On the subject of a part 36 offer:
context: I am considering offering a part 36 to settle outside of court. this is quite a serious case, and I would be the prosecution side, with a member of my family as the defendant. There is overwhelming evidence on my side, and it is essentially assured I would win this case in a court of law.
However, I have my future to think about, and would rather make an offer to settle for a monetary settlement. 2 questions:
1. it must specify a period of not less than 21 days within which the defendant will be liable for the claimant’s costs (the “Relevant Period”) (36.5(1)(c)) - what does this mean! - non legal jargon please. Break it down - a lot!
And if this is in context of law firm costs (which is what I'm kinda getting from online), is there a specific term I would need to include in the offer to negate this?
2. in lieu of actually presenting this offer - because of certain time restrictions and problems, I was along the mind of presenting this family member (alongside a legal rep. of course) with the evidence and the charges I would pursue, and then the actual offer to settle. Would this not be a good way to do it? - I cannot seek legal advice as of yet, so am stuck on the web asking questions.
Also, this would be an abuse case, so is this a personal injury part 26 offer, or not ?
1 answer
If you want to negate the inclusion of law firm costs in your Part 36 offer, you can state that the offer is exclusive of these costs.
2. Presenting the evidence and charges to your family member, along with the Part 36 offer, could be a good way to settle the case outside of court. However, it's important to ensure that the offer is presented in writing and clearly sets out the terms and conditions of the settlement, including the Relevant Period.
This is not a personal injury Part 26 offer. Part 26 deals with the procedure for claims, and your case appears to fall under Part 36, which deals with settlement offers.