All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1324

  • News

    MoJ announces changes to Crown court fees

    2010-04-06T00:00:00Z

    The Ministry of Justice and Legal Services Commission have today announced the fee changes for Crown court legal aid work. The government has decided not to implement the 17.9% cut proposed to the advocates’ graduated fees. Instead there will be a staged reduction over three years ...

  • News

    Metropolitan Police revises document charges for civil cases

    2010-04-06T00:00:00Z

    The Metropolitan Police Service has issued revised charges for providing copies of documentation in civil proceedings. The following most significant changes came into effect on 1 April: Charges for civil cases – statements and interviews ...

  • News

    Edwards Duthie wins contract for first London CLAC

    2010-04-06T00:00:00Z

    East London firm Edwards Duthie has won the contract to run the capital’s first Community Legal Advice Centre (CLAC). It will operate the service in Barking and Dagenham in conjunction with the local Citizens Advice Bureau. Over the next three years the ...

  • News

    Yorkshire Forward launches two legal panels

    2010-04-06T00:00:00Z

    Development agency Yorkshire Forward has launched two legal service panels. Nine firms have won a place on the two panels, with contracts that will run for three years, with an option to extend the term for a further 12 months. The ...

  • News

    Firms should consider alternatives to traditional funding sources

    2010-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Business analysts report that poor management is a principal reason for business failure, while managing cashflow is critical and one of the most frequent stumbling blocks.

  • News

    Scots to debate compromise plan that would derail ‘Tesco law’

    2010-04-08T00:00:00Z

    The head of Anglo-Scottish law firm McGrigors has come up with a compromise proposal that could prevent the full implementation of ‘Tesco law’ in Scotland and heal a damaging rift over the future of the nation’s solicitors’ profession.

  • News

    Pre-packaged insolvency proposals are ‘expensive duplication’

    2010-04-08T00:00:00Z

    Proposals to boost confidence in the pre-packaged insolvency process published this week are ‘an expensive recipe for duplicating costs’, a City insolvency lawyer has warned. The proposals follow a recent report by the Insolvency Service which found that one-third of insolvency practitioners are failing to comply ...

  • Profile

    Interview: SRA chairman on a new conduct code, ABSs and a critical 18 months

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    The contrast between Charles Plant and his predecessor as SRA board chair, Peter Williamson, is marked. Mettlesome intellects both, of course, but Williamson's restless, staccato intensity has been supplanted by a measured - perhaps even slightly aloof - circumspection. If Plant has the demeanour of ...

  • News

    Legal aid work at 1998 rates

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    This may make you laugh. I still do legal aid work. Child care. The rates have not gone up since 1998. Travelling and waiting, I am earning for the firm £32.45 per hour. Because I'm on the Children Panel I can charge an extra amount per hour, just under 5p.

  • News

    Criminal defence firms fail to secure legal aid contracts beyond July 2010

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Criminal solicitors have warned that a ‘cull’ of firms has begun after Legal Services Commission figures revealed that 5% of firms did not secure new contracts. The recent tender for criminal contracts ended with one in 20 firms failing to secure the right to do publicly ...

  • News

    Firm found liable to pay more than £28m for giving negligent advice

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    A warning bell has sounded for law firms that advised on complex financial deals involving local authorities before the economic downturn, after a firm was found liable to pay more than £28m for giving negligent advice.

  • News

    Government abandons libel fee cut bid

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    The government this week ditched controversial plans to cap success fees paid to ‘no win, no fee’ lawyers in libel cases. Commons leader Harriet Harman said the legislation, which would have reduced the fees charged by lawyers who won defamation cases taken on under conditional ...

  • News

    Property solicitors will need to adapt to a rapidly changing market

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Property has been anything but ‘as safe as houses’ for solicitors who deal with residential conveyancing since the onset of the credit crunch. Their colleagues in the commercial property sector have encountered equally thin pickings. But, slowly and unevenly, both sectors of the property market are ...

  • News

    Paying peanuts for legal advice

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    There is a certain irony in the conjunction of the headline on the front page of last week’s Gazette, ‘Consumer call for competence test’ (see [2010] Gazette, 1 April, 1)...

  • News

    Firms face bar competition after conduct rules relaxed

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Changes to the barristers’ code of conduct that enable them to undertake work that was previously only open to solicitors will increase competition but give law firms the opportunity to pick up ‘talent from the bar’, according to consultants. Last week, the Legal Services Board approved ...

  • News

    Legal aid cuts will happen ‘under any government’, parties warn

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    The legal aid budget will face further cuts whoever wins the election, politicians from the three main parties warned last week. Legal aid minister Lord Bach, shadow justice secretary Dominic Grieve QC and Liberal Democrat justice spokesman David Howarth all said new funding streams needed to ...

  • News

    There are no votes in legal aid

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    ‘The future holds few certainties for legal aid practitioners, whichever party forms the next government.’ Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. That observation, contained in the Gazette of 23 April 1997, eight days before the New Labour dawn, has become a truism. Still, ...

  • News

    Is honesty always the best policy? Sometimes

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Politicians may be known for many things, but honesty isn’t normally one of them. So Obiter was intrigued by the disarming veracity of panel members at pro bono group LawWorks’ Question Time-style panel debate on legal aid last week. With Robin Knowles QC, LawWorks trustee, filling the David Dimbleby role, ...

  • News

    A&O is magic, right kids?

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Magic circle firm Allen & Overy is certainly doing well at attracting the graduates. The firm has just scooped not one but two graduate recruitment honours, from newspapers the Times and the Guardian. The Times Graduate Employer of Choice Award named A&O as the legal employer offering the best opportunities ...

  • News

    Local government: standards appraisal – what are the options?

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    In the acclaimed BBC comedy The Office, David Brent had rather a hard time trying to conduct an appraisal with Keith from accounts, who came across as a less-than-helpful appraisee. However, Standards for England (SFE) appeared to have less trouble with its appraisal of the local government standards framework, for ...