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Civil Procedure Rules

The Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) were introduced in 1997 as per the Civil Procedure Act 1997[1] by the Civil Procedure Rule Committee and are the rules of civil procedure used by the Court of Appeal, High Court of Justice, and County Courts in civil cases in England and Wales. They apply to all cases commenced after 26 April 1999, and largely replace the Rules of the Supreme Court and the County Court Rules. The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 is the statutory instrument listing the rules.[2]

Civil Procedure Rules 1998
Statutory Instrument
CitationSI 1998/3132 (L. 17)
Territorial extent United Kingdom
Dates
Made10 December 1998
Laid before Parliament17 December 1998
Commencement24 April 1999 (1999-04-24)
Status: Amended
Text of statute as originally enacted
Text of the Civil Procedure Rules as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.

The CPR were designed to improve access to justice by making legal proceedings cheaper, quicker, and easier to understand for non-lawyers. As a consequence of this, many former, older legal terms were replaced with ‘plain English’ equivalents, such as "claimant" for "plaintiff" and "witness summons" for "subpoena".

Unlike the previous rules of civil procedure, the CPR commence with a statement of their "overriding objective", both to aid in the application of specific provisions and to guide behaviour where no specific rule applies.

History edit

In 1994, the Lord Chancellor instructed the then Master of the Rolls, Lord Woolf, to report on options to consolidate the existing rules of civil procedure.

On 16 June 1995, Lord Woolf published an interim report on Access to Justice.[3] The interim report was the subject of extensive academic commentary. For example, American law professor Richard Marcus Jr. pointed out that the interim report was clearly inspired by the experience of the US federal courts with case management, which grew out of their experience with managing complex litigation. During the 1960s, a massive antitrust scandal in the American electrical equipment industry had led to the enactment of a multidistrict litigation statute in 1968 and the creation of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. In 1969, the Panel published the Manual on Complex Litigation, which proposed that American judges should take a more active role in the management and development of complex cases during the pretrial phase of litigation. This recommendation touched off the case management movement of the 1970s and 1980s in American courts.[4]

On 26 July 1996, Lord Woolf published his final Access to Justice Report 1996[5] in which he "identified a number of principles the civil justice system should meet to ensure access to justice. The system should –

  1. be just in the results it delivers;
  2. be fair in the way it treats litigants;
  3. offer appropriate procedures at a reasonable cost;
  4. deal with cases with reasonable speed;
  5. be understandable to those who use it;
  6. be responsive to the needs of those who use it;
  7. provide as much certainty as the nature of particular cases allows; and
  8. be effective: adequately resourced and organised".[6] (Italics in the original.)

Lord Woolf listed two of the requirements of case management as "fixing timetables for the parties to take particular steps in the case; and limiting disclosure and expert evidence".[7]

The second thread of the report was to control the cost of litigation, both in time and money, by focusing on key issues rather than every possible issue[8] and limiting the amount of work that has to be done on the case.[9]

The report was accompanied by draft rules of practice designed to implement Lord Woolf's proposals. These rules granted wide management powers to the court,[10] proposed that cases be allocated to one of three tracks depending on their nature, limiting or requiring specific actions, and introduced the concept of proportionality to the costs regime.

The Civil Procedure Act 1997 (c. 12) was enacted on 27 February 1997. It conferred the power to make civil procedure rules. It also established the Civil Justice Council, a body composed of members of the judiciary, members of the legal professions and civil servants, and charged with reviewing the civil justice system.

The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 (SI 1998/3132) were made on 10 December 1998 and came into force on 26 April 1999. The draft rules of practice formed their core.

The overriding objective edit

Implemented as a result of reforms suggested by Lord Woolf and his committee, one of the innovations of the rules is the "overriding objective" embodied in Part 1 of the Rules, which states:

  • 1.1
    • (1) These Rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost.
    • (2) Dealing with a case justly includes, so far as is practicable –
      • (a) ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing;
      • (b) saving expense;
      • (c) dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate –
        • (i) to the amount of money involved;
        • (ii) to the importance of the case;
        • (iii) to the complexity of the issues; and
        • (iv) to the financial position of each party;
      • (d) ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly; and
      • (e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court’s resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases.
  • 1.2
    • The court must seek to give effect to the overriding objective when it –
      • (a) exercises any power given to it by the Rules; or
      • (b) interprets any rule.

The rules are written to be intelligible not just to lawyers but also to litigants in person.

