CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)
Commercial Court

CL-2024-000457, 000458, 000459 - [2025] EWHC 1803 (Comm)

Fecha: 17-Jul-2025

On that question, in Ramburs Inc v Agrifert SA [2015] EWHC 3548 (Comm) at [10], Andrew Smith J considered that

A4.

On that question, in Ramburs Inc v Agrifert SA [2015] EWHC 3548 (Comm) at [10], Andrew Smith J considered that:

CPR PD62 para 12.6 is not concerned with a respondents’ notice resisting an appeal once leave has been given, but about a respondent’s notice opposing leave (or “permission”). That is clear from the wording of paragraph 12.6 itself, and put beyond doubt by the requirement that the accompanying skeleton argument provide an estimate for the time needed to deal with the application for leave. In this case, the court has granted leave, and the respondent’s notice is spent. It is … too late to amend it, but not for the reasons that Mr Nolan argued [Mr Nolan there, as here, taking the procedural objection on behalf of the respondent party]. A respondent to an appeal under section 69 is not obliged when resisting an application for leave to set out all the grounds on which he intends to resist the appeal: he is not obliged to oppose the application for leave (and serve a respondent’s notice) at all.