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| uk.legal.moderated (Legal Topics Relevant To UK Law - Moderated) (uk.legal.moderated) To enable contributors who have genuine legal problems to ask for practical advice from other people (lawyers or laymen) who have had to deal with similar problems in the past. Advertising is forbidden. |
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#1
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I have come across the ECHR case of LUORDO v. ITALY and BOTTARO v. ITALY 17.7.2003. Quote; Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, relied on in the Luordo v. Italy case The Court considered that this complaint was to be examined from the standpoint of the right of access to a court. It noted that from the time of the bankruptcy order it fell to the trustee in bankruptcy to represent the bankrupt in the courts in matters relating to his financial rights; the limitation on the right to bring judicial proceedings was intended to protect the rights of others, namely the bankrupt's creditors. Such a restriction on the right of access to a court was not open to criticism in itself. However, there was a risk that such a system might impose an excessive burden on the applicant, particularly in view of the length of proceedings which, in the present case, had lasted 14 years and 8 months. The Court considered that this restriction had not been justified throughout the proceedings, since although in principle limitation of the right to bring judicial proceedings was a necessary measure in order to achieve the aim pursued, the need for it diminished with the passage of time. In the Court's view, the length of the proceedings had therefore upset the balance to be maintained between the general interest in payment of a bankrupt's creditors and the applicant's individual interest in access to a court. *The interference with the applicant's right had therefore been disproportionate to the objective pursued.* The Court accordingly held that there had been a violation of the Convention in that respect. END QUOTE. How would this effect the length of a section 42 Order , in anyone's opinion ?. |
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#2
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"Bloomin Heck" wrote in message ... I have come across the ECHR case of LUORDO v. ITALY and BOTTARO v. ITALY 17.7.2003. Quote; Article 6 § 1 of the Convention, relied on in the Luordo v. Italy case The Court considered that this complaint was to be examined from the standpoint of the right of access to a court. It noted that from the time of the bankruptcy order it fell to the trustee in bankruptcy to represent the bankrupt in the courts in matters relating to his financial rights; the limitation on the right to bring judicial proceedings was intended to protect the rights of others, namely the bankrupt's creditors. Such a restriction on the right of access to a court was not open to criticism in itself. However, there was a risk that such a system might impose an excessive burden on the applicant, particularly in view of the length of proceedings which, in the present case, had lasted 14 years and 8 months. The Court considered that this restriction had not been justified throughout the proceedings, since although in principle limitation of the right to bring judicial proceedings was a necessary measure in order to achieve the aim pursued, the need for it diminished with the passage of time. In the Court's view, the length of the proceedings had therefore upset the balance to be maintained between the general interest in payment of a bankrupt's creditors and the applicant's individual interest in access to a court. *The interference with the applicant's right had therefore been disproportionate to the objective pursued.* The Court accordingly held that there had been a violation of the Convention in that respect. END QUOTE. How would this effect the length of a section 42 Order , in anyone's opinion ?. I think the issues are quite different. In bankruptcy the purpose is to protect the creditors. Once the estate has been administered and the bankruptcy has been discharged (two quite separate concepts) there is no longer any need for the protection. In the case of section 42, the order needs to remain in force so long as the danger of vexatious litigation remains. That may be for a very long time, as is apparent from the cases of some of those obsessives who have over the years pursued their hopeless cases through the courts, and sometimes via uk.legal. Andrew McGee |
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#3
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Andrew McGee wrote: I think the issues are quite different. Different in some respects but not others. In bankruptcy the purpose is to protect the creditors. Once the estate has been administered and the bankruptcy has been discharged (two quite separate concepts) there is no longer any need for the protection. In the case of section 42, the order needs to remain in force so long as the danger of vexatious litigation remains. That may be for a very long time, as is apparent from the cases of some of those obsessives who have over the years pursued their hopeless cases through the courts, and sometimes via uk.legal. I note that some vexatious litigants have been given unlimited Orders. That is effectively for life. Compare that to say a repeat burglar. He is clearly someone likely to commit again, so what do you propose jail him for life and be done with it ?. There surely is a much better and less oppresive method of controlling litigants that can and should be invoked BEFORE section 42 ?. Should that not be tried first, should the party not be made aware of his likelihood of being made subject to section 42 ?. Of course if a man commits murder one would expect him to know that he will likely be jailed for life or at least a long time.How/Is a litigant in person meant to know that if he has 2 cases struck out he will be given a "life sentence" (order) ?. |
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#4
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On Sun, 6 Jun 2004 13:25:05 +0100, Bloomin Heck
