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High Court of Justice

The High Court of Justice in London, known properly as His Majesty's High Court of Justice in England,[2] together with the Court of Appeal and the Crown Court, are the Senior Courts of England and Wales. Its name is abbreviated as EWHC (England and Wales High Court) for legal citation purposes.

High Court of Justice
Royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom
Established1 November 1875[1]
JurisdictionEngland and Wales
LocationStrand, City of Westminster, London
Authorized by
Statute
Appeals to
Websitejudiciary.uk/highcourt

The High Court deals at first instance with all high value and high importance civil law (non-criminal) cases; it also has a supervisory jurisdiction over all subordinate courts and tribunals, with a few statutory exceptions, though there are debates as to whether these exceptions are effective.[3]

The High Court consists of three divisions: the King's Bench Division, the Chancery Division and the Family Division. Their jurisdictions overlap in some cases, and cases started in one division may be transferred by court order to another where appropriate. The differences of procedure and practice between divisions are partly historical, derived from the separate courts which were merged into the single High Court by the 19th-century Judicature Acts, but are mainly driven by the usual nature of their work, for example, conflicting evidence of fact is quite commonly given in person in the Kings's Bench Division, but evidence by affidavit is more usual in the Chancery Division which is primarily concerned with points of law.

Most High Court proceedings are heard by a single judge, but certain kinds of proceedings, especially in the Kings's Bench Division, are assigned to a divisional court—a bench of two or more judges. Exceptionally the court may sit with a jury, but in practice normally only in defamation cases or cases against the police. Litigants are normally represented by counsel but may be represented by solicitors qualified to hold a right of audience, or they may act in person.

In principle, the High Court is bound by its own previous decisions, but there are conflicting authorities as to what extent this is so. Appeal from the High Court in civil matters normally lies to the Court of Appeal, and thence in cases of importance to the Supreme Court (the House of Lords before 2009); in some cases a "leapfrog" appeal may be made directly to the Supreme Court. In criminal matters, appeals from the Kings's Bench Divisional Court are made directly to the Supreme Court.

The High Court is based at the Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand in the City of Westminster, London. It has district registries across England and Wales and almost all High Court proceedings may be issued and heard at a district registry.

History

The High Court of Justice was established in 1875 by the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873. The Act merged eight existing English courts—the Court of Chancery, the Court of King's Bench, the Court of Common Pleas, the Court of Exchequer, the High Court of Admiralty, the Court of Probate, the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes, and the London Court of Bankruptcy—into a new Supreme Court of Judicature (now known as the Senior Courts of England and Wales). The new Supreme Court was divided into the Court of Appeal, which exercised appellate jurisdiction, and the High Court, which exercised original jurisdiction.

Divisions

Originally, the High Court consisted of five divisions, the King’s Bench, Common Pleas, Exchequer, Chancery, and Probate, Divorce and Admiralty divisions. In 1880, the Common Pleas and Exchequer divisions were abolished, leaving three divisions. The Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division was renamed to the Family Division by the Administration of Justice Act 1970, and its jurisdiction reorganised accordingly. The High Court is now organised into three divisions: the King's Bench Division, the Chancery Division, and the Family Division.[4] A list of hearings in the High Court's divisions is published daily.[5]

King's Bench Division

The King's Bench Division – or Queen’s Bench Division when the monarch is female – hears a wide range of common law cases and also has special responsibility as a supervisory court. It consists of an Administrative Court, Commercial Court, Technology and Construction Court, and the Admiralty Court.

Chancery Division

The Chancery Division (housed in the Rolls Building) deals with business law, trusts law, probate law, insolvency, and land law in relation to issues of equity. It has specialist courts (the Patents Court and the Companies Court) which deal with patents and registered designs and company law matters respectively. All tax appeals are assigned to the Chancery Division.

The head of the Chancery Division was known as the Vice-Chancellor until October 2005, when the title was changed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 to Chancellor of the High Court. The first Chancellor (and the last Vice-Chancellor) was Sir Andrew Morritt, who retired in 2013 to be succeeded by Sir Terence Etherton. In 2016, Sir Geoffrey Vos succeeded Etherton as Chancellor on the latter's appointment as Master of the Rolls. Cases heard before the Chancery Division are reported in the Chancery Division law reports. In practice, there is some overlap of jurisdiction with the KBD.

From October 2015, the Chancery Division and the Commercial Court have maintained the Financial List for cases which would benefit from being heard by judges with suitable expertise and experience in the financial markets or which raise issues of general importance to the financial markets. The procedure was introduced to enable fast, efficient and high quality dispute resolution of claims related to the financial markets.[6]

Business and Property Courts

The formation within the High Court of the Business and Property Courts of England & Wales was announced in March 2017,[7] and launched in London in July 2017.[8] The courts would in future administer the specialist jurisdictions previously administered in the King's Bench Division under the names of the Admiralty Court, the Commercial Court, and the Technology and Construction Court, and in the Chancery Division under the lists for Business, Company and Insolvency, Competition, Financial, Intellectual Property, Revenue, and Trusts and Probate. The change was meant to enable judges who have suitable expertise and experience in the specialist business and property jurisdictions to be cross-deployed to sit in the specialist courts, while continuing existing practices for cases that proceed in them.[9]

Family Division

The Family Division deals with personal human matters such as divorce, children, probate and medical treatment. Its decisions are often of great importance only to the parties, but may concern life and death and are perhaps inevitably regarded as controversial. For example, it permitted a hospital to separate conjoined twins without the parents' consent.[10] In 2002 it made a landmark judgement in the case of Ms B v An NHS Hospital Trust regarding the right of mentally competent patients to withdraw from life-saving treatment. The Family Division exercises jurisdiction to hear all cases relating to children's welfare, and has an exclusive jurisdiction in wardship cases. Its head is the President of the Family Division, currently Sir Andrew McFarlane. High Court Judges of the Family Division sit at the Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London, while District Judges of the Family Division sit at First Avenue House, Holborn, London.[11]

The Family Division is comparatively modern. The Judicature Acts first combined the Court of Probate, the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes and the High Court of Admiralty into the then Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High Court, or The Court of Wills, Wives and Wrecks, as it was informally called. That was renamed the Family Division in 1971 when the admiralty and contentious probate business were transferred elsewhere.[12]

The Family Division has faced criticism by allowing allegedly abusive partners to cross-examine their former partners; a procedure already banned in criminal procedure. Peter Kyle, MP for Hove, claimed this amounted to "abuse and brutalisation", and called for the system to be changed.[13] Liz Truss, when she was Lord Chancellor, announced plans to end this practice, and proposals were contained in Clause 47 of the Prisons and Courts Bill before Parliament was prorogued for the 2017 General Election.[14][15][16]

Sittings

The High Court only operates within four traditional periods in the year, known as sittings:

Michaelmas: 1 October to 21 December
Hilary: 11 January to the Wednesday before Easter
Easter: the second Tuesday after Easter to the Friday before the Spring bank holiday (last Monday in May)
Trinity: the second Tuesday after the spring holiday to 31 July

Judges

The Justices of His Majesty's High Court of Justice are informally known as High Court judges, and in judicial matters are formally styled "The Honourable Mr(s) Justice (Forename) Surname", abbreviated in writing to "Surname J". In court, they are properly addressed as My Lord or My Lady. Since by convention they are knighted upon appointment, socially they are addressed as Sir Forename or Dame Forename. High Court judges are sometimes referred to as red judges after the colour of their formal robes, in contrast to the junior circuit judges who are referred to as purple judges for the same reason.

Masters (also judges in the High Court) are addressed as 'Master', regardless of gender, or ‘Judge’ and they wear dark blue gowns with pink tabs echoing the red of the High Court justices' robes. Within the Chancery Division of the High Court, there are also Insolvency and Companies Court Judges, who hear the majority of High Court insolvency (both personal and corporate) and company law cases and trials, together with some appeals from the County Court. They too wear dark blue gowns with pink tabs and are addressed as 'Judge' in court.

Justices of the High Court, Insolvency and Companies Court Judges and Masters are appointed by the King on the recommendation of Judicial Appointments Commission, from qualified lawyers. The Lord Chancellor, and all government ministers, are statutorily required to "uphold the continued independence of the judiciary",[17] and both Houses of Parliament have standing orders to similar effect. High Court justices may be removed before their statutory retirement age only by a procedure requiring the approval of both Houses of Parliament.

In addition to full High Court justices, other qualified persons such as retired judges, circuit judges from the County Court, and barristers are appointed to sit as deputy judges of the High Court to hear particular cases, and while sitting are addressed as though they were full High Court judges. Trials in London are also conducted by Insolvency and Companies Court Judges and Masters, who have almost identical trial jurisdiction to full High Court judges but who do not hear committals to prison, criminal cases, or judicial review and do not travel 'on circuit' to outlying courts.

High Court justices (usually from the Kings's Bench Division) also sit in the Crown Court, which try the more significant criminal cases, but High Court Judges only hear the most serious and important cases, with circuit judges and recorders hearing the majority.

Circuits and district registries

Historically the ultimate source of all justice in England was the monarch. All judges sit in judgment on the monarch's behalf (hence they have the royal coat of arms displayed behind them) and criminal prosecutions are generally made in the monarch's name. Historically, local magnates administered justice in manorial courts and other ways. Inevitably, the justice administered was patchy and appeals were made direct to the monarch. The monarch's travelling representatives (whose primary purpose was tax collection) acted on behalf of the monarch to make the administration of justice more even.

The tradition continues of judges travelling around the country in set 'circuits', where they hear cases in the 'district registries' of the High Court. The 'main' High Court (in the City of Westminster, London) is not itself a High Court district registry.[18]

The High Court previously divided England and Wales into six circuits namely the Midlands, Northern England, North Eastern England, South Eastern England, Wales (including Cheshire), and Western England.[19] Since 2005, the High Court has used seven circuits, listed below, which are identical to the Crown Court regions.[20][21]

Costs Office

The Senior Courts Costs Office, which quantifies legal costs pursuant to orders for costs, serves all divisions. The Costs Office is part of the High Court,[22] so generally all detailed assessment proceedings commenced in the Costs Office are subject to provisional assessment.[23] Exceptions from provisional assessment are detailed assessment proceedings in which the costs claimed are large (greater than £75,000) or in which the potential paying party does not respond to the notice of assessment.

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ Wilson, Arthur (1875). "The Supreme Court of Judicature Acts 1873 and 1875. Schedule of Rules and Forms, and other Rules and Orders. With notes". archive.org. Stevens and Sons.
  2. ^ "Interpretation Act 1978, schedule 1". The National Archives.
  3. ^ "Anisminic Ltd v Foreign Compensation Commission [1968] UKHL 6 (17 December 1968)". www.bailii.org. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  4. ^ Williams, Smith (2010). p. 6.
  5. ^ RCJ Daily court lists
  6. ^ Authorised Guide to the Financial List, 1 October 2015
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  9. ^ Explanatory Statement issued by High Court 18 May 2017, p.2
  10. ^ Herring, Jonathan (October 2017). "Re A (Children)(Conjoined Twins) [2001] 2 WLR 480, Court of Appeal". Law Trove. doi:10.1093/he/9780191847295.003.0036.
  11. ^ "Principal Registry of the Family Division (PRFD)". The Law Pages. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  12. ^ "Remarks by Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division and Head of Family Justice in the President's Court" (PDF). Courts and Tribunals Judiciary. 29 April 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
  13. ^ Laville, Sandra (22 December 2016). "Revealed: how family courts allow abusers to torment their victims". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  14. ^ Courts to ban cross-examination of victims by abusers
  15. ^ "Liz Truss to ban 'humiliating' questioning of women by abusive exes in court". PoliticsHome.com. 12 February 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  16. ^ "Clause 47 | Prisons and Courts Bill 2016-17". services.parliament.uk. UK Parliament. 20 April 2017. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  17. ^ Section 3, Constitutional Reform Act 2005 https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2005/4/section/3
  18. ^ partial support: UK Ministry Of Justice, King's Bench Division webpage, 'Outside London, the work of the King's Bench Division is administered in provincial offices known as District Registries. In London, the work is administered in the Central Office [of the King's Bench Division of the High Court] at the Royal Courts of Justice.' (accessed 2014-Apr-17)
  19. ^ Legal systems in the UK (England and Wales): overview - The High Court
  20. ^ The Judicial System of England and Wales: A visitor’s guide - What are Circuits? from the Judicial Office
  21. ^ Courts and tribunals judiciary: Circuit judge
  22. ^ Ministry of Justice, CPR Part 47 Practice Direction 4.2(2)(c), 'the Costs Office as part of the High Court', accessed 18 April 2014
  23. ^ Ministry of Justice, Civil Procedure Rule 47.15(1), accessed 18 April 2014

Bibliography

External links

high, court, justice, this, article, about, court, england, wales, high, courts, general, high, court, court, that, tried, king, charles, 1649, other, uses, disambiguation, london, known, properly, majesty, england, together, with, court, appeal, crown, court,. This article is about the court of England and Wales For high courts in general see High Court For the court that tried King Charles I see High Court of Justice 1649 For other uses see High Court of Justice disambiguation The High Court of Justice in London known properly as His Majesty s High Court of Justice in England 2 together with the Court of Appeal and the Crown Court are the Senior Courts of England and Wales Its name is abbreviated as EWHC England and Wales High Court for legal citation purposes High Court of JusticeRoyal coat of arms of the United KingdomEstablished1 November 1875 1 JurisdictionEngland and WalesLocationStrand City of Westminster LondonAuthorized byStatute Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1875Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1877Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1891Criminal Appeal Act 1907Supreme Court of Judicature Consolidation Act 1925Supreme Court of Judicature Amendment Act 1935Supreme Court of Judicature Amendment Act 1938Supreme Court of Judicature Amendment Act 1944Supreme Court of Judicature Amendment Act 1959Senior Courts Act 1981Constitutional Reform Act 2005Appeals toCourt of AppealSupreme CourtWebsitejudiciary wbr uk wbr highcourtThe High Court deals at first instance with all high value and high importance civil law non criminal cases it also has a supervisory jurisdiction over all subordinate courts and tribunals with a few statutory exceptions though there are debates as to whether these exceptions are effective 3 The High Court consists of three divisions the King s Bench Division the Chancery Division and the Family Division Their jurisdictions overlap in some cases and cases started in one division may be transferred by court order to another where appropriate The differences of procedure and practice between divisions are partly historical derived from the separate courts which were merged into the single High Court by the 19th century Judicature Acts but are mainly driven by the usual nature of their work for example conflicting evidence of fact is quite commonly given in person in the Kings s Bench Division but evidence by affidavit is more usual in the Chancery Division which is primarily concerned with points of law Most High Court proceedings are heard by a single judge but certain kinds of proceedings especially in the Kings s Bench Division are assigned to a divisional court a bench of two or more judges Exceptionally the court may sit with a jury but in practice normally only in defamation cases or cases against the police Litigants are normally represented by counsel but may be represented by solicitors qualified to hold a right of audience or they may act in person In principle the High Court is bound by its own previous decisions but there are conflicting authorities as to what extent this is so Appeal from the High Court in civil matters normally lies to the Court of Appeal and thence in cases of importance to the Supreme Court the House of Lords before 2009 in some cases a leapfrog appeal may be made directly to the Supreme Court In criminal matters appeals from the Kings s Bench Divisional Court are made directly to the Supreme Court The High Court is based at the Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand in the City of Westminster London It has district registries across England and Wales and almost all High Court proceedings may be issued and heard at a district registry Contents 1 History 2 Divisions 2 1 King s Bench Division 2 2 Chancery Division 2 2 1 Business and Property Courts 2 3 Family Division 3 Sittings 4 Judges 5 Circuits and district registries 6 Costs Office 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksHistory Edit Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand in the City of Westminster The High Court of Justice was established in 1875 by the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873 The Act merged eight existing English courts the Court of Chancery the Court of King s Bench the Court of Common Pleas the Court of Exchequer the High Court of Admiralty the Court of Probate the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes and the London Court of Bankruptcy into a new Supreme Court of Judicature now known as the Senior Courts of England and Wales The new Supreme Court was divided into the Court of Appeal which exercised appellate jurisdiction and the High Court which exercised original jurisdiction Divisions EditOriginally the High Court consisted of five divisions the King s Bench Common Pleas Exchequer Chancery and Probate Divorce and Admiralty divisions In 1880 the Common Pleas and Exchequer divisions were abolished leaving three divisions The Probate Divorce and Admiralty Division was renamed to the Family Division by the Administration of Justice Act 1970 and its jurisdiction reorganised accordingly The High Court is now organised into three divisions the King s Bench Division the Chancery Division and the Family Division 4 A list of hearings in the High Court s divisions is published daily 5 King s Bench Division Edit Main article King s Bench Division The King s Bench Division or Queen s Bench Division when the monarch is female hears a wide range of common law cases and also has special responsibility as a supervisory court It consists of an Administrative Court Commercial Court Technology and Construction Court and the Admiralty Court Chancery Division Edit See also Court of Chancery The Chancery Division housed in the Rolls Building deals with business law trusts law probate law insolvency and land law in relation to issues of equity It has specialist courts the Patents Court and the Companies Court which deal with patents and registered designs and company law matters respectively All tax appeals are assigned to the Chancery Division The head of the Chancery Division was known as the Vice Chancellor until October 2005 when the title was changed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 to Chancellor of the High Court The first Chancellor and the last Vice Chancellor was Sir Andrew Morritt who retired in 2013 to be succeeded by Sir Terence Etherton In 2016 Sir Geoffrey Vos succeeded Etherton as Chancellor on the latter s appointment as Master of the Rolls Cases heard before the Chancery Division are reported in the Chancery Division law reports In practice there is some overlap of jurisdiction with the KBD From October 2015 the Chancery Division and the Commercial Court have maintained the Financial List for cases which would benefit from being heard by judges with suitable expertise and experience in the financial markets or which raise issues of general importance to the financial markets The procedure was introduced to enable fast efficient and high quality dispute resolution of claims related to the financial markets 6 Business and Property Courts Edit The formation within the High Court of the Business and Property Courts of England amp Wales was announced in March 2017 7 and launched in London in July 2017 8 The courts would in future administer the specialist jurisdictions previously administered in the King s Bench Division under the names of the Admiralty Court the Commercial Court and the Technology and Construction Court and in the Chancery Division under the lists for Business Company and Insolvency Competition Financial Intellectual Property Revenue and Trusts and Probate The change was meant to enable judges who have suitable expertise and experience in the specialist business and property jurisdictions to be cross deployed to sit in the specialist courts while continuing existing practices for cases that proceed in them 9 Family Division Edit The Family Division deals with personal human matters such as divorce children probate and medical treatment Its decisions are often of great importance only to the parties but may concern life and death and are perhaps inevitably regarded as controversial For example it permitted a hospital to separate conjoined twins without the parents consent 10 In 2002 it made a landmark judgement in the case of Ms B v An NHS Hospital Trust regarding the right of mentally competent patients to withdraw from life saving treatment The Family Division exercises jurisdiction to hear all cases relating to children s welfare and has an exclusive jurisdiction in wardship cases Its head is the President of the Family Division currently Sir Andrew McFarlane High Court Judges of the Family Division sit at the Royal Courts of Justice Strand London while District Judges of the Family Division sit at First Avenue House Holborn London 11 The Family Division is comparatively modern The Judicature Acts first combined the Court of Probate the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes and the High Court of Admiralty