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The new rules around witness statements

Life as an advocate in the civil courts used to be a fairly tense business. All the documentary paraphernalia we associate with civil litigation – witness statements, skeleton arguments and the like – has come in only over the course of the past four decades. Before, it was possible to go to court not knowing what evidence and arguments would be deployed against you, and having to cross-examine on the hoof.

While that made the job of an advocate pretty exciting, the introduction of successive rules requiring parties to lay out their evidence and arguments in advance was greeted with a degree of relief. It was common, when the more senior of us first started at the Bar, for counsel to be sent the pleadings in a case, and to be asked for an advice on evidence. That was an analytical exercise which required us to separate out the issues that needed to be proved or disproved, and the evidence that would be needed for that task. The instructing solicitor would then procure the evidence, and the case would develop from there. The interviewing of potential witnesses as part of this process was a painstaking and delicate task, requiring the skills of a detective, the patience of Job, and the self-discipline not to put words in the witness’s mouth.

Over the course of time, however, we have seen an increasing tendency for witness statements to be used less as documents providing relevant information, and more as forensic weapons.

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