Breach of contract – a failure or refusal to carry out all or part of an agreed legal obligation, typically a failure to provide or pay for goods or services.
File – to submit or place a legal document or application in the court records. Also to upload a document to the online court.
Civil claim – a non-criminal legal case against an individual or a company for compensation and/or to assert a particular legal right.
Limitation period - a type of time limit. It refers to the amount of time you have got in which to start a civil claim.
Litigant in person – a person bringing or defending a claim without a solicitor or barrister.
Out of time - when you miss the deadline for starting court proceedings.
Personal injury – when you have suffered the sort of harm which leaves you with a physical or mental injury.
Pre action protocol - an official procedure explaining what you have to do before court proceedings start in some sorts of cases.
Primary limitation period – this refers to the basic three year (personal injury) and six-year time limits (contract and non-personal injury negligence).
Sanctions – the punitive action the court takes if somebody involved in the case fails to follow a rule or take a step in the proceedings that they’ve been ordered to take.
Serving the claim – formal delivery of your claim to the defendant once the case has been started.
Statute of limitations - The law that sets out the time limits within which court action must begin.
Strike out – if the court strikes out your case it means that you can’t carry on with it. It is ‘game over’. Sometimes the court might just strike out part of your case. In this situation you can only carry on with the bit that is left.
Time limit - a phrase you might hear as an alternative to ‘limitation period’. For example, ‘Are you within the time limit?’ Or ‘Are you out of time?’ It is also used to refer to the amount of time the court allows you to do something. For example, a court might ask you to produce photographs as evidence, and set a ‘time limit’ for doing this. Any time limits set by the court have to be taken very seriously. If you don’t follow them the court is likely to ‘strike out’ your case. Or you could find that the other side applies to the court to strike out your case if you haven’t done what the court has ordered you to do in the time allowed