In our submission, the proposition can be put this way, that the Tribunal, as you point out, does not have a contradictor. |
|
I think Sir Harry Gibbs said something about the necessity for a contradictor, too, in one of those injunction cases. |
|
Your Honours heard from our learned friend, Mr Bain, that the obvious contradictor, Mr Hurst, has not appeared on this application. |
|
This latter are indeed a series of arguments as judicious as possible, in order to put the contradictor in difficulty. |
|
If there is no contradictor, try as counsel may to present the arguments, it is nonetheless much easier from my end if there is a true contradiction. |
|
In this interpretation, obviously, the final checkmate is the ultimate proof that the winner holds the truth when the contradictor is in the absolute error. |
|