Interim payments, periodical payments and provisional damages

Interim payments

A defendant may make a voluntary interim payment at anytime, including before proceedings have been issued. A claimant can make an application for an interim payment at any time after proceedings have been issued and the time provided for filing an acknowledgment of service has expired. The permission of the court must be obtained before making a voluntary interim payment in respect of a claim by a child or protected party.

Pursuant to CPR 25.23, the court can only order a defendant to make an interim payment in one of the following situations:

  1. the defendant has admitted liability to pay damages or some other sum of money to the claimant

  2. the claimant has obtained judgment against the defendant for damages or some other sum to be assessed (this does not include costs)

  3. the court is satisfied that, if the claim went to trial, the claimant would obtain judgment against that defendant for a substantial sum of money (other than costs), whether or not that defendant is the only defendant or one of several

Where an interim payment

To view the latest version of this document and thousands of others like it, sign-in with LexisNexis or register for a free trial.

Powered by Lexis+®
Latest PI & Clinical Negligence News

Actions for unlawful police detention and QOCS protection in mixed claims (ALK and another v The Chief Constable of Surrey Police)

PI & Clinical Negligence analysis: In an appeal heard by Mr Justice Bourne, the High Court held that the arrests of a married couple, both of whom were serving Metropolitan Police officers, by Surrey Police were unlawful. The court found that the arresting officers had not given appropriate consideration to voluntary attendance for interview as a less intrusive alternative under section 24 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE 1984) and Code G. The court stressed that the ‘necessity’ limb in PACE 1984, s 24 is an important constitutional safeguard, following a line of authority that stresses strict adherence to PACE 1984—an officer who gives no real consideration to alternatives runs the ‘plain risk’ of being found to have had no reasonable grounds to believe arrest was necessary. The court therefore allowed the liability appeal. This decision is an important reaffirmation of the strict operational limits on arrest powers. On costs, the court provided useful guidance as to the starting point in mixed personal injury claims, confirming that properly supported PI claims should attract QOCS protection. Bourne J concluded that the claimants’ pleaded and evidenced psychiatric injury claims meant the proceedings could properly be regarded as a personal injury action ‘in the round’ for QOCS purposes, and that the trial judge’s enforcement order permitting 70% of the defendant’s costs should not have been made, under the mixed-claim discretion in CPR 44.16. Written by Connor Wright, barrister, St Philips Chambers.

View PI & Clinical Negligence by content type :

Popular documents