2025年10月21日
Disputes Quick Read – 2 / 105 观点
Updated: 21 October 2025 - The Practice Direction has now been published. See updated details below.
Recent developments signal a significant shift in court procedures in England and Wales. During an LSLA lecture on transparency and open justice, Mrs Justice Cockerill, recently appointed as Deputy Head of Civil Justice, outlined a pilot practice direction (PD) that will place select court documents squarely in the public domain via a new, public-facing side of the electronic court file (CE-File).
The new Practice Direction 51ZH – Access to Public Domain Documents has now been published and will come into force on 1 January 2026. The Judiciary website has also published a Guidance Note on the scheme.
The pilot will run for two years, from 1 January 2026 to 31 December 2027, which is significantly longer than the six-month period initially anticipated. However, there will be a review after six months. Below, we explore what this pilot entails, why it matters to litigants, and how you can best prepare for heightened transparency and potential public scrutiny.
Implementing Dring v Cape
The pilot marks the judiciary’s most recent effort to implement the landmark Supreme Court judgment (and subsequent High Court ruling) in Dring v Cape. Those decisions confirmed that open justice obliges courts to give access to documents placed before a judge and referred to by any party during trial, except where there is a compelling reason not to do so.
Public by default
Under the pilot, documents deemed 'public' would be placed on the public side of the CE-File. In addition to those documents that the public can currently access or apply to access, a potentially controversial category of documents termed those 'critical to understanding the case' will also be automatically available.
Currently, anyone (including journalists or other members of the public) seeking to access court documents can request and obtain most documents referred to in court hearings, provided they first apply for access and the court grants this access.
Under the pilot, however, the need to apply to the court will be removed. Instead, under the PD parties will need to publicly file the following documents deemed to be (Public Domain Documents):
While third parties can currently seek to access many of these documents, they are not automatically viewable. Under the pilot, these documents will be public by default.
There will, however, still be an opportunity to limit which documents, or specific information within them, are published – the intention is that this will be addressed with the judge at the hearing.
Documents critical to understanding the hearing
The most controversial provision is paragraph 8(g) of the Practice Direction, which empowers the judge to order the filing of documents not expressly listed in the Practice Direction where such documents are critical for understanding the hearing arguments. The Guidance Note clarifies that this provision is narrowly targeted, intended to capture only those documents where it would be artificial to treat them as non-public – typically where a document has been read out in open court (either in full or substantially in full), or where it has been referred to so extensively that the arguments become incomprehensible without it. The Guidance Note illustrates this with practical examples: a contract that forms the centrepiece of a construction argument about a single term, where understanding that term requires reference to multiple other provisions within the same contract; or a letter that has been essentially read out in its entirety and repeatedly referenced throughout the hearing, such that its exclusion would render the proceedings unintelligible.
Filing Modification Orders (FMOs)
Under the pilot, parties will be able remove or redact sensitive information through a mechanism known as Filing Modification Orders (FMOs). The court may make an FMO to prevent non-parties from obtaining copies of a document, waive or restrict the filing requirement, require documents to be edited or redacted before filing, extend or amend the filing period, or make such other order as it thinks fit.
FMOs may be made by the court of its own initiative or sought by any party or any non-party named or referred to in a Public Domain Document. Parties seeking an FMO must file a written request before the commencement of the expected filing period, whilst non-parties must file an application notice under Part 23. Once a request is made the Filing Period is suspended until that request is determined.
However, the default position will be that once documents are referred to in open court they become public.
Practicalities and Scope
One area of initial uncertainty was whether filing obligations under the PD would apply to documents generated prior to the start of the Pilot, if the hearing itself occurs after that date. The published Practice Direction confirms that it will apply to documents filed for or used in hearings taking place in public during the pilot period in both existing and new proceedings. This means that cases that are currently going through the relevant courts will be subject to the new rules starting 1 January next year.
The goal is not only to increase transparency in commercial litigation, but also to likely expand the measures to other courts in due course once lessons have been learned from the pilot scheme. The emphasis here is on reform from the ground up, with the potential for differing practices across different courts with different needs once those courts eventually test the PD. Ultimately, the pilot aims to align court processes with the fundamental principle of open justice, creating a default that documents introduced in public hearings should also be accessible.
Judges are expected to think carefully about the boundary between open justice and the need for litigants to protect sensitive or proprietary information. Under the pilot:
This emphasis on a case-by-case approach echoes the Transparency and Open Justice Board’s overarching view that no single rule fits all when balancing transparency against confidentiality.
With the Practice Direction now published, we would particularly emphasise:
The open documents pilot embodies a notable advance in the push for transparency, aligning with historic common law principles and responding to modern calls for greater public scrutiny. Nonetheless, many tactical and procedural questions remain, particularly around how judges will balance openness with genuine confidentiality needs.
Parties litigating in the commercial courts – from 1 January 2026 forward – should proactively prepare for the shift this pilot represents. We encourage you to reach out with any concerns about how these developments could affect your legal or commercial objectives.
Please contact our Disputes and Investigations team if you would like to discuss how the open documents pilot might affect your case or broader litigation strategy.
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