Last 3 months headlines – Page 1500
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Public procurement
Legal advice and funding - Accreditation - Consultation documents - Legal profession R (on the application of the Law Society) v Legal Services Commission: QBD (Admin) (Lord Justice Moses, Mr Justice Beatson): 30 September 2010 ...
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Civil procedure
Costs - Insolvency - Local government - Bankruptcy petitions Banfield v Harrow London Borough Council: ChD (Mr Justice Lewison): 6 October 2010 The appellant (B) appealed against a costs decision ...
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Intellectual property
Equity - Median and entertainment - BBC - Breach of confidence BBC v (1) Harpercollins Publishers Ltd (2) Ben Collins (3) Collins Autosport Ltd: Ch D (Mr Justice Morgan): 4 October 2010 ...
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Improperly obtained documents in divorce proceedings
In light of the Court of Appeal’s decision in Tchenguiz v Imerman; Imerman v Imerman [2010] EWCA Civ 908, all family lawyers are obliged to reconsider the advice given to clients in respect of improperly obtained documents.
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Brush with the stars
It has been an Indian summer for one Manchester sports lawyer. Mark Hovell, managing partner at Manchester firm George Davies, has spent the last fortnight at the 2010 Commonwealth Games as the British representative on the six-strong legal panel of the Court of Arbitration for Sport, helping settle disputes arising ...
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Party people
Watch out, the barristers are coming. That message came through loud and clear at last week’s christening of criminal set QEB Hollis Whiteman’s new retro-chic offices in the heart of the City of London. The briefs must have set aside a few hefty retainers for 1 & 2 Laurence Pountney ...
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The Solicitors Benevolent Association has a modern makeover
Many years ago Establishment publications like the Telegraph carried advertisements for the Distressed Gentlefolks Aid Association. This charity’s raison d’être appeared to be to ease the money problems of well-bred Home Counties types who had fallen on hard times. I remember thinking then that this must have been a ‘tough ...
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Catching clients
One of the troubles with criminal clients of the 1970s was their ‘out of court – out of mind’ syndrome, writes James Morton.
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Judging the jury
Obiter was heartened to learn of the faith that attorney general, Dominic Grieve QC (pictured), has in the jury system, forged with the help of a cantankerous Old Bailey judge. Delivering the annual Kalisher lecture in memory of criminal barrister Michael Kalisher QC ...
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Clive wows 'em
Noted wit Clive Anderson’s obituary – and let the day of its publication be far distant – is unlikely to dwell for long on his legal career. And why should it, when the one-time Cambridge Footlights president can boast of being the very first act on stage when London’s legendary ...
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Claimant-friendly defamation laws could be about to change
This year and next may come to be looked back on as the beginning of the end of the UK’s status as one of the most claimant-friendly defamation jurisdictions in the world. But how did we get here, and what might this sea change mean for solicitors and their clients?
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UK needs its foreign lawyers
By Natasha Gya Williams, specialist immigration lawyer with Nicholas Moore The proposal of an immigration cap, part of the Conservative election platform earlier this year, was aimed at giving the electorate a very clear message that ‘something is being done’ about so-called uncontrolled levels of immigration.
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SRA's new regime will free it up to focus on the big issues
The Solicitors Regulation Authority’s decision to move to what it terms outcomes-focused regulation has plenty of detractors. The idea of moving from a rulebook of hard and fast ‘dos and don’ts’, to regulation founded largely on just 10 broad ‘principles’, is anathema to many lawyers. ...
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Investors want law firms with capital
Law firms must bulk up their capital reserves if they want investors to consider them as serious acquisition targets, experts said at the Claims Standards Council’s annual conference last week. Royal Bank of Scotland relationship manager Sara Hutton told delegates that firms should retain up to ...
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Conveyancing quality mark launched
The Law Society has launched a conveyancing quality scheme (CQS) designed to give clients a recognisable quality mark for firms providing a high standard of service. The scheme is based on a new Law Society transaction protocol, which will introduce consistent standards to speed up the ...
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Contempt laws needed despite web, says A-G
The increasing power of the internet has not diminished the importance of the contempt of court laws, the Attorney General said last week. Delivering the Criminal Bar Association’s annual Kalisher Lecture, Dominic Grieve QC dismissed calls to scrap the laws that prohibit the publication of evidence ...
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Justice budget will fall to £7bn in four years
The Ministry of Justice will see its budget cut by just under £2bn over the next four years, the chancellor George Osborne announced in the government’s spending review this afternoon. He told the House of Commons that the MoJ budget, which is currently £8.9bn a year, ...
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Huge court closure response, says Djanogly
A Ministry of Justice consultation proposing the closure of 103 magistrates’ courts and 54 county courts has received a huge number of responses, justice minister Jonathan Djanogly told the House of Commons’ Justice Committee this week. The minister said that the MoJ had received ...
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LSC announces contract extension to 14 December
The Legal Services Commission has announced that all current ‘family only’ and ‘family with housing’ legal aid contracts will be extended until 14 December, following the Law Society’s successful judicial review of the tender process. The LSC has until 29 October to decide whether ...