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SQE · Free Mock Test 187 of 250

Free SQE Mock Test 18720 Questions + Full Answers

Solicitors Qualifying Examination · Trainee solicitors · SQE1 sits: Jan & Jul

Sections: FLK1 · Applaa proprietary paper — free to download and print

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Applaa SQE Mock Test 187

applaa-sqe-mock-187.pdf · 20 questions

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Sample Questions — SQE Mock 187

8 of 20 shown

Correct answers highlighted in green. Full explanations included.

1
FLK1

A claimant (Yasmine) has brought an action against a defendant (Nora) in the County Court for breach of contract, claiming £7,500 in damages. The defendant has filed a defense. In accordance with the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR), which track will this claim be allocated to?

  • A.Small Claims Track
  • B.Fast Track
  • C.Intermediate Track
  • D.Multi-Track
  • E.Commercial Court Track

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: CPR Track Allocation The Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) allocate civil claims to one of four procedural tracks based primarily on *financial value* (and sometimes complexity). Each track has different procedural rules, costs caps, and hearing formats. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Claim Value: The claim is for £7,500. 2. Apply the Track Thresholds: - Small Claims Track: £10,000 (for most claims; £1,000 for personal injury/housing disrepair) - Fast Track: > £10,0

2
FLK1

A claimant was injured when a defendant (Henry), who was engaged in delivering expired pharmaceuticals, caused an accident. The defendant admits they owed the claimant a duty of care and breached it, but argues that the claimant's own negligence contributed to the injury. Under the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945, what is the legal effect of contributory negligence?

  • A.It acts as a complete defense, and the claimant receives no damages.
  • B.It reduces the claimant's damages to the extent that is just and equitable, reflecting the claimant's share of responsibility.
  • C.It has no effect on damages but requires the claimant to pay the defendant's legal costs.
  • D.It shifts the burden of proof to the claimant to show that they took all reasonable precautions.
  • E.It renders the claim null and void, requiring allocation to criminal arbitration.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Contributory Negligence (Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945) Contributory negligence is a partial defence - it does not defeat the claim entirely, but reduces the damages awarded to reflect the claimant's own responsibility for their injury. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Defence: Henry admits negligence but argues the claimant also contributed to their own injury (e.g., not wearing a seatbelt, failing to follow safety instructions). 2. Legal Effect (LRCNA 194

3
FLK1

A customer (Victoria) is walking down a warehouse aisle when a heavy crate falls from a high shelf and injures them. The claimant has no evidence of what exactly caused the crate to fall. Can the claimant rely on the doctrine of 'Res Ipsa Loquitur'?

  • A.No, because the claimant must prove the exact negligent act to bring a claim.
  • B.Yes, if the thing causing the accident was under the sole control of the defendant, and the accident is one that does not occur in the ordinary course of things without negligence.
  • C.No, because Res Ipsa Loquitur only applies to breach of contract claims.
  • D.Yes, but the claimant's damages are automatically capped at £10,000.
  • E.No, unless the defendant has already been convicted in a criminal court.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Res Ipsa Loquitur ('The Thing Speaks for Itself') Res ipsa loquitur is an evidentiary doctrine that *shifts the evidential burden* to the defendant to provide an explanation for an accident. It assists claimants who cannot identify the exact cause of an accident but can show the circumstances make negligence the most probable explanation. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Three Requirements (Scott v London and St Katherine Docks [1865]): - The *thing* causing harm was under the defen

4
FLK1

A claimant (Yasmine) has applied for summary judgment against a defendant (Alice) under CPR Part 24. What is the test that the court must apply to determine whether summary judgment should be granted?

  • A.The claimant must prove the case beyond all reasonable doubt.
  • B.The defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim, and there is no other compelling reason why the case should be disposed of at trial.
  • C.The value of the claim must be less than £10,000.
  • D.The defendant has failed to acknowledge service of the claim form within 14 days.
  • E.The dispute involves questions of international law.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Summary Judgment under CPR Part 24 Summary judgment allows a party to obtain judgment *without a full trial* where the opposing party's case has no real prospect of success. It is a cost-effective tool that avoids unnecessary litigation. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Who Can Apply: Either the claimant or defendant can apply for summary judgment under CPR Part 24.2. 2. The Test: The court will grant summary judgment if: - The defendant has no real prospect of successfully defendin

5
FLK1

Rose offered to sell a printing press to James for £45,000. James replied: 'I accept your offer, but I will pay £40,500.' Rose did not respond. Two days later, James wrote to Rose saying: 'I accept your original offer of £45,000.' Is there a binding contract between Rose and James?

