Tomlin order

Tomlin order

A Tomlin order is a court order in the English civil justice system under which a court action is stayed, on terms which have been agreed in advance between the parties and which are included in a schedule to the order. As such, it is a form of consent order. The order permits either party to apply to court to enforce the terms of the order, avoiding the need to start fresh proceedings. The terms of the schedule do not form part of the court order, so may remain confidential, and can include matters outside the jurisdiction of the court or the scope of the case in hand.

The order is named after the High Court judge Mr Justice Tomlin (as he then was), from his ruling in "Dashwood v Dashwood" ( [legal citation| [1927] WN 276, 64 LJNC 431, 71 Sol Jo 911] ) delivered on 1 November 1927, that such an order kept the proceedings alive only to the extent necessary to enable a party to enforce the terms of the settlement. In that case, Tomlin J held that a provision in the order which required one party to refrain from running a business in competition with the other party could not be enforced unless and until the court made an order for specific performance or for an injunction. Thus, any provisions in a Tomlin order which require action by the court, such as releasing funds held in court, or an order for costs, must be included in the body of the order, not the schedule. Until a second order has been sought, it is not possible to apply to commit the party in breach for contempt of court.

The following day, Tomlin J issued "Practice Note" [1927] WN 290, which set out a preferred form for such orders. A similar form of order appeared in the Rules of the Supreme Court and appears in the Civil Procedure Rules today. The form of the schedule is settled between the parties.

References

* [http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/inpractice/benchmarks/view=details.law?GAZETTEINPRACTICEID=280975 Tomlin: a guide to use and abuse] , "Law Society Gazette", 11 May 2006, p.28
*"Encyclopedia of Forms and Precendents", vol.16(2) "Family", para.82
*"Halsbury's Laws of England", Vol.37 "Practice and Procedure", para.1206
*"Civil Procedure Rules", [http://www.dca.gov.uk/civil/procrules_fin/contents/parts/part40.htm#rule40_6 rule 40.6]
*"Practice Direction - Judgments and Orders" (2001), [http://www.dca.gov.uk/civil/procrules_fin/contents/practice_directions/pd_part40b.htm#IDACORQD PD 40B, para.3]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Thomas Tomlin, Baron Tomlin — Thomas James Chesshyre Tomlin, Baron Tomlin PC (6 May 1867 ndash; 13 August 1935) was a British judge.On 11 February 1929, he was appointed Lord of Appeal in Ordinary and was created additionally a life peer with the title Baron Tomlin, of Ash in …   Wikipedia

  • Mike Tomlin — Tomlin coaching a regular season Steelers home game in 2007 Date of birth March 15, 1972 (1972 03 15) (age 39) Place of birth Newport News, Virginia, U.S. Position(s) …   Wikipedia

  • Maurice Tomlin — Major Maurice Hilliard Tomlin OBE (died 10 August 1945[1]) was a British Army and police officer. Tomlin was educated at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst and was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the Green Howards in February 1888.[2] He was …   Wikipedia

  • Mollie Tomlin — was a watercolour artist from Tasmania, Australia. She died in January 2009. Born Mollie Constance Wedd in 1923, her mother died when Mollie was three weeks old. Her father was shattered by his wife s death and despite trying to care for Mollie… …   Wikipedia

  • Word order — Linguistic typology Morphological Isolating Synthetic Polysynthetic Fusional Agglutinative Morphosyntactic Alig …   Wikipedia

  • Frequency and pragmatically unmarked word order — “Frequency and pragmatically unmarked word order” is a paper by Matthew Dryer, published in 1995 within the compilation Word Order in Discourse , analyzing various definitions of markedness as it might apply to word order. It advanced a… …   Wikipedia

  • E. W. F. Tomlin — Eric Walter Frederick Tomlin CBE (1913 1988) was a British essayist, known mostly for many books and articles on philosophical topics.He knew both T. S. Eliot and Wyndham Lewis, and wrote on them.LifeHe was head of the British Council in Japan… …   Wikipedia

  • Professional Darts Corporation — The Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) is a professional darts organisation, established in the United Kingdom during 1992 which split from the officially recognised British Darts Organisation. Barry Hearn, a long time established sports… …   Wikipedia

  • Split in darts — The Split in darts refers to an acrimonious dispute between top professional darts players and the game s governing body which began in 1992 and resulted in the formation of a new organisation to arrange tournaments including a second version of… …   Wikipedia

  • Chris Mason (darts player) — Chris Mason Personal information Full name Christopher John Mason Nickname Mace the Ace Born 17 December 1969 (1969 12 17) (age 41) Bristol, England …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”