Assessing proportionality edit

Two approaches to the assessment of proportionality arose in the case of West v Stockport NHS Foundation Trust (2019), in particular on appeal from the initial trial. The appeal judges referred to a "debate between the parties as to whether a proportionality challenge was limited to the circumstances of the particular case ('the narrower interpretation'), or whether it was to be assessed by reference to all the circumstances, and so encompass matters which were not necessarily related to the case in question ('the wider interpretation')". On a reading of CPR 44, which contains general rules about costs, it was felt to be clear that "questions of proportionality are to be considered by reference to the specific matters noted in 44.3(5) and, if relevant, any wider circumstances identified under r. 44.4(1). Accordingly, the wider interpretation is correct."[11]

Tracks edit

Small Claims Track edit

Claims with a value of not more than £10,000 (the amount increased on 1 April 2013) are usually allocated to the Small Claims Track unless: the amount claimed for pain, suffering, and loss of amenity[12] is more than £1,000.00;[13] or the cost of the repairs or other work to residential premises claimed against the landlord by a tenant is estimated to be more than £1,000 – whether or not they are also seeking another remedy – or the financial value of any claim in addition to those repairs is more than £1,000.[14]

A claim for a remedy for harassment or unlawful eviction relating to residential premises will not be allocated to the Small Claims Track even if it meets the financial limits.[15]

Fast Track edit

Claims with a financial value of no more than £25,000 (£15,000 for claims issued before 6 April 2009) for which the Small Claims Track is not the normal track are usually allocated to the Fast Track[16] unless: the trial is likely to last for more than one day;[17] oral expert evidence at trial will be in more than two fields; or there will be more than one expert per party in each field.[18]

Multi Track edit

Any case not allocated to either the Small Claims Track or the Fast Track is allocated to the Multi Track.[19]

Pre-action Protocols edit

To support the ethos of narrowing the issues prior to the use of proceedings and encapsulate best practice, the CPR introduced "pre-action protocols". They are given force by Practice Direction – Protocols

Purpose edit

Pre-action protocols outline the steps that parties should take in particular types of disputes to seek information from, and to provide information to, each other prior to making a legal claim.

Pre-action protocols, which entails setting out the claim in full to the defendant in an attempt to negotiate a settlement. The emphasis is placed on co-operation to identify the main issues. Failure to co-operate may lead cost penalties, regardless of the eventual outcomes of the case.

Paragraph 1 of the Practice Direction defines the purpose of pre-action protocols as:

  • encouraging the early exchange of all information relating to the prospective legal claim
  • aiding settlement of the claim without the commencement of proceedings
  • producing a foundation for efficient case management where litigation cannot be avoided

Current Pre-action Protocols edit

Protocol Publication Came into Force
Construction and Engineering Disputes September 2000 2 October 2000
Defamation September 2000 2 October 2000
Disease and Illness Claims September 2003 8 December 2003
Disrepair Cases September 2003 8 December 2003
Judicial Review 3 December 2001 4 March 2002
Amended 1 July 2013[20]
Personal Injury Claims January 1999 26 April 1999
Possession claims based on Rent Arrears September 2006 2 October 2006
Professional Negligence May 2001 16 July 2001
Resolution of Clinical Disputes
(previously called Clinical Negligence)
January 1999 26 April 1999

This list was last updated on 6 September 2007.

Penalties edit

Paragraph 2 indicates that the Court may add terms to any order if it feels a party has breached a protocol. These will place parties in the same position as if the breach had not occurred (or as close as possible).

The court may, amongst other remedies, order that the party in breach:

  • pay some or all of the costs of another party
  • pay costs to another party on an indemnity rather than standard basis
  • pay a higher rate of interest on particular damages awarded, or for a particular period.
  • forgo interest on a particular item of damages or for a period.

For instance, where a party commences proceedings prior to supplying important information to the other party(s) then the Court might disallow interest for the period prior to the information being provided.

In addition, the protocol might provide grounds to show a party had or had not behaved so unreasonably as to merit penalty under another Rule (for instance CPR 44.3).

Cases not covered by a protocol edit

Where no protocol has been published Paragraph 4 states that parties should conform to CPR 1 and the Overriding Objective.

It also sets out what would normally be considered reasonable behaviour prior to issue.

Where a case has been commenced prior to the protocol coming into force, but after publication the protocol is not binding. However, the degree to which a party has attempted to follow it anyway might be persuasive.

