Legal language
We try to explain any legal language as we go along, but there is also a What does it mean? section at the end.
Small claim?
In a small claim you are given a very short amount of time for the trial, perhaps only an hour. So, anything you can do to avoid wasting time by hunting for the right piece of paper will help you. And having your papers well organised can help you organise your thoughts too.
You don’t have to prepare a trial bundle and index if your case is being dealt with in the small claims track, although people often do because it is useful to avoid hunting through loose documents. If you have more than a few pages, it is easier to have all your documents in a ring binder, with pages numbered, and indexed. This allows everyone to find the relevant document easily, and it saves the court time.
This guide is also for people supporting litigants in person, for example Support Through Court volunteers, Citizens' Advice volunteers, housing support workers, advice workers, as well as relatives and friends.
We try to explain any legal language as we go along, but there is also a What does it mean? section at the end.
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January 2024
A ‘trial bundle’ is a collection of the documents relevant to your civil claim organised in the way you and the other side and the judge will use them at the trial. The court expects a trial bundle to be in a sensible order and, unless it consists of only one or two short documents, put together in a ring binder or lever arch file, with page numbers written in the middle of the bottom of each page.
‘Index’ just means list - that is a list at the front of all the documents with their page numbers, just like chapter headings at the front of a book.
So, although it sounds complicated, the trial bundle is a pack of papers with a list at the front showing what is in it that you have to provide for the court and the defendant. It pulls together all the relevant information and evidence in one place to provide a history of the case.
It depends. Usually, the person who started the claim has to prepare the bundle but where that person does not have a solicitor, the rules can change. If you are a litigant in person and the other side is legally represented, the court might order the other party to do the job - for everyone’s convenience. If you have had a hearing and received a court order setting out the timetable for the case, check it carefully to see if it mentions who must prepare the trial bundle.
Even if the court does not order the other side to prepare the trial bundle you can ask the other side if they will do so. They may have better access to the documents that are going to make up the bulk of the bundle and a commercial photocopier. This is more likely if the defendant is your employer, or they are represented by an insurance company. However, doing this in a fast track case could add to the legal costs you pay if you lose the case.
If the other party is in charge of preparing the trial bundle, make sure they include the documents you want in the bundle.
If you are responsible for preparing the trial bundle, there are now services you can pay to produce the bundle for you, once you have decided what needs to go in it and agreed the contents with the other side. You upload your documents and order them and they number them, create an index, and put them into one document for you. As always, read reviews and check that it will provide what you need for a court in England and Wales.
The court may give you instructions (in the order for directions) about what to include in the bundle. Read what the court has asked you to do very carefully. You may, for example, be asked to include a short case summary (250 words max) outlining what you and the other side still disagree about. This order may also direct how the court wants the bundle presented, for example, in a lever-arch file or ring binder and with each page clearly numbered.
Get together all the paperwork which supports your claim and challenges what the defendant says or is claiming. You also have to include anything relevant that existed before you started your claim (for example, payslips, contract of employment, work rotas) even if they do not help your case.
Never put original documents in the bundle but take them with you to the trial in case the judge has any queries about them.
If you include a document in your bundle that is not in your List of documents, the other side will object and you will have to explain to the judge why you are only producing it now. It’s possible the judge may not allow you to use it.
The list below represents the usual, suggested order to put your documents in. It’s best to group similar items (for example invoices) together, rather than to itemise them individually in your index.
To get the bundle agreed, just send the other side a copy of the index – your list of what the bundle will have in it. At this stage, don’t include any page numbers on your index because you haven’t finalised what is going in it. The other side may want documents taken out or added.
If you cannot agree, the documents in dispute are put in a second bundle. There is no need to send them the actual documents along with the index.
If you do have to produce the trial bundle, you usually have to give it to the court and give the other side a copy not more than 7 days and not less than 3 days before the start of the trial (or as directed by the court).
You also need to make a copy for yourself and one to take with you to court for the witness box – for the people who will need it, like witnesses and experts.
