I recently
saw a face on the cover of a magazine. I thought it was familiar. On closer
inspection it was Andrew Mitchell MP. How quickly politicians fall out of the
news! For lawyers, he will of course be forever associated with the darkest
months in civil litigation that some of us have ever known. In the light of the
infamous Mitchell litigation and the Jackson Reforms litigators lived in fear
of cases being struck out for minor procedural breaches. Many considered early retirement.
The situation
created a level of uncertainty that threatened to undermine confidence in our
civil justice system –
Cases were
being struck put in their entirety following delays of a few days and in one
case a single day –
One consequence was an unnecessary hostility between opposing solicitors who risked being sued if they
did not take the most trivial of points to try and knock out their opponent’s
claim by default.
It was a
great relief to us all that the case of Denton
in 2014 brought us back to earth, at least in part. The Court of Appeal
reminded judges of the need to consider all of the circumstances of the case
when deciding whether to grant relief
from sanctions for relatively minor breaches. Lawyers were warned
against taking opportunistic procedural points –
It is fair
to say that the world has calmed down a bit since then.
So where are today? The
recent case of The Police v Abdulle is
telling. The case is summarised in Gordon Exall’s blog –
At first glance this seems to be a remarkable
turnaround. The claimant’s solicitors were guilty of a whole series of breaches
of orders. Hickinbottom J at first instance said that –