All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1560

  • News

    Supreme Court opens the way to thousands of employee asbestos claims

    2012-03-28T00:00:00Z

    Campaigners were today celebrating a UK Supreme Court ruling that insurance policies cover asbestos-related disease even after employees have left their job. Insurance companies had sought to limit their obligations to indemnify employers against liabilities towards staff who contracted mesothelioma. In effect, ...

  • News

    MPs back simplified legal regulation

    2012-03-28T00:00:00Z

    MPs would back moves to simplify the way legal services are regulated, according to research from the Solicitors Regulation Authority. The SRA polled MPs for their views on the regulation of legal services, the experience of their constituents in purchasing legal services, and the quality and ...

  • News

    Set judicial diversity target unless significant improvement in five years, Lords say

    2012-03-28T00:00:00Z

    The government should set diversity targets for judicial appointments unless in five years’ time there is a ‘significant increase’ in the numbers of women and black and Asian minority ethnic lawyers sitting on the bench, the House of Lords constitution committee urges today. The report ...

  • News

    Lawyers welcome planning policy reform

    2012-03-28T00:00:00Z

    The government’s announcement of simplified planning rules has received a warm welcome from lawyers in the sector. The National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), published yesterday, replaces more than 1,000 pages of national policy with around 50 pages of guidance, aimed at ‘allowing people and communities back into planning’. ...

  • News

    Not even £2.60 an hour (unless you’re a mum or dad)

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Last week brought excellent news for job hunters in the legal sector – but only if you happen to be a school leaver or a high-achieving lawyer mum or dad.

  • News

    Child abduction

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Removal outside jurisdiction - Return order - British mother returning from Australia to UK with child Re S (a child) (international abduction: subjective fear of risk): SC (Justices of the Supreme Court Lords Phillips (president), Mance, Kerr, Wilson, Lady ...

  • News

    What do you know about the European Ombudsman?

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    In a pretty park in the European quarter of Brussels is situated the local base of an institution that should be better known to lawyers, since it can provide recourse to clients. The world may be filling up with ombudsmen, but the granddaddy of them all (in European terms) is ...

  • News

    Something not right about guideline for either-way offences

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Does anyone else smell a rat? A new allocation guideline for either-way offences was published earlier this month by the Sentencing Guidelines Council which comes into force on 11 June. Within the guideline it states: ‘It is important to ensure that all cases are tried at the appropriate level. In ...

  • News

    A&O sounds note of caution over Asia-Pacific growth prospects

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Asia-Pacific economies will not meet the growth expectations of international business because of the slow pace of regulatory reform in China, a magic circle firm has warned. A survey of large international businesses conducted last year by Allen & Overy predicted that by 2020 six ...

  • News

    Bank of England job - lawyers need not apply

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    In the next few months, David Cameron and George Osborne will be looking to recruit a new governor of the Bank of England to succeed Sir Mervyn King when he steps down in June 2013. I trust that no banking lawyer is tempted to apply ...

  • News

    Blanket approach to civil claims costs unfair

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    I write in response to a number of recent letters about the funding of civil claims. The biggest cause of unfair costs is the blanket approach of the success fee and the premiums for after-the-event (ATE) insurance (often far in excess of the price of any car insurance policy). ...

  • News

    Recovering costs where both parties have succeeded in some of their arguments

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Even though a party may succeed in obtaining a judgment in its favour, the unsuccessful party may have succeeded in defeating some of the successful party’s arguments. The questions which arise in such a scenario are: which party should be awarded its costs? If the successful party is awarded its ...

  • News

    Every public body can produce arguments that it is indispensable

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Quangos rarely lobby for their remit to be pruned and the legal sector is no exception. So last week we saw an exasperated Law Society call on the £5m-a-year Legal Services Board to begin downsizing, now that most of the reforms in the Legal Services Act are coming to fruition.

  • News

    ‘SupplyCo’ could help barristers get work back from solicitor-advocates

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    A new business model allowing barristers to accept instructions through an agency route could help the bar claw back work from solicitor-advocates, a legal consultant has suggested. John Binks (pictured) of the Bar Consultancy Network, a former manager at the Legal Services Commission, said a ‘SupplyCo’ model would give barristers ...

  • News

    Having a ball

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Tony Roe Solicitors, a divorce and family law specialist based in Theale, Reading, is the latest recruit to Obiter’s Brighter Window campaign. The firm’s logo, a rubberband ball, can be seen bouncing across its frontage, the firm’s head, Tony Roe, tells us. ‘The firm’s windows were ...

  • News

    Don’t bank on loyalty

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    My firm, along with thousands of others, is no longer on the HSBC panel. As a result of the ludicrous volume of enquiries being raised by the bank’s preferred lawyers for this area in a case I am currently involved in, and because of the unrealistic and unworkable undertakings which ...

  • News

    Legal training: the best routes to becoming a lawyer

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Abolishing the concept of the qualifying law degree, more common training for prospective lawyers, replacing the training contract with ‘supervised practice’ and sector-wide CPD – just some of the ‘more radical’ ideas being considered by the profession-wide Legal Education and Training Review (LETR). But just ...

  • News

    SRA dubbed ‘institutionally racist’ by Society of Black Lawyers chair

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority is to face accusations of being ‘institutionally racist’ and of abusing its powers to the detriment of solicitors from ethnic minorities. In a hard-hitting report to the Legal Services Board, seen by the Gazette, the Society of Black Lawyers accuses the ...

  • News

    Pro bono: are lawyers leading the way?

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Working at the National Pro Bono Centre I get to observe a large portion of the organised pro bono activities undertaken by members of the legal profession. One of the first things that struck me when I started working as a caseworker at LawWorks was the scale of the volunteer ...

  • News

    Boycott injustice

    2012-03-29T00:00:00Z

    Congratulations for publishing the comment by Melanie Strickland on the need for lawyers to consider more basic principles of justice than the law presently allows. The letter from David Enright on the ‘justice equation’ in the same edition alerts us to more immediate needs as well.