EXPERT PRIVILEGE IN CIVIL EVIDENCE.
Expert evidence frequently wins
or loses cases. The importance of handling that evidence properly is therefore
paramount. Fundamental to this is the application of privilege. Indeed, thorny
privilege issues relating to expert documents, drafts, communications,
instructions, collateral use, joint statements, statements of replaced experts,
amongst other issues, come up time and again in practice.
This book approaches 'expert privilege' as a subcategory of
privilege of its own. This is not because it is defined by a uniform subset of
rules that apply to all situations in which expert material is at issue, but
precisely because it is not. Neither can assumptions about privilege in expert
evidence be based on other areas of application. Instead, 'expert privilege' is
a highly idiosyncratic and problematic area. None of the traditional privilege
texts are dedicated to this important subject. A book dealing with 'expert
privilege' as a subject area of its own is therefore highly overdue. This is the
first such book.
This book provides an overview of the issues, cases and rules
that feature in this complex area, with the touchstone of practicality kept very
much in mind throughout. The order in which issues are discussed follows the
process by which expert evidence is prepared, from instruction through to
collateral use. The intended readership is solicitors and counsel practicing in
England and Wales in all the areas of civil, commercial litigation that use
expert evidence. This book will also be of interest to practitioners in other
common law countries and academics who are interested in English procedural law.