2- Legal system: Civil Courts Flashcards

1
Q

What do civil courts do and what is their hierarchy?

A
  1. Mag court:
    - minor straightforward family matters such as access to children
    - minor civil issues such as non-payment or bills
    - appeal against licensing decisions (bars, clubs)
  2. County Court (approx. 216 in country):
    - Straightforward cases involving negligence, contract and consumer disputes.
    - Family matters such as divorce, custody and adoption cases
  3. High Court (26 in country):
    - QBD: - high value claims for negligence and contract law
    - Admiralty Court (shipping law)
    - FAMILY DIV: - Complex, high value divorce, complex adoption and custody cases.
    - Ethical cases about medical treatment, abortion, consent
    - CHANCERY DIV: - Deals with mortgages- land law
    - Tax disputes
    - Copyright and patent
  4. Court of Appeal (Civ Div):
    - Hears appeals from County and High Courts
  5. SC
    - Hears appeals from CofA and Leapfrog appeals from the High Court
    - In London
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2
Q

What is using a method to solve a dispute other than going to court called?

A

Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR)

Vast majority of cases are settled and do not go to court

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3
Q

What are the 2 parties involved in civil cases called?

A

Person bringing the claim: Claimant

Person receiving the claim: Defendant

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4
Q

What is the civil court process?

A
  1. Before starting the claim, there is a pre-action protocol that must be followed
  2. Knowing the court where the case will be heard
  3. Issuing a claim
  4. Defending a claim
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5
Q

What are pre-action protocols?

A

Procedures that encourage parties to give info to each other to prevent the claim from going to court.

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6
Q

What happens if parties don’t follow pre-action protocols?

A

Pre-action protocols must be followed, and if parties refuse to, they might be liable for certain costs.

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7
Q

What happens after the pre-action protocol?

A

If the other party denies liability and refuses to use ADR a court case will have to be started.

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8
Q

What court should be used for a civil claim?

A

Depends on the amount claimed

  • Claim for £10,000 or less and £1,000 for personal injury cases
    - Small claims track
  • Claim for £100,000 or less and £50,000 or less for personal injury cases
    - County Court
  • Claim for over £100,000 and over £50,000 for personal injury cases
    - County Court or High Court

If using County Court, claim can be started in any of the 200+ courts in the country.

If using High Court, any of the High Courts, including the main one in London can be used.

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9
Q

How is a claim issued?

A

Claimant needs a claim form called N1 and need to fill it in a court office.

Appropriate court fee has to be paid depending on claim.

  • Up to £300- £35 paper form fee and £25 online form.
  • £100,000-£200,000- 5% of claim and no online form fee
    • 200,000- £10,000 paper form fee and no online form fee
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10
Q

How can a defendant defend a claim?

A

D has 3 options:

  1. Admit the claim and pay in full
    • Send defence to court within 14 DAYS of receiving the claim or
    • Dispute claim and send an ‘acknowledgement of service’ (Form N9: used to tell court you need 28 days rather than 14 to prepare a defence)
  2. If these 2 don’t happen claimant can request that the court make an order that D pays the money in full + costs (lawyers…)

Once a claim is defended court will allocate case to most suitable track

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11
Q

What are the 3 tracks?

A
  1. Small claims track
  2. Fast track
  3. Multi track
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12
Q

How is the track to which a case is allocated decided?

A
  1. Small claims track- under £10,000 and £1000 for personal injury cases- there are proposals to increase this number to £5000
  2. Fast track- straightforward disputes between £10,000 to £25,000
  3. Multi-track- Over £25,000 of complex cases under this amount
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13
Q

What characterises the small claims track?

A

Usually heard in private

District judges can be flexible in how they hear case, trained to take an active part in proceedings, asking questions and making sure both parties explain all the important points.

Parties encouraged to represent themselves (they cannot claim the cost of a lawyer from the other side, even if they win the case)

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14
Q

What characterises the fast track?

A
  1. Court wills set down a very strict timetable for pre-trial matters to prevent each party having unnecessary costs
  2. Once case is set down for hearing, aim is to have the case heard within 30 weeks- in practise it is nearer to 50 weeks
  3. Trial usually heard by a Circuit Judge in an open court with a more formal procedure.
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15
Q

What characterises multi track cases?

A

Judge expected to manage case by:

  1. Identifying main issues at an early stage
  2. Encouraging main parties to use ADR id possible#
  3. Dealing with procedural steps without expecting parties to attend court
  4. Fixing timetables by which different stages can be reached
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16
Q

How was the old system before the introduction of the three tracks?

