All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1624

  • News

    Intellectual property

    2012-09-20T00:00:00Z

    Patent - Infringement - Proceedings for infringement Eli Lilly & Company v Human Genome Sciences Inc: CA (Civ) (Lord Justices Hooper, Lewison, Sir Robin Jacob): 5 September 2012 The proceedings, ...

  • News

    Memory Lane

    2012-09-20T00:00:00Z

    Law Society’s Gazette, September 1962 Father v Son An unusual encounter took place recently at Cardiff Magistrates’ court when a father and son, both of who are solicitors, appeared, respectively, for the defence and the prosecution. They are Mr Myer Cohen (admitted ...

  • News

    LegalZoom in QualitySolicitors tie-up

    2012-09-20T00:00:00Z

    US online legal services shop LegalZoom is to come to Britain later this year in partnership with UK network QualitySolicitors, the Gazette has learned. LegalZoom claims to be the most recognised legal brand in the US and the leading provider of online legal documentation services ...

  • News

    Probate

    2012-09-20T00:00:00Z

    Will - Gift - Specific bequests - Confusion Scarfe and another v Matthews and others: ChD (Mr N Strauss QC (sitting as a deputy judge)): 5 September 2012 The instant ...

  • News

    Uncompromising truth

    2012-09-20T00:00:00Z

    The entire content of Nicholas Lakeland’s article rang true for me as an employment solicitor who advises on up to 8-10 compromise agreements a week. They are increasingly common and I repeatedly find myself having to explain to clients that I have a duty to ...

  • News

    Solicitors warned off SDLT avoidance schemes after landmark judgment

    2012-09-21T00:00:00Z

    Schemes designed to dodge stamp duty land tax (SDLT), which cost the public purse £170m a year, will face tough scrutiny from HM Revenue & Customs after a landmark tribunal judgment this week. Regulations have also been laid that will force users of avoidance schemes to disclose them to the ...

  • News

    How digital age strengthens in-house professionals

    2012-09-21T00:00:00Z

    I am delighted to be writing for the Law Society Gazette as an in-house lawyer in industry. The Law Society represents and services the interests of 126,000 solicitors. Some 33% of these lawyers are working in house.

  • News

    PI specialist is thirtieth alternative business structure

    2012-09-21T00:00:00Z

    The former president of the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers has steered his firm to alternative business structure status. David Bott, who stood down as president in April, will bring practice manager Paul Hinchcliffe and finance manager Gary Froggatt, both non-solicitors, into equity partner status at ...

  • News

    LSB calls for ‘open debate’ on cost of regulation

    2012-09-21T00:00:00Z

    The legal profession’s umbrella watchdog today calls for an ‘open debate’ on the cost of regulation which would encompass all the levies lawyers must pay in order to practise. In its response to the government’s first triennial review of its activities, the Legal Services Board ...

  • News

    Chief coroner sets out new regime in first speech

    2012-09-21T00:00:00Z

    Only lawyers will be appointed as coroners from next June, the first holder of the new post of chief coroner for England and Wales has announced in his first public speech. Judge Peter Thornton QC told the annual conference of coroners today that new appointments ...

  • News

    Supplementary Legal Aid Scheme is abandoned

    2012-09-24T00:00:00Z

    The government has abandoned a scheme to take up to 25% of damages awards from clinical negligence victims. The Supplementary Legal Aid scheme was intended to fund cases that would still come under the scope of legal aid from next April. Campaigners argued it amounted to ...

  • News

    Economies of scale needed to set up a firm have actually fallen

    2012-09-24T00:00:00Z

    by Ian Wimbush, chair of the Legal Software Suppliers Association When Kenneth Clarke told members of the Birmingham Law Society that alternative business structures (ABSs) would herald a ‘whole new world’ for lawyers, he said that 3,000 high street firms would disappear.

  • News

    Ten thousand register for criminal advocacy

    2012-09-24T00:00:00Z

    Over 10,000 solicitors have notified the Solicitors Regulation Authority that they will be seeking criminal advocacy accreditation next year when the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) begins. The controversial scheme is scheduled to start on 14 January when all solicitor-advocates wishing to practise criminal advocacy ...

  • News

    Banking reforms would ‘damage English legal system’

    2012-09-24T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has warned of dire consequences for the English legal system if the government presses ahead with ‘protectionist’ measures contained in its banking reform plans. In a 54-page response to the Treasury’s June white paper on banking reform, Chancery Lane focuses on ...

  • News

    When human rights and clients’ rights conflict

    2012-09-24T00:00:00Z

    Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is a fashionable concept. Big firms flaunt their CSR credentials, and no one knows whether it is a marketing strategy to make us buy their goods and services, or a serious attempt to promote a better society. It was only a matter of time before law ...

  • News

    Separating couples ignorant of dispute resolution options

    2012-09-24T00:00:00Z

    Nearly half of British adults think they have to go to court to get divorced, according to a survey that shows a lack of awareness of non-court options for family law matters. A poll of 2,018 adults by family lawyers’ group Resolution today reveals that 45% ...

  • News

    Damages uplift ‘will cost defendants £300m’

    2012-09-25T00:00:00Z

    Insurers told the High Court today that defendants stand to lose more than £300m if claimants are given the ‘windfall’ of a risk-free rise in damages.

  • News

    Judicial appointment reforms ‘sideline’ Wales

    2012-09-25T00:00:00Z

    Coalition plans to abolish permanent Welsh representation in the judicial appointments process will lead to an even more ‘England-centric judiciary’, Wales’ top lawyer has warned. The government proposes scrapping the requirement for a Welsh commissioner on the Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) as part of a drive ...

  • News

    Met upgrades cell security to ensure safety of solicitors

    2012-09-25T00:00:00Z

    Concerns raised by the Law Society about the safety of solicitors in police custody cells have led the Metropolitan police to implement changes. Wimbledon firm Burnley-Jones Bate & Co raised the issue of the personal safety of solicitors conducting interviews with clients in locked custody rooms ...

  • News

    ‘Clear risk’ of negligence claims if IFA referral is liberalised

    2012-09-25T00:00:00Z

    Solicitors will be vulnerable to negligence claims if they are allowed to refer clients to financial advisers who are not wholly independent, the Law Society has warned. In its response to the Solicitors Regulation Authority’s consultation on financial advice, the society pointed to the danger of ...