Questions tagged [england-and-wales]

Questions specific to England and Wales

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What is the law regarding playing in the street?

It is being reported that claims are made that is can be against the law for children to play in the street. Liz Swift thought a basketball hoop on wheels pushed to the corner of her street on sunny ...
User65535's user avatar
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-2 votes
1 answer
72 views

Issues with asking if legal action have been taken? [closed]

I was working for a forum and have since left. To cut a long story short, I have an intrusive thought all day every day that he's going to take legal action against me, since we had a data breach(I've ...
SpoiltAroma14's user avatar
-1 votes
3 answers
168 views

Perverting the Course of Justice - Does deception fit this crime? [closed]

My question: Does Perverting the Course of Justice 'apply' to those who try and garner 'evidence' using somewhat deceptive means, even if the evidence they intend to gain is accurate and lawful? ...
SpoiltAroma14's user avatar
6 votes
1 answer
996 views

Do I need a licence to fly a drone in public?

If I practice flying a drone in a public park not over gardens or using the camera for looking into windows do I need a licence?
Heddy's user avatar
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-5 votes
2 answers
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Dispensing items free for restricted purposes

Suppose a grocery chain charges £0.3 for carrier bags but gives out smaller and slightly flimsier ones for free, but they are imagined as only to be used for fresh produce to be weighed. Bob sees them ...
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-3 votes
2 answers
105 views

In the context of third-party murder, is an unborn foetus a separate living thing? [duplicate]

Bob stomps on Alice's pregnant stomach, thereby causing the latter to miscarry. Did the former individual commit murder if the latter survived the assault? Alice shoots Bob's pregnant stomach, thereby ...
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1 vote
1 answer
134 views

What law could criminalise using prank calls to expose politicians?

It is in the news that a campaign group Led by Donkeys has made prank calls to politicians to show how willing they are to work with commercial companies for £10,000 a day. Former minister Stephen ...
User65535's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
1k views

Is it legal for a disability accomodation to inconvenience able-bodied people?

About 10 people and I cycle to work and have to swipe a card on a post to get through the gates. Now, someone in a wheelchair has started working here too, and because the post's position was ...
Heddy's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
19 views

Under what rules may money judgments be granted during possession proceedings?

Money awards are regularly granted in the course of possession proceedings, but what rule or rules of law enable and govern this practice?
Seeking answers's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
42 views

Is it ever possible to "sell" the right to action a tort?

Suppose Bob discriminates against Alice on a date 1/1/2023. Alice has a right to sue Bob for this discrimination for some limited period, but she doesn't care to bother with the hassle of pursuing ...
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2 votes
1 answer
84 views

Can a periodic tenant unilaterally lower his rent, with binding effect if the landlord does not properly appeal the notice within 3 months?

Section 6, HA1988 provides: (2)Not later than the first anniversary of the day on which the former tenancy came to an end, the landlord may serve on the tenant, or the tenant may serve on the ...
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1 vote
1 answer
64 views

Does S5(5A), Housing Act 1988 have any effect on typical PRS tenancies?

S5(5A), Housing Act 1988 refers to rights "of pre-emption": (5A)Nothing in subsection (5) affects any right of pre-emption— (a)which is exercisable by the landlord under a tenancy in ...
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24 votes
2 answers
9k views

Do cats have a "right to roam" in the UK?

I've seen numerous sources, including the RSPCA, making claims along the lines that cats in the UK have a "right to roam", are "free spirits", and therefore that cat owners cannot ...
Jez's user avatar
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1 vote
2 answers
96 views

Computer Misuse Act 1990 - Definition of unauthorised

My question is: What does "Unauthorised" mean? The legislation claims that it means not having "Consent" to access the system - does this refer to implicit or explicit? For example,...
AnotherUser's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
1k views

When does name-calling become slanderous?

Usually, the difference between ordinary insults/name-calling and actionable slander is taken to be that non-actionable insults are either subjective statements that can't unambiguously be determined ...
Vikki's user avatar
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4 votes
1 answer
1k views

What is the difference between the terms defendant and Respondent?

It seems that there is perhaps a trend toward less adversarial terminology, so I wonder if it is that defendant was a more traditional term used exclusively historically, while Respondent has now ...
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1 vote
1 answer
102 views

Is it normal for district judges first instance decisions to be appealed to circuit judges in other locations?

