A judge is expected to be entirely impartial when hearing a case and recuse himself if there is any sign or suggestion of bias between them and a party to an action.
This principle was evident recently in a case before the Court of Appeal, where President Ryan recused himself from hearing a matter involving the property developer Sean Dunne.
The reason for this was that the judge had bought a house from Mr Dunne over 20 years ago and had once met him.
The President believed that this link, though tenuous, was enough to require him to step aside from hearing the case and adjourn it.
Multiparty Litigation in Ireland: the “test case” procedure
In Ireland, we currently have no formal procedures to allow for “class actions”, unlike other countries such as the USA.
A class action will arise in a case where there can be hundreds of plaintiffs, who are all victim of an act of ‘mass harm’.
An example of this may be when a company pollutes a water supply, which harms a large number of people.
However, in Ireland we have failed to follow the lead of other countries in adopting a formal procedure for multiparty actions. Instead, in cases where there are multiple plaintiffs, the action will usually proceed by way of what is termed the ‘test case’.
There is no legislative basis for the test case process, but it has developed into the de facto procedure to be followed by multiple litigants who share a common case or issue to be tried in Ireland.
In such circumstances one case will be selected as a ‘test’ to be tried first, while the other cases are paused until the test case has been determined.
The test case procedure has been used frequently in Ireland on a wide range of matters, including cases of financial misspelling, pyrite cases and cases taken against the State for breach of a European Directive or constitutional rights.
In order to commence proceedings and proceed by way of a test case, each claimant must institute their own individual claim and then one party will proceed to trial.
The resulting decision will become the benchmark for the ones that follow.
The test case procedure, as opposed to the multiparty action practiced in other countries, has received much criticism as being slow, expensive and a waste of resources.
A paper of recommendations was drafted by the Law Reform Commission but to date this area of law awaits reform.
Notices for Particulars: what you are entitled to and what you are not
In any action where you are unsure of the case that the other party is going to make at trial, you may serve your opponent with a ‘Notice for Particulars’.
This is a list of questions that arise from your opponent’s legal pleadings which they are required to reply to.
Though a useful piece of artillery in your legal armoury, over time the Notice for Particulars has evolved into a tactic to frustrate an opponent by delivering pages of wide-ranging questions to illicit information and evidence one is otherwise not entitled to.
Especially in personal injuries actions, Defendants have adopted the practice of serving pages of standardised Notices for Particulars. Such tactics are considered to be oppressive and have received much judicial criticism over the years.
Here are three of the key principles that apply to Notices for Particulars:
Examples of regular particulars asked for (but which should not be replied to) include requests for copies of documents or details of witnesses.
Even though the Courts have regularly stated that such items are outside the scope of particulars, they are still regularly asked for by practitioners in personal injuries actions.
Despite this judicial criticism, this practice does not look like it will reform any time soon.
A.C. FORDE & CO. LLP
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