2. Juni 2020
Disputes Quick Read – 91 von 105 Insights
A number of practice directions have been introduced to temporarily modify the court's procedural rules, the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR), to ensure that the courts can operate as effectively as possible during the coronavirus pandemic. We have been tracking these amendments here.
One such amendment, Practice direction 51Z, Stay of Possession Proceedings – Coronavirus (PD51Z), recently came under challenge for allegedly being implemented without proper legal authority.
PD51Z introduced a 90-day stay on all possession proceedings brought under Part 55 of the CPR and all proceedings for the enforcement of possession orders. Paragraph 2(A) of PD51Z sets out a limited number of exceptions, including applications for case management directions which are agreed by the parties.
The challenge to the validity of PD51Z was made by Mr Arkin (a fixed charge receiver) in possession proceedings Arkin v Marshall [2020] EWCA Civ 620, in which the parties had agreed case management directions prior to the implementation of PD51Z.
Mr Arkin argued that PD51Z was not a "pilot scheme" as required for practice directions implemented under CPR 51.2 to modify existing rules, and that the stay inhibited access to justice in contravention of Article 6 of the ECHR.
In its judgment given on 11 May 2020, the Court of Appeal rejected the challenge in its entirety, because:
The carve-out is limited to the endorsement of agreed directions. Therefore, if the stay applies, parties are not required to carry out the agreed directions during the stay period, but can do so voluntarily. However, any applications to amend the directions order or to remedy compliance issues would have to wait until the stay has expired.
Although the impact of PD51Z itself has not been without controversy, we think this is the right approach. The purpose of practice directions is to enable the CPR to be amended without the need for further legislation, which provides a degree of flexibility to respond to a development – or an entirely unpredictable pandemic – as it arises. The alternative of requiring Parliament to legislate for every procedural amendment to be trialled would be simply unworkable.
Furthermore, the reasoning expressed by the Court of Appeal in Arkin has now been followed and extended in Okoro v London Borough of Hackney [2020] EWCA Civ 681. The judgment in this case confirms that PD51Z also applies to appeals from possession orders that have already been made. In view of the "blanket" character of the stay, this result is perhaps unsurprising.
Andrew Howell and Natalia Faekova unpack an extraordinary case. A Mexican billionaire's strong fraud claim. Former Israeli intelligence operatives hired to target the defendant's solicitor. Secret recordings over wine and dinner. A judge who called it 'anathema to civil litigation' but may have been 'too lenient'.
19. November 2025
During an LSLA lecture on transparency and open justice, Mrs Justice Cockerill, recently appointed as Deputy Head of Civil Justice, outlined a pilot practice direction (PD) that will place select court documents squarely in the public domain via a new, public-facing side of the electronic court file (CE-File).
21. Oktober 2025
11. Juni 2025
30. Januar 2025
6. Dezember 2024
14. November 2024
14. November 2024
8. November 2024
15. Oktober 2024
14. Dezember 2023
13. Dezember 2023
17. Oktober 2023
4. August 2023
21. Juli 2023
10. Juli 2023
1. Juni 2023
20. April 2023
8. März 2023
2. März 2023
14. Februar 2023
13. Februar 2023
8. Februar 2023
19. Januar 2023
3. Oktober 2022
22. September 2022
9. August 2022
25. Juli 2022
6. Juli 2022
Welcome news for those pursuing fraud claims in the English Courts
28. Juli 2022
27. Juli 2022
29. Juli 2022
17. Juni 2022
13. Juni 2022
26. Mai 2022
31. Mai 2022
4. April 2022
5. April 2022
31. März 2022
21. September 2021
13. September 2021
6. September 2021
2. August 2021
21. Juli 2021
15. Juli 2021
26. Mai 2021
5. Mai 2021
21. April 2021
31. März 2021
26. Februar 2021
24. Februar 2021
20. Januar 2021
12. Januar 2021
23. November 2020
16. Oktober 2020
23. September 2020
7. Oktober 2020
12. Mai 2020
18. Mai 2020
15. April 2020
27. April 2020
21. April 2020
11. März 2020
26. Februar 2020
21. Februar 2020
2. Juni 2020
16. Juni 2020
9. Juli 2020
21. Juli 2020
3. Dezember 2021
24. November 2021
8. Oktober 2021
10. Januar 2022
20. Januar 2022
22. März 2022
7. April 2022