High Court Ruling Permits Court Summons Via Facebook

A UK high court judge has permitted the serving of legal summons through Facebook according to a report from The Telegraph.

Mr Justice Teare ruled that TFS Derivatives, an investment broker, could use the social network to summon one its employees to court after a claim to a home address went unanswered.

Embracing social networks

Using social networks in legal matters is not entirely unprecedented in the UK. Last year, Hastings County Court granted solicitor Hilary Thorpe consent to use Facebook to summon a debtor to court for questioning. “It is great to see that the Courts are willing to embrace new technology,” Ms Thorpe said in a statement last year.

The Telegraph also reports that in 2009 Mr Justice Lewison granted an injunction against a defendant who could only be identified through his Twitter profile. Today’s ruling, however, is the first at the high court level and could open doors to further via-Facebook summons in the future.

“It’s a fairly natural progression. A high court judges has already ruled that an injunction can be served via Twitter, so it’s a hop, skip and a jump away from that to allow claims to be served via Facebook,” Jenni Jenkins, a lawyer for one of the parties involved in today’s case, told The Telegraph.

Mr Justice Teare’s decision to allow TFS Derivatives to serve a claim to Fabio de Biase via Facebook came after the broker stated that their employee may have moved home but was still active on the social network and had recently accepted friend requests. The precedent set out by the judge therefore would require a party to be unable to locate a defendant, thus necessitating contact through a social network.

Are you an expert on social networks? Take our quiz

Jiten Karia

Recent Posts

Hate Speech Watchdog CCDH To Quit Musk’s X

Target for Elon Musk's lawsuit, hate speech watchdog CCDH, announces its decision to quit X…

7 hours ago

Meta Fined €798m Over Alleged Facebook Marketplace Violations

Antitrust penalty. European Commission fines Meta a hefty €798m ($843m) for tying Facebook Marketplace to…

8 hours ago

Elon Musk Rebuked By Italian President Over Migration Tweets

Elon Musk continues to provoke the ire of various leaders around the world with his…

9 hours ago

VW, Rivian Launch Joint Venture, As Investment Rises To $5.8 Billion

Volkswagen and Rivian officially launch their joint venture, as German car giant ups investment to…

10 hours ago

AMD Axes 4 Percent Of Staff, Amid AI Chip Focus

Merry Christmas staff. AMD hands marching orders to 1,000 employees in the led up to…

13 hours ago

Tesla Recalls 2,431 Cybertrucks Over Propulsion Issue

Recall number six in 2024 for Tesla Cybertruck, and this time the fault cannot be…

14 hours ago