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Experts
Code of Conduct
1. Application of Code
This code of conduct applies to any expert engaged
to:
- provide a report as to his or her opinion for use as evidence
in proceedings or proposed proceedings, or
- give opinion evidence in proceedings or proposed proceedings,
or
- inquire into and report on a question as the Courts'
appointed expert.
2. General Duty to
the Court
- An expert witness has an overriding duty to assist the
Court impartially on matters relevant to the expert's area
of expertise.
- An expert witness should state the facts or assumptions
upon which his opinion is based. He should not omit to consider
material facts which could detract from his concluded opinions.
- An expert witness's paramount duty is to the Court and
not to the person retaining the expert.
- An expert witness is not an advocate for a particular
party.
3. The Experts' Report
A report by an expert witness must (in the body
of the report or in an annexure) specify:
- the person's qualifications as an expert, and
- the facts, matters and assumptions on which the opinions
in the report are based (a letter of instructions may be
annexed) and
- reasons for each opinion expressed, and if applicable
- that a particular question or issue falls outside his
or her field of expertise
- any literature or other materials utilised in support
of the opinions, and
- any examinations, tests or other investigations on which
he or she has relied and identify, and give details of the
qualifications of, the person who carried them out.
If an expert witness who prepares a report,
believes that it may be incomplete or inaccurate without some
qualification... then that qualification must be stated in
the report.
If an expert witness considers that his or her
opinion is not a concluded opinion because of insufficient
research or insufficient data or for any other reason, this
must be stated when the opinion is expressed.
An expert witness, who after communicating an
opinion to the party engaging him or her (or that party's
legal representative), changes his or her opinion on a material
matter, then the expert must forthwith provide the engaging
party (or that party's legal representative) with a supplementary
report, to that effect which must contain such of the information
referred to in the above paragraphs as is appropriate.
Where an expert witness is appointed by the
Court, the preceding paragraph applies as if the Court were
the engaging party.
Where expert evidence refers to photographs,
plans, calculations, analyses, measurements, survey reports
or other similar documents, these must be provided to the
opposite party at the same time as the exchange of reports.
Most importantly, the key to an expert's evidence
is to ensure that they use plain language and apply the following
to their reports
...... Clarity, Precision, Brevity, Relevance,
Directness and Orderliness.
4. Expert Conferences
An expert witness must abide by any direction
of the Court to:
- confer with any other expert witness, and
- endeavour to reach agreement on material matters for
expert opinion, and
- provide the Court with a joint report specifying matters
agreed and matters not agreed and the reasons for any non
agreement.
An expert witness must exercise his or her independent,
professional judgment in relation to such a conference and
joint report, and must not act on any instruction or request
to withhold or avoid agreement.
An expert may apply to the court for further
directions and the content of the conference between experts
will not be referred to at the hearing or trial unless the
parties affected have agreed.
5.
Challenges for Experts
Expert witnesses face a range of ethical dilemmas
and conflicts in their work. A lawyer often seeks narrow and
specific expertise, when in some cases that is not always
possible and an expert who can consider more general principles
must suffice.
Then there are the companion requirements of
being thorough and perceptive on the one hand, and impartial
and objective on the other. There is a real need to look beyond
the obvious, to see the whole situation (as far as this is
possible) and to tell it all, without "filtering out"
evidence that may not suit the lawyer's case. If a case is
weak, early knowledge of this is valuable to the lawyer.
Matters which give rise to expert opinion are
often complex, and the formation of robust and reliable technical
opinion is not a quick, easy activity. Often, as well as project
hours, an element of "calendar time" is required
in order to gain a perceptive appreciation of a complex situation.
Short time scales mitigate against a full and proper achievement
of this.
Where there is a heavy reliance on expert evidence
in a case and the evidence of a particular expert is accepted,
there is a danger that this can usurp the role of the trier
of fact. The courts are well aware of this danger and experts
should be alerted to its potential. Judges decide cases, not
experts.
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