Creation of the Rules edit

Section 2 of the Civil Procedure Act 1997 requires that the CPR are made by a committee called the Civil Procedure Rule Committee.[21] Members of the committee consist of:

Ex officio:

  • the Master of the Rolls/Head of Civil Justice
  • the Deputy Head of Civil Justice (if there is one)

Those appointed by the Lord Chief Justice:

Those appointed by the Lord Chancellor:

  • three persons who have a Supreme Court qualification (within the meaning of section 71 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 (CLSA)), including at least one with particular experience of practice in county courts
  • Three persons who have been authorised by a relevant approved regulator to conduct litigation in relation to all proceedings in the Senior Courts, including at least one with particular experience of practice in county courts
  • two persons with experience in and knowledge of the lay advice sector or consumer affairs

The Lord Chancellor's appointments are made in consultation with the Lord Chief Justice and all authorised bodies which have members who are eligible for appointment.

Rulemaking procedure edit

Rules must be approved by at least eight members of the committee, and submitted to the Lord Chancellor who may allow or disallow them. Where he decides to disallow, he must express his reasons for doing so in writing.

Changes to legal terminology edit

England and Wales began to diverge from the common law (and from other common law jurisdictions) with the Rules of the Supreme Court in 1883, which replaced the traditional "complaint" and "answer" with the "statement of claim" and "defence".

The CPR went much further by replacing several dozen traditional legal terms. For example, the "writ of summons" and the "statement of claim" were replaced, respectively, with "claim form" and "particulars of claim".

The CPR implemented a new system of radically different legal terminology in order to bring plain English to the legal system of England and Wales.[22] This was intended to help laypersons comprehend legal terms more easily and to make the judicial process faster and less expensive.[22] However, Bryan A. Garner has noted that the new system seems to have replaced "old jargon with new, even less-comprehensible jargon".[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Civil Procedure Act 1997".
  2. ^ "The Civil Procedure Rules 1998".
  3. ^ The Right Honourable the Lord Woolf, Master of the Rolls, Access to Justice: Interim Report to the Lord Chancellor on the Civil Justice System in England and Wales (Lord Chancellors Dept 1995).
  4. ^ Marcus Jr., Richard L. (1995). "Déjà Vu All Over Again? An American Reaction to the Woolf Report". In Zuckerman, A. A. S.; Cranston, Ross (eds.). Reform of Civil Procedure: Essays on 'Access to Justice'. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 219–244. ISBN 9780198260936.
  5. ^ The Right Honourable the Lord Woolf, Master of the Rolls, Final Report to the Lord Chancellor on the Civil Justice System in England and Wales (HMSO 1996).
  6. ^ Lord Woolf, Access to Justice Report 1996, Section I: Overview, Paragraph 1
  7. ^ Access to Justice Report 1996, Woolf, Section II: Case Management, Chapter 1, Paragraph 4
  8. ^ Access to Justice Report 1996, Woolf, Section II: Case Management, Chapter 1, Paragraph 3
  9. ^ Access to Justice Report 1996, Woolf, Section II: Case Management, Chapter 2 Fast Track: General, Paragraph 23
  10. ^ Access to Justice Report 1996, Woolf, Section II: Case Management, Chapter 1, Paragraph 1
  11. ^ West v Stockport NHS Foundation Trust [2019] EWCA Civ 1220 at paragraphs 70 and 73 (17 July 2019)
  12. ^ CPR 26.6(2)
  13. ^ CPR 26.6(1)(a)
  14. ^ CRP 26.6(1)(b)
  15. ^ CPR 27.1(2)
  16. ^ CPR 26.6(4)
  17. ^ CPR 26.6(5)(a)
  18. ^ CPR 26.6(5)(b)
  19. ^ CPR 26.6(6)
  20. ^ Ministry of Justice, "63rd Update – Pre-action Protocol Amendments", accessed 30 August 2022
  21. ^ "Civil Procedure Act 1997, s. 2".
  22. ^ a b Garner, Bryan A. (2011). Garner's Dictionary of Legal Usage (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 950. ISBN 9780195384208. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  23. ^ Garner, Bryan A. (2011). Garner's Dictionary of Legal Usage (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 951. ISBN 9780195384208. Retrieved 19 November 2023.

Bibliography edit

  • Dwyer, D, The Civil Procedure Rules Ten Years On, Oxford University Press (2009).

