Approximately 80 CFA judgments between 1997 and 2010 touched upon civil procedure. About a quarter of those decisions concerned the CFA’s own procedures (i.e. when leave to appeal will be granted), and almost as many dealt with costs. Far fewer addressed weightier matters such as pleadings or evidence. An examination of some of the CFA’s decisions is a worthwhile exercise given the significance to practitioners and their clients of what the court’s members said from 1997 to 2010. This paper will do so in the sequence that procedural issues are usually encountered by parties (i.e. pleadings followed by discovery and so on). It is not a review of every case considered by the CFA – or even of every case on a specific issue – but a ‘snapshot’ t...
Reports on research into the extent to which eight county courts have succeeded in using case manage...
Anciently, regulations of pleading and practice were principally of judicial origin. Some were the r...
Procedural rules reflect different, often competing, interests. The rules governing applications to ...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
In 2011 the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit decided a number of cases of fir...
The Second Circuit during the 1977-78 term decided a number of significant cases comfortably contain...
In my view, the story of the last ten years in civil procedure is the slow but inexorable creep of i...
Unfortunately, any objective evaluation of current federal civil process will inevitably lead to the...
In 2007 and in 2009, the Supreme Court decided two cases that have proven immensely controversial: B...
As a topic of my thesis I chose one of the fundamental topics of the civil procedure, because in the...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Often, members of the public become engaged (or enraged) when they read about Supreme Court decision...
The amendments to the civil rules continue a process of transition from legal formulas toward adapta...
This survey contains only a handful of the hundreds of decisions rendered last year by the Georgia a...
Professors choosing a civil procedure book have always faced difficult dilemmas. The breadth vs. de...
Reports on research into the extent to which eight county courts have succeeded in using case manage...
Anciently, regulations of pleading and practice were principally of judicial origin. Some were the r...
Procedural rules reflect different, often competing, interests. The rules governing applications to ...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
In 2011 the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit decided a number of cases of fir...
The Second Circuit during the 1977-78 term decided a number of significant cases comfortably contain...
In my view, the story of the last ten years in civil procedure is the slow but inexorable creep of i...
Unfortunately, any objective evaluation of current federal civil process will inevitably lead to the...
In 2007 and in 2009, the Supreme Court decided two cases that have proven immensely controversial: B...
As a topic of my thesis I chose one of the fundamental topics of the civil procedure, because in the...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Often, members of the public become engaged (or enraged) when they read about Supreme Court decision...
The amendments to the civil rules continue a process of transition from legal formulas toward adapta...
This survey contains only a handful of the hundreds of decisions rendered last year by the Georgia a...
Professors choosing a civil procedure book have always faced difficult dilemmas. The breadth vs. de...
Reports on research into the extent to which eight county courts have succeeded in using case manage...
Anciently, regulations of pleading and practice were principally of judicial origin. Some were the r...
Procedural rules reflect different, often competing, interests. The rules governing applications to ...