Administration of Justice Act 1970
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Administration_of_Justice_Act_1970 an entity of type: WikicatUnitedKingdomActsOfParliament1970
The Administration of Justice Act 1970 (c. 31) is a UK Act of Parliament. Section 11 reforms the Debtors Act 1869 by further restricting the circumstances in which debtors may be sent to prison. Section 40 includes a number of provisions forbidding creditors such as debt collection agencies from harassing debtors, including: Section 1 transferred certain non-family matters away from what was then called the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division and renamed it as the Family Division.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Administration of Justice Act 1970
xsd:integer
28060016
xsd:integer
1102114660
xsd:integer
197
rdf:langString
yes
rdf:langString
An Act to make further provision about the courts , their business, jurisdiction and procedure; to enable a High Court judge to accept appointment as arbitrator or umpire under an arbitration agreement; to amend the law respecting the enforcement of debt and other liabilities; to amend section 106 of the Rent Act 1968; and for miscellaneous purposes connected with the administration of justice.
rdf:langString
Parliament of the United Kingdom
rdf:langString
Administration of Justice Act 1970
rdf:langString
Amended
rdf:langString
Act
rdf:langString
The Administration of Justice Act 1970 (c. 31) is a UK Act of Parliament. Section 11 reforms the Debtors Act 1869 by further restricting the circumstances in which debtors may be sent to prison. Section 40 includes a number of provisions forbidding creditors such as debt collection agencies from harassing debtors, including:
* Excessive demands for payment
* Falsely claiming that criminal proceedings will follow after failing to pay a debt
* Falsely pretending to be officially authorised to collect payment
* Producing false documents claiming to have some official status that they do not have Section 36 was enacted to return the law to the position which it was generally thought to be, and applied by the courts since the mid 1930s, before the landmark bar to adjournments applied by the courts since 1962 in the decision of Birmingham Citizens Permanent Building Society v Caunt [1962] which had put an end to a practice under which mortgage possession summonses were adjourned to give the mortgagor an opportunity to pay by instalments. It had intended to restore the position to what it had previously been thought to be. The section did not however cover those mortgages excluding section 103 of the Law of Property Act 1925. Section 1 transferred certain non-family matters away from what was then called the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division and renamed it as the Family Division.
xsd:date
1970-05-29
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
3337