Clark Sargent
Of Counsel
Article
10
Anyone involved in litigation can testify to how protracted and costly it can be. The Shorter Trials Scheme (STS) pilot currently running in the Rolls Building courts is aimed at addressing this.
A shorter and earlier trial, a designated judge who manages the case, limited disclosure and limited and written witness and expert evidence will be the order of the day. Cases issued in the STS should come to trial within 10 months of issue of proceedings with judgment being delivered within six weeks thereafter.
Disclosure, evidence and trial are generally the most time-consuming elements of dispute resolution to deal with and so account for the greatest proportion of the costs incurred. By heavily streamlining these areas, the STS is intended to offer dispute resolution to businesses on a commercial time scale and at proportionate cost.
The STS will be most appropriate for relatively simple commercial and business related disputes which do not hinge on expert or factual evidence; are not document heavy; and where speed of resolution is required, perhaps in order to maintain a business relationship or avoid damage to reputation.
It is not suitable for cases that involve allegations of fraud or dishonesty, or involve multiple issues or multiple parties, or that might not be fairly tried on the basis of only limited disclosure and limited oral evidence.
An alternative to the STS is the Flexible Trials Scheme (FTS). The FTS was introduced at the same time as the STS; like the STS, it is applicable to all claims started in the Rolls Building courts, but it is a less streamlined process than the STS.
The FTS procedure enables parties to agree to adapt the trial procedure to suit their particular case, to achieve a more simplified and speedier trial than is currently provided for by the CPR. This includes limiting disclosure in a similar (albeit wider) manner to that in the STS, and minimising the amount of witness and expert oral evidence and submissions at trial.
A standard trial procedure is set out in the FTS and can be followed in full or varied by agreement. Parties intending to use the FTS should agree to do so in advance of the first CMC.
Again the scheme is voluntary with the aim of providing flexibility and choice to the parties and reducing the costs and time required for trial by streamlining what currently are the most costly and time consuming aspects of litigation.
Particularly complex cases or cases requiring wider disclosure will not be suitable for either of these two schemes. There will, however, under the 'standard' CPR, be a number of cases where the cost (in both legal fees and wasted management time) of running those cases is likely to be disproportionate to the sum in dispute.
If the case is sufficiently simple, the STS may provide a suitable alternative, and be well worth using. Certainly it could be a better alternative than deciding simply to write off a debt, or feeling obliged to agree an unsatisfactory compromise, just to avoid high costs.It is a viable alternative to expensive full blown litigation where even reasonably incurred costs in fighting the case may then not be allowed as recoverable by the court, at the end of the case, being then adjudged to be disproportionate to the sums involved and so held to be irrecoverable by the winning party.
Don't forget though, neither scheme is compulsory and there needs to be agreement on both sides to opt, or stay, in. Once in the STS, the parties and their representatives are also expected to co-operate with, and assist, the court in ensuring that the proceedings are conducted in accordance with the STS and its short timetable, so that the claim can be dealt with in the most efficient and cost-effective way possible.
Claimants should, however, be aware that the court is alive to the risk that a well-prepared claimant may attempt to use the STS to "ambush" a defendant during the pre-CMC period. The court may sanction such behaviour in costs if it considers that a claimant has acted in an oppressive or unfairly prejudicial manner.
Both the STS and FTS pilots will run until 30 September 2017. Full details can be found in Practice Direction PD51N of the CPR.
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