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29 November 2024 / Sarah Jane Cartlidge
Issue: 8096 / Categories: Features , Costs , Insurance / reinsurance
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Non-party costs orders: are the tides turning?

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Successful non-party costs orders against credit hire operators are swelling in number: Sarah Jane Cartlidge considers whether these are just a drop in the ocean
  • 2023-24 has seen a number of persuasive or binding cases where the courts considered it just to make a non-party costs order against a credit hire operator.
  • The hire companies involved in the cases were considered to be the real beneficiaries of the credit hire claim and were intrinsically linked to the litigation.
  • There was no requirement to prove a link between the hire company’s involvement in the litigation and the costs incurred.

In 2023-24, there has been a number of high-profile cases where defendants have been successful in obtaining non-party costs orders (NPCOs) against credit hire operators (CHOs) in cases where credit hire is claimed, and the defendants had obtained a costs order which the claimant themselves had not been able to discharge.

Is this a turn in the tide? Are these cases gamechangers in sending a message to the CHOs that if you benefit from claims, then

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HERBERT SMITH STAFF PENSION SCHEME (THE “SCHEME”)

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND BENEFICIARIES UNDER SECTION 27 OF THE TRUSTEE ACT 1925
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