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The Conditional Fee Agreements Regulations 2000 © Crown Copyright 2000 The legislation contained on this web site is subject to Crown Copyright protection. It may be reproduced free of charge provided that it is reproduced accurately and that the source and copyright status of the material is made evident to users. It should be noted that the right to reproduce the text of Statutory Instruments does not extend to the Royal Arms and the Queen's Printer imprints. The text of this Internet version of the Statutory Instruments has been prepared to reflect the text as it was Made. The authoritative version is the Queen's Printer copy published by The Stationery Office Limited as the The Conditional Fee Agreements Regulations 2000 , ISBN 0 11 098922 8. For details of how to obtain an official copy see How to obtain The Stationery Office Limited titles To ensure fast access over slow connections, large documents have been segmented into "chunks". Where you see a "continue" button at the bottom of the page of text, this indicates that there is another chunk of text available.
The Lord Chancellor, in exercise of the powers conferred on him by sections 58(3)(c), 58A(3) and 119 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990[1] and all other powers enabling him hereby makes the following Regulations: Citation, commencement and interpretation 1. - (1) These Regulations may be cited as the Conditional Fee Agreements Regulations 2000. (2) These Regulations come into force on 1st April 2000. (3) In these Regulations -
(b) is liable to pay the legal representative's fees in respect of those services; and
Requirements for contents of conditional fee agreements: general
(b) the circumstances in which the legal representative's fees and expenses, or part of them, are payable, (c) what payment, if any, is due -
(ii) irrespective of whether those circumstances occur, and (iii) on the termination of the agreement for any reason, and (d) the amounts which are payable in all the circumstances and cases specified or the method to be used to calculate them and, in particular, whether the amounts are limited by reference to the damages which may be recovered on behalf of the client. (2) A conditional fee agreement to which
regulation 4 applies must contain a statement that the requirements
of that regulation which apply in the case of that agreement have
been complied with.
(b) must specify how much of the percentage increase, if any, relates to the cost to the legal representative of the postponement of the payment of his fees and expenses. (2) If the agreement relates to court proceedings, it must provide that where the percentage increase becomes payable as a result of those proceedings, then -
(ii) the legal representative or the client is required by the court to disclose to the court or any other person the reasons for setting the percentage increase at the level stated in the agreement, he may do so,
(ii) any amount in respect of the percentage increase is disallowed on the assessment on the ground that the level at which the increase was set was unreasonable in view of facts which were or should have been known to the legal representative at the time it was set, that amount ceases to be payable under the agreement, unless the
court is satisfied that it should continue to be so payable, and
(ii) the legal representative agrees with any person liable as a result of the proceedings to pay fees subject to the percentage increase that a lower amount than the amount payable in accordance with the conditional fee agreement is to be paid instead, the amount payable under the conditional fee agreement in respect of those fees shall be reduced accordingly, unless the court is satisfied that the full amount should continue to be payable under it. (3) In this regulation "percentage increase"
means the percentage by which the amount of the fees which would be
payable if the agreement were not a conditional fee agreement is to
be increased under the agreement.
(b) if the client requires any further explanation, advice or other information about any of those matters, provide such further explanation, advice or other information about them as the client may reasonably require. (2) Those matters are -
(b) the circumstances in which the client may seek assessment of the fees and expenses of the legal representative and the procedure for doing so, (c) whether the legal representative considers that the client's risk of incurring liability for costs in respect of the proceedings to which agreement relates is insured against under an existing contract of insurance, (d) whether other methods of financing those costs are available, and, if so, how they apply to the client and the proceedings in question, (e) whether the legal representative considers that any particular method or methods of financing any or all of those costs is appropriate and, if he considers that a contract of insurance is appropriate or recommends a particular such contract -
(ii) whether he has an interest in doing so. (3) Before a conditional fee agreement is
made the legal representative must explain its effect to the client.
(b) there are no circumstances in which the client may be liable to pay any costs in respect of the proceedings, paragraph (1) does not apply.
(b) the obligations under regulation 4 apply in relation to the amendments in so far as they affect the matters mentioned in that regulation. Revocation of 1995 Regulations (This note is not part of the Regulations) Section 58(1) of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 provides that a conditional fee agreement is not unenforceable if it satisfies certain conditions. These include conditions to be specified in regulations under section 58(3) of that Act. Regulations 2 and 3 specify those conditions. Regulation 2 applies to all conditional fee agreements. Regulation 3 sets out further requirements applying only to agreements which provide for success fees. Section 58A(3) enables the conditions which may be prescribed for conditional fee agreements to include requirements for the person providing advocacy or litigation services to have provided prescribed information before the agreement is made. Regulation 4 imposes such a requirement and specifies what information is to be given. It does not apply where the agreement is between legal representatives. Regulation 5 requires that agreements other than those between legal representatives must be signed by the client and the legal representative. Regulation 6 provides for similar requirements to apply as respects amendments of agreements. These regulations replace the Conditional Fee Agreements Regulations 1995, which are revoked. Notes: [1] 1990 c. 41; sections 58 and 58A are substituted by section 27 of the Access to Justice Act 1999 (c. 22); section 119 is an interpretation provision and is cited because of the meaning given to the word "prescribed".back
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