Paper 1: Section A - Civil Courts and other forms of Dispute Resolution [COMPLETE] Flashcards
1) What do civil claims involve?
Individuals or companies who wish to make a claim because their rights have been affected. This includes family law, contract law or employment law.
2) Briefly outline the civil claim court process.
- Civil claims begin in the County Court
- First stage is an issue of a claim form (N1 form)
- If the defendant admits the claim / doesn’t reply in 14 days a judge orders them to pay.
- If the defendant denies the claim, the case is allocated to three tracks - either the small track, fast track or multi track.
3) Go over the structure, jurisdiction and composition of the County Court.
Structure: Hears almost all civil court cases. Almost 200 County Courts in the country. Deals with small track, fast track or multi track claims.
Jurisdiction: Deals with all contract and tort claims, all cases for land recovery and matters of trusts up to £350,000.
Composition: Cases are heard by a Circuit or District judge
4) Go over the structure, jurisdiction and composition of the High Court.
Structure: The High Court is split into three divisions: Queen’s Bench Division; Chancery Division and Family Division.
Jurisdiction: The high court has the power to hear claims above £100,000
Compostion: Based in London but also has judges sitting at 26 towns and cities throughout England and Wales.
5) What are the three types of track claims?
Small track, fast track or multi track.
6) What does the QBD (high court division) deal with?
J- Deals with claims such as contract, tort (e.g. personal injury), where amount is £100,000 or over. Also deal with libel and slander
C - Cases tried by a single judge but there is a right to trial by jury for fraud, libel and slander cases. A jury is very rarely used.
7) What does Family Court (high court division) deal with?
J - This court is headed by the President of the Family Division and hear cases involving the welfare of children under the Children Act 1989. It also hears matrimonial cases such as defended divorce cases and some probate cases (how a will should be executed). The Crime & Courts Act 2013 created a new Family Court and majority of family matters are dealt with here.
C - Cases are heard by a single judge.
8) What does the Chancery division (high court division) deal with?
J - Deals with civil cases such as insolvency where a person is unable to pay his or her debts (bankruptcy), copyright and patents and contested probate actions (disagreements over a deceased person’s will and how their estate should be handled).
C - Cases are heard by a single judge and juries are never used.
9) What are the three divisions in the High court?
QBD, Family and Chancery
10) What does the N1 claim form do?
The N1 Claim Form is the form that you are required to complete if you intend to issue court proceedings.
13) What’s the 3 track system?
Small Claims Track, Fast Track Procedure and the Multi Track Procedure
14) Explain the Small Claims Track.
- The small claims track are for disputes less than £10,000 (except for personal injury cases and housing cases where the limit is usually £1,000)
- Cases normally heard in private, claimant encouraged to represent themselves and reasons for decision must be given. They cannot claim a lawyer’s cost even if they win the case.
- District Judge will sit in the County Court and are the most inferior judges in the UK. They’re given training in how to handle small claims and make sure both parties explain their important points
15) What is the fast track procedure?
The fast track is usually for disputes worth £10,000 to £25,000.
- Court sets down a very strict timetable for the pre-trial matters. This is aimed at preventing one or both sides from wasting time and running up unnecessary costs. The aim is to have the case heard within 30-50 weeks.
- The actual trial will usually be heard by a Circuit judge and take place in open court with a more formal procedure than for small claims. In order to speed up the trial itself, the hearing will be limited to a maximum of one day and the number of expert witnesses restricted, with usually only on expert being allowed.
16) What is the multi track procedure?
- The multi-track is for cases over £25,000.
- Each case is heard by a judge who will also be expected to ‘manage’ the case from the moment it is allocated to the multi-track route. The judge will need to identify the issue at an early stage; encourage parties to use ADR, fix timetables and deal with procedural steps.
18) How do you appeal in County Court?
If a District Judge heard the case, then the appeal’s sent to a Circuit Judge in the County Court. If a Circuit judge heard the case, then the appeal’s sent to a High Court judge in the County Court. This is then sent to the CoA