The Civil Courts And Other Forms Of Dispute Resolution Flashcards
Civil Claims
Claims made in the civil courts when an individual or a business believes that their rights have
been infringed
The main areas of civil law
Contract law
Law of tort
Family law
Employment law
Company law
When a dispute occurs, it is normal to try and resolve it without going to court. If a case does go to court, two courts in which civil cases are tried are the County and High court.
The County Court tries nearly all civil cases. The main areas of jurisdiction are:
• contract and tort cams
• cases for recovery of land
Cases in the County Court are heard by a Circuit Judge or a District Judge.
The Queen’s Bench Division
The Chancery Division
The Family Division
The Queen’s Bench Division:
- biggest division
- deals with contract and tort cases, the amount claimed is over £100,000
- QBD has speciality divisions such as the Administrative Court which hears appeals from the MC.
The Chancery Division:
- deals with disputes relating to:
Property
Copyright and patents
The Family Division:
- family matters
Starting a court case
Most people who have been injured or had property damaged do not want to start a court case unless they have to.
‘Once the decision is made to go to court, the first problem is which court to use. The court being used will depend on the amount being claimed. There are different limits depending on whether the claim is for personal injuries or damage to property.
The three tracks
A trackis a way of deaing with the cases.
Small Claims Track:
- damage to property up to £10,000
- personal injury claims up to £1000
- County Court
Fast Track:
- damage to property £10,000 - £25,000
- personal injury claims £1000 - £25,000
- court court
Multi Track:
- damage to property £25,000+
- personal injury claims £25,000+
- county court unless personal injury £50,000+ and property claims £100,000+. Heard in high court.
Appeal routes in civil cases
Appeals from the County Court:
Route one:
Court of Appeals
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Circuit judge in the same county court
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Case heard by a district judge
Route two:
Court of Appeals
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High court judge
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Case heard by a circuit judge
Appeals from the High Court:
The Supreme Court
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Court of Appeal
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High Court
Other forms of dispute resolution: Tribunals
Tribunals are a forum used instead of a court for deciding certain types of disputes. They’re less formal than courts.
Role - enforce rights which have been granted through social and welfare legislation includes rights such as the right to payment if made redundant of the right not to be discriminated against because of sax, age, race or disability.
First and second tiers:
First tier - deals with cases of first instances
Second tier - deals with appeals from the first tier
Advantage:
- cheapness
- dealt with quickly
- more informal
- dealt with by experts in the area
Disadvantage:
- lack of funding
- more formal than ADR
- delay
Alternative dispute resolution (ADR)
ADR - a method of resolving disputes without going to court.
Negotiating - parties negotiate directly with each other to try to resolve disputes that way.
Mediation - when a third party helps to reach compromise.
Negotiation:
- cheapness
- quickest
- private
- solicitors can get involved
Mediation:
- only suitable if parties cooperate
- decision can be based off common sense
- avoids adversarial conflict of the courtroom
advantages of using ADR over court-based resolution
- going to court can be traumatic, costly and may not lead to satisfactory outcome
- ADR is cheaper than going to court
- parties are in control