Reed Smith In-depth

Key takeaways

  • Determining the jurisdiction in which a claim will be heard is important and may have a significant impact on the outcome of a case
  • The English courts continue to warn of the time and cost spent on jurisdiction battles and the need for proportionality
  • How should a party balance submitting sufficient evidence to meet the required legal test of a “good arguable case”, with the need for efficiency and proportionality

作者: Catherine Lewis Mark Pring Timothy Killen

In this article, Catherine Lewis and Mark Pring at Reed Smith and Timothy Killen of 2 Temple Gardens discuss some of the practical issues faced by parties and the tensions involved, and what parties can do when navigating challenges to the jurisdiction of the English courts.

We continue to see regular disputes over the jurisdiction in which a claim should properly be determined. The context for such disputes can take a range of forms, including: conflicting or ambiguous contractual provisions, claims involving subsidiary company wrongdoing where only the parent company is in the jurisdiction, claims involving multinational operations where loss occurs in one country but events (including relevant management decisions) take place in another, and wholly “foreign” claims against overseas domiciled entities or individuals but which involve an English domiciled “anchor” defendant.

Whilst we focus on the issues that arise where a claimant is seeking to assert the jurisdiction of the English court over a defendant located outside the jurisdiction, the principles regarding the approach to factual and expert evidence apply in a similar fashion to challenges concerning whether a dispute should be heard in arbitration proceedings or in court.1