Q&As

What is the procedure for coming off the record? Does it require the client’s consent and/or co-operation for a solicitor to come off the court record?

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Produced in partnership with Chris Bryden of 4 King’s Bench Walk
Published on: 14 January 2019
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A solicitor is ‘on the record’ for a litigant where the address for service of a party is the business address of that solicitor unless and until the procedure in CPR 42 is complied with. CPR 42 applies where a litigant wishes to change their solicitor or where a party having previously conducted the claim by a solicitor intends to act in person. In these circumstances the party or solicitor must file a notice of the change and serve it on every party and on the former solicitor. The

Chris Bryden
Chris Bryden

Chris was called to the Bar in 2003 and since that time has built a busy practice across a range of areas, with an emphasis on Chancery practice. He enjoys a well-deserved reputation for his knowledge and expertise in each area. He appears regularly in the County Court, Family Court and the High Court as well as various specialist Tribunals, and has been involved in cases up to and including the Supreme Court. He regularly is instructed at Appellate level. He has extensive and wide-ranging experience particularly in the areas of wills, probate and inheritance disputes; property including adverse possession, boundary disputes and issues arising out of trusts of land; company and commercial work and financial remedies. Chris is head of the Family Group and head of the Property Team at 4KBW.

Chris is the author of numerous articles in publications such as the New Law Journal, Counsel and Family Law, amongst many other titles, and is the co-author of Social Media in the Workplace: A Handbook (2015, Jordan Publishing).

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United Kingdom

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