Poecheng
Well-Known Member
Hi JFM,
I am not exp in the CPR but just enough to know some of the consequences.
I was tempted to agree with you about that last paragraph so went back and read it. I think the reason is that the case is unappealable because there were no issues of law that were contentious and the appeal (I think) would have to be on a point of law rather than fact. So I expect J felt on safe ground to forget part two as there could effectively be no legal point appealed.
It got me reading the penultimate paragraph about the 40% and it's worth a re-read. I think I was too kind
. Shimmel is the name of the expert and he suggests a working likelihood of 80% efficiency. Then he concedes that he has no expertise in the area at all. So his evidence is (effectively) dismissed and the judge goes straight to accepting the 40% in the manual. Well that is no more accurate than Shimmel and may be a whole lot less accurate - Shimmel may not have proven expertise but that doesn't mean he is wrong. He probably knows exactly what he is talking about but hasn't particularly studied it to describe himself as an expert in that particular area.
We know J actually went to 40% as I have done the calculations
Pump 1 and 2 = 1500 and 3700 g/ph
x 40% = 2080g/h
/60 =34.66g/m
convert to lt = 157.56 litre/min (and the J worked with 158 l/m)
Might be worth a squint at the manuals because I assume Rule are a US firm. If the g/h figures were US Gallons then it equates to 131 litre/min.
I assume they knew the difference (or the manual states it) between imperial and US Gallons? or maybe I am being too kind again.
It is odd though - but typical - find a reason to reject the person to then reject their evidence AND assume it cannot be correct. You may not accept it from them but it doesn't mean it cannot be correct. Yet you see the judge flip from 80% to 40% for no reason other than the man wasn't an expert in pumps. I think if my case depended on it I might have got some empirical data!
Just re-read it again:
Claimant makes witness statement saying 6" crack
In opening the case (Ie the opening speech to the judge at trial) counsel says that is not correct and the witness statement should not have said that. No one else says it as the diver's emails etc are not admitted. Therefore there is no evidence at all it was 6". We only know it was 30" later.
But they try to prove it was 6" or thereabouts by the known fact that the floorboards in the aft cabin were not flooded and therefore the pumps kept up with the leak. As you don't know the leak you look at the actual capacity of the pumps. But if that calculation is bollocks - being arbitrarily based on 40% - then the evidence about the size of the leak is suspect. Greater capacity pumps could keep up with a much greater breach of the hull. Too tired to work out who this helps but Humphreys (Claimant's expert) seems in §40 to be seeking to keep the size of the breach to 6" or less.
Gotta get on with work now :encouragement:
I am not exp in the CPR but just enough to know some of the consequences.
I was tempted to agree with you about that last paragraph so went back and read it. I think the reason is that the case is unappealable because there were no issues of law that were contentious and the appeal (I think) would have to be on a point of law rather than fact. So I expect J felt on safe ground to forget part two as there could effectively be no legal point appealed.
It got me reading the penultimate paragraph about the 40% and it's worth a re-read. I think I was too kind
We know J actually went to 40% as I have done the calculations
Pump 1 and 2 = 1500 and 3700 g/ph
x 40% = 2080g/h
/60 =34.66g/m
convert to lt = 157.56 litre/min (and the J worked with 158 l/m)
Might be worth a squint at the manuals because I assume Rule are a US firm. If the g/h figures were US Gallons then it equates to 131 litre/min.
I assume they knew the difference (or the manual states it) between imperial and US Gallons? or maybe I am being too kind again.
It is odd though - but typical - find a reason to reject the person to then reject their evidence AND assume it cannot be correct. You may not accept it from them but it doesn't mean it cannot be correct. Yet you see the judge flip from 80% to 40% for no reason other than the man wasn't an expert in pumps. I think if my case depended on it I might have got some empirical data!
Just re-read it again:
Claimant makes witness statement saying 6" crack
In opening the case (Ie the opening speech to the judge at trial) counsel says that is not correct and the witness statement should not have said that. No one else says it as the diver's emails etc are not admitted. Therefore there is no evidence at all it was 6". We only know it was 30" later.
But they try to prove it was 6" or thereabouts by the known fact that the floorboards in the aft cabin were not flooded and therefore the pumps kept up with the leak. As you don't know the leak you look at the actual capacity of the pumps. But if that calculation is bollocks - being arbitrarily based on 40% - then the evidence about the size of the leak is suspect. Greater capacity pumps could keep up with a much greater breach of the hull. Too tired to work out who this helps but Humphreys (Claimant's expert) seems in §40 to be seeking to keep the size of the breach to 6" or less.
Gotta get on with work now :encouragement: