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King's Bench Division

The King's Bench Division (or Queen's Bench Division when the monarch is female) of the High Court of Justice deals with a wide range of common law cases and has supervisory responsibility over certain lower courts.

King's Bench Division
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom
Established1 November 1875
JurisdictionEngland and Wales
LocationRolls Building, City of London, London
Appeals toCourt of Appeal (civil matters)
Supreme Court (criminal matter)
Appeals fromCrown Court
Magistrates' courts
President
CurrentlyVictoria Sharp
Since23 June 2019
Vice-President
CurrentlyJames Dingemans
Since5 February 2020
Senior Master and King's Remembrancer
CurrentlyBarbara Fontaine
Since27 October 2014[1]

It hears appeals on points of law from magistrates' courts[a] and from the Crown Court.[b] These are known as appeals by way of case stated, since the questions of law are considered solely on the basis of the facts found and stated by the authority under review.

Specialised courts of the King's Bench Division include the Administrative Court, Technology and Construction Court, Commercial Court, and the Admiralty Court. The specialised judges and procedures of these courts are tailored to their type of business, but they are not essentially different from any other court of the King's Bench Division.

Appeals from the High Court in civil matters are made to the Court of Appeal (Civil Division); in criminal matters appeal from the Divisional Court is made only to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.

History

 
Westminster Hall, meeting place of the Court of King's Bench (England) from 1215 until the King's Bench was abolished in England in 1875

In England and Wales, the Court of King's Bench (or Court of Queen's Bench) was the name of two courts. Each was a senior court of common law, with civil and criminal jurisdiction, and a specific jurisdiction to restrain unlawful actions by public authorities.

The Court of King's Bench grew out of the King's Court, or Curia Regis, which, both in character and the essence of its jurisdiction, dates back to the reign of King Alfred. At first, it was not specifically a court of law, but was the centre of royal power and national administration in England, consisting of the King, together with his advisors, courtiers, and administrators. At an unknown point, another court, independent of the King's personal presence, grew out of the Curia Regis, and consisted of a number of royal judges who would hear cases themselves.

It was recorded in the chronicle of Abbot Benedict of Peterborough that, in 1178, Henry II ordered that five judges of his household should remain in Curia Regis, referring only difficult cases to himself. The situation seemed, thereafter, to be that a central royal court, called The Bench, began to sit regularly at Westminster, leading, at some stage, to a separation between the hearing of matters relevant to the King and those that had no royal connection, which came to be known as common pleas.

In 1215, the Magna Carta provided that there should be a court – the Common Bench (later Court of Common Pleas), which met in a fixed place – and, by 1234, two distinct series of plea rolls existed: de banco – those from the Common Bench – and coram rege (Latin for "in the presence of the King") – for those from the King's Bench. The King's Bench, being a theoretically movable court, was excluded from hearing common pleas, which included all praecipe actions for the recovery of property or debt. Actions of trespass and replevin were shared between the two benches. In practice pleas of the Crown were heard only in the King's Bench.

The King's Bench was divided into two parts: the Crown side, which had an unlimited criminal jurisdiction, both at first instance or as a court to which legal questions arising out of indictments in other courts could be referred; and the plea side, which dealt with actions of trespass, appeals of felony, and writs of error. The Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench was styled the Lord Chief Justice of England, being the highest permanent judge of the Crown.

The King's Bench became a fixed court sitting in Westminster Hall. Its justices travelled on circuit, a requirement of Magna Carta. By a legal fiction, criminal cases to be heard in the shires were set down for trial in Westminster Hall "unless before" (nisi prius) the justice came to the county, which was where the trial actually took place.

During the Commonwealth of England, from 1649 to 1660, the court was known as the Upper Bench.[2]

The English Court of King's Bench was abolished in 1875 by the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873. The Court's jurisdiction passed in each case to a new High Court of Justice and specifically to the King's Bench Division of that court.

The court gave its name to London's King's Bench Prison, in which many defendants were subsequently incarcerated, and to King's Bench Walk in the Inner Temple.

Subdivisions

Administrative Court

The Administrative Court deals mainly with administrative law matters and exercises the High Court's supervisory jurisdiction over inferior courts and tribunals and other public bodies.[3] It is generally the appropriate legal forum where the validity, but, at least in principle, not the merits of official decisions may be challenged. Generally, unless specific appeal processes are provided, the validity of any decision of a minister of the crown, inferior court, tribunal, local authority or other official body may be challenged by a judge with sufficient interest through the exercise of judicial review. A single judge first decides whether the matter is fit to bring to the Court, to filter out frivolous or unarguable cases, and if so, the matter is allowed to go forward to a full judicial review hearing with one or more judges.

The Administrative Court may sit with a single judge or as a divisional court (i.e. with two or more judges). A divisional court of the Administrative Court usually consists of a Lord Justice of Appeal sitting with a judge of the High Court. Although the Administrative Court is within the King's Bench Division (reflecting the historical role of the Court of King's Bench in exercising judicial review), judges from the Chancery Division and the Family Division of the High Court are also assigned to sit.

