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Expertise

Brendan is a Partner in the Commercial Litigation and Dispute Resolution Department at Matheson and is a member of the firm’s Corporate Restructuring and Insolvency Law Group.  Brendan provides specialist advice to financial institutions, creditor groups, NAMA, receivers, examiners and companies on contentious and non-contentious corporate restructuring and insolvency matters.

Brendan is a Council member of the Irish Society of Insolvency Practitioners and is also is a member of INSOL Europe and the American Bankruptcy Institute. Brendan lectures and tutors on insolvency law matters on the professional practice courses of the Incorporated Law Society of Ireland and Chartered Accountants Ireland.

Experience Highlights
  • Advising in relation to solvent corporate restructurings, including high profile section 72 capital reductions such as Eaton Corporation plc, Tullow Oil plc and Weatherford International plc and section 201 schemes of arrangement such as Valista Limited and the merger of IAWS Group plc and Hiestand to create Aryzta.
  • Advising on numerous cross-border mergers (both in and out of Ireland) under the European Communities (Cross-Border Merger) Regulations 2008 (as amended), examples of which include the merger of Citibank Europe plc with a number of its European sister companies, which was the first cross-border merger into Ireland, and the merger of various Henkel group companies.
  • Advising financial institutions in relation to the enforcement of security, recovery of debt and enforcement options (including bankruptcy) with extensive experience in advising in connection with both High Court and commercial court proceedings.
  • Advising directors and shareholders of companies on corporate governance and compliance issues and on matters relating to the Director of Corporate Enforcement, restriction proceedings, Section 205 proceedings and shareholder disputes.
  • Advising financial institutions and receivers in domestic receiverships, examples of which include B3 Cable Solutions (Ireland) Limited, Goode Concrete, Murrays Rent A Car Limited, WMG Group Limited and Castleknock Golf Club.
  • Advising Danske Bank A/S and various receivers in connection with the first ever residential property portfolio sale of over 700 properties.
  • Advising in examinerships, both from an examiner’s and creditor’s perspective, examples of which include Fate Park, Qualceram Shires plc, Linen Supply of Ireland, Blackshore Group, Classic Marketing Limited and Tougher Oil Distributors Limited.
  • Advising in liquidations, both from a liquidator’s and creditor’s perspective, recent examples of which include Buzreel Limited (In Liquidation) which company owned the Buy & Sell brand and advising the liquidators appointed to Newbridge Credit Union Limited (In Liquidation) and Berehaven Credit Union Limited (In Liquidation) in respect of their obligations under the Central Bank and Credit Institutions (Resolution) Act 2011, which are the only two credit unions to be wound up in Ireland.
Accolades

Brendan Colgan is recommended.
European Legal 500 2020

Brendan Colgan is named a next generation partner.
European Legal 500 2020

Brendan Colgan is "extremely technically proficient and effective".
European Legal 500 2020

“Brendan Colgan is my main point of contact at Matheson. He has got an unbelievable work ethic and is very practical in his approach. His ability to remember specific detail on complex litigation is impressive.”
European Legal 500 2020

Brendan Colgan is named ‘Highly Regarded’
IFLR1000 2020

Brendan Colgan remains "calm under pressure".
European Legal 500 2019

Brendan Colgan is recommended.
European Legal 500 2019

Brendan Colgan is described as being “technically excellent and commercial”.
Restructuring / Insolvency: Chambers Europe 2019

Brendan Colgan is "excellent".
European Legal 500 2018

"Technically very good and very commercial."
Chambers Europe 2018

Brendan Colgan is named a Highly Regarded Individual.
IFLR1000 2018

“Excellent application of knowledge to deliver practical solutions, and commercially savvy.” 
IFLR1000 2018

Education

National University of Ireland, Galway, B Corp. Law, LLB

Law Society of Ireland

A new statutory exception to the Rule against Hearsay

Sep 7, 2020, 22:06 PM
A new statutory exception to the Rule against Hearsay – The Civil Law and Criminal Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2020.
Title : A new statutory exception to the Rule against Hearsay
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Insight Date : Aug 20, 2020, 12:10 PM
A new statutory exception to the Rule against Hearsay – The Civil Law and Criminal Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2020.

The Civil Law and Criminal Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2020 (the “Act”) was recently passed by the Dáil to deal with a number of practical issues arising as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Act introduces a variety of reforms in both civil and criminal law, including provision for remote hearings and electronic filings. Of particular interest for creditors in summary proceedings, is the introduction of a new statutory exception to the rule against hearsay which now allows for the admission of business records as evidence in civil proceedings in certain circumstances.

