The claim form
The claim form (Form N1) must contain a concise statement of the nature of the claim and a ’statement of value’. This states the amount the creditor is claiming and whether s/he expects to recover:
•not more than £10,000; or
•more than £10,000, but not more than £100,000; or
•more than £100,000.
The amount claimed includes the court fee paid by the creditor to issue the proceedings and, if a solicitor has been instructed, an amount for the solicitor’s costs. The court fee and solicitor’s costs vary with the amount claimed. The claim form must state the amount of any interest claimed up to the date of judgment.
Details of the court of issue (usually, the County Court Business Centre) and the unique reference number allocated to the case appear in the top right corner of the claim form.
The claim form must be sent to (‘served on’) the client within four months of issue. This is usually done by the court by first-class post. The claim form is usually deemed to have been received on the second business day after it was posted – ie, if posted on Monday, it is deemed to have been received on Wednesday (Saturdays, Sundays, Bank Holidays, Christmas Day and Good Friday are not counted).1r6.14 CPR; Anderton v Clwyd County Council (Adviser 93 abstracts) In Business Centre cases, the claim form is deemed to have been served five days after issue. The five days includes weekends and bank holidays. See here if the client states that s/he did not receive the claim form before judgment was entered or any enforcement action taken by the creditor.