Commencing Proceedings Flashcards
In which court should a claim for the value of less than £100,000 be commenced?
County Court.
In which court should a claim for the value of more than £100,000 be commenced?
It can be commenced in the High Court but it does not have to be (note claims of £50,000 or more can be commenced in the high court if relating to personal injury).
Why may a claimant choose to commence proceedings in the High Court (if they have the option to do so)?
The claim is complex either in relation to facts, legal issues or remedy procedures;
The outcome is important to the public in general.
County Court claims: explain how money only claims proceedings are issued.
All money-only claims made on paper (both specified and unspecified) must be sent to county court money claims centre (CCMCC). If hearing is required, county court local to the defendant will be allocated.
County Court: what claims do the County Court Business Centre deal with?
Online claims for specified amounts of money. Judgements can be obtained and enforced over the internet.
Explain how proceedings are issued for claims not falling under remit of CCMCC and County Court Business Centre.
Proceedings can be issued in any county court hearing centre in England or Wales.
Explain the divisions of the high court.
King’s Bench Division - primary actions in contract and tort;
Chancery Division - disputes over land, trusts, contentious inheritance matters, partnership claims and company law;
Family Division - family disputes (divorce and adoption issues).
Explain the jurisdiction of the Commercial Court and Technology and Construction Court.
Commercial Court- complex cases arising out of business disputes (contracts, insurance, banking and finance);
Technology and Construction Court - claims re buildings, engineering and surveying.
Which documents are issued when commencing proceedings?
A claim form (form N1);
Particulars of claim (which may be drafted as part of the claim form or sent
separately); and
Documents that are required to be annexed by the CPR such as a copy of any contract.
List the 12 things which need to be on the claim form.
1) Details of solicitor’s fee account (so court fee can be paid);
2) Party details (accurate names and addresses - failure to do so may mean proceedings are struck. if D is dead then name of the executors/ administrators should be used);
3) Details of the relevant court the claimant wishes to commence proceedings in;
4) Brief details of claim and specify remedy being sought by C;
5) Statement of value (ie the value of the claim irrespective of whether it is specified or unspecified this needs to be filled out);
6) D’s name and address accurately displayed in box at bottom left of form;
7) Financial summary of the claim (for specified claims each figure should be given but for unspecified claims - estimate of what the C genuinely expects to recover should be stated; should also include the court fee payable which can be a maximum of 10k);
8) Preferred county court hearing centre venue;
9) Details of any witnesses;
10) Whether claim relates to Human Rights (under Human Rights Act 1998);
11) Particulars of the claim;
12) Statement of truth - annexed to the claim form;
Who can sign a statement of truth on behalf of:
a) Partnerships;
b) Company’s
a) any of the partners in the partnership or a person having control or management of the business;
b) person holding a senior position - eg director, secretary, CEO, treasurer
List the assumptions which are presumed if legal representative signs a statement of truth on client’s behalf.
a) Client authorised them to do so;
b) They’ve explained to the client that in signing the statement of truth the solicitor is confirming the client’s belief facts stated in document are true; and
c) Client was warned of possible consequences should it subsequently transpire client did not have an honest belief in the truth of those facts (where client may be prosecuted for contempt of court).
In relation to a statement of value, what needs to be inserted for:
a) specified claims;
b) unspecified claims.
a) specified claims - the precise figure be sought by C (figure should be calculated inclusive of interest which has accrued);
b) Unspecified claims:
a) high court claims, state whether over value of £100,000 (or £50,000 for PI claims);
b) for county court claims - state whether the amount is under 10k, between 10 and 25k, or over 25k. Also acceptable to state they cannot estimate recoverable amount (when calculating this figure, interest costs, contributory negligence and counterclaims should be disregarded).
Give the time limit for a claim form to be served on the defendant once a claim has been initiated.
Within 4 months of the claim from initially being commenced.
Can a claim form be served on a firm of solicitors (ie instead of directly to the defendant)?
Yes provided the defendant has nominated them in writing.