  • A.Yes, because the second letter constituted a valid acceptance of the original offer.
  • B.Yes, because the original offer remained open and had not been revoked by the offeror.
  • C.No, because the counter-offer of the lower price killed the original offer, meaning it could no longer be accepted.
  • D.No, because a contract for sale of goods must be made in writing signed by both parties.
  • E.Yes, because the offeror's silence on the counter-offer constituted acceptance of the lower price.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Counter-Offer and the Death of the Original Offer A counter-offer is a rejection of the original offer combined with a new offer on different terms. Once a counter-offer is made, the original offer is extinguished - it cannot be revived or accepted later. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Original Offer: Rose offers the printing press for £45,000. 2. Counter-Offer: James replies with £40,500 - this is a counter-offer, NOT an acceptance. Under Hyde v Wrench (1840), this kills the origina

6
FLK1

An employee of Alpha Trading Ltd negligently injures a customer (Sophia) while driving a company delivery van to make a scheduled delivery. The customer sues Alpha Trading Ltd. What is the legal doctrine that allows the employer to be held liable, and what is the test?

  • A.Res Ipsa Loquitur; requires showing the van was in a defective condition.
  • B.Vicarious liability; requires showing that the employee committed a tort in the course of their employment.
  • C.Strict liability; requires showing the employer acted with malicious intent.
  • D.Privity of liability; requires a signed agreement between the employer and the customer.
  • E.Contributory liability; requires allocating the claim to the Multi-Track.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Vicarious Liability Vicarious liability makes an employer strictly liable for torts committed by their employee, where the tort occurs in the 'course of employment'. It is a form of secondary liability - the employer is liable even without their own fault. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Employer-Employee Relationship: The delivery driver is an employee of Alpha Trading Ltd (not an independent contractor). 2. Course of Employment Test: Was the tort committed while perform

7
FLK1

A claimant (Helen) has applied for summary judgment against a defendant (Harry) under CPR Part 24. What is the test that the court must apply to determine whether summary judgment should be granted?

  • A.The claimant must prove the case beyond all reasonable doubt.
  • B.The defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim, and there is no other compelling reason why the case should be disposed of at trial.
  • C.The value of the claim must be less than £10,000.
  • D.The defendant has failed to acknowledge service of the claim form within 14 days.
  • E.The dispute involves questions of international law.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Summary Judgment under CPR Part 24 Summary judgment allows a party to obtain judgment *without a full trial* where the opposing party's case has no real prospect of success. It is a cost-effective tool that avoids unnecessary litigation. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Who Can Apply: Either the claimant or defendant can apply for summary judgment under CPR Part 24.2. 2. The Test: The court will grant summary judgment if: - The defendant has no real prospect of successfully defendin

8
FLK1

A shopkeeper (Rose) places a designer coat in the shop window with a price tag of £75,000. A customer (Zachary) enters the shop, places the cash on the counter, and demands to buy the item. The shopkeeper refuses to sell it. Is there a binding contract?

  • A.Yes, because placing the item in the window was a unilateral offer that was accepted by the customer's cash payment.
  • B.No, because the display of goods in a shop window is an invitation to treat, not an offer. Refusing to sell does not breach any contract (Fisher v Bell).
  • C.Yes, because consumer protection laws force retailers to sell all displayed items automatically.
  • D.No, because contracts for sales in shops require a written signed document.
  • E.Yes, because the shopkeeper was silent when the customer entered, constituting acceptance.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Invitation to Treat vs. Offer A binding contract requires a valid *offer* and *acceptance*. The display of goods in a shop window or on a shelf is an invitation to treat - an invitation for customers to make offers. It is fundamentally different from a legal offer, which can be accepted to form a contract. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. What is an Invitation to Treat?: A display of goods with a price tag is not an offer - it is merely an expression of willingness to deal on those ter

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Paper Info

Exam
SQE
Mock number
187 of 250
Questions
20
Format
Multiple Choice (MCQ)
Sections
1
Audience
Trainee solicitors
Timing
SQE1 sits: Jan & Jul
Copyright
Applaa Proprietary

Sections Covered

  • FLK1

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