Q&As

The Family Procedure Rules 2010 provide that a party may put written questions about an expert's report to a single joint expert within ten days beginning with the date on which the expert's report was served. Can a question be put to a single joint expert after the expiry of ten days and is the permission of the court required to do so?

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Produced in partnership with David Salter
Published on: 30 April 2024
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Family Procedure Rules 2010 (FPR 2010), SI 2010/2955, 25.10(2) is specific in providing that written questions to an expert must be put within ten days of the date on which the report was served, unless the court directs otherwise. In practice, some experts will answer questions put (shortly) outside this time window. However, the other party would then be entitled to object to the expert’s

David Salter
David Salter

Solicitor (non-practising)


David Salter has enjoyed a varied career in family law with over 45 years’ experience. He served as National Head of Family Law at Addleshaw Goddard and, subsequently, as Joint National Head of Family Law at Mills & Reeve, retiring in 2018.

From 1997-1999, David was Chairman of Resolution, also acting as the first Chairman of Resolution’s Accreditation Committee. He subsequently became President of the International Academy of Family Lawyers from 2010 to 2012, having previously served as the Academy's European Chapter President.

He has sat in various part-time judicial posts since 1985 sitting regularly as a deputy High Court judge and Recorder in the Family Court until March 2022. He now conducts private financial dispute resolution appointments.

David was one of the original members of the Family Procedure Rules Committee which framed the 2010 Rules, serving a ten-year term from 2004 to 2014.

He is a prolific author on a variety of family topics with an acknowledged expertise in relation to pensions on divorce. He is a contributor to the Family Court Practice (The Red Book), Butterworths Family Law Service, Rayden and Jackson, the International Family Law Practice and LexisPSL Family. 

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Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom

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