Gwyneth Paltrow - latest: 'He ran right into my back,' Paltrow told daughter - as witness says star's version of crash 'more consistent with physics'

The actress is being sued for $300,000 by a man who claims she crashed into him while skiing, leaving him concussed and with broken ribs. She rejects the allegation, her lawyer describing it as "utter BS". Watch the proceedings live from court in the stream below.

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That's it for today

Court has now adjourned until tomorrow.

Thank you for following along as we brought you all the live updates on the case against Gwyneth Paltrow.

'He ran right into my back,' Paltrow told daughter

The deposition of Gwyneth Paltrow's daughter Apple is now being read to the court.

Apple was also at the ski resort on the day of the incident in 2016.

In her deposition, Apple said she did not see the collision but can recall the events following it.

Asked how far away she was from her brother Moses just before the collision, she said: "I don't really know how to say it. I was further down the run. They were in the middle of the run. I was towards the end with my stepsister. I was not with Moses or my mother."

Questioned on whether she heard a scream when the collision took place, Apple said: "I did hear some commotion but I was further down so I decided to continue to go down to the lodge."

Asked if she looked anywhere when she heard the collision, Apple said: "I don't remember."

Apple said at the time she heard the collision she was with her ski instructor Keri Oaks - who she believes was in front of her and she would usually lead. 

"We continued to ski down to lunch," she added.

Asked if she knew at the time there had been a ski collision, she added: "No."

She said she first found out there had been a collision when she saw her mother for lunch - about five minutes later.

"She told us what happened," she said.

"She came in and I noticed that she looked a bit shocked. 

"I asked what happened and she said 'this a******e ran into me. He ran right into my back'. I remember that is what she said."

Paltrow's son Moses says mother 'yelled' at Sanderson after collision

The deposition of Gwyneth Paltrow's son Moses- who she shares with Coldplay singer Chris Martin - is now being read to the court by a member of Paltrow's legal team. 

Moses was on the ski slope on the day of the incident in 2016.

In his statement, Moses, who was nine at the time of the collision, said he was familiar with the accident.

He said he was skiing with his ski instructor Eric Christiansen just before the collision.

"I recall skiing with my instructor and briefly seeing the collision. And then he skied over and I followed him," Moses said in his deposition.

"Then I saw my mother and a person behind her."

Asked if the person behind her was a man, he said: "Yes."

Moses confirmed that the person was uphill from his mother and "decently close".

Asked how he knew his mother had been in a collision, he said: "I realised because of the equipment she was wearing because I know what she wears when she skis. 

"And then I realised that it was my mum. So I was standing around - I realised it was my mother.

"When I skied over I heard my mum yelling at the guy. She was saying something along the lines of 'what the f*** you just ran into me'".

Asked if she was standing up when she said that, Moses said he did not remember but "he believed she was on the ground lying down".

He said his mother was on the ground for "around two minutes" before she got up.

'Nobody to our knowledge was hurt'

In her deposition - which is being read by Ms Vanorman - Keri Oaks says the day of the incident "may have been the first time" she went skiing with Paltrow's family.

She had been teaching Paltrow's daughter Apple to ski on the day of the incident.

She says on the day of the incident she discussed her "relief" with Paltrow's ski instructor Eric Christiansen - who she knows through Deer Valley Resort - that everybody was safe.

Ms Oaks says on the day of the collision Moses and Apple wanted their mother to watch them ski.

She says: "They wanted to do the side of the run so she could see. She could see them ski. 

"So we stepped to cross the run, the run was clear. There was nobody in front. It stands out in my mind because that was a rarity."

She says "we crossed the run and made two turns and that is when I heard the sound".

"I looked over and that is when I saw they [Paltrow and Mr Sanderson] had collided and were both on the snow."

She says she heard Paltrow's voice and "that is what caught her attention".

Ms Oaks says when Paltrow got up she "was frustrated".

She says: "It was verbalised that everybody was okay. Mr Sanderson verbalised to us that he was okay, he was fine, that was his response to her checking. We checked. Ski patrol checked."

Ms Oaks says that is when the group dispersed.

Asked why she did not write an incident report that day, she adds: "Nobody to our knowledge was hurt. Everybody left the scene to their own volition. Everybody was able to leave."

Court resumes

The judge, lawyers, and jury are back, and the hearing has resumed.

There are no more questions for Dr Steven Edgley.

Terry Sanderson's lawyer Kristin Vanorman is reading the deposition of Keri Oaks - a ski instructor who was at the resort when the incident took place.

Court takes a brief break

The court is taking another brief break and will resume soon.

Does Sanderson's post-collision evaluation show evidence of impairment?

Dr Steven Edgley is now asked by Gwyneth Paltrow's lawyer Stephen Owens whether Mr Sanderson's concussion was mild.

"Yes," Dr Edgley says.

He is then asked if it is still his opinion that Mr Sanderson's post-collision neuropsychological evaluation shows no evidence of impairment

The doctor says: "It is."

Did Sanderson have signs of brain disorder before collision?

A lawyer for Terry Sanderson is now asking Dr Edgley if the retired optometrist had signs of normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) - a brain disorder - before the incident.

The doctors says before 2009 it was commented on in a MRI and given how the symptoms are insidious, 14 years later he is "not surprised" with the plaintiff experiencing memory issues.

Asked if he reviewed any of Mr Sanderson's MRI images in 2017 (after the collision), Dr Edgley says: "Yes."

However, he says he cannot determine if it showed worsening of the condition.

He is asked if the "laundry list" of medical conditions Mr Sanderson may or may not have had before the incident kept him from skiing.

"The fact that three weeks earlier he said to his physician 'I feel like I am getting old' - that is most likely based on as you said it that laundry list of conditions," Dr Edgley says.

"No one condition is that problematic but the combination of those conditions do weigh on a person both physically and psychologically."

Proceedings back in session

The proceedings have begun again following some brief legal discussions between the lawyers and the judge.

Court takes a break

The court is taking a brief break and will resume soon.