Last 3 months headlines – Page 1712

  • News

    Poaching teams is profitable, research shows

    2009-02-05T00:00:00Z

    Large law firms are increasingly looking to poach teams from their rivals as they can quickly turn a profit, according to new research. The annual Smith & Williamson professional practices survey found that 45% of the 102 law firms which took part – most in the ...

  • News

    Fatal shootings raise issues over police notes

    2009-02-05T00:00:00Z

    Last May barrister Mark Saunders was killed by police after he repeatedly fired a shotgun out of the window of his Chelsea flat.

  • News

    Data page for January 2009

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    The data page is the financial rates and data compiled for the Law Society Gazette by MoneyFacts Group, the UK's largest supplier of savings and mortgage data. DownloadsDownload the Data Page for January 2009 below ...

  • News

    Criminal law: changes to bail, sentencing and sexual offences

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    A number of the provisions of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 (CJIA) have been brought into force.

  • News

    Human rights

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Sentencing – EC law – Foreign travel – Notification – Sex offenders R (on the application of F) v Secretary of State for Justice: R (on the application of Angus Aubrey Thompson) v Secretary of State for Justice: ...

  • News

    Local government

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Planning – Human rights – Change of use – Mobile homes (1) Theo Langton (2) Ruth McGill v (1) Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government (2) West Dorset District Council: QBD (Admin) (Judge Gilbart QC): 7 ...

  • News

    Developing new skills may help lead to prosperity

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    As some firms struggle to survive, there is no better time than the present for lawyers to develop the extra skills they may need to prosper. From ‘cocktail party’ training to better writing skills to a three-year doctorate in legal practice – just what skills should ...

  • News

    Looking for a wife

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Spouse gone AWOL? Then ask a law librarian. That was the instinct of the solicitor who called the Law Society library to say his client wanted a divorce, but had no marriage certificate and could not remember the exact date of the marriage or precisely where it took place (‘somewhere ...

  • News

    City kitty

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    As if times weren’t challenging enough for City solicitors, a rumour doing the rounds at London’s City Hall set a few corporate fingers twitching towards their calculators. Apparently, Mayor Boris Johnson has come up with a splendid wheeze for funding the Crossrail east-west rail link – a £213-per-square-metre levy on ...

  • News

    Experience necessary

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Though a sly old fox, Obiter has almost been out-foxed by Hertfordshire law firm Curwens. We requested details of long-serving legal secretaries and were startled to receive Curwens’ surely unbeatable record of 72 years. Closer scrutiny, however, revealed the firm was claiming the sum of Jenny Rogers’ 48 years and ...

  • News

    Court out

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Civil litigator Hilary Messer, this issue’s Lawyer In The News, told Obiter she has occasionally misunderstood a judge’s meaning. There was the time when, as a newly qualified solicitor, she got to court early and found herself killing time with the (female) judge. The latter whispered: ‘What are you wearing?’ ...

  • News

    Practice criminal law and earn the minimum wage

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    I was admitted to the roll on 1 September 2008. To be able to work in criminal law, I had to complete police station accreditation, which involved a portfolio of 27,000 words and travelling some 200 miles to take the critical incidents exam. If I want to become a ...

  • News

    Judicial obstacles

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    The recent research carried out by Professor Dame Hazel Genn and quoted in Joshua Rozenberg’s article [see [2009] Gazette, 15 January, 8] highlighted clearly the barriers that women solicitors can face when applying for a judicial appointment.

  • News

    Buck the market

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Lord Turner’s recent report says the banking crisis was caused by banks abandoning proven, prudent banking principles. Their attitude seems to have been ‘everyone in the market is doing it, so it must be all right. We have to copy them or go out of business’.

  • News

    Novel experience

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    May I congratulate Neil Rose on an excellent article about combining a professional legal career with that of a novelist (see [2008] Gazette, 18 December, 8). I am not a solicitor, but have worked as administrator for LawCare for the past ten years, and also had my third novel published ...

  • News

    Britain’s military prosecutor will never ‘go native’

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    News that President Obama had decided to end military trials at Guantanamo Bay broke just as I was on my way to see Britain’s new military prosecutor, providing me with a perfect starting point for my interview. But it is very difficult to imagine Bruce Houlder ...

  • News

    Dying in a democracy

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    ‘The Official Secrets Act is not there to protect secrets, it is there to protect officials!’, the archetypal mandarin Sir Humphrey Appleby told his ministerial dupe Jim Hacker in the timeless sitcom Yes Minister. One recalled Sir Humphrey’s cynicism upon the publication of the Coroners ...

  • News

    Compensation fears force schools to cancel trips

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Is it me, or is the latest bandwagon for ‘compensation culture’ myth-peddlers that schools and schoolchildren are no longer able to undertake activities and trips that we all enjoyed when growing up? It is not unusual for claimant personal injury lawyers to feel that the whole ...

  • News

    Conveyancing specialists go into receivership

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has urged residential conveyancers not to panic following the collapse of two large Yorkshire firms. Leeds-based Fox Hayes, which employed 115 people, last week went into administration, joining Bradford-based property conveyancing and home information pack processing company Hammonds Support Services (HSS). ...

  • News

    Massive rise in civil court fees slammed

    2009-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Plans for some civil court fees to rise nearly fifty-fold to help raise an extra £38m for the ­Ministry of Justice have come under fire. Proposals out for consultation could see hikes in 26 fee areas in civil court matters, with increases in 10 fee areas ...