Professional Training

Default & Debarring Orders - A Guide for Litigators - Webinar

Length
0.5 hours
Next course start
Available On-Demand See details
Course delivery
Self-Paced Online
Length
0.5 hours
Next course start
Available On-Demand See details
Course delivery
Self-Paced Online

Course description

The Courts have increasingly shown a willingness to sanction a party in deliberate and sustained breach of a court order. This can mean that a party in default may be debarred from participating in proceedings. You will require a full understanding of how this procedure works to then advise your client accurately on how to proceed.

Katie Dyson presents this concise and informative webinar which will consider the circumstances in which the court may make a debarring order and the important policy reasons behind them, as well as providing practical advice on the evidence a respondent will be required to adduce in order to resist such an application.

Upcoming start dates

1 start date available

Available On-Demand

  • Self-Paced Online
  • Online
  • English

Outcome / Qualification etc.

Following all MBL courses, a certificate of attendance will be provided for those who are required to evidence their CPD activity to a professional body.

Training Course Content

Introduction

In recent years, the courts have increasingly demonstrated a willingness to sanction a party in deliberate and sustained breach of a court order. Where proportionate and just, the party in default may be debarred from participating in the proceedings.

This webinar will consider the circumstances in which the court may make a debarring order and the important policy reasons behind them.

It will provide practical advice on the key principles the court will consider and the evidence a respondent will be required to adduce in order to resist such an application.

What You Will Learn

This short webinar will cover the following:

  • The important policy reasons behind debarring orders and how these shape the court’s approach
  • The circumstances in which it may be appropriate to issue an application for a debarring order
  • The six principles the court will consider, as set out in Michael Wilson & Partners v Sinclair
  • The interplay between debarring orders and Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights
  • The evidence that is required in order to resist an application
  • The court’s approach to proportionality

Expenses

From £99
MBL Seminars Limited
C/o Law Business Research
Holborn Gate, 330 High Holborn
WC1V 7QT London

MBL Seminars Limited

MBL is a leading learning and development provider for professional service firms. Over the past 18 years, more than 198,000 people across 23,000 different organisations spanning 81 countries, have chosen us to deliver their training. With over 800 expert speakers...

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