External links edit

civil, procedure, rules, were, introduced, 1997, civil, procedure, 1997, civil, procedure, rule, committee, rules, civil, procedure, used, court, appeal, high, court, justice, county, courts, civil, cases, england, wales, they, apply, cases, commenced, after, . The Civil Procedure Rules CPR were introduced in 1997 as per the Civil Procedure Act 1997 1 by the Civil Procedure Rule Committee and are the rules of civil procedure used by the Court of Appeal High Court of Justice and County Courts in civil cases in England and Wales They apply to all cases commenced after 26 April 1999 and largely replace the Rules of the Supreme Court and the County Court Rules The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 is the statutory instrument listing the rules 2 Civil Procedure Rules 1998Statutory InstrumentCitationSI 1998 3132 L 17 Territorial extent United KingdomDatesMade10 December 1998Laid before Parliament17 December 1998Commencement24 April 1999 1999 04 24 Status AmendedText of statute as originally enactedText of the Civil Procedure Rules as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk The CPR were designed to improve access to justice by making legal proceedings cheaper quicker and easier to understand for non lawyers As a consequence of this many former older legal terms were replaced with plain English equivalents such as claimant for plaintiff and witness summons for subpoena Unlike the previous rules of civil procedure the CPR commence with a statement of their overriding objective both to aid in the application of specific provisions and to guide behaviour where no specific rule applies Contents 1 History 2 The overriding objective 2 1 Assessing proportionality 3 Tracks 3 1 Small Claims Track 3 2 Fast Track 3 3 Multi Track 4 Pre action Protocols 4 1 Purpose 4 2 Current Pre action Protocols 4 3 Penalties 4 4 Cases not covered by a protocol 5 Creation of the Rules 5 1 Rulemaking procedure 6 Changes to legal terminology 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory editIn 1994 the Lord Chancellor instructed the then Master of the Rolls Lord Woolf to report on options to consolidate the existing rules of civil procedure On 16 June 1995 Lord Woolf published an interim report on Access to Justice 3 The interim report was the subject of extensive academic commentary For example American law professor Richard Marcus Jr pointed out that the interim report was clearly inspired by the experience of the US federal courts with case management which grew out of their experience with managing complex litigation During the 1960s a massive antitrust scandal in the American electrical equipment industry had led to the enactment of a multidistrict litigation statute in 1968 and the creation of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation In 1969 the Panel published the Manual on Complex Litigation which proposed that American judges should take a more active role in the management and development of complex cases during the pretrial phase of litigation This recommendation touched off the case management movement of the 1970s and 1980s in American courts 4 On 26 July 1996 Lord Woolf published his final Access to Justice Report 1996 5 in which he identified a number of principles the civil justice system should meet to ensure access to justice The system should be just in the results it delivers be fair in the way it treats litigants offer appropriate procedures at a reasonable cost deal with cases with reasonable speed be understandable to those who use it be responsive to the needs of those who use it provide as much certainty as the nature of particular cases allows andbe effective adequately resourced and organised 6 Italics in the original Lord Woolf listed two of the requirements of case management as fixing timetables for the parties to take particular steps in the case and limiting disclosure and expert evidence 7 The second thread of the report was to control the cost of litigation both in time and money by focusing on key issues rather than every possible issue 8 and limiting the amount of work that has to be done on the case 9 The report was accompanied by draft rules of practice designed to implement Lord Woolf s proposals These rules granted wide management powers to the court 10 proposed that cases be allocated to one of three tracks depending on their nature limiting or requiring specific actions and introduced the concept of proportionality to the costs regime The Civil Procedure Act 1997 c 12 was enacted on 27 February 1997 It conferred the power to make civil procedure rules It also established the Civil Justice Council a body composed of members of the judiciary members of the legal professions and civil servants and charged with reviewing the civil justice system The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 SI 1998 3132 were made on 10 December 1998 and came into force on 26 April 1999 The draft rules of practice formed their core The overriding objective editImplemented as a result of reforms suggested by Lord Woolf and his committee one of the innovations of the rules is the overriding objective embodied in Part 1 of the Rules which states 1 1 1 These Rules are a new procedural code with the overriding objective of enabling the court to deal with cases justly and at proportionate cost 2 Dealing with a case justly includes so far as is practicable a ensuring that the parties