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Jean-Yves Gilg

Editor, Solicitors Journal

Lord Neuberger calls for debate on use of disclosure and live evidence

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Lord Neuberger calls for debate on use of disclosure and live evidence

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Lawyers should look again at 'cherished' practices

The Master of the Rolls has called for a debate on scrapping disclosure and live evidence in commercial cases.

'Mainland continental Europe manages largely without disclosure and live witnesses, and the result is not the collapse of society,' Lord Neuberger said.

'More importantly the result is much cheaper litigation. And, in these days of increasing cost-consciousness, that is very important, and it is something which should make us sit up and think '“ especially when some of those courts are offering English language hearings.'

Speaking to the Chancery Bar Association conference, Lord Neuberger asked why there was so 'very much more European patent litigation in German courts than in our courts, despite the very high quality of our specialist patent judges, patent barristers, patent solicitors and patent agents?

'It is, I suggest, at least in part, the disproportionate difference in legal costs of patent proceedings here when compared with Germany.'

The Master of the Rolls said judges and lawyers should look 'open-mindedly and critically' at the 'cherished common law practices' of disclosure and live evidence.

He said disclosure was very often an 'enormously expensive and time-consuming exercise' in an electronic world.

'I accept that there will be cases where a document is crucial to the outcome of a case, and, if that document had not been disclosed pursuant to our disclosure rules, the decision would have gone the other way.

'But that, I suggest, would be a rare case. Is it right that such a rare case justifies the enormous effort and time which is now required in any big case, and indeed in some small cases?

'And in most of the Rolls Building litigation, it may be said that you have quite enough documentation available without disclosure. Whatever system of justice you have, however full your disclosure, you will never get the right answer in every case.

'And the fact that you may get the odd extra wrong result if you get rid of disclosure is not necessarily much of an argument.'

On live witnesses Lord Neuberger said there was 'considerable force' in the point that once judges had the witness statements, 'inherent commercial probability, consistency with the contemporaneous documentation, and internal inconsistency' were the best guides to the truth.

He added that he was not suggesting that we should 'abandon or even cut down' disclosure or live evidence, but at least consider it.