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Practice Notes issued by the Chief Justice

CM 7 - Expert Witnesses in Proceedings in the Federal Court of Australia

NOTE: This Practice was superseded on 1 August 2011. Check the Practice Notes table for the most recent version.

1.       Practitioners should give a copy of the following guidelines to any witness they propose to retain for the purpose of preparing a report or giving evidence in a proceeding as to an opinion held by the witness that is wholly or substantially based on the specialised knowledge of the witness (see Part 3.3 - Opinion of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth)).

2.       The guidelines are not intended to address all aspects of an expert witness’s duties, but are intended to facilitate the admission of opinion evidence1, and to assist experts to understand in general terms what the Court expects of them.  Additionally, it is hoped that the guidelines will assist individual expert witnesses to avoid the criticism that is sometimes made (whether rightly or wrongly) that expert witnesses lack objectivity, or have coloured their evidence in favour of the party calling them.

Guidelines

1.       General Duty to the Court2
1.1     An expert witness has an overriding duty to assist the Court on matters relevant to the expert’s area of expertise.
1.2     An expert witness is not an advocate for a party even when giving testimony that is necessarily evaluative rather than inferential3.
1.3     An expert witness’s paramount duty is to the Court and not to the person retaining the expert.

2.       The Form of the Expert Evidence4
2.1     An expert’s written report must give details of the expert’s qualifications and of the literature or other material used in making the report.
2.2     All assumptions of fact made by the expert should be clearly and fully stated.
2.3     The report should identify and state the qualifications of each person who carried out any tests or experiments upon which the expert relied in compiling the report.
2.4     Where several opinions are provided in the report, the expert should summarise them.
2.5     The expert should give the reasons for each opinion.
2.6     At the end of the report the expert should declare that “[the expert] has made all the inquiries that [the expert] believes are desirable and appropriate and that no matters of significance that [the expert] regards as relevant have, to [the expert’s] knowledge, been withheld from the Court.”
2.7     There should be included in or attached to the report: (i) a statement of the questions or issues that the expert was asked to address; (ii) the factual premises upon which the report proceeds; and (iii) the documents and other materials that the expert has been instructed to consider.
2.8     If, after exchange of reports or at any other stage, an expert witness changes a material opinion, having read another expert’s report or for any other reason, the change should be communicated in a timely manner (through legal representatives) to each party to whom the expert witness’s report has been provided and, when appropriate, to the Court5.
2.9     If an expert’s opinion is not fully researched because the expert considers that insufficient data are available, or for any other reason, this must be stated with an indication that the opinion is no more than a provisional one.   Where an expert witness who has prepared a report believes that it may be incomplete or inaccurate without some qualification, that qualification must be stated in the report (see footnote 5).
2.10   The expert should make it clear when a particular question or issue falls outside the relevant field of expertise.
2.11   Where an expert’s report refers to photographs, plans, calculations, analyses, measurements, survey reports or other extrinsic matter, these must be provided to the opposite party at the same time as the exchange of reports6.

3.       Experts’ Conference
3.1     If experts retained by the parties meet at the direction of the Court, it would be improper for an expert to be given, or to accept, instructions not to reach agreement.   If, at a meeting directed by the Court, the experts cannot reach agreement about matters of expert opinion, they should specify their reasons for being unable to do so.

 

M E J BLACK
Chief Justice
25 September 2009


1 As to the distinction between expert opinion evidence and expert assistance see Evans Deakin Pty Ltd v Sebel Furniture Ltd [2003] FCA 171 per Allsop J at [676].

2 See rule 35.3 Civil Procedure Rules (UK); see also Lord Woolf “Medics, Lawyers and the Courts” [1997] 16 CJQ 302 at 313.

4 See rule 35.10 Civil Procedure Rules (UK) and Practice Direction 35 – Experts and Assessors (UK); HG v the Queen (1999) 197 CLR 414 per Gleeson CJ at [39]-[43]; Ocean Marine Mutual Insurance Association (Europe) OV v Jetopay Pty Ltd [2000] FCA 1463 (FC) at [17]-[23]

5 The “Ikarian Reefer” [1993] 20 FSR 563 at 565

6 The “Ikarian Reefer” [1993] 20 FSR 563 at 565-566.  See also Ormrod “Scientific Evidence in Court” [1968] Crim LR 240

 

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