A judge has told the lawyer for Pike River Mine directors he may have lost his chance to question three witnesses who gave evidence to the Royal Commission into the Pike River Mine tragedy after the public hearings came to an end.
The witnesses, who worked for the mine, gave written statements to the commission and a request to reopen the hearings to cross-examine the trio was declined.
A two-day hearing seeking a review of the decision by the commission began yesterday morning in the High Court at Wellington.
Stuart Grieve, counsel for the applicants who include the company's former chairman John Dow and former chief executive Peter Whittall, told Justice Ronald Young the men who submitted the statements had vital experience in areas the commission was investigating.
The evidence, on the secure commission website and confidential, was from former Pike River Coal technical staff member Udo Renk and middle managers Terry Moynihan and Greg Borichevsky.