The rule against hearsay and the judgment in Burns

The law of evidence concerning hearsay refers to any testimony given by a witness about words spoken or a document generated out of court by another person who is not produced in court as a witness, where the testimony is presented to prove the truth of what is asserted in the words or document involved.  This clearly covers an exceptionally wide range of important documents, including letters, medical records, business records and public records.  It can result in documents being inadmissible in evidence because the person who had originally created the documents was not available to be cross-examined in court.

Heretofore, the exceptions to the rule against hearsay generally relied upon in summary proceedings were (i) the statutory exception in the Bankers' Books Evidence Act 1879-1959 (which can only be invoked by a bank) and (ii) the common law exception based on a 'course of dealings' between the defendants and the plaintiff or its predecessor in title (which has its origins in Moorview Developments v First Active plc [2010] IEHC 275, Bank of Scotland v Fergus [2012] IEHC 131, Bank of Ireland v. Keehan [2013] IEHC 631, and was developed in Ulster Bank v O'Brien [2015] 2 IR 656 – see our previous client update here).

The rule against hearsay has created some difficulties for those seeking to obtain summary judgment, particularly for loan purchasers as was highlighted in the recent case of Promontoria v Burns [2020] IECA 87. In this case, the Court of Appeal noted that the deponent's source of knowledge was not identified save with respect to the specific documents he exhibited and, even in respect of the exhibits, it was not clear whether original books and records had been examined. The only statement of account provided to the Court in this case appeared to have been prepared for the purpose of litigation, and no bank statements or documentation from which a course of dealing could be inferred had been exhibited. The Court of Appeal in that case concluded that the affidavit evidence in this case did no more than confirm what the plaintiff had been told (by the bank from which the loan was purchased) as to the amount due by the borrowers at the time that the loan was acquired and what amount had, on that basis, been calculated as having accrued since then. The Court of Appeal held that the affidavit amounted to "classic hearsay, a statement of what the deponent was told by someone else".

In both judgments of Collins J and Baker J in the Court of Appeal, there was a call for clarity around the rule against hearsay in the context of summary judgment cases, either from the Supreme Court or from the legislature. The Law Reform Commission had been advocating for reform of the hearsay rule in civil claims for many years.

Chapter 3 of the Act and the admission of business records as evidence of their contents

Chapter 3 of the Act introduces a new statutory exception to the hearsay rule. Section 13 provides for circumstances in which any record in document form compiled in the ordinary course of business is presumed to be admissible as evidence of the truth of the facts asserted in such a document.

The Act creates a rebuttable presumption that the information contained in documents is admissible as evidence of the facts contained in those records as long as (a) the documents were compiled in the ordinary course of business, (b) they are supplied by a person who has, or may reasonably be supposed to have, personal knowledge of the matters dealt with (whether or not that person compiled the records and is identifiable); and (c) in the case of information in non-legible form that has been reproduced in legible form, the information was reproduced in the course of the normal operation of the reproduction system concerned.

The onus therefore shifts to the other party to establish that the evidence contained in those records is untrue or incorrect.

It is a further requirement that (i) a copy of the document intended to be relied upon has been served on the other party or parties or (ii) a notice of intention to give the information in evidence, together with a copy of the document, is served on the other party or parties not later than 21 days before the commencement of the trial.  If this provision is not adhered to, the party seeking to admit the records will need to seek leave from the Court.  The other party on whom such a notice has been served shall not, without leave from the court, object to the admissibility in evidence of the information concerned unless they serve a notice objecting to its admissibility on the other parties to the proceedings at least 7 days before the commencement of the civil trial.  The Act also provides for the method of service of such notices.

Business is broadly defined to include “any trade, profession or other occupation carried on, whether for profit or otherwise, either within or outside the state”. There are some exceptions to admissibility, such as where the information is privileged or is compiled for the purpose of a criminal investigation.

The Act ensures that the Court retains the usual discretion in deciding whether to admit such evidence and can refuse to admit records where it comes to the conclusion that to do so would not be in the interests of justice – such as where the Court decides it would result in unfairness to a party. The Court can also decide what weight to afford to such records and can take into account their reliability or authenticity.

What does this mean in practical terms?

The introduction of this statutory exception to the rule against hearsay should make it more straightforward for loan purchasers to adduce evidence of sums due by borrowers in that it creates a (rebuttable) presumption that copies of documents produced in the ordinary course of business can be relied upon as truth of their contents without requiring the individual who created the document to be called to give evidence.  It will be for the party opposing their admission to show reason why the records are inaccurate, incomplete or otherwise should not be admitted.

The Act became law on 6 August and the majority of the Act, including the section on business records which is the focus of this piece, commenced on 21 August 2020.

For further information or general advice on what the Act means for you, please contact  Julie Murphy-O’ConnorTony O’GradyBrendan ColganGráinne DeverMairéad Ní Ghabhain or your usual Matheson contact.

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