Commercial Court

The Commercial Court is a major civil court in England and Wales that specialises on adjudicating domestic and international business disputes, with a particular emphasis on international trade, banking, insurance, and commodities.[4][5]

History

The Commercial Court was set up in 1895 following demands from the City of London and the business community for a tribunal or court staffed by judges with knowledge and experience of commercial disputes which could determine such disputes expeditiously and economically, thereby avoiding tediously long and expensive trials with verdicts given by judges or juries unfamiliar with business practices.

The commercial list was originally heard by two judges of the King's Bench Division with the appropriate knowledge and experience. As the work of the Court has expanded, eight judges now sit in the Court.[6]

Function

The current work of the Commercial Court entails all aspects of commercial disputes, in the fields of banking and finance, disputes over contracts and business documents, import, export and transport, agency and management agreements, shipping, insurance and reinsurance, and commodities. The court is also the principal supervisory court for London arbitration, dealing with the granting of freezing and other relief in aid of arbitration, challenges to arbitration awards, and enforcement of awards. The Mercantile Court also can hear most of these cases.[7]

It is also a major centre for international disputes. Over 70% of the court's workload involves foreign parties where the only connection with the jurisdiction is the choice of English and Welsh law in a contract.[8]

Judges

Eight specialist judges sit in the Court at any one time. They are drawn from a list of those authorised due to their specialist knowledge and expertise.[6] The current Judge in Charge of the Commercial Court is Dame Sara Cockerill.[9]

Financial List

From October 2015, the Commercial Court and the Chancery Division 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.[10]

Technology and Construction Court

The Civil Procedure Rules, which regulate civil procedure in the High Court, allocate non-exhaustive categories of work to the Technology and Construction Court (TCC), principally, as the name suggests, disputes in the areas of construction and technology.[11]

However, since its formation in its current guise in October 1998, the court's jurisdiction has expanded such that many civil claims which are factually or technically complex are now heard in the TCC, beyond its traditional case load. For example, large-scale group personal injury claims are heard by the court, as are disputes arising out of the EU's public procurement regime.

The court's reputation has steadily grown over the years, such that it is now regarded as a highly capable and knowledgeable court. Its case load has dramatically increased since 1998, both in the form of traditional litigation and through assisted methods of alternative dispute resolution. In 2011, the court moved its central location from its aged buildings in Fetter Lane to the newly constructed £200m Rolls Building.[12][13]

History

The court was known until 9 October 1998 as the Official Referees' Court, a name which reflected its old status as a tribunal with no jurisdiction per se, but which could report to judges on its findings.[14] The new court, which was founded under the leadership of Mr Justice Dyson (later the Master of the Rolls), aimed to rid the perception this created that the court was not equal to others in the King's Bench Division. When opening the new court, Dyson said the new changes were "of real significance", and included technological advancements to aid the court's running, such as a centralised listing system.[14]

With the introduction of the new Civil Procedure Rules on 26 April 1999 following Lord Woolf's report, the TCC's caseload dropped slightly as a result of the new Rules' focus on alternative dispute resolution. This meant fewer claims were issued: previously, claims had been issued as a matter of course as part of the negotiation process.[15]

The proliferation of adjudication following its introduction in the Construction Act 1996 also led to fewer disputes going before the court, but did give the court a new role in enforcing adjudication decisions. The Construction Act gives parties to a "construction contract" a right to refer matters to adjudicators, with the aim of aiding cash flow in the construction sector by allowing disputes to be settled without the need for lengthy and costly court proceedings.[16] Changes to the Construction Act 1996 brought in by the Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 are likely to see even more disputes referred to adjudication before reaching the TCC.[17]

The Arbitration Act 1996 had a similar effect as adjudication. Such was the effect on the number of cases being brought before the TCC, extra capacity meant that TCC judges could act as judge-arbitrators, utilising their experience and knowledge while contributing to the CPR's goals in reducing litigation costs.[15]

Jurisdiction

The TCC deals primarily with litigation of disputes arising in the field of technology and construction. It includes building, engineering and technology disputes, professional negligence claims and IT disputes as well as enforcement of adjudication decisions and challenges to arbitrators’ decisions. The TCC also regularly deals with allegations of lawyers’ negligence arising in connection with planning, property, construction and other technical disputes.[18]

The work of the TCC often involves both complex legal argument and heavyweight technical issues, and as a result TCC judges try some of the most arduous and complex disputes that come before the civil courts. The sums at issue can be large, often involving millions of pounds, although there is in theory at least no minimum sum to be claimed (as, under the CPR, the court has wide powers to assert jurisdiction over claims it feels are appropriate). Cases can last several days and involve mountains of paperwork and expert evidence.[19]

Court locations

TCC cases are managed and heard by specialist judges in London and at centres throughout England and Wales. The cases are allocated either to High Court judges, senior circuit judges, circuit judges or recorders both in London and at regional centres outside London. Since its inception, the court has been led by several judges-in-charge, a role filled by a number of pre-eminent judges in the field of construction law: Lord Dyson, Sir John Thayne Forbes, Sir Rupert Jackson, Sir Vivian Ramsey, Mr Justice Akenhead (2010 to 2013), Sir Antony Edwards-Stuart (2013 to 2016), Sir Peter Coulson (2016 to 2018), Sir Peter Fraser (2018 to 2020) and Dame Finola O'Farrell (2020 to present).[20] As at 2019, the court has seven full-time High Court judges.[21]

In April 2011, the court moved its central location from its aged building in Fetter Lane (now replaced by a block of plush apartments) to a purpose-built block less than 100 yards away on Fetter Lane, the Rolls Building, not far from the Royal Courts of Justice in London. The court shares the building with other divisional courts of the King's Bench and Chancery Divisions. As well as its London location, where most cases (including those with an international element) are heard after being started or transferred there, claims can be issued and heard at any of the following regional court centres:

  • Birmingham (full-time TCC judge available)
  • Bristol
  • Cardiff
  • Chester
  • Exeter
  • Leeds
  • Liverpool (full-time TCC judge available)
  • Manchester (full-time TCC judge available)
  • Newcastle
  • Nottingham

TCC authorised judges are also available at Leicester, Sheffield and Southampton, although claims cannot be issued there.[22]

Admiralty Court

England's admiralty courts date to at least the 1360s, during the reign of Edward III. At that time there were three such courts, appointed by admirals responsible for waters to the north, south and west of England. In 1483 these local courts were amalgamated into a single High Court of Admiralty, administered by the Lord High Admiral of England.[23] The Lord High Admiral directly appointed judges to the court, and could remove them at will. This was amended from 1673, with appointments falling within the purview of the Crown,[24][c] and from 1689 judges also received an annual stipend and a degree of tenure, holding their positions subject to effective delivery of their duties rather than at the Lord High Admiral's pleasure.[24]

From its inception in 1483 until 1657 the court sat in a disused church in Southwark, and from then until 1665 in Montjoy House, private premises leased from the Dean of St Paul's Cathedral. In order to escape the Great Plague of London in 1665, the court was briefly relocated to Winchester and then to Jesus College at Oxford University. The plague threat having subsided by 1666, the court returned to London and until 1671 was located at Exeter House on The Strand before returning to Montjoy House near St Paul's.[26]

During the period after the French and Indian War, admiralty courts became an issue that was a part of the rising tension between the British Parliament and their American Colonies. Starting with the Proclamation of 1763, these courts were given jurisdiction over a number of laws affecting the colonies. The jurisdiction was expanded in later acts of the Parliament, such as the Stamp Act of 1765.

The colonists' objections were based on several factors. The courts could try a case anywhere in the British Empire. Cases involving New York or Boston merchants were frequently heard in Nova Scotia and sometimes even in England. The fact that judges were paid based in part on the fines that they levied and naval officers were paid for bringing "successful" cases led to abuses. There was no trial by jury, and evidence standards were lower than in criminal courts, the latter requiring proof "beyond reasonable doubt". The government's objective was to improve the effectiveness of revenue and excise tax laws. In many past instances, smugglers would avoid taxes. Even when they were caught and brought to trial, local judges frequently acquitted the popular local merchants whom they perceived as being unfairly accused by an unpopular tax collector.

In 1875, the High Court of Admiralty governing England and Wales was absorbed into the new Probate, Divorce and Admiralty (or PDA) Division of the High Court. When the PDA Division was in turn abolished and replaced by the Family Division, the "probate" and "admiralty" jurisdictions were transferred to, respectively, the Chancery Division and to the new "Admiralty Court", a subset of the King's Bench Division of the High Court. Strictly speaking, there was no longer an "Admiralty Court" as such, but the admiralty jurisdiction allocated by the Senior Courts Act 1981 was (and is) exercised by the Admiralty Judge and other Commercial Court judges authorized to sit in admiralty cases. When these judges sat, it became convenient to call the sitting the "Admiralty Court".

In England and Wales today, admiralty jurisdiction is exercised by the High Court of Justice in England (EWHC). Admiralty law applied in this court is based upon the civil law-based Law of the Sea,[citation needed] with statutory law and common law additions. The Admiralty Court is no longer in the Royal Courts of Justice in the Strand, having moved to the Rolls Building.

Leadership

President

Until 2005, the head of the Division was the Lord Chief Justice. The post of president of the King's Bench Division was created by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, leaving the Lord Chief Justice as president of the Courts of England and Wales, head of the Judiciary of England and Wales and head of Criminal Justice.[27] Sir Igor Judge was the first person to hold this office, appointed in October 2005.[27][28]

List of presidents

Vice-President

The office of Vice-President of the King's Bench Division predates the separation of the division's presidency from the office of Lord Chief Justice. In 1988, the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Lane, made arrangements for Sir Tasker Watkins, a Lord Justice of Appeal, to be Deputy Chief Justice, deputising across the range of Lane's responsibilities. The arrangement continued under Lane's successor. When Watkins retired in 1993, Lord Taylor of Gosforth appointed Sir Paul Kennedy of the Court of Appeal to oversee the Queen's Bench Division.[34][35]

Lord Bingham of Cornhill, who took over as Lord Chief Justice in 1996, made arrangements with Lord Mackay of Clashfern (Lord Chancellor under John Major) whereby Lord Justice Kennedy would become Vice-President of the Queen's Bench Division, with the understanding that it would be made a statutory office at an early date. Lord Bingham made the appointment in 1997. Lord Mackay's Labour successor, Lord Irvine of Lairg, honoured the commitment in the Access to Justice Act 1999.[34][35]

List of vice-presidents

See also

References

  1. ^ "No. 61034". The London Gazette. 30 October 2014. p. 21106.
  2. ^ 'House of Commons Journal Volume 6: 10 February 1649' Journal of the House of Commons: volume 6: 1648–1651 (1802), pp. 136–38. Accessed 26 April 2007.
  3. ^ "Administrative Court". GOV.UK. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  4. ^ [1] History of the Commercial Court. Judiciary.gov.uk
  5. ^ "Admiralty and Commercial Court - Find a Court or Tribunal - GOV.UK". www.find-court-tribunal.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  6. ^ a b "About Us". www.judiciary.gov.uk. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  7. ^ "Commercial Court".
  8. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 September 2017.
  9. ^ "Judges & clerks".
  10. ^ Authorised Guide to the Financial List, 1 October 2015
  11. ^ Davis, Michael E. (2006). The Technology and Construction Court : practice and procedure. Robert Akenhead. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-928004-9. OCLC 69331809.
  12. ^ "The Changing Face of Dispute Resolution". einsidetrack. December 2010. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  13. ^ "A royal opening for the Rolls Building".
  14. ^ a b "Official Referee's Court is now TCC". The Times. 13 October 1998. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  15. ^ a b "Acceptance of adjudication helps big cut in construction's litigation workload". International Construction Review. 5 April 2006. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  16. ^ "Arbitration is learning from adjudication". Atkinson Law. 14 August 2004. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  17. ^ "Adjudication: caught in the Act?". The In-House Lawyer. 9 July 2010. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  18. ^ "The Technology and Construction Court Guide" (PDF). Second Edition, Second Revision. October 2010. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ Linklaters Business Services v. Sir Robert McAlpine Ltd and ors (Technology and Construction Court 3 November 2010).Text
  20. ^ "New Judge in Charge of the Technology and Construction Court". judiciary.uk. 2 March 2020.
  21. ^ https://tecbar.org/the-tcc/[dead link]
  22. ^ "The Technology and Construction Court". Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  23. ^ Senior, W. (1924). "The Mace of the Admiralty Court". The Mariner's Mirror. 10 (1): 52. doi:10.1080/00253359.1924.10655256.
  24. ^ a b Sainty 1975, p95
  25. ^ Sainty 1975, pp. 95, 131
  26. ^ Wiswall 1970, p.77
  27. ^ a b "Constitutional Reform Act 2005 (c. 4)". Opsi.gov.uk. 24 March 2005. Retrieved 13 March 2009.
  28. ^ "NDS – News Distribution Service". Gnn.gov.uk. 15 August 2008. Retrieved 13 March 2009.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ "No. 57779". The London Gazette. 5 October 2005. p. 12927.
  30. ^ "No. 58843". The London Gazette. 6 October 2008. p. 15222.
  31. ^ "No. 59931". The London Gazette. 6 October 2011. p. 19091.
  32. ^ "No. 60644". The London Gazette. 1 October 2013. p. 19289.
  33. ^ a b "Appointment of the President of the Queen's Bench Division". www.judiciary.uk. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  34. ^ a b House of Lords Debates 28 January 1999 c 1244–45.
  35. ^ a b Access to Justice Act 1999, s 69.
  36. ^ Swaine, Jon (2 December 2009). "MPs expenses: Profile of Sir Paul Kennedy, new judge of allowance claims". The Telegraph. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
  37. ^ "Appointments to Queen's Bench Division of the High Court and Lord Justice of Appeal" (Press release). Number10.gov.uk. 4 September 2008. Archived from the original on 20 January 2009.
  38. ^ "Lord Justice May to replace Kennedy". Legal Week (subscription required). 9 August 2001. May is to replace Lord Justice Kennedy in the role. The appointment will come into effect in February 2002...
  39. ^ Rozenberg, Joshua (12 October 2012). "A Who's Hughes of the number twos". The Telegraph.
  40. ^ (Press release). Judiciary of England and Wales. 27 July 2011. Archived from the original on 18 December 2012.
  41. ^ "New Vice President of the Queen's Bench Division Appointed" (Press release). Courts and Tribunals Judiciary of England and Wales. 14 March 2014. from the original on 22 May 2014.
  42. ^ Vice-President of the Queen’s Bench Division

Notes

  1. ^ See Challenges to decisions of England and Wales magistrates' courts.
  2. ^ See Courts of England and Wales for an explanation of these courts.
  3. ^ An exception was Judge Humphrey Henchman, appointed in June 1714 by direction of the Board of Admiralty, rather than the monarch. Henchman served for six months and was removed from office in December 1714.[25]

king, bench, division, this, article, about, division, british, high, court, justice, other, uses, king, bench, queen, bench, division, when, monarch, female, high, court, justice, deals, with, wide, range, common, cases, supervisory, responsibility, over, cer. This article is about the division of the British High Court of Justice For other uses see King s Bench The King s Bench Division or Queen s Bench Division when the monarch is female of the High Court of Justice deals with a wide range of common law cases and has supervisory responsibility over certain lower courts King s Bench DivisionRoyal Coat of Arms of the United KingdomEstablished1 November 1875JurisdictionEngland and WalesLocationRolls Building City of London LondonAppeals toCourt of Appeal civil matters Supreme Court criminal matter Appeals fromCrown CourtMagistrates courtsPresidentCurrentlyVictoria SharpSince23 June 2019Vice PresidentCurrentlyJames DingemansSince5 February 2020Senior Master and King s RemembrancerCurrentlyBarbara FontaineSince27 October 2014 1 It hears appeals on points of law from magistrates courts a and from the Crown Court b These are known as appeals by way of case stated since the questions of law are considered solely on the basis of the facts found and stated by the authority under review Specialised courts of the King s Bench Division include the Administrative Court Technology and Construction Court Commercial Court and the Admiralty Court The specialised judges and procedures of these courts are tailored to their type of business but they are not essentially different from any other court of the King s Bench Division Appeals from the High Court in civil matters are made to the Court of Appeal Civil Division in criminal matters appeal from the Divisional Court is made only to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom Contents 1 History 2 Subdivisions 2 1 Administrative Court 2 2 Commercial Court 2 2 1 History 2 2 2 Function 2 2 3 Judges 2 2 4 Financial List 2 3 Technology and Construction Court 2 3 1 History 2 3 2 Jurisdiction 2 3 3 Court locations 2 4 Admiralty Court 3 Leadership 3 1 President 3 1 1 List of presidents 3 2 Vice President 3 2 1 List of vice presidents 4 See also 5 References 6 NotesHistory EditFurther information Court of King s Bench England Westminster Hall meeting place of the Court of King s Bench England from 1215 until the King s Bench was abolished in England in 1875 In England and Wales the Court of King s Bench or Court of Queen s Bench was the name of two courts Each was a senior court of common law with civil and criminal jurisdiction and a specific jurisdiction to restrain unlawful actions by public authorities The Court of King s Bench grew out of the King s Court or Curia Regis which both in character and the essence of its jurisdiction dates back to the reign of King Alfred At first it was not specifically a court of law but was the centre of royal power and national administration in England consisting of the King together with his advisors courtiers and administrators At an unknown point another court independent of the King s personal presence grew out of the Curia Regis and consisted of a number of royal judges who would hear cases themselves It was recorded in the chronicle of Abbot Benedict of Peterborough that in 1178 Henry II ordered that five judges of his household should remain in Curia Regis referring only difficult cases to himself The situation seemed thereafter to be that a central royal court called The Bench began to sit regularly at Westminster leading at some stage to a separation between the hearing of matters relevant to the King and those that had no royal connection which came to be known as common pleas In 1215 the Magna Carta provided that there should be a court the Common Bench later Court of Common Pleas which met in a fixed place and by 1234 two distinct series of plea rolls existed de banco those from the Common Bench and coram rege Latin for in the presence of the King for those from the King s Bench The King s Bench being a theoretically movable court was excluded from hearing common pleas which included all praecipe actions for the recovery of property or debt Actions of trespass and replevin were shared between the two benches In practice pleas of the Crown were heard only in the King s Bench The King s Bench was divided into two parts the Crown side which had an unlimited criminal jurisdiction both at first instance or as a court to which legal questions arising out of indictments in other courts could be referred and the plea side which dealt with actions of trespass appeals of felony and writs of error The Lord Chief Justice of the King s Bench was styled the Lord Chief Justice of England being the highest permanent judge of the Crown The King s Bench became a fixed court sitting in Westminster Hall Its justices travelled on circuit a requirement of Magna Carta By a legal fiction criminal cases to be heard in the shires were set down for trial in Westminster Hall unless before nisi prius the justice came to the county which was where the trial actually took place During the Commonwealth of England from 1649 to 1660 the court was known as the Upper Bench 2 The English Court of King s Bench was abolished in 1875 by the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873 The Court s jurisdiction passed in each case to a new High Court of Justice and specifically to the King s Bench Division of that court The court gave its name to London s King s Bench Prison in which many defendants were subsequently incarcerated and to King s Bench Walk in the Inner Temple An illuminated initial membrane with portrait of Elizabeth I Court of King s Bench Coram Rege Roll Easter Term 1584 Subdivisions EditAdministrative Court Edit The Administrative Court deals mainly with administrative law matters and exercises the High Court s