Your Honour will remember references to document 71 and document 72A in the discovery, which were specifically and particularly addressed by Mr Ghirardello in his correspondence with Mr Mark Gray-Spencer."
21 The significant fact that decides the outcome of this application is that there is not, or certainly does not appear to be, any dispute that the deficiencies and dissimilarities in the document, or versions of it or of parts of it, are all agreed and accepted. In other words, no party is putting in issue any suggestion by any other that various versions of exhibit J or of parts of it, have not all or always been consistent. It is agreed and recognised that some appendices were incomplete or totally absent, and that they have also been misdescribed.
22 A search for the reason why this should be so does not appear to be of any obvious assistance to any party or to me. Indeed, on one view, an answer to the question may be inimical to the interests of Rimanui. For example, at present the submission is available to Rimanui that the incompleteness of Mr Ward's notes at some point in their dissemination and consideration since 2 December 2000 may, in Mr Donohoe's words, have poisoned the well (of justice) at its source. The availability of a submission that any particular expert may have commenced or considered another or different line of investigation or analysis, or may have been more easily capable of persuasion to another point of view, with the benefit of all of the material, is not lost simply because the form or format of exhibit J cannot definitively be located or isolated in time and space.
23 I am also at a loss to understand what any forensic document examiner could tell the parties and me about exhibit J, which it may be important to know, other than the accepted fact that it may have been in several different forms at various different times. However, that is not only already known, it is uncontroversial, and therefore currently unimportant. Mr Maconachie's admissions made for the plaintiff on this application confirm and support it. It might be otherwise if it were to be alleged that some critical event occurred or some essential issue was irretrievably overlooked, because of reliance by someone on an incomplete document, or that the exposure of some dishonesty or secrecy were lurking. The earlier of these possibilities do not present themselves for consideration in this case and the later ones have been specifically disavowed. The fourth page of Mr Ward's typed notes has been in circulation for a long time and its role as part of exhibit J is forensically inconsequential. It undoubtedly has a role of some forensic significance in these proceedings but precisely what it is remains to be seen. It is not limited by or tied to the question of whether or not it was or became a part of exhibit J at any particular time or whether it ever did, or in what circumstances.
24 Even though there may be no clear dividing line in all cases between the authenticity and identity of documents, that distinction does not appear in any event to loom large at present with respect to exhibit J. Nor is the time of its creation a matter of apparent significance once it is accepted or admitted that it was in a particular form at a particular time, in this case specifically in March and May 2003, but also at other times as well. Authenticity rather denotes correctness or genuineness. What we are here concerned with is more akin to inadvertence or mistake at the time of creation or reproduction or dissemination, than with authenticity strictly so called. The identity of exhibit J is also not in issue in the sense that it is in the form that it is in, and there is no dispute that other different versions of it or of part of it have been circulated over the years. Mr Ghirardello was alive to the discrepancies in 2003 and his perspicacity alerted others to the differences as well.
25 Even though Rimanui has agreed that the costs associated with the proposed examination should be borne by it, I rather suspect that the whole exercise is ill founded and is likely to be a waste of time. I do not think I should accede to the application.
Orders
26 Rimanui's application to uplift exhibit J for the purpose of having it forensically examined is dismissed.