
Case Handling
An illustrated View from the Bench
Nicholas Chambers(Author)
Wildy, Simmonds and Hill Publishing
Published on 17. October 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
55 pages
978-0-85490-147-0 (ISBN)
Description
'Experience of all sorts at the Bar and on the Bench has led to the thought that a few timely words could avoid a lot of grief as well as perhaps bringing a smile or two from the pictures.'
At the Bar Nick Chambers did a great variety of cases ranging from the miners' respiratory claims to the Kuwait Airways litigation. On the Bench his job was to manage and try cases as the Mercantile Judge for Wales and Chester and then for Wales as well as sitting in London in the Commercial Court and other jurisdictions. He was a member of the Civil Procedure Rule Committee at the time of the introduction of the Woolf reforms. He now practices as an arbitrator and mediator from Brick Court Chambers.
The Chambers family's involvement with watercolours goes back to 1779 with an ancestor's sketches during the Siege of Gibraltar. Since then each generation has made its own contribution including scenes from Mumbai in the V&A and the first illustrations of the rules of rugby football done at the school in 1845. Illustrations and texts from Nick's book Missed Moments in Legal History hang in the Rolls Building. The pictures in Case Handling pay a further happy tribute to his past.
This book, with its pithy advice and attractive illustrations, makes taking the serious medicine of case handling a pleasure both for the recently qualified and anyone else with an interest in making dispute resolution work.
At the Bar Nick Chambers did a great variety of cases ranging from the miners' respiratory claims to the Kuwait Airways litigation. On the Bench his job was to manage and try cases as the Mercantile Judge for Wales and Chester and then for Wales as well as sitting in London in the Commercial Court and other jurisdictions. He was a member of the Civil Procedure Rule Committee at the time of the introduction of the Woolf reforms. He now practices as an arbitrator and mediator from Brick Court Chambers.
The Chambers family's involvement with watercolours goes back to 1779 with an ancestor's sketches during the Siege of Gibraltar. Since then each generation has made its own contribution including scenes from Mumbai in the V&A and the first illustrations of the rules of rugby football done at the school in 1845. Illustrations and texts from Nick's book Missed Moments in Legal History hang in the Rolls Building. The pictures in Case Handling pay a further happy tribute to his past.
This book, with its pithy advice and attractive illustrations, makes taking the serious medicine of case handling a pleasure both for the recently qualified and anyone else with an interest in making dispute resolution work.
More details
Edition
UK ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 213 mm
Width: 164 mm
Thickness: 3 mm
Weight
134 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-85490-147-0 (9780854901470)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
At the Bar Nick Chambers did a great variety of cases ranging from the miners' respiratory claims to the Kuwait Airways litigation. On the Bench his job was to manage and try cases as the Mercantile Judge for Wales and Chester and then for Wales as well as sitting in London in the Commercial Court and other jurisdictions. He now practices as an arbitrator and mediator from Brick Court Chambers.
Content
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Why am I Reading This?
Identifying the Problem
Is there a Case?
Strategy
Funding
Telling the Other Side
Responding
Correspondence
Litigants in Person
Settlement
Costs
Statements of Case
Directions and Case Management Conferences
Preliminary and Other Issues
Applications
Orders and Breaches of Orders
Problems
Disclosure
Witnesses
Expert Witnesses
Bundling
Skeleton and Authorities
Some Facts about Judges
Some Things that Judges Don't Like
Some Things that Judges Do Like
Foreword
Why am I Reading This?
Identifying the Problem
Is there a Case?
Strategy
Funding
Telling the Other Side
Responding
Correspondence
Litigants in Person
Settlement
Costs
Statements of Case
Directions and Case Management Conferences
Preliminary and Other Issues
Applications
Orders and Breaches of Orders
Problems
Disclosure
Witnesses
Expert Witnesses
Bundling
Skeleton and Authorities
Some Facts about Judges
Some Things that Judges Don't Like
Some Things that Judges Do Like