations were worlds apart (or as the judge commented they had a “manifestly excessive difference”) and needed some careful scrutiny and assessment by the judge. Whilst the approach of examining both valuations is very case specific, there are some fundamental tests which can be taken away. An objective test was used several times as a benchmark looking at the scope of works that a ‘reasonable owner’ or ‘purchaser’ would require. The key legal issue of “proportionality” was also visited frequently throughout the assessment of valuations. Iya Patarkatsishvili & Anor v William Woodward-Fisher [2025] EWHC 265 (Ch)
13 March Case Updates Lost in translation 11. Report Writing, 15. Giving Oral Evidence In this patent case, the judge noted that neither expert was a native English speaker and both had difficulties with questions put to them during cross-examination. The misstep of one expert over the word “buckling”, which he had used in his report, and his use of a translator during cross-examination for reference, led the judge to approach his written evidence with a degree of caution. Salts Healthcare Limited v Pelican Healthcare Limited [2025] EWHC 497 (Pat)
8 March Day in the life A Day in the Life of an Aerial Imagery Expert 01. Starting your Expert Witness Business, 13. Experts Discussions and Joint Statements, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, Aerial Photography Chris Cox is a professional heritage consultant, specialist interpreter of aerial imagery and Lidar data, and an Expert Witness. She is the Director of Air Photo Services Ltd.
25 February Case Updates Undisplaced spiral right humeral fracture – accidental or non-accidental? 15. Giving Oral Evidence, Paediatrics Radiology This case illustrates how the Family Court depends on expert paediatric and radiological evidence to decide when and how a child’s fracture was sustained. This summary does not include how the court used the evidence. Suffice it to say that the expert evidence was only a part of the evidence before the court. C1 and C2 (Children: Fact Finding), Re [2024] EWFC 247 (B)
24 February Day in the life A Day in the Life of an Accountancy Expert Witness 11. Report Writing, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, Expert Witness Training, Accountancy Heather Rogers is an accountant, tax practitioner and Expert Witness. Most of her cases involve director disputes or professional negligence where there is a financial element. She runs her own consultancy, Aston Accountancy Limited.
20 February Case Updates Kohler Mira Limited v Norcros Group (Holdings) Limited [2024] EWHC 3247 (Ch) Patent Law, 11. Report Writing, 01. Starting your Expert Witness Business, 14. Changing your opinion, 15. Giving Oral Evidence, 16. Criticism and Complaints, Prior Art, CV Writing The judge preferred the evidence of the Claimant's expert because of the Defendant's expert’s approach to his task as expert, his confusion over the proper approach to what prior art was and was not in the common general knowledge, the number of assertions he made which he was forced to resile from as incorrect, and his failure to acknowledge a key fact.