supervisory jurisdiction over inferior courts and tribunals and other public bodies 3 It is generally the appropriate legal forum where the validity but at least in principle not the merits of official decisions may be challenged Generally unless specific appeal processes are provided the validity of any decision of a minister of the crown inferior court tribunal local authority or other official body may be challenged by a judge with sufficient interest through the exercise of judicial review A single judge first decides whether the matter is fit to bring to the Court to filter out frivolous or unarguable cases and if so the matter is allowed to go forward to a full judicial review hearing with one or more judges The Administrative Court may sit with a single judge or as a divisional court i e with two or more judges A divisional court of the Administrative Court usually consists of a Lord Justice of Appeal sitting with a judge of the High Court Although the Administrative Court is within the King s Bench Division reflecting the historical role of the Court of King s Bench in exercising judicial review judges from the Chancery Division and the Family Division of the High Court are also assigned to sit Commercial Court Edit The Commercial Court is a major civil court in England and Wales that specialises on adjudicating domestic and international business disputes with a particular emphasis on international trade banking insurance and commodities 4 5 History Edit The Commercial Court was set up in 1895 following demands from the City of London and the business community for a tribunal or court staffed by judges with knowledge and experience of commercial disputes which could determine such disputes expeditiously and economically thereby avoiding tediously long and expensive trials with verdicts given by judges or juries unfamiliar with business practices The commercial list was originally heard by two judges of the King s Bench Division with the appropriate knowledge and experience As the work of the Court has expanded eight judges now sit in the Court 6 Function Edit The current work of the Commercial Court entails all aspects of commercial disputes in the fields of banking and finance disputes over contracts and business documents import export and transport agency and management agreements shipping insurance and reinsurance and commodities The court is also the principal supervisory court for London arbitration dealing with the granting of freezing and other relief in aid of arbitration challenges to arbitration awards and enforcement of awards The Mercantile Court also can hear most of these cases 7 It is also a major centre for international disputes Over 70 of the court s workload involves foreign parties where the only connection with the jurisdiction is the choice of English and Welsh law in a contract 8 Judges Edit Eight specialist judges sit in the Court at any one time They are drawn from a list of those authorised due to their specialist knowledge and expertise 6 The current Judge in Charge of the Commercial Court is Dame Sara Cockerill 9 Financial List Edit From October 2015 the Commercial Court and the Chancery Division 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 10 Technology and Construction Court Edit The Civil Procedure Rules which regulate civil procedure in the High Court allocate non exhaustive categories of work to the Technology and Construction Court TCC principally as the name suggests disputes in the areas of construction and technology 11 However since its formation in its current guise in October 1998 the court s jurisdiction has expanded such that many civil claims which are factually or technically complex are now heard in the TCC beyond its traditional case load For example large scale group personal injury claims are heard by the court as are disputes arising out of the EU s public procurement regime The court s reputation has steadily grown over the years such that it is now regarded as a highly capable and knowledgeable court Its case load has dramatically increased since 1998 both in the form of traditional litigation and through assisted methods of alternative dispute resolution In 2011 the court moved its central location from its aged buildings in Fetter Lane to the newly constructed 200m Rolls Building 12 13 History Edit The court was known until 9 October 1998 as the Official Referees Court a name which reflected its old status as a tribunal with no jurisdiction per se but which could report to judges on its findings 14 The new court which was founded under the leadership of Mr Justice Dyson later the Master of the Rolls aimed to rid the perception this created that the court was not equal to others in the King s Bench Division When opening the new court Dyson said the new changes were of real significance and included technological advancements to aid the court s running such as a centralised listing system 14 With the introduction of the new Civil Procedure Rules on 26 April 1999 following Lord Woolf s report the TCC s caseload dropped slightly as a result of the new Rules focus on alternative dispute resolution This meant fewer claims were issued previously claims had been issued as a matter of course as part of the negotiation process 15 The proliferation of adjudication following its introduction in the Construction Act 1996 also led to fewer disputes going before the court but did give the court a new role in enforcing adjudication decisions The Construction Act gives parties to a construction contract a right to refer matters to adjudicators with the aim of aiding cash flow in the construction sector by allowing disputes to be settled without the need for lengthy and costly court proceedings 16 Changes to the Construction Act 1996 brought in by the Local Democracy Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 are likely to see even more disputes referred to adjudication before reaching the TCC 17 The Arbitration Act 1996 had a similar effect as adjudication Such was the effect on the number of cases being brought before the TCC extra capacity meant that TCC judges could act as judge arbitrators utilising their experience and knowledge while contributing to the CPR s goals in reducing litigation costs 