A judgment from clerkenwell and Shoreditch county court district judge (swan) was appealed to a circuit (?) judge in central London (Luba). Isn’t the point of a circuit judge that they are the more ...
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1 vote
1 answer
76 views

Could Julian Assange have elected for the portions of his extradition proceedings conducted at Westminster magistrates to have been in crown court?

Parts of the extradition proceedings thus far of Julian Assange have taken place in Woolwich Crown Court, others in the old Bailey, others like his post-triumph bail hearing and also monthly case ...
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19 votes
7 answers
5k views

Are there any laws against either excessively loud motorcycles or riding such motorcycles inconsiderately in residential areas at night?

Loud disturbing motorcycles are awful but occasionally circle around certain roads after midnight up and down gratuitously if the objective is actually transportation. One would hope that there are ...
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-3 votes
1 answer
206 views

Is it legal in England for unpasteurised dairy products to be sold in retail stores?

I understand that it is not legal to sell unpasteurised dairy products in retail stores in England, at least in the case of raw milk. (It must be purchased directly from farmers.) But then one sees ...
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2 votes
1 answer
74 views

What provision of the CPR requires any parties who might possibly be claimants to an action to be made defendants if they are not?

A blog site mentions a provision requiring all parties who might be a party to a claim to be listed as defendants if they are not participating as claimants, but I cannot find it again now that I want ...
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2 votes
2 answers
134 views

If there is an error in a webpage that forms a contract how is that resolved?

Ecommerce websites tend to make the details of the sale a contract. For example a website that auctions used cars states predominantly: Your bid is a contract between you and the listing creator. If ...
User65535's user avatar
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0 votes
0 answers
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What is the legality and consequence of blocking one who submits a SAR? [duplicate]

Alice submits a subject access request to Bob via WhatsApp, Bob responds to this by blocking Alice, but otherwise ignores her. What is the legality and consequences of Bob’s response to her SAR?
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7 votes
1 answer
2k views

Minimum penalty for extradition makes no sense?

I have been looking into extradition law, focusing on the United Kingdom (England and Wales jurisdiction) wanting to extradite an individual back from a country abroad. There are many factors to ...
user5623335's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
120 views

Access rights to professional photographs

An independent professional photographer uses a sales tactic of candidly taking photos of others in public and then approaching them and offering them copies for a price. Suppose one of these ...
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0 votes
1 answer
85 views

Who is the data controller of footage taken on a retail worker’s personal phone?

An on-duty retail employee draws their personal smartphone while in uniform and commences recording a customer. Who is the data recorded and held/controlled by, for GDPR purposes? Does the customer ...
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0 votes
2 answers
513 views

Can a customer of a business make a recording of an employee on the business’s privately premises?

Suppose a customer enters a store. The business, through an employee, treats the customer unlawfully. Perhaps this is by verbally or physically abusing them, discriminating against them, or denying ...
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-1 votes
1 answer
68 views

What connections do different locations of county court in Greater London area have with one another? [duplicate]

Do county courts throughout the London area share any closer of a connection than do a county court in Bristol and one in York? And how do they all bind each other? It has been said in past answers ...
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4 votes
1 answer
314 views

What is the “prayer” in a claim?

A blog refers to certain things not having been pleaded/specified in the “prayer”. What does this refer to?
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0 votes
1 answer
30 views

What is needed to access the written materials in a case?

County court decisions tend to be public. Some refer to other case documents such as particulars of claim or defence statements etc, sometimes by precise paragraphs. Suppose a member of the public ...
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0 votes
2 answers
129 views

Does a county court circuit judge’s decision in Birmingham bind a district judge in London?

They are more senior but in a different region of the English “county court.” So how does this work?
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0 votes
0 answers
38 views

How may one break down this neutral citation “[2022] EW Misc 8 (CC)“ [duplicate]

[2022] EW Misc 8 (CC) Normally instead of EW I would expect to see EWCA. and instead of Misc. I would expect to see Civ. On top of that, what does CC mean in this?
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3 votes
2 answers
57 views

Do tribunals have inquisitorial powers?

In England, tribunals are intended to be more informal and therefore accessible venues of justice where the parties cannot be expected to conduct proceedings with full legal competence. In a pure ...
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1 vote
1 answer
47 views

Do any judicial bodies in England have inquisitorial powers?

