Latest news – Page 647

  • News

    Minimum wage for Scottish trainees

    2012-04-30T00:00:00Z

    Trainee solicitors in Scotland are set to be paid the national minimum wage of £6.08 an hour or more from June 2012, the Law Society of Scotland (LSS) has announced. The announcement came the same day that the LSS agreed a proposed cut in council member ...

  • News

    Herbert Smith cuts City jobs

    2012-04-30T00:00:00Z

    City firm Herbert Smith has confirmed it plans to cut staff numbers at its London headquarters by 51. The redundancies, which represent 3.2% of the total London headcount, were announced to staff today as a consultation period was started. The proposed reductions would come principally from ...

  • News

    CoA ruling makes parent companies liable for subsidiaries’ health and safety

    2012-04-30T00:00:00Z

    Parent companies have a responsibility for the health and safety of their subsidiaries’ employees, the Court of Appeal has ruled in a groundbreaking case. The judgment comes after a retired factory worker successfully sued his former employer’s parent company after contracting asbestosis. Cape, which owned ...

  • News

    Russell Jones & Walker approved as ABS

    2012-04-27T00:00:00Z

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) has cleared the Australian takeover of top-100 firm Russell Jones & Walker by licensing it as an alternative business structure (ABS), it announced today. RJW, acquired by Slater & Gordon earlier this year, is the fifth ABS firm to be ...

  • News

    Solicitor judges get their own network

    2012-04-27T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society is to create a new membership section - the Solicitor Judges Division - to create a community of solicitor judges. The division, which will be launched at Chancery Lane on 9 May, is intended to provide opportunities for networking and supporting solicitors in their judicial careers, through ...

  • News

    UK right not to adopt EU justice measure, Lords committee says

    2012-04-27T00:00:00Z

    European Union laws setting minimum rights for defendants and victims are in the interests of British citizens, but the government was right not to sign up to a Lisbon treaty proposal guaranteeing suspects access to a lawyer, a committee of peers has said. The Lords Justice ...

  • News

    Firm offers £1,500 advance for PI victims

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    A personal injury firm with ambitions to open 50 outlets this year is offering a £1,500 cash advance for accident victims who make a claim. GT Law, which has also applied to be an alternative business structure, will require a medical report and insurer’s admission of ...

  • News

    Strasbourg reform ‘watered down’

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    The coalition’s blueprint for the reform of Europe’s human rights court in Strasbourg achieved only limited changes after proposals to help clear the backlog of more than 150,000 cases were watered down or removed during negotiations.

  • News

    SRA costs plan 'a burden' says Society

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has told regulators that solicitors should not be expected to pay for losses incurred by uninsured firms. The Solicitors Regulation Authority proposed last week that payments would be taken out of the Compensation Fund from later this year. The fund, paid for by ...

  • News

    Court interpreter situation 'improving'

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    Large numbers of court hearings are still being hit by interpreter problems nearly three months after new contracting arrangements began - but the situation has improved, new ­figures indicate.

  • News

    Private prosecution pioneer opens

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    A firm thought to be the first private prosecution specialist in Britain opened in London last week to ‘fill a gap in the tackling of economic crime’. Edmonds Marshall McMahon, established as a legal disciplinary practice, will specialise in fraud, counterfeiting, regulatory offences, corporate crime and ...

  • News

    Chancery Lane slams ‘flawed’ BSB report

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has condemned as ‘flawed and self-serving’ a Bar Standards Board survey alleging a decline in the quality of advocacy. The report, Perceptions of Criminal Advocacy, found that a majority of barristers responding to an online survey blamed pressure on criminal legal aid ...

  • News

    Solicitor rapped for ‘frustrating’ tribunal

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    The president of the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has backed an employment tribunal’s finding of ‘appalling’ behaviour by a solicitor in a strongly worded judgment.

  • News

    Move to close criminal advice loophole

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    A legal loophole that has allowed police to deny suspects their right to consult a solicitor could be closed by a change in the law. Home Office officials have agreed to propose an amendment to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) 1984, imposing a ...

  • News

    Difficult to comprehend

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    I have followed with interest and mounting concern the Gazette’s coverage of fears about the declining standards of interpretation in UK criminal courts, most recently ‘Interpreter mistake causes trial to collapse'.

  • News

    Why the overlap?

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    I note the debate about the future of the Legal Services Board. I remain intrigued and confused. I thought that the Law Society and the Solicitors Regulation Authority represented our professional and regulatory body respectively. Alas, it would seem that this is not the case, ...

  • News

    ‘Light touch’ OFR?

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    In her speech on 19 April announcing the delayed dates for the submission of nominations for the appointment of COLPs and COFAs, SRA executive director Samantha Barrass is reported to have said that in support of the nomination ‘a senior manager from the firm must confirm that the firm has ...

  • News

    Outmoded example

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    I do not seek to comment on the broad issues raised by the author of the letter ‘Smelling a rat', but I do take strong issue with the facts set out in the two cases he cites in his argument. In each case he mentions that ...

  • News

    PI lawyers rule out ‘deal or no deal’

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    Personal injury lawyers are refusing to play ‘deal or no deal games’ with the government over fixed fees for smaller cases. The government has written to all stakeholders asking them to suggest a limit for the value of claim that solicitors should be able to charge ...

  • News

    MoJ: ‘up to solicitors’ to police damages

    2012-04-26T00:00:00Z

    A Ministry of Justice official has said it will be up to solicitors to police a key aspect of the civil litigation reforms. Robert Wright, head of civil litigation and funding at the MoJ, admitted last week there is no way for the government to ensure ...