All News articles – Page 1580
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News
Employment
Negligence - Asbestos - Burden of proof Karen Sienkiewicz (administratrix of the estate of Enid Costello, deceased) v Greif (UK) Ltd: Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council v Willmore: SC (Lords Phillips, Rodger, Brown, Mance, Kerr, Dyson, Lady Hale): 9 March ...
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Failing the means test
I have read about Crown Court legal aid and the current problems surrounding it, but do people not realise that legal aid in the magistrates’ court is a much bigger problem? I agree that the idea of cases progressing faster is usually a good thing. ...
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Having faith in judicial institutions
Why do we have such faith in judicial institutions that sometimes get things wrong? The question was posed last week by Stephen Breyer, a justice of the US Supreme Court, speaking in London at an event arranged by the Bingham Centre for the Rule ...
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Finger on the trigger
Conveyancing solicitors face many hurdles in their day-to-day battle to transfer ownership of property. Excessive bureaucracy from the Land Registry; frustrating delays in obtaining search data; irate clients with unrealistic expectations; all part and parcel of the average conveyance. But ...
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Solicitor jailed for money laundering and fraud
A solicitor whose lavish lifestyle included driving a Lamborghini worth more than £80,000 was jailed last week for four years and eight months after a joint investigation by the police and Solicitors Regulation Authority. Benjamin Cornelius, 37, was convicted at Cardiff Crown Court of money laundering ...
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Overcoming hurdles
Robert Cumming raises a good point in saying that labour laws needs to be reformed to ensure equality of pay. There is a huge groundswell of opinion, among women as much as men, that new paternity rights ought to be ‘use it or lose it ...
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Personal injury
Autistic spectrum disorder - Employers’ liability Janet Vaile v Havering London Borough Council CA (Civ Div): (Lords Justices Longmore, Etherton, Sir David Keene): 11 March 2011 The appellant former teacher ...
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Tied up in knots
Obiter is thinking of changing its name to the ‘Djanogly diary’, such is the frequency with which the unfortunate legal aid minister has been featured on this page in recent weeks. Indeed, Jonathan Djanogly’s (pictured) eccentric performance at last week’s National Pro Bono Centre ...
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Law Society warns LSB over 'micro-management'
The Legal Services Board must resist the urge to ‘micro-manage’ aspects of legal regulation, and should reduce its budget rather than extending its role to become an ‘economic regulator’, the Law Society has warned. Responding to the LSB’s draft business plan, Chancery Lane also cautioned that ...
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Legal advice ‘too expensive’ warns bar regulator’s chair
Legal advice is ‘too expensive’ and has ‘moved out of reach of the middle classes,’ the chair of the Bar Standards Board said this week. Speaking at Inner Temple, Lady Deech said: ‘The advice of a top barrister is affordable only by government, by corporate bodies ...
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LSC and Law Society fail to agree on civil contracts compensation
Firms that incurred losses after the High Court quashed the Legal Services Commission’s family tender last year will not receive compensation from the LSC, the Law Society announced today. Chancery Lane said it had been trying to negotiate a settlement arrangement with the LSC since last ...
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Low exposure asbestos claims
The recent Supreme Court ruling does clarify the tests the courts should apply and will make it easier for victims with relatively low exposure to asbestos to succeed in claims, but significant hurdles still remain for many mesothelioma victims who do not know exactly where or when they were exposed ...
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Why are divorcing couples so careless when it comes to Facebook?
I don’t mean to pry – it’s probably none of my business, anyway - but why do we have such an ambivalent attitude towards privacy? Even while going through divorce proceedings, a family lawyer warned this week, we seem impelled to risk the demolition of our ...
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Maintaining your independence
With the current appetite for national rebranding and an increase in ‘opportunities’ for franchising, many law firms are considering their options. Is it better to invest in your own destiny or join a national brand or franchise for the same sort of investment? Whilst there can ...
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Weightmans and Mace & Jones to merge
National firm Weightmans and north-west firm Mace & Jones will merge on 1 May to create a £75m-revenue, 1,000-employee business, the firms announced today. The news follows Weightmans’ recent announcement that it will acquire the full 13-partner insurance team from south-east firm Vizards Wyeth on 1 ...
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News
What is that spell again, Hermione?
Never has the European Commission had more need of magic. It has become the Harry Potter figure, waving its wand desperately, trying to fight off death eaters and dementors (I have a few nominees for representatives of these groups, beginning with the hysterically anti-EU columnists in certain UK newspapers). In ...
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Pressure prompts review of ‘domestic violence’ legal aid definition
The government has delayed its plans to respond to the legal aid and civil costs consultations until after Easter, and will ‘review’ the definition of domestic violence, the legal aid minister said last week. Jonathan Djanogly had previously said the government would respond before Easter, but ...
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News
Pressure prompts review of ‘domestic violence’ legal aid definition
The government has delayed its plans to respond to the legal aid and civil costs consultations until after Easter, and will ‘review’ the definition of domestic violence, the legal aid minister said last week. Jonathan Djanogly had previously said the government would respond before Easter, but ...





















