The overriding objective Implemented as a result of reforms suggested by
Lord Woolf and his committee, one of the innovations of the rules is the "overriding objective" embodied in Part 1 of the Rules, which states: {{blockquote|{{unbulleted list|1.1{{unbulleted list|item_style=margin-left: 1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em The rules are written to be intelligible not just to lawyers but also to
litigants in person.
Part 2: Application and interpretation of the rules The part provides for interpretation of a number of terms used throughout the CPR, the roles of court staff and judges, and issues concerned with time durations and
limits. Rule 2.11 is one of a number of rules which make provision for the parties to a dispute to vary the certain rules by written agreement.
Part 3: General powers of the court Part 3.1 incorporates a general court power to "extend or shorten the time for compliance with any rule, practice direction or court order".
Part 6: Service of documents Part 6 identifies the valid ways in which legal documents in general, and specifically a
claim form, may be served. Personal service to an individual or to an organisation involves giving the document to the individual, to "a person holding a senior position within the
company or corporation" or, in the case of a in a business
partnership, to one of the partners or to a person who exercises "control or management" of the partnership at its principal place of business.
Part 7: Service of a claim form Proceedings are started when the court issues a claim form at the request of the claimant (CPR 7.2). Service of a claim form must take place within four months of the date when the claim form is issued, or within six months if it is to be issued outside the jurisdiction of the court, i.e. outside England and Wales and any part of the
territorial waters of the United Kingdom adjoining England and Wales.
Part 8: Application for a judicial declaration Part 8 allows for claimants to seek one or more judicial declarations as an alternative to issuing a claim form.
Part 17: Amending a claim An addition to or substitution of material in relation to a claim which has already been made is permitted under this part, including where the relevant
limitation period has already expired, but a new claim cannot be made outside the relevant period of limitation unless it arises out of "the same facts or substantially the same facts" as the preceding claim.
Part 31: Disclosure Part 31 deals with
disclosure and inspection of documents. Two types of disclosure are "standard disclosure" and "specific disclosure".
Part 40: Judgments and orders Part 40 "sets out rules about judgments and orders which apply except where any other of these Rules makes a different provision in relation to the judgment or order in question". Where a court gives judgment both on a claim and a counterclaim, and judgments sums are specified in both cases, the court has discretion to set off one amount against the other so that a net sum is payable. In the High Court (Chancery Division) case of
Fearns v Anglo-Dutch Paint & Chemical Company Ltd & others,
George Leggatt QC built on this provision where two sums had been fixed on a claim and a counterclaim, but one sum was expressed in pounds and the other in
Euros. He ruled that: • the date when the two sums could be set off against each other should be "the date on which the existence and amount of the two liabilities is or was established"; • the value of the smaller amount due should be converted into the currency of the larger amount at the exchange rate prevailing on that date. A single net sum payable could then form the basis of an order for net payment.
Assessing proportionality Two approaches to the assessment of proportionality arose in the case of
West v Stockport NHS Foundation Trust (2019), in particular on appeal from the initial trial. The appeal judges referred to a "debate between the parties as to whether a proportionality challenge was limited to the circumstances of the particular case ('the narrower interpretation'), or whether it was to be assessed by reference to all the circumstances, and so encompass matters which were not necessarily related to the case in question ('the wider interpretation')". On a reading of CPR 44, which contains general rules about costs, it was felt to be clear that "questions of proportionality are to be considered by reference to the specific matters noted in 44.3(5) and, if relevant, any wider circumstances identified under r. 44.4(1). Accordingly, the wider interpretation is correct." ==Tracks==