15 Jurisdiction Edit The TCC deals primarily with litigation of disputes arising in the field of technology and construction It includes building engineering and technology disputes professional negligence claims and IT disputes as well as enforcement of adjudication decisions and challenges to arbitrators decisions The TCC also regularly deals with allegations of lawyers negligence arising in connection with planning property construction and other technical disputes 18 The work of the TCC often involves both complex legal argument and heavyweight technical issues and as a result TCC judges try some of the most arduous and complex disputes that come before the civil courts The sums at issue can be large often involving millions of pounds although there is in theory at least no minimum sum to be claimed as under the CPR the court has wide powers to assert jurisdiction over claims it feels are appropriate Cases can last several days and involve mountains of paperwork and expert evidence 19 Court locations Edit TCC cases are managed and heard by specialist judges in London and at centres throughout England and Wales The cases are allocated either to High Court judges senior circuit judges circuit judges or recorders both in London and at regional centres outside London Since its inception the court has been led by several judges in charge a role filled by a number of pre eminent judges in the field of construction law Lord Dyson Sir John Thayne Forbes Sir Rupert Jackson Sir Vivian Ramsey Mr Justice Akenhead 2010 to 2013 Sir Antony Edwards Stuart 2013 to 2016 Sir Peter Coulson 2016 to 2018 Sir Peter Fraser 2018 to 2020 and Dame Finola O Farrell 2020 to present 20 As at 2019 the court has seven full time High Court judges 21 In April 2011 the court moved its central location from its aged building in Fetter Lane now replaced by a block of plush apartments to a purpose built block less than 100 yards away on Fetter Lane the Rolls Building not far from the Royal Courts of Justice in London The court shares the building with other divisional courts of the King s Bench and Chancery Divisions As well as its London location where most cases including those with an international element are heard after being started or transferred there claims can be issued and heard at any of the following regional court centres Birmingham full time TCC judge available Bristol Cardiff Chester Exeter Leeds Liverpool full time TCC judge available Manchester full time TCC judge available Newcastle NottinghamTCC authorised judges are also available at Leicester Sheffield and Southampton although claims cannot be issued there 22 Admiralty Court Edit England s admiralty courts date to at least the 1360s during the reign of Edward III At that time there were three such courts appointed by admirals responsible for waters to the north south and west of England In 1483 these local courts were amalgamated into a single High Court of Admiralty administered by the Lord High Admiral of England 23 The Lord High Admiral directly appointed judges to the court and could remove them at will This was amended from 1673 with appointments falling within the purview of the Crown 24 c and from 1689 judges also received an annual stipend and a degree of tenure holding their positions subject to effective delivery of their duties rather than at the Lord High Admiral s pleasure 24 From its inception in 1483 until 1657 the court sat in a disused church in Southwark and from then until 1665 in Montjoy House private premises leased from the Dean of St Paul s Cathedral In order to escape the Great Plague of London in 1665 the court was briefly relocated to Winchester and then to Jesus College at Oxford University The plague threat having subsided by 1666 the court returned to London and until 1671 was located at Exeter House on The Strand before returning to Montjoy House near St Paul s 26 During the period after the French and Indian War admiralty courts became an issue that was a part of the rising tension between the British Parliament and their American Colonies Starting with the Proclamation of 1763 these courts were given jurisdiction over a number of laws affecting the colonies The jurisdiction was expanded in later acts of the Parliament such as the Stamp Act of 1765 The colonists objections were based on several factors The courts could try a case anywhere in the British Empire Cases involving New York or Boston merchants were frequently heard in Nova Scotia and sometimes even in England The fact that judges were paid based in part on the fines that they levied and naval officers were paid for bringing successful cases led to abuses There was no trial by jury and evidence standards were lower than in criminal courts the latter requiring proof beyond reasonable doubt The government s objective was to improve the effectiveness of revenue and excise tax laws In many past instances smugglers would avoid taxes Even when they were caught and brought to trial local judges frequently acquitted the popular local merchants whom they perceived as being unfairly accused by an unpopular tax collector In 1875 the High Court of Admiralty governing England and Wales was absorbed into the new Probate Divorce and Admiralty or PDA Division of the High Court When the PDA Division was in turn abolished and replaced by the Family Division the probate and admiralty jurisdictions were transferred to respectively the Chancery Division and to the new Admiralty Court a subset of the King s Bench Division of the High Court Strictly speaking there was no longer an Admiralty Court as such but the admiralty jurisdiction allocated by the Senior Courts Act 1981 was and is exercised by the Admiralty Judge and other Commercial Court judges authorized to sit in admiralty cases When these judges sat it became convenient to call the sitting the Admiralty Court In England and Wales today admiralty jurisdiction is exercised by the High Court of Justice in England EWHC Admiralty law applied in this court is based upon the civil law based Law of the Sea citation needed with statutory law and common law additions The Admiralty Court is no longer in the Royal Courts of Justice in the Strand having moved to the Rolls Building Leadership EditPresident