Last 3 months headlines – Page 1708

  • News

    Axe falls at A&O

    2009-02-19T00:00:00Z

    Magic circle firm Allen & Overy is to cut up to 82 partners and up to 200 lawyers and freeze pay for all employees as part of a wide-ranging, £44m restructuring programme. In total more than 240 A&O jobs in London could go.

  • News

    Repossession claims fall in wake of new protocol

    2009-02-19T00:00:00Z

    The number of new mortgage repossession claims issued in the courts is down by 50% since the credit crunch-inspired introduction of a civil procedure affecting lenders and borrowers. The mortgage pre-action protocol (MPAP), approved by the Master of the Rolls, was introduced for possession claims in ...

  • News

    Thinktank calls for overhaul of City firm regulation

    2009-02-19T00:00:00Z

    A legal policy thinktank has today (23 February) called for an urgent shake-up of the regulation of City law firms. Trying to regulate the high-street practitioner and global firms under one regime produces ‘unhappy compromises’, argues the College of Law’s Legal Services Policy Institute. The institute ...

  • News

    Local government law – ASBOs, injunctions and anti-social behaviour

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Birmingham City Council has had a setback in its use of injunctions to curb serious gang-driven criminal and anti-social behaviour.

  • News

    PPI claims become a revenue stream for law firms

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    In the last 12 months, the payment protection insurance (PPI) claims sector has exploded as customers increasingly become ‘clued up’ about their consumer rights.

  • News

    Scent of a woman

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Last month Obiter reported Berkshire solicitor Hilary Messer’s recollection of misunderstanding a female judge’s enquiry about the perfume she was wearing. Roberta Tish, a consultant with London firm Blacklaws Davis, reckons Messer was lucky. ‘How times have changed,’ Tish writes. ‘In the very early sixties, I was appearing before ...

  • News

    Breaking the law

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    They are supposed to uphold and administer the law, but when it comes to motoring, the legal profession shows delinquent tendencies. Lawyers, judges and magistrates are 60% more likely than the average motorist to have points on their licence, according to research by insurer ...

  • News

    World games

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    When we cheerfully predicted that new technology would cause the demise of the legal typo, we forgot about a new peril: the predictive text software that’s supposed to make life easier for people sending text messages or emails on the fly. Unless you’re careful, messages thus generated can range ...

  • News

    Pinsent Masons

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Thanks to our friends at Pinsent Masons for sending us a preview of the firm’s stylish new Manchester premises in the city’s Spinningfields development. Apparently the property fit-out specialist Overbury has started work on the décor, ready for a June move-in. The aim is ‘a visually striking, welcoming and user-friendly ...

  • News

    Female decoration

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    We welcome two new members to the club of long-serving legal stalwarts: secretaries at Suffolk firm Greene & Greene who have clocked up a combined total of 84 years’ service. Lorraine Palfrey joined the firm in October 1966 as an office junior, being promoted ...

  • News

    Lord Bingham monitors the Binyam Mohamed controversy

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    David Miliband won something of a hollow victory over the media last week. The foreign secretary persuaded two judges not to publish ‘seven very short paragraphs’ they had withheld from a judgment last August. These 25 lines summarised reports to British security and intelligence officials by ...

  • News

    Conveyancing crisis: a reflection of the times

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    I am writing as chair of the Direct Conveyancing Association, which represents some of the largest direct conveyancers in the UK, to respond to comments made by Law Society President Paul Marsh (see [2009] Gazette, 29 January, p1).

  • News

    Delivering the post on time

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Practising solicitors are proving slow to grasp the business development opportunities offered by the internet, as this column somewhat didactically observed last month. The findings of this year’s Law Society Software Solutions Guide (see In Business) confirm what we know.

  • News

    Cost fears that may put solicitors off ID cards

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    The Home Office wants lawyers to be ‘early adopters’ of ID equipment. According to minister Meg Hillier, ‘for legal transactions it might well be worthwhile [solicitors] having a reading machine to quickly verify ID’ (see [2009] Gazette, 5 February, 4). There are many civil liberty arguments against the scheme. But ...

  • News

    Commodity fetish

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    I note the recent sad administrations of Hammonds Support Services and Fox Hayes (see [2009] Gazette, 29 January, 1). They were probably two of the biggest examples of firms who followed Professor Richard Susskind’s regular entreaties to the legal profession to ‘commoditise’ legal work. Will ...

  • News

    False economies

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Your article ‘Dial J for Justice’ claims CDS Direct saves money (see [2009] Gazette, 5 February, 10). John Sirodcar [director of national accounts at the Legal Services Commission] says they get £18 or £19 a call as opposed to £30.25 in private practice – giving a £1m saving.

  • News

    Time to move on

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    I reply to Peter Browne’s letter asking us not to follow the crowd and in particular resistance to paying referral fees (see [2009] Gazette, 29 January, 9). As owners of an estate agency, we are well aware that most estate agents successfully try to persuade buyers and sellers to use ...

  • News

    Only four firms apply to become LDPs

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    Hopes that the legal profession would eagerly embrace new business structures created by the Legal Services Act have received a blow with the news that only a handful of firms have applied to be part of the first wave of reforms. With only three weeks ...

  • News

    Solicitors to promote own high street brand

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    High street solicitors have launched a new legal brand to promote themselves collectively when supermarkets and other businesses enter the legal arena in 2011. QualitySolicitors.com is a nationwide alliance of small and medium-sized firms that will pool resources to develop a recognisable brand to compete with ...

  • News

    Law firms’ parliamentary links under scrutiny

    2009-02-12T00:00:00Z

    UK legal firms employ 15 Lords and four MPs as consultants for as much as £61,000 a year, a Gazette investigation has found. Although the relationships are above board and break no rules, parliamentary activity is likely to come under scrutiny amid calls for tighter ...