I will try to keep this brief, just to double check things relating to service of documents.
We have an application hearing next month and court instructed to serve Witness Statements/Evidence no later than 14 days before the hearing.
I may have ran dates down to the wire while finishing up some details in my WS. Letters were sent out on the same date 26 Dec 2019 before 4pm, to be filed with court and served to the defendants. The hearing is for 14 January 2020.
All my letters are normally posted first class with signed-for service (being overcautious). Although it can be argued that 1st class with proof of postage or just tracking is sufficient.
The court received the letter today but the defendant, who is a company, may be closed for holidays. So the post message shows "address inaccessible" and will "try again tomorrow". This may be due to nobody being around to sign and it may well be the same tomorrow.
Is the letter deemed "served"or the defendants can try to argue they did not receive it 14-days before the hearing?
Part 6.26 of the CPR shows accepted methods and deemed service
PART 6
https://www.justice.gov.uk/courts/pr...es/part06#6.26
If to be on the safe side, is it an option to serve in person with a witness?
We have an application hearing next month and court instructed to serve Witness Statements/Evidence no later than 14 days before the hearing.
I may have ran dates down to the wire while finishing up some details in my WS. Letters were sent out on the same date 26 Dec 2019 before 4pm, to be filed with court and served to the defendants. The hearing is for 14 January 2020.
All my letters are normally posted first class with signed-for service (being overcautious). Although it can be argued that 1st class with proof of postage or just tracking is sufficient.
The court received the letter today but the defendant, who is a company, may be closed for holidays. So the post message shows "address inaccessible" and will "try again tomorrow". This may be due to nobody being around to sign and it may well be the same tomorrow.
Is the letter deemed "served"or the defendants can try to argue they did not receive it 14-days before the hearing?
Part 6.26 of the CPR shows accepted methods and deemed service
PART 6
https://www.justice.gov.uk/courts/pr...es/part06#6.26
If to be on the safe side, is it an option to serve in person with a witness?
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