Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 October 2022
This chapter recognises the practical reality that in high-value, cross-border commercial litigation it is frequent to see claimants making applications for more than one type of interim relief. In addition to a freezing injunction and an ancillary disclosure order, the complexity of the facts and the defendant’s conduct may lead the claimant to apply for an anti-suit injunction, an anti-enforcement injunction, a Norwich Pharmacal order and/or a receivership order. It is suggested that this potential for a ‘kitchen sink’ approach to interim relief raises concerns about the financial pressure on defendants, the pressure on the English courts, and the consistency of the courts’ reasoning relating to the extraterritorial scope of interim relief. The significance of taking into account the pressure on the courts cannot be underestimated as the potential for delays resulting from interim relief may undermine access to justice. The chapter examines the relationship between freezing injunctions and other types of interim relief.
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