civil court

Cards (18)

  • civil cases concern disputes between individuals usually when an individual or a business thinks that someone else has infringed their legal rights in someway
  • there are two civil courts which cases can begin. These are the county court and High Court.
  • jurisdiction means the power each court has to deal with certain types of cases
  • jurisdiction of the county court
    • the county court hears the vast majority of civil cases
    • these include businesses trying to recover money they are owed , individuals seeking compensation for injuries , landowners seeking orders that will prevent trespass
  • jurisdiction of high court
    • The High Court has 3 divisions : chancery divisions, kings bench division, family divisions
    • The Kings bench division deals of the work including tour and contract not suitable for County Court
    • as it is the division of the king’s bench it also hears criminal appeals and judicial review cases with tax and probate and bankruptcy cases
    • chancery division hears tax, property, wills and probate, and bankruptcy cases
    • family division hears about where there is a dispute under hague convention also hears cases about adoption, divorce, wills and child custody
  • pre-action protocols
    • pre-action protocols rules about what the parties must do even before the court proceedings are issued
    • there are currently 16 separate action protocols and the one that applies will depend on the type of claim
    • for example, the personal injury pre-action protocol requires the following to be done: (1)letter of claim (2) the defendant has few months to investigate and admit liability or explain to c why liability is denied (3) parties agree an expert witness if required
    • if party doesn’t comply, they can be penalised
  • issuing a claim
    if a dispute cannot be settled, the claimant can issue proceedings by completing FORM N1 (or claiming online if it is a case of being owned money up to £100,000) and paying a fee which ranges between £25 for a very low value online claim to £10,000 for a claim for more than £200,000
  • issuing a claim
    the court will then allocate it to one of four tracks a track is the name for the different set of rules that are applied to different types of values of claim
  • small claims track
    value of : claim under £10,000; personal injury cases under £1,000
    court : county court
    judge : district judges
    approach : cannot cover costs ; largely used by people representing themselves known as litigants in person this allows district judge to adopt an inquisitorial approach
  • fast track
    value of claim : £10,000 - £25,000 ; personal injury cases between £1,000 and £25,000
    court : county court
    judge : circuit judge
    approach : 30-week timetable to trial , only one joint expert allowed , trial limited to one day , fixed recoverable costs
  • intermediate track
    value of claim : claims between £25,000 and £100,000
    court : up to £50,000 - county court, over £50,000 - high court
    judge : up to £50,000 - circuit judge, over £50,000 - puisne judge
    approach : simplified procedure, fixed reversible costs, trial limited to two days, two experts per party
  • multi-track
    value of claim : claims over £100,000 ; more complex claims
    court : high court
    judge : puisne judge
    approach : judge sets timetable to trial , no limits on experts
  • civil appeals
    appeals in small claims and fast track civil cases are made to the next judge up in the hierarchy :
    • if the case was heard by a district judge , the appeal is made to a circuit judge in the same county court
    • if the case was heard by a circuit judge , the appeal is to a high court judge
  • civil appeals
    second appeals are possible and are always made to the court of appeal (civil division) and only in exceptional circumstances
    s55 Access to Justice Act 1999 - not unless
    1. the appeal would raise an important point of principle or practice
    2. there is some other compelling reason for the Court of appeal to hear it
  • civil appeals
    • appeals from the multi track are made to the court of appeal civil division
    • there is a further appeal available to the supreme court if the case concerns a point of law of general public importance and if either the Court Of Appeal or Supreme Court gives permission
  • civil appeals
    • on rare occasions there can be a leapfrog of appeals directly from the High Court to the Supreme Court under the administration justice act 1999 if:
    1. Supreme Court gives permission
    2. Point of law of general public importance
    • if a European law issues involved the case may be referred to the European court of justice under article 267 referral from any court on an EU law issue
  • advantages of civil courts
    • it is a fair system
    • decisions of the court are binding in law
    • parties have the right appeal against the decision of the court
  • disadvantages of the civil court
    • it is expensive
    • court proceedings can be very slow
    • taking a case to court carries significant uncertainty with it