06-30-2026, 03:16 PM
Yes. If it is only 29 pages total and about 1 MB, it is comfortably within the email limits. That is nowhere near 25 sheets/50 sides of A4 when printed double-sided, so there is no point arguing with the court about it further. Just file it by email. If they still refuse for some reason, then it can be printed and posted, but on those figures it ought to be acceptable by email.
The practical point is that the page and size limits are only really relevant to the court’s copy because that is the copy the court may have to print onto the paper file.
There is no need to worry about those limits for the claimant’s copy or your own copy. Gladstones can be served electronically and you can keep your own electronic set without any issue. So the only question is whether the pack being emailed to the court fits within the County Court email limits. On 29 pages (sides of A4) total, it plainly does.
The practical point is that the page and size limits are only really relevant to the court’s copy because that is the copy the court may have to print onto the paper file.
There is no need to worry about those limits for the claimant’s copy or your own copy. Gladstones can be served electronically and you can keep your own electronic set without any issue. So the only question is whether the pack being emailed to the court fits within the County Court email limits. On 29 pages (sides of A4) total, it plainly does.
Never argue with stupid people. They will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience. - Mark Twain

