All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1165
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Shape up to survive, conveyancers told
The Law Society has warned conveyancers not to panic as the property market stagnates, but to take action to ‘trim’ themselves down.
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Correction
Dr Ann Barker, the Bar Standards Board’s new complaints commissioner, was wrongly named Parker in last week’s issue. Apologies.
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Defence deal
Defence deal: Birmingham firm Wragge & Co advised the Ministry of Defence, as part of the Aircraft Carrier Alliance, on a £3bn contract to build aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales – which will be the largest warships ever ...
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In defence of the victims
Matthew Hickling’s criticism of the Criminal Procedure Rules does not stand up to scrutiny I write as one who prosecutes daily in the magistrates’ court.
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Matters of discretion
A new sentencing commission could make those responsible for policy more accountable Lord Justice Gage’s report on sentencing will make interesting reading – not so much for what he says but more for the degree of restraint with which he says it. The appeal judge – ...
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Fox on the gun...
Has legal legend Ronnie Fox finally unveiled the secret of his success as a top partnership law and employment lawyer? Talk about shock tactics. Sadly, Obiter cannot reveal that Ronnie – who runs Fox Lawyers in London – attends meetings with the opposition in a Sherman ...
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Grandee of the law wades in
Lord Woolf has witnessed ‘the transformation of almost every aspect of the legal scene’ For many people, the name Lord Woolf will always be synonymous with the revolutionary reform of the civil court code in the late 1990s: the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR). ...
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Human rights
Asylum seekers - Delay - Immigration policy - Leave to remain - Proportionality EB (Kosovo) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (2008): HL (Lord Bingham of Cornhill, Lord Hope of Craighead, Lord Scott of Foscote, Baroness Hale of Richmond, Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood): 25 ...
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Human traffic warning
Immigration lawyers must become more ‘victim-focused’ if they are to stop giving unwitting help to human traffickers, a top European lawyer has told the Gazette. Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, a lawyer and deputy secretary-general of the Council of Europe, said trafficking could go undetected when practitioners endorsed ...
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Immigration issues
As an immigration consultancy based in Sheffield we recently read with great interest an article published in March concerning the quality of advice for Turkish workers (see [2008] Gazette, 6 March, 4). While we agree that the quality of immigration services is high, we do not ...
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Personal injury
Negligence – Damages – Criminal conduct - Ex turpi causa - Post-traumatic stress disorder Kerrie Francis Gray v (1) Thames Trains Ltd (2) Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd (formerly Railtrack Plc) (2008): CA (Civ Div) (Sir Anthony Clarke Master of the Rolls, Lords Justice Tuckey, Smith): ...
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Intellectual property
Criminal law – Media and entertainment – Circumvention of copy protection – Computer games – Copyright R v Neil Stanley Higgs (2008): CA (Crim Div) (Lords Justice Jacob, Hughes, Justice Andrew Smith): 24 June 2008 The appellant (H) appealed against ...
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Landlord and tenant
Local government – Mental health – Possession claims – Public sector tenancies – Schizophrenia Lewisham London Borough Council v Malcolm (2008): HL (Lord Bingham of Cornhill, Lord Scott of Foscote, Baroness Hale of Richmond, Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood, Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury): 25 June 2008 ...
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Silver lining?
In the light of recent turmoil on the stockmarket, there would appear to be scope for charities to gain substantially from estates which include shares in companies that have declined dramatically in value (such as banks, builders and property companies). Where there is a taxable estate ...
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Long road from the LSA
Leading figures from the profession recently debated the likely shape of a post-Legal Services Act world. The Gazette was granted exclusive access. It is some consolation for the legal profession that Professor Richard Susskind, the leading commentator, has put a question mark at the end ...
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State of the nation
Just after the poor darlings at Queen Mary College, University of London got their degree marks, the results of something far more important came up – those of the first Field Fisher Waterhouse Essay competition for the QM law students who help out at the university’s London Legal Advice Centre. ...
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Sole practitioners
Yet more news of fast lady lawyers – and Obiter believes the fastest lady lawyer in the land may finally have been chased down.
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Showing the way
Our changes to guidance on the transfer system safeguard the public interest while minimising any adverse consequences An area of our work that has attracted considerable interest is the Solicitors Regulation Authority’s (SRA) recent decision to improve the arrangements which allow lawyers qualified in a number ...
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AXA kicks off £60m ‘son of TAG’ litigation
Insurance giant AXA has begun legal proceedings against 78 law firms in an attempt to recover losses associated with after-the-event (ATE) insurance policies taken out on claims it believes were not properly vetted, the Gazette has learned. According to sources close to the parties involved, AXA ...
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MDPs lure 75% of counsel
The vast majority of corporate general counsel will purchase legal services from non-specialist firms once the Legal Services Act reforms are in place, a new study has revealed. Three-quarters of respondents to a survey by business advisory firm KPMG – seen exclusively by the Gazette this ...





















