Small Claims Hearings
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE SMALL CLAIMS
TRACK
In all cases under £5000, if
a Defence is filed and the case is to be defended all the
way to a Hearing then the case will be dealt with by means
of the Small Claims Track.
Directions for the Small Claims Procedure
will be given automatically by the Court and so will a date
for the Hearing.
Although the Small Claims procedure is deliberately
designed for laymen or Litigants in Person as they are referred
to, and proceedings are less informal than others, you do
nonetheless have to have your wits about you.
At Veritas Legal, we will advise you and
prepare your case FREE
of charge to include complying with all directions prior to
the final hearing of the matter. You may or may not want legal
representation on the day of the hearing itself.
However, it should be borne in mind that
under current legislation no costs for legal representation
can be recovered from your opponent, although other expenses
such as the cost of travelling to the court, any overnight
accommodation, loss of earnings whilst attending the hearing
may be considered.
Due to our relationship with law
firms in England and Wales and also Barristers
Chambers we can arrange for you to have that representation
at rates that have been negotiated by us on your behalf.
We favour the instruction of barristers
wherever possible as they are specialist advocates. Quite
often junior barristers can appear on your behalf at an agreed
brief fee which is a substantial reduction in cost when compared
to the cost of instructing a law firm who charge hourly rates.
We have excellent relationships with barristers’ clerks
throughout England & Wales and will ensure you get a competitive
rate.
Whether you have legal representation or
not, you now have to formally prove to a District Judge that
"on the balance of probabilities", yours, the Claimant,
is the correct version of events in the proceedings in that
for example you delivered the goods or services, that they
were not defective or that they performed correctly and that
you are entitled to payment. This is by no means difficult
because you will have invoices and you will be able to prove
that the defendant has made no complaint before now, or at
least not until you sued and then a "dispute" arose.
If you wish to send somebody from your Company,
then it should be someone of suitable seniority within the
Company who is not going to be overwhelmed by the sense of
occasion and have rings run around them by the other side.
They must also be able to put your version of events across
to the District Judge in a clear and reasoned manner. It is
also important that they do not let the Defendant frustrate
them, no matter what flannel or spurious arguments have been
raised by them.
We would always encourage you to consider
the merit of having a barrister to represent you. After all
if there is £3,500 due to you and a barrister has agreed
a brief fee of £250, that is a small sum to pay for
peace of mind and the quality of representation that you will
receive.
Just remember, there is no point
in going to court and losing.
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