In this section we explain the main things you need to understand to get to grips with the idea of taking someone to court.
Civil courts
A civil court is a court which deals with claims between people, or between people and organisations. They deal with hundreds of thousands of legal disputes each year when one person or organisation claims that another person or organisation has done something wrong which has caused injury, damage, financial loss, or expense.
This guide focuses on the sort of disputes where the person bringing the claim wants the court to order the wrongdoer to pay compensation. Financial compensation awarded or agreed in court proceedings is often called ‘damages’.
There are different types of civil courts. The civil court that most people will come across is the county court. There is also the high court, but that deals with the most serious civil claims, generally ones worth over £50,000 for personal injury claims, or over £100,000 for other claims, or claims that are legally very complex. This guide focuses on everyday civil claims in the county court.
We talk about the court ‘doing’ things in this guide. For example, the court may ‘send’ out a form or ‘make’ a decision. You may be more used to thinking of the court as a place - a building. But ‘the court’ is often used as shorthand to refer to the people working in the court, whether they are a judge or other court staff.
Types of claim
A civil court can only deal with a dispute if there is a legal problem, with a legal solution.
The most common types of legal problem that you might take someone to court over are broken contracts, being owed money, and because you were injured. For example, a builder not finishing the work they agreed to, being owed money for work that you did and haven’t been paid for, or if you were hurt in an accident that wasn't your fault.
The most common legal solution is asking the court to award an amount of money as compensation.
The main types of legal claim that we cover in this guide are listed below. It is important to work out which type your problem comes under as different types of claim may have different rules:
Breach of contract claim
A ‘breach of contract’ claim is when someone or an organisation breaks a legal agreement you have with them, and you suffer a loss. A legal agreement doesn’t have to be in writing, it can be a verbal agreement (also called an oral agreement). In a claim over a debt or consumer problem, you must show that someone broke the contract that they had with you, for example an agreement between you and a shop for them to provide you with goods but they failed to provide the goods after you had paid for them.
Negligence
‘Negligence’ is a legal term for carelessness - a failure to behave with the level of care and duty that most people would expect. Sometimes this is also called a ‘breach of duty’ because they have failed to meet their duty of care towards you. For example, if your neighbour's builders are careless and drop a roof tile on your car. In this type of claim you have to show that someone has failed to exercise the level of care and skill that a reasonable person would have done, and that you suffered loss as a result.
Some claims can be both breach of contract and negligence.
Personal injury (including road traffic accidents) claims
You might see these types of claims abbreviated to PI for personal injury and RTA for road traffic accident.
Personal injury is one of the most common types of negligence claims. In a personal injury claim, you have to show that someone else is at fault, or mostly at fault, for causing your injury, by being negligent. To claim against your employer, you have to show they are to blame, for example by not having safe premises or equipment or a safe system of work. If you are injured in a road traffic accident, you have to show someone else was to blame, for example another driver, or possibly that the highway authority was responsible for the accident because they didn’t safely maintain the road. You also have to show that you have suffered an injury as a result.
Legal aid used to be available for many of these types of claim, particularly if they involved several thousand pounds, but generally this is no longer the case. (See What will it cost?).
Small claims
A ‘small claim’ is a claim that is worth compensation of £10,000 or less (however there are special rules for personal injury and housing disrepair small claims).
The small claims process is supposed to be relatively quick and easy, and you are not expected to need a lawyer to help you. Because of this any legal costs you pay if you lose, or get back if you win, are usually very limited.
The ‘small claims track’ is the name for the process that the court uses to deal with small claims, which is less formal than other types of claims.
A personal injury case is a small claim if the total value of the claim is worth up to £10,000, and the injury part of your claim is worth up to £1500. However, if the injuries were caused by a car accident the boundaries are a little different. If the care accident happened on or after 1st June 2021 it would be a small claim if the total value of the claim is £10,000 or less and the injury element is up to £5,000 and no other exceptions apply. If the car accident happened before that, it would be a small claim if the total value of the claim was up to £10,000 and the personal injury element was worth up to £1000. See How to make a small claim about injuries caused by a car accident.
A housing disrepair case is a small claim if the total value of the claim is worth up to £10,000, and where the cost of repairs is worth up to £1,000 (however, we don’t cover housing disrepair claims in this guide).
Fast track claims
Fast track claims are dealt with by the County Court. A ‘fast track’ claim is a claim that is not a small claim and is worth compensation of up to £25,000.
Litigant in person
A ‘litigant in person’ is someone who starts or responds to a claim without a lawyer. You may see this shortened to ‘LiP’. Since the withdrawal of legal aid for most civil claims in 2013, the majority of people who need to go to court can’t afford a lawyer and have to represent themselves, unless they can find free help, for example from a charity, or get alternative funding, for example through a Conditional Fee Agreement. See the section What does it cost? below for more information.
Although judges may be helpful to you as a litigant in person, you will be expected to follow the same court rules as litigants who are represented by solicitors or barristers.
Legal names
- ‘Claimant’ is what the law calls the person who starts court proceedings, the one taking the other person to court.
- The ‘defendant’ is the person or organisation being taken to court.
- ‘Other side’ is the informal term used by the claimant to refer to the defendant, and by the defendant to refer to the claimant.
- ‘Party’ is a legal term used for anyone who is a claimant or defendant in the case. ‘Parties’ are all the claimants and defendants in a case.
Going to court
The question ‘will I have to go to court?’ is often what worries people most when they are considering suing someone. Although we still talk about ‘going to court’ most civil cases don’t get as far as the final hearing (the trial) - which often takes place in a court building but could also take place remotely, with everyone joining by phone or video call. Although there is no guarantee that you will be able to sort out your individual case without going to a hearing trial, you may find it reassuring to know that statistically it is quite unlikely you will have to attend a court hearing, either in person or by phone or video call.
There are two common reasons why so few cases end up in a trial:
- You might win your case early on because the ‘other side’, the defendant, doesn’t respond to your claim in time.
- Both sides might reach an agreement and the case ends before it gets as far as the trial – this is very common.
Most cases settle because under modern court rules starting a legal case and going to trial are considered a last resort. Lots of cases settle before people start a civil claim or shortly afterwards. Small claims are now offered free mediation to help people come to an agreement. All the evidence on which both sides intend to rely has to be exchanged before the trial, including statements by the witnesses and this therefore allows both sides to see the strength of each other’s cases beforehand.
If you decide to take someone to court, there are many more things you need to know before you start a civil claim. See Things you need to know about court procedure before you sue
Online court
Some court processes are now online. This is intended to make the process easier for people to do without a lawyer as the online system guides you through all the steps so that there are fewer things you can get wrong. (That said HMCTS do make mistakes and Advicenow often highlight to Government areas where the people without a lawyer may be misled into thinking a system is more straight-forward than it is or where they may accidentally give up some important rights – please do read our guides where they are relevant as they will help you avoid common problems). Most claims about money for up to £10,000 can now be started and responded to online.