All News articles – Page 1335

  • News

    Brace yourself for unprecedented change, says master of rolls

    2012-10-19T00:00:00Z

    Implementing the Jackson costs reforms will inevitably lead to satellite litigation, the master of the rolls has warned. He urged courts and lawyers to ‘do what they can’ to minimise it. In a wide-ranging speech at the Law Society yesterday, Lord Dyson (pictured) said that the ...

  • News

    Secret of my success

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Such success as I had as a criminal defence lawyer can be attributed to my inspired decision to instruct Wilfrid Fordham. Before then, my principal, Simpson, had relied for criminal cases on John Averill, a small, curly haired man who became increasingly eccentric and involved ...

  • News

    Public procurement

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Public contracts – Claimants tendering for development contract from defendant market authority By Development Ltd and others v Covent Garden Market Authority: Queen's Bench Division, Technology and Construction Court: 28 September 2012 ...

  • News

    War tribunal ‘politically motivated’

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    A barrister representing a prominent Muslim figure in Britain has criticised a tribunal seeking his extradition to Bangladesh on war crimes charges.

  • News

    A new look for new times

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society Gazette, which turns 109 next month, has gone through many iterations in print. Today’s issue introduces the first comprehensive redesign for several years and reflects our determination to ensure solicitors from every constituency of a diverse readership are seen and heard in these pages.

  • News

    Do we need more law students?

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Further to the article of 24 September at Gazette Online by Ian Wimbush, I write to express my astonishment at the writer’s statement in his final paragraph: ‘That, with the recent consolidation and the increase in law students, tends to paint a rather more optimistic picture for the future of ...

  • News

    Top hat and... wardrobe malfunction

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Obiter is more than a little disappointed that a feature in the latest British Vogue titled ‘Law of attraction’ includes few practical answers to the sartorial challenges thrown up by the average lawyer’s diary (too many chunky knits, mainly). However, male colleagues who fear being wrong-footed ...

  • News

    Fright night

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Obiter last week asked for a fictional/historic character whose estate you’d least like to wind up. At least six readers proposed Henry VIII; ‘look what happened to Thomas Cromwell’. Genghis Khan was another popular choice. Fictional probate clients from hell ranged from Willy Wonka to ...

  • News

    Interpreter firm still missing target, official statistics reveal

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    The company contracted to provide court interpreters has failed to reach its performance target after six months, statistics released today reveal. The overall success rate for jobs completed by Applied Language Solutions between 30 January and 31 August was 89%. The contract’s performance target is ...

  • News

    Lost generation fears of Labour's Sadiq Khan

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Criminal legal aid solicitors will be such an endangered species by 2015 that Labour would not need to take forward plans for price-competitive tendering in the sector. That is the startlingly frank opinion of shadow justice secretary Sadiq Khan MP, who has given the Gazette ...

  • News

    Family

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Orders in family proceedings - Parental order D and L (children) (surrogacy): Family Division (Mr Justice Baker): 28 September 2012 The Family Division granted parental orders in respect of ...

  • News

    Litigant in person ‘not entitled to indulgence’

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    The Court of Appeal has told a self-represented litigant that his lack of legal understanding does not entitle him to ‘extra indulgence’. The finding will comfort solicitors facing a soaring number of self-represented opponents. Peter Elliott, who claims to be ...

  • News

    Osborne's employee plan is flawed

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    by Richard Fox, head of employment law at City firm Kingsley Napley and chair of the Employment Lawyers Association It was a complete surprise to most people when, at the beginning of last week, George Osborne announced to the Conservative party conference, a plan to introduce ...

  • News

    Are DBAs a viable option in personal injury?

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    As personal injury lawyers prepare to kiss goodbye to recoverability of after-the-event insurance premiums and success fees in conditional fee agreements from next April, so they will be waving hello to the new kid in town, the damages-based agreement. Will DBAs prove to be the hero of the hour, rescuing ...

  • News

    Study recommends shift in CPD provision

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    The annual requirement for 16 hours of continuing professional development (CPD) should not be extended and could even be lowered, according to a report commissioned by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. The Nottingham Law School study also says law firms should have to contribute to the ...

  • News

    Hudson warning over failure to modernise conveyancing

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Failure to computerise the conveyancing process could damage the UK economy, the chief executive of the Law Society has told a United Nations conference. Speaking at a UN Economic Commission for Europe event on the role of land registration in economic recovery, Desmond Hudson (pictured) ...

  • News

    Degree of discipline at party conference

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Party conferences are difficult things for the majority parliamentary party. You have to rouse the faithful but the course of government is already set. One moment of temptation – by applause or a headline – and some department is stuck with an initiative that went down a storm in ...

  • News

    Top firms risk collapse, US economist warns

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    The very largest corporate law firms are wedded to an unsustainable business model designed around support for their own massive overheads, one of the US’s leading general counsel has warned, predicting more collapses like that of US firm Dewey LeBoeuf. Michael Trotter, now with US firm ...

  • News

    Reality check

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    Do we have any sympathy with the comments of the solicitor judge whose name was withheld on request, bemoaning the changes to the pension regime for the judiciary? I think not.

  • News

    Roundtable: the changing role of corporate counsel

    2012-10-18T00:00:00Z

    In-house lawyers in commerce and industry operate in a landscape that has changed hugely since the turn of the millennium. This new terrain has been shaped by across-the-board growth in the demands of regulators, investors and legislators worldwide, and by an increased sensitivity to litigation risks.