wrote: I note that some vexatious litigants have been given unlimited Orders. That is effectively for life. Compare that to say a repeat burglar. He is clearly someone likely to commit again, so what do you propose jail him for life and be done with it ?. There surely is a much better and less oppresive method of controlling litigants that can and should be invoked BEFORE section 42 ?. Should that not be tried first, should the party not be made aware of his likelihood of being made subject to section 42 ?. Of course if a man commits murder one would expect him to know that he will likely be jailed for life or at least a long time.How/Is a litigant in person meant to know that if he has 2 cases struck out he will be given a "life sentence" (order) ?. Have a look at http://www.treasury-solicitor.gov.uk...nts_policy.doc This outlines how the treasury solicitors' office will look at s42 orders. You'll see that orders are normally indefinite and that determinate periods are the exception rather than the norm. That's why lists of vexatious litigants include orders made in the 19th Century Also they won't normally consider a s42 application until there are 6 or more unmeritorious claims. In any event an order under s42 is not a total ban as the claimant can still issue proceedings if they get prior leave of the court. If a person is deemed to have previously been determined to be abusing the law where is their a detriment in them having to establish the validity of a claim before they can issue it. And before there are too many bleatings about the human rights of the claimant put yourself in the position of the defendants in these proceedings who have to deal with situations that have gone why beyond what should be encountered - they have rights too. Nigel ======================== Replace spamhater with n |
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#5
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Nigel wrote: Also they won't normally consider a s42 application until there are 6 or more unmeritorious claims. Who won't , and please define "unmeritorious" .thanks And before there are too many bleatings about the human rights of the claimant put yourself in the position of the defendants in these proceedings who have to deal with situations that have gone why beyond what should be encountered - they have rights too. Of course ,but those defendants must have done to warrant an issue of the proceedings one would guess. Also, is it not excessive to impose a life sentence before trying the matters ?. |
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#6
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In article ,
Bloomin Heck wrote: Of course ,but those defendants must have done to warrant an issue of the proceedings one would guess. One would be wrong to jump to that conclusion. That kind of assumption would seem to me to precisely underline one of the kinds of problems that lead to vexatious litigation. That is, in some cases, litigants really _do_ wind up with a world view that is completely out of kilter with reality. And you really _do_ need a mechanism for managing them, such as the "vexatious litigant" system. And it's a pretty mild restraint that is imposed, all things considered. -patrick. |
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#7
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"Bloomin Heck" wrote in message ... Nigel wrote: Also they won't normally consider a s42 application until there are 6 or more unmeritorious claims. Who won't , and please define "unmeritorious" .thanks And before there are too many bleatings about the human rights of the claimant put yourself in the position of the defendants in these proceedings who have to deal with situations that have gone why beyond what should be encountered - they have rights too. Of course ,but those defendants must have done to warrant an issue of the proceedings one would guess. Also, is it not excessive to impose a life sentence before trying the matters ?. In my experience, you can get caught up in these things through no fault of your own. I am a trustee of a fund where two beneficiaries fell out. Just defending my position as impartial, I ran up costs of nearly 100k. The matter settled and I got my costs back, but there's no compensation for all the hassle. |
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#8
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Patrick Gosling wrote:
One would be wrong to jump to that conclusion. That kind of assumption would seem to me to precisely underline one of the kinds of problems that lead to vexatious litigation. That is, in some cases, litigants really _do_ wind up with a world view that is completely out of kilter with reality. And you really _do_ need a mechanism for managing them, such as the "vexatious litigant" system. And it's a pretty mild restraint that is imposed, all things considered. Just to underline this point, in Bhamjee, Mr Bhamjee started to sue all the lawyers (in particular barristers) who appeared against him. One of the things that influenced the court of appeal against him was that he appeared to be trying to discover the addresses of his opponents' barristers (who were representing other barristers sued by Mr Bhamjee) in order to sue them as well. That is as stupid as a football manager suing the other side's players because they scored goals against him. Obviously, in my profession, we get a lot of hostile litigation and complaints against us. In any case that gets to trial one side at least is likely to loose. They will be looking for someone to blame and we are an obvious target. All litigants can't be right (at least 50% must be wrong), but few are prepared to recognise that their own cases might have any weaknesses. Up to a point all of this is just a risk of the job, and we do have a certain amount of insurance, but left to themselves the Mr Bhamjees of this world would tie up all our time defending misconceived claims and we would never be able to live our lives. The court system would also waste a lot of its time and resources on such things. Most normal litigants, even quite obsessive litigants in person, get nowhere near to being vexatious. The line is quite hard to cross, you have to be someone who really won't take anyone else's advice and won't stop when advised to do so. Francis Davey |
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