Latest news – Page 566

  • News

    Judges call for urgent overhaul to cope with surge of LIPs

    Archive

    The government and judicial office must overhaul training, advice to litigants and the nature of the court process itself to deal with thousands more litigants in person (LIPs), a judicial working group has concluded. In a report published today, the working group, made up of senior ...

  • News

    Society calls for hold on fixed-fee extension

    Archive

    The Law Society today urged the government to delay the extension of the RTA Portal to new civil litigation areas – which will mean fixed fees for all claims worth up to £25,000 – warning that law firms may not be ready for the change. The ...

  • News

    Lord Young shuns meeting with profession’s regulator

    Archive

    Lord Young of Graffham turned down an offer to meet with the solicitors’ regulator in advance of his report on health and safety and the ‘compensation culture’, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said. The SRA said it had ‘offered to engage’ with Young during the research ...

  • News

    Allen & Overy opens results season with 2.2% profit growth

    Archive

    Profits at Allen & Overy rose 2.2% to £496.7m on flat turnover last year, the firm revealed today in the first announcement of 2012-13 results from the magic circle. Revenue grew just 0.6% to £1.19bn, with profit per equity partner remaining £1.1m for the year ...

  • News

    Society condemns ‘plain wrong’ criticism of legal aid stance

    Archive

    Amid growing anger among some criminal solicitors and a call for a special general meeting of the Law Society to vote on its proposed alternatives to the government’s legal aid reforms, the Law Society today hit back against claims that it has ‘sold out’ to the Ministry of Justice. ...

  • News

    Public still sees lawyers as ‘arrogant’

    Archive

    Regulation of legal services is not working to promote public trust in the profession as lawyers continue to be perceived as accountable only to themselves, new research has suggested. Surveys carried out by the Legal Services Board found a perception that legal professionals are not answerable ...

  • News

    City firm Rohrer closed by SRA

    Archive

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority has closed City firm Rohrer & Co following an intervention, citing ‘reason to suspect dishonesty’. The SRA said today that Rohrer, based in Finsbury Square, London, had failed to comply with the SRA Principles and Code of Conduct under the Administration of ...

  • News

    Grayling promises second consultation on legal aid – but sets red lines

    Archive

    The Ministry of Justice will publish a second ‘short’ consultation on its ‘finalised’ legal aid proposals in September before ‘pressing on’, the justice secretary announced this morning. Giving evidence to the House of Commons justice committee, Chris Grayling said: ‘We will move shortly to bring forward ...

  • News

    Solicitors warned over RTA Portal registration

    Archive

    Solicitors have been warned they risk running out of time if they delay registering for the extended online claims portal. From 31 July employers’ and public liability claims will be brought into the RTA Portal with fixed fees for practitioners in those areas. ...

  • News

    PEP breaks £1m mark at Stewarts Law

    Archive

    Average profit per equity partner at litigation firm Stewarts Law broke through the £1m mark last year, according to 2012/13 financial results released today. Revenue jumped 27% to £45.2m, with profit rising to £20.5m from £15.8m. PEP was £1.1m, up from around £800,000 the previous ...

  • News

    Outstanding achievement award for legal aid battler Bhatt

    Archive

    Raju Bhatt, the founder of London civil liberties firm Bhatt Murphy, received the award for outstanding achievement at the Legal Aid Lawyer of the Year awards last night. Accepting the award on behalf of his firm and colleagues, and dedicating it to his clients’ continuing eligibility ...

  • News

    Lasting powers of attorney applications go on web

    Archive

    An online tool designed to eliminate errors in the application process for lasting powers of attorney (LPA) has gone live today. Currently, almost a fifth of applications received by the Office of the Public Guardian (OPG), which manages the LPA scheme, contain mistakes. ...

  • News

    Profits rise in ‘turbulent year’ for Field Fisher Waterhouse

    Archive

    Profits at City firm Field Fisher Waterhouse rose 8% to £18.3m for the ‘turbulent’ financial year 2012/13. Revenues dropped by 2.5% to £95m for the year to 5 April. Average profit per equity partner was also down, by 2% to £402,000. The ...

  • News

    Supreme Court judge Lady Hale succeeds Hope

    01 July 2013

    Lady Hale, the only woman among 12 Supreme Court judges, has been appointed deputy president of the country’s highest appellate court following the retirement of Lord Hope. Hale became the UK’s first woman Lord of Appeal in January 2004, before the establishment of the Supreme Court in 2009, following five ...

  • News

    MoJ call for QC nominations

    01 July 2013

    The Ministry of Justice is inviting nominations for the 2013/14 round of Queen’s Counsel hononoris causa (honorary silk) awards. These opened on 6 June 2013. For the Law Society, nominations are invited who are members of the law society but not barristers. Only the highest quality individuals will be nominated ...

  • News

    Financial crime sentences to prioritise victims

    01 July 2013

    Proposed new sentencing guidelines for financial crimes published last week encompass bribery and money laundering for the first time, while setting out to prioritise the impact of crime on the victim. The guidelines, which will replace existing guidance published by the Sentencing Guidelines Council in 2009, also cover the sentencing ...

  • News

    Birmingham Law Centre closes as cash runs out

    01 July 2013

    Britain’s second city is without a law centre following the closure of Birmingham Law Centre last week. Cashflow problems and the anticipated fall in legal aid funding led the trustees to shut down the service, which is descended from bodies that have offered free legal advice for nearly a century. ...

  • News

    Delay in switch of CMC complaints

    01 July 2013

    The government is almost certain to miss its target for transferring complaints about claims management companies (CMCs) to the Legal Ombudsman. The Ministry of Justice cannot yet say when the plans – unveiled last August – will come to fruition. The move was scheduled to be completed this year, but ...

  • News

    Law Commission looks at extending hate crime law

    01 July 2013

    The Law Commission is consulting on extending the law on hate crimes to cover sexual orientation, transgender identity and disability. Commissioner leading the project, Professor David Ormerod QC, said: ‘We will look at options for reform that would recognise that the criminal law should protect people who are targeted because ...

  • News

    Tory maverick Davis blasts 'Soviet' PCT

    01 July 2013

    Pressure on the government to amend its criminal legal aid reforms mounted last week as MPs debated the changes in parliament. Signs of a cabinet split had already emerged after deputy prime minister Nick Clegg voiced concern about the removal of client choice and attorney general ...