are on an equal footing b saving expense c dealing with the case in ways which are proportionate i to the amount of money involved ii to the importance of the case iii to the complexity of the issues and iv to the financial position of each party d ensuring that it is dealt with expeditiously and fairly and e allotting to it an appropriate share of the court s resources while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases 1 2The court must seek to give effect to the overriding objective when it a exercises any power given to it by the Rules or b interprets any rule The rules are written to be intelligible not just to lawyers but also to litigants in person Assessing proportionality edit Two approaches to the assessment of proportionality arose in the case of West v Stockport NHS Foundation Trust 2019 in particular on appeal from the initial trial The appeal judges referred to a debate between the parties as to whether a proportionality challenge was limited to the circumstances of the particular case the narrower interpretation or whether it was to be assessed by reference to all the circumstances and so encompass matters which were not necessarily related to the case in question the wider interpretation On a reading of CPR 44 which contains general rules about costs it was felt to be clear that questions of proportionality are to be considered by reference to the specific matters noted in 44 3 5 and if relevant any wider circumstances identified under r 44 4 1 Accordingly the wider interpretation is correct 11 Tracks editSmall Claims Track edit Claims with a value of not more than 10 000 the amount increased on 1 April 2013 are usually allocated to the Small Claims Track unless the amount claimed for pain suffering and loss of amenity 12 is more than 1 000 00 13 or the cost of the repairs or other work to residential premises claimed against the landlord by a tenant is estimated to be more than 1 000 whether or not they are also seeking another remedy or the financial value of any claim in addition to those repairs is more than 1 000 14 A claim for a remedy for harassment or unlawful eviction relating to residential premises will not be allocated to the Small Claims Track even if it meets the financial limits 15 Fast Track edit Claims with a financial value of no more than 25 000 15 000 for claims issued before 6 April 2009 for which the Small Claims Track is not the normal track are usually allocated to the Fast Track 16 unless the trial is likely to last for more than one day 17 oral expert evidence at trial will be in more than two fields or there will be more than one expert per party in each field 18 Multi Track edit Any case not allocated to either the Small Claims Track or the Fast Track is allocated to the Multi Track 19 Pre action Protocols editTo support the ethos of narrowing the issues prior to the use of proceedings and encapsulate best practice the CPR introduced pre action protocols They are given force by Practice Direction Protocols Purpose edit Pre action protocols outline the steps that parties should take in particular types of disputes to seek information from and to provide information to each other prior to making a legal claim Pre action protocols which entails setting out the claim in full to the defendant in an attempt to negotiate a settlement The emphasis is placed on co operation to identify the main issues Failure to co operate may lead cost penalties regardless of the eventual outcomes of the case Paragraph 1 of the Practice Direction defines the purpose of pre action protocols as encouraging the early exchange of all information relating to the prospective legal claim aiding settlement of the claim without the commencement of proceedings producing a foundation for efficient case management where litigation cannot be avoided Current Pre action Protocols edit Protocol Publication Came into Force Construction and Engineering Disputes September 2000 2 October 2000 Defamation September 2000 2 October 2000 Disease and Illness Claims September 2003 8 December 2003 Disrepair Cases September 2003 8 December 2003 Judicial Review 3 December 2001 4 March 2002Amended 1 July 2013 20 Personal Injury Claims January 1999 26 April 1999 Possession claims based on Rent Arrears September 2006 2 October 2006 Professional Negligence May 2001 16 July 2001 Resolution of Clinical Disputes previously called Clinical Negligence January 1999 26 April 1999 This list was last updated on 6 September 2007 Penalties edit Paragraph 2 indicates that the Court may add terms to any order if it feels a party has breached a protocol These will place parties in the same position as if the breach had not occurred or as close as possible The court may amongst other remedies order that the party in breach pay some or all of the costs of another party pay costs to another party on an indemnity rather than standard basis pay a higher rate of interest on particular damages awarded or for a particular period forgo interest on a particular item of damages or for a period For instance where a party commences proceedings prior to supplying important information to the other party s then the Court might disallow interest for the period prior to the information being provided In addition the protocol might provide grounds to show a party had or had not behaved so unreasonably as to merit penalty under another Rule for instance CPR 44 3 Cases not covered by a protocol