Expert witnesses to be recalled in Dublin building defect case 04/03/2010 16:26:21 High Court judge Mr Justice Paul Gilligan, has refused to halt a long-running action to establish the cause of defects in hundreds of homes in north Dublin.
The defects arise from swelling and cracking in hundreds of homes allegedly as a result of defective pyrite infill.
Because of the discovery of documents failures, 400 affected homeowners awaiting the outcome of the action by developer Menolly Homes against Irish Asphalt Limited (IAL) and several companies in the Lagan group will now have a longer wait before they can proceed
After the judge’s ruling last week, Paul Gardiner SC, for the homeowners, said his clients have been very prejudiced by the discovery failures and he asked to be heard by the court when the case is mentioned again next Thursday. The homeowners had expected the case to conclude last July, counsel added. The case opened last February and has run for some 90 days, including 50 days of evidence.
The Menolly action opened a year ago, but discovery failures led to both sides bringing motions against each other late last year. The defendants sought to have the Menolly claim struck out over admitted failures in Menolly’s discovery of June 2008 and the plaintiff’s delay in making discovery of some 50,000 documents until some months into the trial while the Menolly side also sought to strike out the defence over a series of defence discovery failures.
In a 400-page decision on those motions yesterday, Mr Justice Gilligan strongly criticised both sides over discovery failures, but ruled these had not caused such irreparable prejudice to either side requiring the trial be halted.
A series of directions from the court, if adhered to, and other measures including the recall of expert witnesses to address issues raised in later discovery should address the problems, he found.
The judge said the characterisation of Menolly’s discovery of June 2008 as “a mess” was appropriate and he found negligence by the plaintiffs, their servants or agents, in failing to comply with discovery. Their actions could be described as “blameworthy to a significant extent”.
Various explanations for the discovery failures included anxiety to get on with the trial, he noted. Whatever the reasons, the discovery failed to achieve the standard required by the court.
However, there was no wilful attempt to suppress documents and he did not consider the failures were deliberate or dishonest.
He rejected the defence argument that the Menolly side will not make discovery and noted the plaintiffs had since retained a panel of junior counsel and PriceWaterhouseCoopers chartered accountants to assist with e-discovery and had given assurance to abide by court directions.
The judge also found the defendants were negligent and blameworthy in aspects of their discovery. The defendants had embarked on “a plan of subterfuge” to convince their own solicitors and the Menolly side some documents related to the Bay Lane quarry were not relevant “when clearly they were”.
He was also seriously concerned at serious deficiency in discovering minutes of management meetings both of IAL and Lagan and said he was entitled to conclude he had “a reasonable suspicion” whether or not all relevant minutes were discovered.
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