into the then Probate Divorce and Admiralty Division of the High Court or The Court of Wills Wives and Wrecks as it was informally called That was renamed the Family Division in 1971 when the admiralty and contentious probate business were transferred elsewhere 12 The Family Division has faced criticism by allowing allegedly abusive partners to cross examine their former partners a procedure already banned in criminal procedure Peter Kyle MP for Hove claimed this amounted to abuse and brutalisation and called for the system to be changed 13 Liz Truss when she was Lord Chancellor announced plans to end this practice and proposals were contained in Clause 47 of the Prisons and Courts Bill before Parliament was prorogued for the 2017 General Election 14 15 16 Sittings EditThe High Court only operates within four traditional periods in the year known as sittings Michaelmas 1 October to 21 December Hilary 11 January to the Wednesday before Easter Easter the second Tuesday after Easter to the Friday before the Spring bank holiday last Monday in May Trinity the second Tuesday after the spring holiday to 31 JulyJudges EditMain article High Court judge England and Wales See also List of High Court Judges of England and Wales The Justices of His Majesty s High Court of Justice are informally known as High Court judges and in judicial matters are formally styled The Honourable Mr s Justice Forename Surname abbreviated in writing to Surname J In court they are properly addressed as My Lord or My Lady Since by convention they are knighted upon appointment socially they are addressed as Sir Forename or Dame Forename High Court judges are sometimes referred to as red judges after the colour of their formal robes in contrast to the junior circuit judges who are referred to as purple judges for the same reason Masters also judges in the High Court are addressed as Master regardless of gender or Judge and they wear dark blue gowns with pink tabs echoing the red of the High Court justices robes Within the Chancery Division of the High Court there are also Insolvency and Companies Court Judges who hear the majority of High Court insolvency both personal and corporate and company law cases and trials together with some appeals from the County Court They too wear dark blue gowns with pink tabs and are addressed as Judge in court Justices of the High Court Insolvency and Companies Court Judges and Masters are appointed by the King on the recommendation of Judicial Appointments Commission from qualified lawyers The Lord Chancellor and all government ministers are statutorily required to uphold the continued independence of the judiciary 17 and both Houses of Parliament have standing orders to similar effect High Court justices may be removed before their statutory retirement age only by a procedure requiring the approval of both Houses of Parliament In addition to full High Court justices other qualified persons such as retired judges circuit judges from the County Court and barristers are appointed to sit as deputy judges of the High Court to hear particular cases and while sitting are addressed as though they were full High Court judges Trials in London are also conducted by Insolvency and Companies Court Judges and Masters who have almost identical trial jurisdiction to full High Court judges but who do not hear committals to prison criminal cases or judicial review and do not travel on circuit to outlying courts High Court justices usually from the Kings s Bench Division also sit in the Crown Court which try the more significant criminal cases but High Court Judges only hear the most serious and important cases with circuit judges and recorders hearing the majority Circuits and district registries EditSee also Circuit judge England and Wales and List of courts in England and Wales District registries of the High Court Historically the ultimate source of all justice in England was the monarch All judges sit in judgment on the monarch s behalf hence they have the royal coat of arms displayed behind them and criminal prosecutions are generally made in the monarch s name Historically local magnates administered justice in manorial courts and other ways Inevitably the justice administered was patchy and appeals were made direct to the monarch The monarch s travelling representatives whose primary purpose was tax collection acted on behalf of the monarch to make the administration of justice more even The tradition continues of judges travelling around the country in set circuits where they hear