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SQE · Free Mock Test 99 of 250

Free SQE Mock Test 9920 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 99

applaa-sqe-mock-99.pdf · 20 questions

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Sample Questions — SQE Mock 99

8 of 20 shown

Correct answers highlighted in green. Full explanations included.

1
FLK1

A claimant (Victoria) has brought an action against a defendant (Charlotte) in the County Court for breach of contract, claiming £180,000 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 £180,000. 2. Apply the Track Thresholds: - Small Claims Track: £10,000 (for most claims; £1,000 for personal injury/housing disrepair) - Fast Track: > £10

2
FLK1

A claimant (Arthur) makes a valid CPR Part 36 settlement offer to the defendant (Victoria) of £500,000. The defendant rejects the offer. The case goes to trial, and the claimant wins, obtaining judgment of £575,000. What is the primary costs consequence under Part 36?

  • A.The claimant must pay the defendant's costs on the indemnity basis.
  • B.The defendant must pay the claimant's costs on the indemnity basis, plus interest on those costs, from the expiry of the relevant offer period.
  • C.The court will split the trial costs equally between both parties.
  • D.All costs recovery is capped at the Small Claims Track limit.
  • E.The defendant is immune to costs penalties because they defended the claim in good faith.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: CPR Part 36 Offers and Cost Consequences A Part 36 offer is a formal settlement mechanism under CPR. When a claimant's Part 36 offer is beaten at trial (i.e., judgment exceeds the offer), the defendant faces automatic cost penalties designed to encourage early settlement. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Arthur's Offer: £500,000 - a valid Part 36 offer. 2. Victoria's Decision: Rejected the offer and proceeded to trial. 3. Trial Outcome: Arthur wins £575,000 - which *exceeds* the Part 3

3
FLK1

A claimant (Victoria) has brought an action against a defendant (Oliver) in the County Court for breach of contract, claiming £180,000 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 £180,000. 2. Apply the Track Thresholds: - Small Claims Track: £10,000 (for most claims; £1,000 for personal injury/housing disrepair) - Fast Track: > £10

4
FLK1

A builder (Ryan) contractually agreed to construct a wall for a customer (Alice) for £5,000. Halfway through the job, the builder states they cannot finish unless the customer pays an extra £1,000. The customer agrees. After completion, the customer refuses to pay the extra £1,000. Under Williams v Roffey Bros, is the promise to pay the extra £1,000 binding?

  • A.No, because performing an existing contractual duty can never be good consideration.
  • B.Yes, if the customer obtained a practical benefit (such as avoiding a penalty clause to a third party) and there was no economic duress.
  • C.No, because a promise to pay more must be approved by the County Court under CPR regulations.
  • D.Yes, because oral contracts are automatically binding regardless of consideration.
  • E.No, because it violates Section 52 of the Law of Property Act 1925.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Consideration and Practical Benefit (Williams v Roffey Bros) The traditional rule (Stilk v Myrick) held that performing an existing contractual duty cannot be good consideration. Williams v Roffey Bros [1990] modified this rule: performing an existing duty CAN be valid consideration if the promisee obtains a 'practical benefit'. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Traditional Rule: A builder promising to finish what they're already contractually bound to do provides nothing new - no consi

5
FLK1

Grace offered to sell a office building to Beatrice for £500. Beatrice replied: 'I accept your offer, but I will pay £450.' Grace did not respond. Two days later, Beatrice wrote to Grace saying: 'I accept your original offer of £500.' Is there a binding contract between Grace and Beatrice?

  • 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: Grace offers the office building for £500. 2. Counter-Offer: Beatrice replies with £450 - this is a counter-offer, NOT an acceptance. Under Hyde v Wrench (1840), this kills the original

6
FLK1

A director of Aura Goods Ltd (a private company limited by shares) wants to allot new shares to a new investor (Charlotte) to raise capital of £250,000. The company has only one class of ordinary shares. Under the Companies Act 2006, which of the following is correct regarding the director's authority to allot these shares?

  • A.The director has automatic statutory authority to allot the shares without shareholder approval under Section 550, unless restricted by the articles.
  • B.The director must always obtain authorization by ordinary resolution of the shareholders under Section 551.
  • C.The director must obtain authorization by special resolution of the shareholders to allot any shares.
  • D.The director requires the approval of the Board of Trade before alloting any class of shares.
  • E.Authority is only required if the allotment would cause the company to exceed its authorised share capital as stated in the memorandum.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Director's Authority to Allot Shares (Section 550 CA 2006) The Companies Act 2006 grants directors of private companies with a single class of shares a specific statutory power to allot shares of that class without requiring shareholder approval - unless the articles restrict this. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify Company Type: Aura Goods Ltd is a *private* company limited by shares with *one* class of ordinary shares. 2. Apply Section 550: Directors of such a company have pow

7
FLK1

A claimant (Harry) has brought an action against a defendant (Mila) in the County Court for breach of contract, claiming £35,000 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 £35,000. 2. Apply the Track Thresholds: - Small Claims Track: £10,000 (for most claims; £1,000 for personal injury/housing disrepair) - Fast Track: > £10,

8
FLK1

A builder (Oliver) contractually agreed to construct a wall for a customer (Xavier) for £5,000. Halfway through the job, the builder states they cannot finish unless the customer pays an extra £1,000. The customer agrees. After completion, the customer refuses to pay the extra £1,000. Under Williams v Roffey Bros, is the promise to pay the extra £1,000 binding?

  • A.No, because performing an existing contractual duty can never be good consideration.
  • B.Yes, if the customer obtained a practical benefit (such as avoiding a penalty clause to a third party) and there was no economic duress.
  • C.No, because a promise to pay more must be approved by the County Court under CPR regulations.
  • D.Yes, because oral contracts are automatically binding regardless of consideration.
  • E.No, because it violates Section 52 of the Law of Property Act 1925.

✓ Worked Explanation

Core Concept: Consideration and Practical Benefit (Williams v Roffey Bros) The traditional rule (Stilk v Myrick) held that performing an existing contractual duty cannot be good consideration. Williams v Roffey Bros [1990] modified this rule: performing an existing duty CAN be valid consideration if the promisee obtains a 'practical benefit'. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Traditional Rule: A builder promising to finish what they're already contractually bound to do provides nothing new - no consi

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Paper Info

Exam
SQE
Mock number
99 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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