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. A list of hearings in the High Court's divisions is published daily.
King's Bench Division The King's Bench Division (KBD)or Queen's Bench Division when the
monarch is femalehears a wide range of common law cases and also has special responsibility as a supervisory court. It includes subdivisions such as the Administrative Court, the Commercial Court, the Technology and Construction Court, and the Admiralty Court. A
Royal Commission was appointed in 1934 in order to address concerns about delays within the King's Bench Division and to determine whether any reforms would help to alleviate the problems then being experienced. Its chair was
Lord Peel. Until 2005, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales was the head of the Division. The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 created a
President of the Queen's Bench Division.
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. Until 2005, the Lord Chancellor was the
de jure head of the Chancery Division, but appointed a
Vice-Chancellor who nominally acted as his deputy. The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 renamed the Vice-Chancellor to
Chancellor of the High Court and made him the head of the Division. 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.
Business and Property Courts The formation within the High Court of the Business and Property Courts of England and Wales was announced in March 2017, and launched in London in July 2017. 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 law, competition, finance, intellectual property, revenue, and trusts and probate. These courts are located at the
Rolls Building in central London, and in District Registries located in Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds and Newcastle. The change was intended 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.
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. 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 vacant since the retirement of Sir
Andrew McFarlane on 16 April 2026. 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. 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. 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.
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. This practice, with the passing of the
Domestic Abuse Act 2021, was officially prohibited in 2022 for both family and civil proceedings, under which section 65 of the act amended the
Matrimonial and Family Proceedings Act 1984 to prohibit the cross-examination of victims of parties in a family proceeding, whether they be witnesses or parties of the proceeding. ==Sittings==