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Lawbite: double trouble – multiple proceedings considered an abuse of process
- United Kingdom
- Litigation and dispute management
- Real estate
- Real estate dispute resolution
26-07-2016
A claim to determine the meaning of the term “market value” in a pre-emption agreement was struck-out for being an abuse of process under CPR 3.4, as a pre-existing (continuing) claim was capable of determining the issue. Streather and Walsh, the administrators of the deceased’s estate, had brought a claim against Bodker seeking rescission of the pre-emption agreements on the basis that the deceased had been misrepresented and placed under undue influence in entering into the agreements. Two years later, a further claim was brought (while the aforementioned claim was on-going) seeking a declaration as to the meaning of the term “market value” within the pre-emption agreements. They claimed that it should include the value of the property to a purchaser with a special interest. Bodker successfully submitted that the administrators were required to bring forward their whole claim in one action and that seeking to run a fresh claim simply to determine the legal meaning of a term which could have been dealt with in the first claim was an abuse of process, as it created a multiplicity of proceedings. (1) Bruce Godfrey Streather (2) Jonathan Patrick James Walsh v Christopher Charles Bodker [2016] EWHC 1311 (Ch)
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