cases in the district registries of the High Court The main High Court in the City of Westminster London is not itself a High Court district registry 18 The High Court previously divided England and Wales into six circuits namely the Midlands Northern England North Eastern England South Eastern England Wales including Cheshire and Western England 19 Since 2005 the High Court has used seven circuits listed below which are identical to the Crown Court regions 20 21 London consisting of the Greater London region Midlands consisting of the East Midlands and West Midlands regions plus North East Lincolnshire and North Lincolnshire North East England consisting of the North East England and Yorkshire and the Humber regions minus North East Lincolnshire and North Lincolnshire North West England consisting of the North West England region South East England consisting of the East of England and South East England regions minus Hampshire and the Isle of Wight South West England consisting of the South West England region plus Hampshire and the Isle of Wight Wales consisting of all of Wales Costs Office EditThe Senior Courts Costs Office which quantifies legal costs pursuant to orders for costs serves all divisions The Costs Office is part of the High Court 22 so generally all detailed assessment proceedings commenced in the Costs Office are subject to provisional assessment 23 Exceptions from provisional assessment are detailed assessment proceedings in which the costs claimed are large greater than 75 000 or in which the potential paying party does not respond to the notice of assessment See also EditHigh Court enforcement officerNotes EditReferences Edit Wilson Arthur 1875 The Supreme Court of Judicature Acts 1873 and 1875 Schedule of Rules and Forms and other Rules and Orders With notes archive org Stevens and Sons Interpretation Act 1978 schedule 1 The National Archives Anisminic Ltd v Foreign Compensation Commission 1968 UKHL 6 17 December 1968 www bailii org Retrieved 25 January 2021 Williams Smith 2010 p 6 RCJ Daily court lists Authorised Guide to the Financial List 1 October 2015 Judicial Office press release 12 March 2017 Archived from the original on 28 July 2017 Retrieved 5 July 2017 Launch of Business and Property Courts Judicial Office 4 July 2017 Archived from the original on 28 July 2017 Retrieved 5 July 2017 Explanatory Statement issued by High Court 18 May 2017 p 2 Herring Jonathan October 2017 Re A Children Conjoined Twins 2001 2 WLR 480 Court of Appeal Law Trove doi 10 1093 he 9780191847295 003 0036 Principal Registry of the Family Division PRFD The Law Pages Retrieved 5 January 2023 Remarks by Sir James Munby President of the Family Division and Head of Family Justice in the President s Court PDF Courts and Tribunals Judiciary 29 April 2014 Retrieved 5 January 2023 Laville Sandra 22 December 2016 Revealed how family courts allow abusers to torment their victims The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 19 June 2017 Courts to ban cross examination of victims by abusers Liz Truss to ban humiliating questioning of women by abusive exes in court PoliticsHome com 12 February 2017 Retrieved 19 June 2017 Clause 47 Prisons and Courts Bill 2016 17 services parliament uk UK Parliament 20 April 2017 Retrieved 19 June 2017 Section 3 Constitutional Reform Act 2005 https www legislation gov uk ukpga 2005 4 section 3 partial support UK Ministry Of Justice King s Bench Division webpage Outside London the work of the King s Bench Division is administered in provincial offices known as District Registries In London the work is administered in the Central Office of the King s Bench Division of the High Court at the Royal Courts of Justice accessed 2014 Apr 17 Legal systems in the UK England and Wales overview The High Court The Judicial System of England and Wales A visitor s guide What are Circuits from the Judicial Office Courts and tribunals judiciary Circuit judge Ministry of Justice CPR Part 47 Practice Direction 4 2 2 c the Costs Office as part of the High Court accessed 18 April 2014 Ministry of Justice Civil Procedure Rule 47 15 1 accessed 18 April 2014Bibliography EditWilliams Glanville Llewellyn Smith A T H 27 July 2010 Learning the Law Sweet amp Maxwell ISBN 978 0 414 04173 8 Retrieved 29 August 2011 External links EditRoyal Courts of Justice Archived 15 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title High Court of Justice amp oldid 1131770966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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