Last 3 months headlines – Page 1222

  • News

    Ask the staff

    2013-01-28T00:00:00Z

    The annual civil service people survey is a great annual diversion, juxtaposing low levels of staff satisfaction and confidence in the Ministry of Justice’s leadership on the one hand, and hyper-positive confidence of senior management spin on the other. This year my colleague Catherine Baksi reported it as news - ...

  • News

    A dissenting Judge

    2013-01-28T00:00:00Z

    Lord Judge, as we all know, has a wonderfully apt name. Not as good as the anaesthetist from Essex called Doctor De’ath but certainly enough to raise a smile. However that’s not the main reason why I’ll miss the Lord Chief Justice when he hangs up the gown and retires ...

  • News

    Call for care failings disclosure laws

    2013-01-28T00:00:00Z

    NHS trusts and their lawyers should be forced by law to reveal when care providers have made serious mistakes, campaigners have said in the run-up to the report of the inquiry into alleged failings at Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust. Peter Walsh, chief executive of ...

  • News

    Leniency for whistleblowing? This is not the NYPD

    2013-01-28T00:00:00Z

    Call me a stooge if you like, but I reckon the Law Society is bang on the money with this one. Yesterday it emerged that Chancery Lane is opposed to the Solicitors Regulation Authority’s plan to offer whistleblowers leniency if they shop their partners in crime. ...

  • News

    Planning

    21 January 2013

    Human rights – Right to respect for private and family life AZ v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government and another: Queen's Bench Division, Administrative Court: 20 December 2012 ...

  • News

    Copyright

    21 January 2013

    Judge finding defendants having defence – Whether defence ought to be limited Football Association Premier League Ltd v QC Leisure and others and other cases: Court of Appeal, Civil Division: 20 December 2012 ...

  • News

    Costs

    21 January 2013

    Assessment – Detailed assessment – Conduct of parties Wilkinson v London Strategic Health Authority: Patents County Court (Judge Birss QC): 23 November 2012 The court considered the award of costs ...

  • News

    Injunction

    21 January 2013

    Conflict of laws – Foreign proceedings – Restraint of foreign proceedings Malhotra v Malhotra and another: Queen's Bench Division, Commercial Court: 30 October 2012 The claimant sought the continuation of ...

  • News

    Appeal

    21 January 2013

    Unfair dismissal – Claimant working as a lap dancer for defendant – Whether EAT erring Quashie v Stringfellows Restaurants Ltd: Court of Appeal, Civil Division (Lord Justices Ward, Elias and Pitchford): 21 December 2012 ...

  • News

    A review of the 2012 changes to criminal law

    21 January 2013

    Two major cases regarding case management were decided in 2012. In R (on the application of Drinkwater) v Solihull Magistrates’ Court [2012] EWHC 765 (Admin), the court had to consider whether a trial should be adjourned or go ahead in the absence of a defendant. Following the decision in R ...

  • News

    Smaller firms can thrive by turning size to their advantage

    21 January 2013

    Sarah Harman’s comment that ‘the days of the small practice are numbered’ (My Legal Life, 14 January) is simply wrong. The days of the small general practice reliant predominantly on legal aid may well be coming to an end, but small specialist practices are unquestionably in a hugely competitive and ...

  • News

    Help is at hand for addiction

    21 January 2013

    In 2006 I got a job with a City firm. It proved to be very stressful and within months my occasional recreational use of drugs had turned into a full-blown addiction. I found myself deeply in debt and alienating my family and my firm.

  • News

    No magic bullet cure for cancer

    21 January 2013

    Having studied Lord Saatchi’s draft Medical Innovation Bill, I was pleased with Robert Illidge’s thoughtful perspective. As a retired NHS consultant and an expert witness with experience of medical negligence from both sides (and at the risk of becoming frightfully unpopular), I would suggest that entrusting only the medical profession, ...

  • News

    Legal advice agencies hit by funding cut

    21 January 2013

    Organisations helping not-for-profit agencies and litigants in person have been dealt another blow by the decision to axe Community Legal Service grants. After consultation, the Legal Services Commission announced this week that funding to the Advice Services Alliance, Law Centres Network and the Royal Courts ...

  • News

    Business leaders have grown ‘diversity weary’

    21 January 2013

    Managers of leading professional firms are growing ‘diversity weary’, according to the organisers of a poll of business leaders. Research commissioned by City firm Reed Smith found concerns that ‘a flurry’ of initiatives to encourage more women into senior roles could lead to a backlash. ...

  • News

    Family justice ‘wish list’

    21 January 2013

    Children caught up in the family justice system want their cases dealt with faster and with greater support throughout the process, according to a board made up of 32 young people with direct experience of the system or an interest in children’s rights. The Family ...

  • News

    Surveying the damage

    21 January 2013

    Law firms serious about sustaining – never mind building – their businesses should digest the ‘super-survey’ published last week by the Ministry of Justice, Law Society and Legal Services Board. This heavyweight (literally and metaphorically) piece of work offers the deepest insight yet into how practitioners are coping with an ...

  • News

    Is compulsory pro bono needed to fill the void left by legal aid cuts?

    21 January 2013

    by Emma Pearmaine, head of family law at Simpson Millar As we approach the implementation of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act in April, I cannot help but think about my visit to Uganda in November.

  • News

    ‘Common sense’ fraud ruling lauded

    21 January 2013

    The Court of Appeal’s ruling that a solicitor was not liable for a building society’s losses after being duped by a fraudster has been hailed as a ‘return to common sense’. Birmingham firm Davisons was instructed by Nationwide to act in respect of the purchase of ...

  • News

    My legal life: Philip Trott

    21 January 2013

    My mother was a political refugee. The family saw Hitler coming, and took a very circuitous route from Czechoslovakia to Bedford Street, London, and refuge here. Ultimately, hearing and seeing what the family had gone through caused me to practise immigration law.