A
  • Expensive, costs often exceeded value of the claim
  • Slow to conclude cases
  • Litigants used to control cases
  • Delay tactics were used bc system was too adversarial
  • Some chose not to follow rules and procedures but there was no way of punishing them
17
Q

Who was Lord Woolf?

A

Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales 2000-2005- introduced reforms including 3 track system in 1999

18
Q

What did Lord Woolf want the justice system to be?

A
  1. Just in the results delivered
  2. Fair in the way it treated litigants (claimant- defendant)
  3. Offer appropriate proceedings at a reasonable cost
  4. Deal with cases at reasonable speed
  5. Understandable to those who used it
19
Q

What were Lord Woolf’s reforms?

A
  1. Documents and proceedings were simplified
  2. Single set of rules for County and High Courts
  3. More cooperation between party’s lawyers
  4. Reduction in delays between issuing the claim and court hearing
  5. More claims settled before reaching the court
  6. Introduced 3 track system
20
Q

What are the problems that were not solved by Lord Woolf’s reforms?

A
  1. ADR not used enough
  2. Costs of cases continue to increase
  3. Courts still under resourced- in particular IT systems
21
Q

Who is Lord Briggs?

A

Justice of the SC- he reviewed the civil justice system in 2016

22
Q

What did Lord Briggs recommend?

A
  1. That there should be an out-of-hours private mediation service in County Court and
  2. that an Online Court should be set up for claims up to £25,000
23
Q

What would be the 3 stages to the process of establishing an online court?

A
  1. Automated interactive online process to identify issues and provide evidence
  2. Conciliation and case management carried out by case managers
  3. If not resolved at stage 2 a judge would resolve the issue using documents on the screen, phone, video or face to face meetings.
24
Q

What are the appeal routes for Civil Cases?

A

Different appeal routes depending on level of judge and appeal route used:

Case heard by District Judge- appeal to County Court with case heard by a Circuit Judge- further appeal to CofA civil div.

Case heard by Circuit Judge- appeal to High Court with case heard by a High Court Judge- further appeal to CofA civil div.

25
Q

When are further or second appeals possible?

A

Only allowed in exceptional cases set out in Access to Justice Act 1999: no appeal should be made unless CofA considers that:

 - appeal would raise an important point of law
 - there is other compelling reason for CofA to hear it
26
Q

How do appeals from the High Court work?

A

Appeals usually to CofA civ. div.

In rare cases there may be a ‘leapfrog appeal’ direct to the SC.

27
Q

What must an appeal involve for a leapfrog appeal to be possible?

A

Since 2015 it must involve:

 - an issue of national importance
 - raise issues of sufficient importance to justify a leapfrog appeal.

SC must grant leave to appeal.

28
Q

Is it possible to appeal to the SC after an appeal to the CofA?

A

It is possible but SC must give leave to appeal.

29
Q

What are the advantages of using the courts to resolve disputes?

A
  1. Fair process and impartial judge
  2. Trial conducted by legal expert and judge is an experienced lawyer
  3. Decision can be enforced
  4. Appeals process exists
  5. May be possible to get legal aid
30
Q

What are the disadvantages of using the courts to resolve disputes?

A
  1. High cost- High Court case can cost up to £100,000 and small claims track can cost more than the claim
  2. Delay. Many preliminary stages and then usually a year before case goes to court
  3. Complicated process for non legal people
  4. Uncertainty of the outcome. Loser may have to pay.
31
Q

How are appeals to the CofA managed?

A

Generally heard by 3-5 judges, there are 37 in total (Lord Justices of Appeal)

Most senior judge called Master of the Rolls

Appeal is not a rehearing of trial but a review of the case

Barristers in CofA hearings must provide in advance a concise statement known as skeleton arguments of their arguments to the court and opposing barrister.

This saves time and cost to all parties.

32
Q

What are the advantages of using the small claims track?

A
  1. Cost is low, especially for claims under 1000
  2. If you lose, don’t have to pay other side’s legal costs
  3. Can represent themselves, saves money
  4. Procedure quicker than other tracks
  5. District judge will help both parties to explain the case
33
Q

What are the disadvantages of using the small claims track?

A
  1. Legal aid not available
  2. When other side is a business, they are most likely to use a lawyer, leaving the claimant at a disadvantage
  3. Research has shown that District judges are not always helpful to unrepresented claimants
  4. Only about 60% claimants receive all the money awarded by the court.