Last 3 months headlines – Page 1538

  • News

    Fresh legal aid cuts not ruled out by MoJ

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    The new legal aid minister refused to rule out more legal aid cuts in his first press interview last week. Jonathan Djanogly (pictured) also said no decision had been made on whether the coalition would proceed with the Labour government’s plans to consolidate the criminal defence ...

  • News

    EAT upholds victimisation claim

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    A firm that ‘gratuitously’ mentioned a solicitor’s previous discrimination claim against it when providing an employment reference to another firm has lost an appeal in the Employment Appeal Tribunal. Pothecary Witham Weld (PWW) lost the appeal in a case that has established that the reverse burden ...

  • News

    Banks' reluctance to grant loans impedes student access to LPC

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Access to the profession is being restricted because banks are increasingly unwilling to provide loans to Legal Practice Course students, the Junior Lawyers Division has warned. JLD chair Heidi Sandy said LPC students across the country have reported that they are finding it more difficult ...

  • News

    The jurisdictional scope of freezing orders

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    The jurisdiction of a freezing order was set out in the leading case of TSB Private Bank International S.A. v Chabra [1992] 1 WLR 231 (also known as the court’s Chabra-type of jurisdiction). It was held that, so long as the claimant had a good arguable cause of action against ...

  • News

    Warning over CPS recruitment freeze and budget cut

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    A recruitment freeze at the Crown Prosecution Service and its latest budget cut will increase the burden on defence solicitors and the criminal justice system, lawyers warned this week. The Attorney General’s Office has said that the CPS must contribute an additional £16m of savings. This ...

  • News

    Conveyancers 'vulnerable' as mortgage fraud continues to rise

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Conveyancing solicitors are ‘uniquely vulnerable’ to exploitation by criminals laundering money, a leading anti-money laundering solicitor has warned. The warning came as the latest figures from the Solicitors Regulation Authority showed that cases of mortgage fraud continue to rise. Peter Rodd, ...

  • News

    Law firms and investors showing 'little appetite' for external funding

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Lifting restrictions on external investment in law firms will not lead to a ‘big bang’ for the legal profession, ‘just a big whimper’, a leading private equity investor has predicted. His comments came as the Ministry of Justice confirmed that the new government is ‘fully ...

  • News

    How legal services reforms will affect high street firms

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    A glimpse of the future can be found in unlikely places. Nigel Haddon, chairman of the Law Society’s Law Management Section (LMS), caught one in a local supermarket. And he heard it, too. Haddon was at his local Co-op when he was ‘surprised to hear advertising ...

  • News

    Baha Mousa inquiry raises important human rights concerns

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    You can see why Sir Mike Jackson was Tony Blair’s favourite soldier. He looks – even with his manicured eye bags – like a general and he talks like a general. He is politically shrewd; he demanded the opinion on the legality of the Iraq war that has subsequently dogged ...

  • News

    Split profession?

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    I read with interest that the Legal Services Board commissioned an ‘economic analysis’ which concluded there was no evidence that referral fees harm consumers.

  • News

    Border agency has to get it right

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    I agree with C Selvarajah ‘Asylum tragedy’ (see letters, 27 May). Nobody likes uncertainty, which prevents them from pursuing a full life.

  • News

    Why government's response to cost-capping victory could be disappointing

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Many demands contained in the Law Society’s pre-election manifesto, the theme of which was curbing the increasing power of the state and safeguarding the freedom of the individual, have already been met by the coalition government. This is welcome, though the suspicion lingers that the new administration was able to ...

  • News

    Regulation and will-writing

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    As long as there is an unregulated will-making sector, professional and ethical solicitors, and professional and ethical willwriters, should join forces with a common goal to provide professional and regulated will-writing services to consumers by whatever means the consumer chooses.

  • News

    Solicitors who defend in the Youth Court should be specially trained

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    by Penelope Gibbsdirector of the Out of Trouble Programme at the Prison Reform Trust Thousands of 10 and 11-year-olds are prosecuted in our courts every year, yet it took one case of two children accused of raping an eight-year-old to enlighten the public about the absurdity ...

  • News

    Claiming damages for a ruined holiday

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Recent reports of clouds of ­volcanic ash and BA cabin crew strikes have highlighted the plight of holidaymakers who are either stranded abroad or unable to take their holiday. However, even those who manage to avoid disruption are often disappointed when their holiday falls short of their expectations.

  • News

    Lawyer wins tribunal appeal over withdrawal of job offer

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    A woman lawyer has won her appeal against an employment tribunal ruling that disability discrimination did not lie behind a major law firm’s decision to withdraw a job offer.

  • News

    Are some cases beyond the pale when it comes to legal aid?

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    After Roy Whiting’s sentence for the murder of eight-year-old Sarah Payne was reduced by the Court of Appeal, her mother criticised the availability of legal aid to fund the action and solicitors who advise prisoners to fight such cases.

  • News

    Traditionalists v modernists: business dilemma for law firms

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Last week, Chris Roebuck, in his interesting blog post on making change happen, stated that ‘legal firms face probably their toughest challenges for years’.

  • News

    Courts report rise in personal injury claims

    2010-06-17T00:00:00Z

    The number of personal injury claims filed in the High Court jumped 32% between 2006 and 2008, research has found. Claims relating to personal injury jumped 31.8% from 914 in 2006 to 1,205 in 2008, according to a study of the latest available figures by ...

  • News

    Bar must step up competition with solicitors, chairman warns

    2010-06-16T00:00:00Z

    The bar must embrace direct access to the public to compete in a system that has been ‘calibrated and designed to hand the entire legal aid pot to solicitors’, the Bar Council chairman said last week. Speaking at a symposium last week to discuss the paper ...