Expert Evidence 2022
Course Date: February 16, 2022
Total: 5h 35min
Total Ethics: 1h 6min
Course Date: February 16, 2022
Welcome and Land Acknowledgment (9:00 – 9:05)
Theresa Iandiorio — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, New Westminster
Michael Parrish — Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, Vancouver
Expert Evidence Case Law Update (9:05 – 9:50)
- recap of SCC's decision in White Burgess v. Abbott, 2015 SCC 23
- survey of recent cases from SCC, BCCA, BCSC, and other courts
- Rule 11-6 and 11-7
- trends and developing issues
- key take-aways on the current state of the law and practice
Theresa Iandiorio — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, New Westminster
Michael Parrish — Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, Vancouver
BREAK (9:50 – 10:00)
Selecting, Retaining, and Instructing an Expert (10:00 – 10:40)
- selecting the expert and vetting qualifications
- consulting experts vs. testifying experts
- "hot tubbing" and court appointed experts
- expert fees and budgets
- retaining the expert and retention letters
- instructing the expert and instructing letters
- requested opinions/questions
- factual assumptions
- documents and other materials
- formal requirements under Rule 11-2 and 11-6
- formal requirements pursuant to s. 657.3 of the Criminal Code
- disclosure of reports/opinions
- in-chief vs. responding vs. supplemental reports
Mandeep Gill — Harper Grey LLP, Vancouver
Gloria M. Ng — Gloria Ng Law, Vancouver
BREAK (10:40 – 10:50)
The Boundaries of Expert Evidence: Novel, Social Science, and "Junk" Science Experts (10:50 – 11:35)
- novel science vs. "junk" science
- Daubert and R. v. J-LJ, 2002 SCC 51
- historical and social science experts
- the perils of faulty scientific evidence in criminal matters
- courtroom presentations and demonstrations
Brent Olthuis — Olthuis Van Ert, Vancouver
Marilyn Sandford, KC — Ritchie Sandford McGowan, Vancouver
BREAK (11:35 – 11:45)
The Expert's Perspective (11:45 – 12:15)
- the role of the expert from the expert's perspective
- what lawyers can do better when retaining and instructing experts
- practical tips on site investigations, preservation of evidence, testing protocols, joint examinations, exemplars
- written instructions, document assembly and review, factual assumptions
- report writing and review
- trial preparation
- testimony at trial
Elvis Cepus, PhD, PEng — RJ Waldron & Company, Richmond
Christopher J. Reed, PEng — Principal, Reed Engineering Consultants Inc., Langley
LUNCH BREAK (12:15 – 1:00)
Expert Evidence: A View from the Bench (1:00 – 1:30)
The Honourable Madam Justice Carla L. Forth — Supreme Court of BC, Vancouver
BREAK (1:30 – 1:40)
Objecting to Expert Evidence (1:40 – 2:10)
- strategies and tactics for objections
- common grounds for objecting to admissibility
- compliance with s. 657.3(3) of the Criminal Code
- objecting to qualifications
- notice of objections under Rule 11-6(10)
- applying to strike reports
- objections at trial
- responding to objections
Mark Wolf — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, Vancouver
Jill S. Yates — McCarthy Tétrault LLP, Vancouver
BREAK (2:10 – 2:20)
Direct Examination of Expert Witnesses (2:20 – 2:50)
- differences between criminal and civil practice
- practical aspects of conducting direct examination of expert witness in a criminal trial
- when direct permitted: only where demanded or with leave: 11-7(2)
- preparing the expert for the direct testimony at trial
- qualifying the expert
- scope of direct—what is permitted and what is not?
- operation and limits of Rule 11-7: Cambie Surgeries, 2017 BCSC 581
- practice and art of direct examination
- outlining instructions, assumptions, and questions asked
- outlining methodology and analyses
- summarizing key opinions
- effective presentation of the evidence
- addressing limitations, errors, anticipating issues on cross-examination
- re-examination? when, why, and what?
Rod Flannigan — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, New Westminster
Talya Schapiro — KazLaw Injury Lawyers, Vancouver
BREAK (2:50 – 3:00)
Cross-Examination of Expert Witnesses (3:00 – 3:30)
- theories and practice of cross-examination of experts
- bases for cross-examination: bias, qualifications, instructions, assumptions, documents, methodology, opinion on merits
- common fertile grounds for cross-examination
- scope of cross-examination
- use of learned literature in cross-examination
- recently considered issues including order of cross-examination and "sweetheart crosses" in multi-party litigation
Laura L. Bevan — Lawson Lundell LLP, Vancouver
Lisa J. Helps — Helps Law Corporation, Vancouver
BREAK (3:30 – 3:40)
Demonstration: Direct and Cross-Examination of an Expert Witness (3:40 – 4:10)
Laura L. Bevan — Lawson Lundell LLP, Vancouver
Rod Flannigan — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, New Westminster
Lisa J. Helps — Helps Law Corporation, Vancouver
Kaleigh Milinazzo — Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, Vancouver
Talya Schaprio — KazLaw Injury Lawyers, Vancouver
Mark Wolf — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, Vancouver
Closing Remarks (4:10 – 4:15)
Theresa Iandiorio — Crown Counsel, Ministry of Attorney General, New Westminster
Michael Parrish — Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP, Vancouver
Contributor(s):