Last 3 months headlines – Page 1232

  • News

    Prisoner voting debate no excuse for leaving Euro convention

    Archive

    Sometimes you just have to rant. I have spent near a lifetime teaching staff ‘to do lofty’, to conduct debate only in moderate tones. Then you encounter something like politicians posturing on prisoner voting. And the dam breaks. This is not only humbug: it is dangerous humbug.

  • News

    60 years and counting

    Archive

    David Duke-Cohan was admitted to the profession in October 1952, the month that Britain tested its first atomic bomb, the newly formed nation of Pakistan played its first cricket Test match and Birds Eye sold its first frozen peas. Duke-Cohan, now 84, is still practising – ...

  • News

    Photographic evidence

    Archive

    The term ‘conversational distance’ is often used in personal injury and clinical negligence claims to describe the measurability of the prominance of a scar or deformity. It is deemed suitable for this purpose, yet in medico-legal photography it has no meaning.

  • News

    Labour takes aim at whiplash reform plan

    Archive

    The government’s whiplash reforms are an attack on access to justice, the legal profession and genuine victims, according to shadow justice minister Andy Slaughter. Slaughter (pictured) accused the government, which unveiled its proposals on Tuesday, of ignoring root causes of problems with personal injury claims, such ...

  • News

    Justice secretary out of order

    Archive

    Press headlines about fat-cat lawyers minting it from legal aid are a bad sign for some solicitors and their clients – they tend to herald further assaults by the government on access to justice. The Sunday Telegraph and the Sun both ran stories at the weekend ...

  • News

    Small claims limit raised to £5,000 in Grayling whiplash plan

    Archive

    Justice secretary Chris Grayling will today unveil his long-expected blueprint for bringing down the number of whiplash claims. In a four-month consultation to be launched this morning, Grayling (pictured) will outline proposals for independent medical panels to diagnose whiplash injuries and raise the small-claims track threshold ...

  • News

    Ombudsman warns of dangers from ‘conveyancing factories’

    Archive

    ‘Conveyancing factories’ pose a potential risk for housebuyers, the chief ombudsman warns today, saying he is braced for more complaints about services. A report, ‘Losing the Plot – residential conveyancing complaints and their causes’, says that despite the fall in house sales, residential conveyancing accounted for ...

  • News

    PC renewals – one-third of the roll still to apply

    Archive

    Almost a third of the expected applications for practising certificate renewal have yet to be started with just four working days until the deadline. Despite repeated pleas from the Solicitors Regulation Authority for early applications, 31% of last year’s PC holders had yet to even start ...

  • News

    Will post-Jackson clients need protection from lawyers?

    Archive

    The government is now well on its way towards introducing damages-based agreements, which will be served up to litigants from a new menu of funding options next April. It issued a draft version of its DBA regulations nearly two months ago, and after inviting comments during ...

  • News

    Unmeritorious appeals ‘clogging the arteries’ of CoA

    Archive

    Increasing numbers of ‘unmeritorious’ appeals could have the effect of ‘clogging the arteries’ of the court of appeal, the registrar of criminal appeals has warned. In the court’s annual review published today, Master Egan QC says that with pressure on funding and as the number of ...

  • News

    Unified patent regime clears parliamentary hurdle

    Archive

    London is to hear all European patent cases concerning medical biotechnology, hygiene and chemicals, including pharmaceuticals, following today’s vote in the European parliament in favour of setting up a new court system for a unitary EU patent. The vote signals the final stage of nearly 40 ...

  • News

    Strasbourg Christmas surprises

    Archive

    Here is the first pantomime of the season. The scene opens in Strasbourg, where giants live: the European Court of Human Rights, and the Council of Europe, among others. Baron Hard-Up (otherwise known as the French government) owns their forest habitat, and has made it as difficult as possible to ...

  • News

    Human Rights Day warning to prime minister

    Archive

    The Law Society has warned the government that the ‘increasingly worrying tone’ of domestic debate about the Human Rights Act has placed the UK’s reputation for international human rights leadership at risk. In a letter to prime minister David Cameron and deputy prime minister Nick Clegg, ...

  • News

    Smallest firms ‘hardest hit’ by fee rises

    Archive

    The smallest law firms have been hardest hit by this year’s increase in the cost of practising certificates, a finance provider has claimed. Professions finance provider Syscap said sole-trader firms had seen the cost of renewing PCs rise by as much as 40% this year. ...

  • News

    RTA Portal costs: a tale of dishonesty

    Archive

    by Anthony Learmonth, partner at Coyne Learmonth LLP Lord Young’s report in October 2010 led to the 2011 consultation in relation to the Jackson proposals. It will be recalled that much of the consultation took place between the government and the heads of the motor insurance ...

  • News

    Dishonesty in debates on tax law

    Archive

    Despite Starbucks’ announcement that it intends to start paying corporation tax in the UK, I’m finding the current debate on tax law frustrating. There is a lack of honesty on all sides. The debate as presented at the moment is a triangle. In one corner, ...

  • News

    Diversity boost for lowest rung of judiciary

    Archive

    A quarter of the lawyers recommended as deputy district judges (magistrates’ courts) in the most recent round of appointments were black, Asian and minority ethnic (BME), statistics released by the Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) this week reveal. The Commission received almost 1,500 applications for the 28 ...

  • News

    Statement of intent

    Archive

    On initial reading, the autumn statement contained fewer tax-related announcements than might have been expected. On closer reading there are several developments, actual and potential, affecting clients (and solicitors).

  • News

    Civilise the internet, Leveson demands

    Archive

    The internet is not out of reach of the law, but new laws are likely to be required to ‘civilise the internet’, the judge charged with investigating the press has suggested. Speaking at the Communications Law Centre in Australia, Lord Justice Leveson said the internet posed ...

  • News

    Appeal

    Archive

    Contract – Breach – Oral contract – First defendant selling popular sauce Bailey and another v Graham and others: Court of Appeal, Civil Division (Sir Andrew Morritt C, Lord Justices Longmore and Davis): 16 November 2012 ...