A v A (Arbitration Guidance) [2021] EWHC 1889 (Fam)
Judgment date: 09 July 2021
Related
P v B (Permission to appeal an arbitral award: children) [2025] EWFC 69 (B)
Judgment date: 10 January 2025
https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewfc/b/2025/69
Permission to appeal heard by HHJ Robertson involving a challenge to an arbitral determination in a children matter. Held that the powers of an arbitrator to re-open issues in a case are different to those of
On v On [2024] EWFC 379
Judgment date: 11 December 2024
https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewfc/2024/379
HHJ Booth (now retired), sitting as a High Court judge, considered whether the duty of full and frank disclosure ends at the arbitration hearing, the judgment, and also whether the arbitral award should be treated as a
Will Delays in Converting Arbitral Awards into Court Orders Deter the Use of Arbitration?
https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewfc/2024/379
‘There is a common misconception that the use of arbitration, as an alternative to the court process in financial remedy cases, is the purview only of the rich who seek privacy, away from the courts and the eyes of the media. If
Read the journal
Financial Remedies Journal – 2025 Issue 2 | Summer
Related
P v B (Permission to appeal an arbitral award: children) [2025] EWFC 69 (B)
Judgment date: 10 January 2025
https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewfc/b/2025/69
Permission to appeal heard by HHJ Robertson involving a challenge to an arbitral determination in a children matter. Held that the powers of an arbitrator to re-open issues in a case are different to those of
On v On [2024] EWFC 379
Judgment date: 11 December 2024
https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewfc/2024/379
HHJ Booth (now retired), sitting as a High Court judge, considered whether the duty of full and frank disclosure ends at the arbitration hearing, the judgment, and also whether the arbitral award should be treated as a
Will Delays in Converting Arbitral Awards into Court Orders Deter the Use of Arbitration?
https://caselaw.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ewfc/2024/379
‘There is a common misconception that the use of arbitration, as an alternative to the court process in financial remedy cases, is the purview only of the rich who seek privacy, away from the courts and the eyes of the media. If
Latest
Promises Unkept: Unpaid Child Maintenance and the Price of Inaction
Unpaid child maintenance remains one of the most persistent and under-addressed financial injustices affecting separated families in England and Wales. The failures of the CMS destabilise the very integrity of financial provision for children post-separation.
Finality and Funding: a Further Thought on CC v UU Concerning the Availability of LSPOs for Enforcement Proceedings
In the case of CC v UU, concerning post-final order LSPOs, did Peel J fall into error? Should the judgment have been decided differently?
She Who Laughs Last? Pets, Perpetuities, and Other Problems with the Last Will and Testament of Taylor A. Swift.
Taylor Swift's 'Anti-Hero' may be the only pop song to feature a contentious probate dispute. This article considers the drafting problems of Taylor Swift's Will from the perspective of the law of England and Wales.