England mostly follows common law, an adversarial system which is the opposite of the inquisitorial judicial system. That said, are there deviations and variations from this in any of its judicial ...
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3 votes
1 answer
96 views

Why does the high court of chivalry follow “civil law,” and what does this mean?

The English so called high court of chivalry, archaic and now rarely used, is said by Wikipedia to follow civil law (ie not common law). How does this work, and how did it come to be? https://en.m....
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3 votes
1 answer
201 views

what courts are bound by the decisions of the privy council?

Which levels of other courts are its decisions binding or not binding on, if English courts don’t actually appeal to it? To rephrase the question for greater clarity: Essentially, of courts that don’t ...
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7 votes
3 answers
2k views

broker cancelled life insurance policy without authorization [closed]

Back in 2018 we had a life insurance policy that was set up in 2007, we were selling our house and buying another, our broker wanted to make sure we were covered as we were taking on a bigger debt. ...
Cheryl's user avatar
  • 81
0 votes
1 answer
78 views

Are there any opportunities to Socratically question an opposing counsel on their legal arguments in a civil trial?

According to this answer, https://law.stackexchange.com/a/90414/48046 Opposing counsel was called as a witness for examination in the American scopes trial. Is such a practice allowed in English trial ...
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9 votes
2 answers
1k views

Is cross examination strictly confined to the subjects that the original examination pertained to, or can the opposing party make their own points?

Pretty straightforward question, really: what are the topical constraints of cross examination with reference to examination? Suppose party A calls witness W to the stand to ask them questions about ...
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2 votes
1 answer
106 views

What sorts of “necessities” could married women enter contracts for?

A recent answer by @Ohwilleke on the historical status of married women lists the limited types of contracts they could enter into. One of these of those for necessities. What is referred to by this?
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0 votes
1 answer
98 views

Are there any crimes or civil wrongs in disingenuously wasting another’s time?

Suppose that one phones you and states that they have a Nigerian princes inheritance which they would like to arrange to send to you. Or that they would like to donate some money to your organisation ...
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3 votes
1 answer
105 views

How do lower level (county or magistrates) courts in the City of London differ in their jurisdictions from those in the surrounding boroughs?

Because the City of London has certain aspects of municipal autonomy, are there restrictions on their equivalence with the rest of the county or magistrate court system? In general any county court ...
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8 votes
2 answers
2k views

In a civil trial, can a party “call” its opponent’s witnesses in making its case?

I mean, as opposed to merely cross-examining them in the course of the opposing side’s presentation of their case. A closely related question asks of calling the defendant itself, though not its ...
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-2 votes
2 answers
86 views

In a criminal trial, what is the sequence of proceedings? [closed]

Does the prosecution advance their own case first, calling their witnesses, examining them before the defense cross examines them, all before the defense then presents their case, calling each of ...
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1 vote
1 answer
53 views

What does it mean that the RPT tribunal member in this case was “also sitting as a district judge of the county court”?

In this case one of the tribunal judges is indicated as having been sitting as a judge of the county court, even though the claim had been brought in the first tier tribunal of residential property. ...
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2 votes
1 answer
65 views

How does a body corporate get sentenced for criminal offences?

Some criminal offences specifically state that if they are committed by the officer of a body corporate then they along with the body corporate itself may be simultaneously processed against as well ...
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0 votes
2 answers
54 views

Is there a practical way to see the actual rulings/reasons/considerations that resulted in the litigation bars in effect against vexatious litigants?

There is a register of bans available at https://www.gov.uk/guidance/vexatious-litigants, but it is just the barest list of names. Where can one find any more details on each of these cases?
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2 votes
1 answer
289 views

Do all legal persons have human rights?

For example, a corporate legal person can be proceeded against with criminal charges. Instinctively, one would be inclined to apply such "human" rights as that to a fair trial in protecting ...
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2 votes
2 answers
110 views

How did the right for peers to be tried by peers end in 1948?

In another question's comments is claimed that the right for aristocratic peers to be tried by their own kind had ended in 1948. How and why did it end then?
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4 votes
2 answers
788 views

Can private prosecution be brought against anoymous identifying placeholder?

In a civil case, the proper name of the defendant need not be known and it can simply be filed against "the individual with this phone number" and their identity possibly later subpoenaed ...
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