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Allocation questionnaire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An allocation questionnaire is a form used in English legal practice. After a claim is made, if a defence is filed each party is required to complete and return an allocation questionnaire to the court so that the judge may properly allocate the claim to a track and give further directions towards a final hearing.

Forms on the Internet

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Sample allocation questionnaires are available on the Internet. The official UK Courts web site has many forms available, including the allocation questionnaire.[1] The actual form is available, as of March 2007, as a pdf file.[2]

The Citizens Advice Bureau provides a generic legal advice web site with information about the words and phrases used in small claims procedure in UK Courts.[3]

The form itself

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The allocation questionnaire is a Pivotal Point in the judicial process requesting the following information:

  • Whether you wish to have a month to settle the case.
  • What is the location or venue of the case, and why it is chosen.
  • Whether any pre-action protocols applied, and whether these were complied with.
  • What is the amount of the claim in dispute.
  • Who you will call as lay or expert witnesses.
  • Whether the case should be considered small claims, or another track.
  • How long you think the trial will take.
  • How much your costs will be (in Pounds sterling).[2]

Tracks

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There are three tracks:[4]

  1. Small claims - any claim up to £10,000 and certain personal injury and tenant claims under £1,000.
  2. Fast track - disputes involving between £10,000 and £25,000.
  3. Multi-track - disputes that are claimed to be over £25,000, or in certain cases where the claim is for less than £25,000 but the complexity of the evidence and/or legal issues to be decided means the claim is better suited to the Multi-track, particularly where a claim will take more than 1 day to try. All Part 8 proceedings are allocated to the Multi-track.[2]

The Woolf Report had recommended these changes in 1999 to the Lord Chancellor.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "UK Courts forms". Archived from the original on 6 July 2010. Retrieved 3 April 2007.
  2. ^ a b c "PDF file of the allocation questionnaire" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2007. Retrieved 3 April 2007.
  3. ^ AdviceGuide.org.uk from the Citizens Advice Bureau.
  4. ^ "CPR 26.1(2)". Archived from the original on 6 September 2008. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
  5. ^ Woolf Report online