Limitation Act 1939

The Limitation Act 1939 (2 & 3 Geo.6 c.21) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that simplified the law relating to limitation periods in England & Wales. The Act was based on the fifth report of the Law Revision Committee and is divided into 3 parts, with Part I dealing with limitation periods, Part II dealing with exceptions and Part III dealing with general matters.[2]

Limitation Act 1939
Citationc.21
Dates
Royal assent[1] 25 May 1939
Commencement1 July 1940
Other legislation
Repealed byLimitation Act 1980
Status: Repealed

Section 2 of Part I introduces a new limitation period; six years for all cases in tort and contract. The period runs from the point where the injury or problem was created, not from when it was discovered; thus, the Act replicates problems later solved by the Limitation Act 1963. Part II allows for a "resetting" of the limitation period in situations where the party is insane, not a legal adult or imprisoned for either the death penalty or for penal servitude.[3]

References

  1. "Royal Assent (Hansard, 25 May 1939)". Hansard. 25 May 1939. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  2. Unger (1940) p.45
  3. Unger (1940) p.46

Bibliography

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