Edit Until 2005 the head of the Division was the Lord Chief Justice The post of president of the King s Bench Division was created by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 leaving the Lord Chief Justice as president of the Courts of England and Wales head of the Judiciary of England and Wales and head of Criminal Justice 27 Sir Igor Judge was the first person to hold this office appointed in October 2005 27 28 List of presidents Edit 3 October 2005 Sir Igor Judge 29 1 October 2008 Sir Anthony May 30 3 October 2011 Sir John Thomas 31 1 October 2013 Sir Brian Leveson 32 23 June 2019 Dame Victoria Sharp 33 Vice President Edit The office of Vice President of the King s Bench Division predates the separation of the division s presidency from the office of Lord Chief Justice In 1988 the Lord Chief Justice Lord Lane made arrangements for Sir Tasker Watkins a Lord Justice of Appeal to be Deputy Chief Justice deputising across the range of Lane s responsibilities The arrangement continued under Lane s successor When Watkins retired in 1993 Lord Taylor of Gosforth appointed Sir Paul Kennedy of the Court of Appeal to oversee the Queen s Bench Division 34 35 Lord Bingham of Cornhill who took over as Lord Chief Justice in 1996 made arrangements with Lord Mackay of Clashfern Lord Chancellor under John Major whereby Lord Justice Kennedy would become Vice President of the Queen s Bench Division with the understanding that it would be made a statutory office at an early date Lord Bingham made the appointment in 1997 Lord Mackay s Labour successor Lord Irvine of Lairg honoured the commitment in the Access to Justice Act 1999 34 35 List of vice presidents Edit 1997 Sir Paul Kennedy 36 February 2002 Sir Anthony May 37 38 October 2008 Sir John Thomas 39 3 October 2011 Dame Heather Hallett 40 4 March 2014 Sir Nigel Davis 41 1 January 2016 Dame Victoria Sharp 33 5 February 2020 Sir James Dingemans 42 See also EditLord Chief Justice Master of the Rolls President of the Family Division Chancellor of the High CourtReferences Edit No 61034 The London Gazette 30 October 2014 p 21106 House of Commons Journal Volume 6 10 February 1649 Journal of the House of Commons volume 6 1648 1651 1802 pp 136 38 Accessed 26 April 2007 Administrative Court GOV UK Retrieved 29 November 2022 1 History of the Commercial Court Judiciary gov uk Admiralty and Commercial Court Find a Court or Tribunal GOV UK www find court tribunal service gov uk Retrieved 30 November 2022 a b About Us www judiciary gov uk Retrieved 31 January 2017 Commercial Court City UK Legal Services Report 2016 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 September 2017 Judges amp clerks Authorised Guide to the Financial List 1 October 2015 Davis Michael E 2006 The Technology and Construction Court practice and procedure Robert Akenhead Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928004 9 OCLC 69331809 The Changing Face of Dispute Resolution einsidetrack December 2010 Retrieved 30 January 2011 A royal opening for the Rolls Building a b Official Referee s Court is now TCC The Times 13 October 1998 Retrieved 30 January 2011 a b Acceptance of adjudication helps big cut in construction s litigation workload International Construction Review 5 April 2006 Retrieved 30 January 2011 Arbitration is learning from adjudication Atkinson Law 14 August 2004 Retrieved 30 January 2011 Adjudication caught in the Act The In House Lawyer 9 July 2010 Retrieved 30 January 2011 The Technology and Construction Court Guide PDF Second Edition Second Revision October 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Linklaters Business Services v Sir Robert McAlpine Ltd and ors Technology and Construction Court 3 November 2010 Text New Judge in Charge of the Technology and Construction Court judiciary uk 2 March 2020 https tecbar org the tcc dead link The Technology and Construction Court Retrieved 30 January 2011 Senior W 1924 The Mace of the Admiralty Court The Mariner s Mirror 10 1 52 doi 10 1080 00253359 1924 10655256 a b Sainty 1975 p95 Sainty 1975 pp 95 131 Wiswall 1970 p 77 a b Constitutional Reform Act 2005 c 4 Opsi gov uk 24 March 2005 Retrieved 13 March 2009 NDS News Distribution Service Gnn gov uk 15 August 2008 Retrieved 13 March 2009 permanent dead link No 57779 The London Gazette 5 October 2005 p 12927 No 58843 The London Gazette 6 October 2008 p 15222 No 59931 The London Gazette 6 October 2011 p 19091 No 60644 The London Gazette 1 October 2013 p 19289 a b Appointment of the President of the Queen s Bench Division www judiciary uk Retrieved 5 July 2019 a b House of Lords Debates 28 January 1999 c 1244 45 a b Access to Justice Act 1999 s 69 Swaine Jon 2 December 2009 MPs expenses Profile of Sir Paul Kennedy new judge of allowance claims The Telegraph Retrieved 14 October 2012 Appointments to Queen s Bench Division of the High Court and Lord Justice of Appeal Press release Number10 gov uk 4 September 2008 Archived from the original on 20 January 2009 Lord Justice May to replace Kennedy Legal Week subscription required 9 August 2001 May is to replace Lord Justice Kennedy in the role The appointment will come into effect in February 2002 Rozenberg Joshua 12 October 2012 A Who s Hughes of the number twos The Telegraph Appointment of Vice President of the Queen s Bench Division and Deputy Senior Presiding Judge Press release Judiciary of England and Wales 27 July 2011 Archived from the original on 18 December 2012 New Vice President of the Queen s Bench Division Appointed Press release Courts and Tribunals Judiciary of England and Wales 14 March 2014 Archived from the original on 22 May 2014 Vice President of the Queen s Bench DivisionNotes Edit See Challenges to decisions of England and Wales magistrates courts See Courts of England and Wales for an explanation of these courts An exception was Judge Humphrey Henchman appointed in June 1714 by direction of the Board of Admiralty rather than the monarch Henchman served for six months and was removed from office in December 1714 25 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title King 27s Bench Division amp oldid 1153450541 Technology and Construction Court, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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