Stick to the deadline for preparing the indexed bundle and giving it to the court. If it’s not possible to agree the bundle with the other side then you should still provide the court with a copy of your own bundle. Make sure you have all the emails showing how you tried to agree the contents of the bundle with you at court, so the judge can see it’s not your fault.
You should be able to look down the index, find the document you are interested in, turn to the page it says it is at, and find it there. It makes finding things much quicker as long as you make sure the documents are in the order the index says they are in, and that every sheet of paper is numbered in order in the middle of the bottom of the page.
At the trial you can say to the judge ‘please will you look at page 38 in the bundle’ and if everyone quickly and correctly finds the same page, then you have prepared your bundle successfully.
IN THE [Type or write in the name of the court] COURT Claim No: [Type or write in the case number]
BETWEEN [Insert name] Claimant And [Insert name] Defendant _____________________ Index to trial bundle _____________________ Description of Document Page number Claim Form 1 - 2 Particulars of Claim (including medical report) 3 – 20 Defence 21 - 24 Order for directions dated 1st November 2018 25-26 Agreed Case Summary 27 Witness statement of the Claimant 28 – 32 Exhibit to the witness statement of the Claimant 33 – 35 Witness statement of Mr X 36 – 39 Exhibit to the witness statement of Mr X 40 – 42 Witness statement of the Defendant 43 – 47 Witness statement of Y 48 – 51 Exhibit to the witness statement of Y 52 – 56 DVLA document V5C 57 – 60 MOT test certificate 61 – 62 Repair & Care Recovery and Storage Invoice 63 |
Allocation - the process of deciding which track the case should follow.
Directions questionnaire - a questionnaire that helps the court decide how to deal with your case and which track to allocate (transfer) your case to.
Disclosure - the process of showing the relevant evidence to the other party.
Expert evidence - this is evidence of an expert’s opinion, of what they think or believe about something.
Filing – giving the court a document or copy
Index - a document at the front of the trial bundle listing all the documents in the bundle and their page numbers.
Indexed bundle of documents - a pack combining both parties’ documents with a list at the front showing what is in it.
Notice of proposed allocation - a notice is a bit like a letter. This notice tells you which track the judge thinks is suitable for your case. This could be the small claims track, the fast track, the intermediate track or the multi-track. It also tells you to complete a directions questionnaire.
Pagination - giving numbers to the pages of the bundle. So, a ‘paginated’ bundle is one where the pages have been numbered in the middle of the bottom of each page.
Pre-trial checklist - a form you use to tell the court how your case is progressing in the run up to the trial.
Serving a bundle – giving the other side the bundle.
Trial bundle - a collection of documents relevant to a civil claim which is used at the trial.
Trial window – the particular period of time during which your case is likely to be heard. The court may ask you for information about when you can and can’t attend during that period.
Request to inspect - this refers to your right to ask to see and check the original documents supporting the other party’s case. It’s no longer common to do this unless one party suspects the other has tampered with originals.
Settled - you reach an agreement with the other party which concludes the case.
Witness statement - a document in which someone explains what they saw, did or heard
Simultaneous exchange - this is when the parties to a case exchange their witness statements at the same time on the same day.
Statements of case – the court documents in which you and the other side present and argue each side of the case. So, a claim form, particulars of claims, counterclaim or defence are all ‘statements of case’.
The information in this guide applies to England and Wales only. The law may be different if you live in Scotland or Northern Ireland. The law is complicated. We have simplified things in this guide. Please don’t rely on this guide as a complete statement of the law. We recommend you try and get advice from the sources we have suggested.
The cases we refer to are not always real but show a typical situation. We have included them to help you think about how to deal with your own situation.
This guide was produced by Law for Life's Advicenow project. We would like to thank everybody who commented on the guide including editorial teams at Thomson Reuters who kindly peer reviewed this updated version.
Thank you to Katherine Wagg from University of Law who peer reviewed it.
This guide was updated thanks to funding from the Ministry of Justice.
Please tell us about your problem. Knowing more about our users and what you found useful helps us get funding to keep our website going. We also want to hear if there is anything you didn’t like or couldn’t find so that we can be even more useful. It is OK to skip questions – but please press ‘submit’ at the end as otherwise we don’t get your response.
January 2024