Court Injunction vs Undertaking: Enforced Order vs Voluntary Promise
A court injunction is an order imposed by a judge; an undertaking is a voluntary commitment given to the court by a party. Both are enforceable by contempt of court proceedings, but they arise in different circumstances and carry different implications.
Overview
In civil proceedings, a party seeking to restrain conduct or compel action has two main tools: obtaining a court injunction (an order of the court) or accepting an undertaking offered by the opposing party. An undertaking given to the court is treated as equivalent to a court order for the purposes of enforcement — breach of an undertaking is contempt of court, punishable by fine or imprisonment, exactly as breach of an injunction. Undertakings are commonly used to resolve interim injunction applications without a contested hearing: the respondent offers to undertake not to do the act in question, the applicant agrees to accept the undertaking, and the court records it. This avoids the cost and delay of a contested hearing. However, injunctions are sometimes preferred precisely because they carry the explicit authority of a court order and the undertaking is a party's own voluntary commitment, which may be withdrawn or varied more readily.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Court Injunction
Pros
- Imposed by the court — carries the full authority of a judicial order
- Can be obtained without notice (ex parte) in urgent cases — freezing orders, non-molestation orders
- Breach is immediately actionable as contempt — arrest warrant can be issued
- Precise terms set by the court — less scope for ambiguity if the defendant argues they did not understand the undertaking
Cons
- Requires a contested or agreed application — court fee and hearing time
- Applicant must give a cross-undertaking in damages (if the injunction turns out to have been wrongly granted)
- May harden the dispute — injunctions are more adversarial than accepted undertakings
- Interim injunctions require the American Cyanamid [1975] balance of convenience test to be satisfied
Best For
Cases where the respondent is unlikely to comply voluntarily, where ex parte relief is needed urgently, or where the terms need to be set precisely by the court rather than negotiated.
Undertaking to the Court
Pros
- Faster and cheaper to agree — avoids contested hearing; can be agreed between solicitors and submitted to the court by consent
- Preserves the respondent's position — not an admission of wrongdoing (unlike an injunction obtained after a finding)
- Commercially pragmatic — respondent can give an undertaking without conceding the point of principle
- Enforceable by contempt — same enforcement mechanism as an injunction
Cons
- Voluntary in origin — a party who has not been ordered to give an undertaking can simply refuse
- Terms are negotiated — may be less comprehensive than a court-ordered injunction
- No cross-undertaking in damages is automatically required from the claimant when an undertaking is accepted
- A party seeking to vary an undertaking must apply to the court — cannot unilaterally resile
Best For
Cases where the respondent is willing to comply and both parties want to avoid the cost of a contested hearing — particularly in commercial disputes, intellectual property cases, and interim applications where the parties can agree terms.
Key Differences
Our Recommendation
Where the opposing party is willing to give an appropriate undertaking, accept it — the enforcement mechanism is identical to an injunction, and you save the cost and delay of a contested application. Insist on an injunction where: the respondent has already breached undertakings previously; ex parte emergency relief is needed; or the precise wording needs to be set by the court. In either case, ensure the terms are clear enough to be enforced — vague undertakings or injunctions cause problems at the contempt stage.