Case No. EWHC-185-(Admin)
Administrative Court

Case No. EWHC-185-(Admin)

Fecha: 31-Ene-2023

The need for precision.

Lord Hoffman ruled as follows:“One such objection, which applies to orders to achieve a result and a fortiori to orders to carry on an activity, is imprecision in the terms of the order. If the terms of the court's order, reflecting the terms of the obligation, cannot be precisely drawn, the possibility of wasteful litigation over compliance is increased. So is the oppression caused by the defendant having to do things under threat of proceedings for contempt. The less precise the order, the fewer the signposts to the forensic minefield which he has to traverse. The fact that the terms of a contractual obligation are sufficiently definite to escape being void for uncertainty, or to found a claim for damages, or to permit compliance to be made a condition of relief against forfeiture, does not necessarily mean that they will be sufficiently precise to be capable of being specifically enforced. So in Wolverhampton Corporation v. Emmons, Romer L.J. said, at p. 525, that the first condition for specific enforcement of a building contract was that'the particulars of the work are so far definitely ascertained that the court can sufficiently see what is the exact nature of the work of which it is asked to order the performance.'Similarly in