edit Where no protocol has been published Paragraph 4 states that parties should conform to CPR 1 and the Overriding Objective It also sets out what would normally be considered reasonable behaviour prior to issue Where a case has been commenced prior to the protocol coming into force but after publication the protocol is not binding However the degree to which a party has attempted to follow it anyway might be persuasive Creation of the Rules editSection 2 of the Civil Procedure Act 1997 requires that the CPR are made by a committee called the Civil Procedure Rule Committee 21 Members of the committee consist of Ex officio the Master of the Rolls Head of Civil Justice the Deputy Head of Civil Justice if there is one Those appointed by the Lord Chief Justice either two or three judges of the Senior Courts one Circuit judge either one or two district judges one person who is a Master referred to in Part II of Schedule 2 to the Senior Courts Act 1981 Those appointed by the Lord Chancellor three persons who have a Supreme Court qualification within the meaning of section 71 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 CLSA including at least one with particular experience of practice in county courts Three persons who have been authorised by a relevant approved regulator to conduct litigation in relation to all proceedings in the Senior Courts including at least one with particular experience of practice in county courts two persons with experience in and knowledge of the lay advice sector or consumer affairs The Lord Chancellor s appointments are made in consultation with the Lord Chief Justice and all authorised bodies which have members who are eligible for appointment Rulemaking procedure edit Rules must be approved by at least eight members of the committee and submitted to the Lord Chancellor who may allow or disallow them Where he decides to disallow he must express his reasons for doing so in writing Changes to legal terminology editEngland and Wales began to diverge from the common law and from other common law jurisdictions with the Rules of the Supreme Court in 1883 which replaced the traditional complaint and answer with the statement of claim and defence The CPR went much further by replacing several dozen traditional legal terms For example the writ of summons and the statement of claim were replaced respectively with claim form and particulars of claim The CPR implemented a new system of radically different legal terminology in order to bring plain English to the legal system of England and Wales 22 This was intended to help laypersons comprehend legal terms more easily and to make the judicial process faster and less expensive 22 However Bryan A Garner has noted that the new system seems to have replaced old jargon with new even less comprehensible jargon 23 See also editCivil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 Lord Woolf Practice DirectionReferences edit Civil Procedure Act 1997 The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 The Right Honourable the Lord Woolf Master of the Rolls Access to Justice Interim Report to the Lord Chancellor on the Civil Justice System in England and Wales Lord Chancellors Dept 1995 Marcus Jr Richard L 1995 Deja Vu All Over Again An American Reaction to the Woolf Report In Zuckerman A A S Cranston Ross eds Reform of Civil Procedure Essays on Access to Justice Oxford Clarendon Press pp 219 244 ISBN 9780198260936 The Right Honourable the Lord Woolf Master of the Rolls Final Report to the Lord Chancellor on the Civil Justice System in England and Wales HMSO 1996 Lord Woolf Access to Justice Report 1996 Section I Overview Paragraph 1 Access to Justice Report 1996 Woolf Section II Case Management Chapter 1 Paragraph 4 Access to Justice Report 1996 Woolf Section II Case Management Chapter 1 Paragraph 3 Access to Justice Report 1996 Woolf Section II Case Management Chapter 2 Fast Track General Paragraph 23 Access to Justice Report 1996 Woolf Section II Case Management Chapter 1 Paragraph 1 West v Stockport NHS Foundation Trust 2019 EWCA Civ 1220 at paragraphs 70 and 73 17 July 2019 CPR 26 6 2 CPR 26 6 1 a CRP 26 6 1 b CPR 27 1 2 CPR 26 6 4 CPR 26 6 5 a CPR 26 6 5 b CPR 26 6 6 Ministry of Justice 63rd Update Pre action Protocol Amendments accessed 30 August 2022 Civil Procedure Act 1997 s 2 a b Garner Bryan A 2011 Garner s Dictionary of Legal Usage 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 950 ISBN 9780195384208 Retrieved 19 November 2023 Garner Bryan A 2011 Garner s Dictionary of Legal Usage 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 951 ISBN 9780195384208 Retrieved 19 November 2023 Bibliography editDwyer D The Civil Procedure Rules Ten Years On Oxford University Press 2009 External links editCivil Procedure Rules Committee official website The Civil Procedure Rules 1998 legislation gov uk The National Archives SI 1998 3132 retrieved 9 March 2023 To see the Rules as they are in force today use the Latest available Revised button on the left Keane Adrian 2008 The Modern Law of Evidence Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 923166 9 Sime Stuart 2008 A Practical Approach to Civil Procedure Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 954253 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Civil Procedure Rules amp oldid 1221846765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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