Questions and Answers

Before contacting the EWI Helpline, have a look at the questions asked by fellow members, you may find an answer to your query:

Advice notes are provided to members of the Expert Witness Institute in support of their work. They represent the Institute’s view of good practice in a particular area, and members are not obliged to follow them. They do not constitute legal or professional advice and should not be relied upon as a substitute for it. Whilst care has been taken to ensure that they are accurate, up to date, and useful, The Expert Witness Institute will not accept any legal liability in relation to them. If specific advice or information is required, then a suitably qualified professional should be consulted.

Mantir Singh Sahota v Albinder Singh Sahota & Ors [2024] EWHC 2165 (Ch)
Sean Mosby 542

Mantir Singh Sahota v Albinder Singh Sahota & Ors [2024] EWHC 2165 (Ch)

bySean Mosby

 

Summary

The judge found that the forensic accounting expert’s approach of forming an opinion as to the value of the Company, then carrying out a detailed calculation and only if it matches his initial opinion accepting it, undermined the credibility and reliability of his opinion as to the value of the Company.

Learning points
  • If you have made errors in your report, seek to address them as soon as possible with a supplemental report, clearly explaining why the errors were made and the impact they had on your opinion.

  • The court may view errors of calculation less severally than errors of principle, especially if they are addressed promptly and effectively.

  • However, multiple, or clearly careless, errors of calculation are likely to undermine the court’s confidence in your expert opinions, even if the errors were made in reports from earlier in the process which are now largely redundant.  

  • The court is likely to approach with caution any figure that is not supported by a calculation which the court can scrutinise.

  • When conducting valuation calculations, avoid forming a view as to the likely outcome of those calculations before you have made them. The purpose of the calculation is to determine an outcome, not validate an hypothesis.

  • If you choose to reconsider the validity of your assumptions once you have performed the initial calculations, it is important to do so without being influenced by their outcome on the calculation.

To continue reading you must be an EWI member, become a member and access exclusive content. 

Already a member? Login

Share

Print
Comments are only visible to subscribers.