The tenth edition of Costs & Funding following the Civil Justice Reforms: Questions & Answers publishes with the White Book 2024. Depending on which format of the White Book you choose, your free copy will be delivered in the same format: it will be published in print, as an eBook using the award-winning ProView app, and online with the White Book on Westlaw.
Costs & Funding following the Civil Justice Reforms: Questions & Answers is a unique book. Produced in conjunction with Practical Law, this practical and accessible book tackles common practitioner questions on the effects of the 2013 Jackson reforms on costs and funding. It not only states the law, as set out in the latest legislation, court rules, forms and case law, but also identifies and, where possible, tackles issues and inconsistencies. It sets out to answer questions posed on topics ranging from funding of litigation, case and costs management and proportionality to settlement offers, QOCS and summary assessment. The new edition adds a significant number of new questions and answers; updates the existing questions and answers and revised commentary in light of new and ongoing case law and legislation in the fast-evolving costs and funding landscape post-Jackson.
Each chapter starts with introductory commentary covering relevant legislation, case law and the ongoing reforms arising from Lord Justice Jackson’s Review of Civil Litigation Costs: Final Report followed by the questions and answers, sub-divided under topics.
Edited by former Senior Costs Judge Peter Hurst with contributions from a top team of costs and funding experts: District Judge Simon Middleton; Roger Mallalieu K.C., Judith Ayling K.C., Nicola Greaney K.C. and Shaman Kapoor, this is an authoritative and unique book that any practitioner involved with costs cannot afford to be without.
Subscribers to the White Book Service 2024 are offered this book – worth £110 – gratis as part of their subscription.
The new edition covers changes made by recent CPR and legislation updates:
Other important new developments are covered:
New significant case law includes:
Please note this book is included with The White Book 2024 Service