All News articles – Page 1623

  • News

    Solicitors sue police and Prison Service

    2010-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Three solicitors are suing the police and Prison Service after being arrested and detained for storing a dictation device and memory sticks in the wrong lockers during prison visits. The three lawyers were among five solicitors who were held at HMP Brixton in unconnected incidents, following ...

  • News

    Sketch show

    2010-10-28T00:00:00Z

    You can’t beat a good courtroom drama. So Obiter was delighted to receive a review copy of court artist Patricia Coleman’s sketches, brought together in a book with text by Evening Standard courts correspondent Paul Cheston. It includes scenes from some of Obiter’s favourite cases, from the appearance of Catherine ...

  • News

    Tax

    2010-10-28T00:00:00Z

    Accountants – Legal professional privilege – Tax avoidance R (on the application of (1) Prudential Plc (2) Prudential (Gibraltar) Ltd (appellants) v (1) Special Commissioner of Income Tax (2) Philip Pandolfo (inspector of taxes) (respondents) & (1) Institute of ...

  • News

    Immigration lawyers issue warning over appeals fee

    2010-10-26T00:00:00Z

    Immigration lawyers have warned that immigrants could be ‘penalised’ as a result of government plans to introduce fees in certain immigration and asylum appeals. Court fees of up to £250 could be charged for immigration and asylum tribunal appeals. No fees are currently charged.

  • News

    Unregulated will-writers and building case studies

    2010-10-26T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has asked members to inform it of any problems their clients may have experienced with unregulated will-writers.

  • News

    Lord chief justice calls for reform of family system

    2010-10-26T00:00:00Z

    The adversarial court system is not appropriate for settling parental disputes over the custody of children, the lord chief justice said today. Giving evidence to the House of Commons’ justice committee, Lord Judge (pictured) said he has ‘real concerns’ that the adversarial system ‘leaves a ...

  • News

    Regulators consult on tougher rules for law degrees

    2010-10-26T00:00:00Z

    A joint committee of the Solicitors Regulation Authority and Bar Standards Board has released two consultations on the future of the undergraduate law degree. The first Joint Academic Stage Board (JASB) paper asks for views on whether students who have failed a single foundation subject within ...

  • News

    The right to choose your own lawyer – part 2

    2010-10-25T00:00:00Z

    A year ago, I wrote about the Eschig decision of the European Court of Justice, which held that insured individuals in a mass tort case retain the right to choose their own lawyers. Now there is another case on its way to the European Court of Justice on the same ...

  • News

    New advocacy proposals ‘prejudice’ solicitors

    2010-10-25T00:00:00Z

    A proposed new quality assurance scheme for criminal advocates could prejudice solicitors because it places too much weight on the views of judges, an advocates’ group has warned. The Solicitors Association of Higher Court Advocates (SAHCA) has voiced concerns over the ‘over-reliance’ on judicial evaluation proposed ...

  • News

    Children at risk over court fees

    2010-10-22T00:00:00Z

    Solicitors have warned that local authorities may be deterred from placing vulnerable children into care, following the government’s decision not to scrap the controversial court fees paid by local authorities in care and supervision cases. In a written ministerial statement yesterday, justice minister Jonathan Djanogly (pictured) ...

  • News

    Des Collins named Gazette Legal Personality of the Year

    2010-10-22T00:00:00Z

    High-profile civil litigation solicitor Des Collins, senior partner of Collins in Watford, was named Gazette Legal Personality of the Year at the Law Society’s Excellence Awards last night.

  • News

    Support victims of rape, says Stern

    2010-10-22T00:00:00Z

    The government must support the victims of serious violent crime despite financial constraints following its spending review, Baroness Stern said last night. The crossbench peer, who led the independent review into how rape complainants are treated by public bodies, said justice had to be balanced, and ...

  • News

    LSC announces contract extension to 14 December

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    The Legal Services Commission has announced that all current ‘family only’ and ‘family with housing’ legal aid contracts will be extended until 14 December, following the Law Society’s successful judicial review of the tender process. The LSC has until 29 October to decide whether ...

  • News

    Justice budget will fall to £7bn in four years

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    The Ministry of Justice will see its budget cut by just under £2bn over the next four years, the chancellor George Osborne announced in the government’s spending review this afternoon. He told the House of Commons that the MoJ budget, which is currently £8.9bn a year, ...

  • News

    Abolish ‘unfair’ means testing, say criminal lawyers

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Criminal law solicitors have called for the abolition of the ‘unfair, unworkable and discriminatory’ system of means testing for legal aid in the magistrates’ court, claiming the change would save £100m. In a paper on legal aid funding, the Criminal Law Solicitors Association proposed that legal ...

  • News

    Claimant-friendly defamation laws could be about to change

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    This year and next may come to be looked back on as the beginning of the end of the UK’s status as one of the most claimant-friendly defamation jurisdictions in the world. But how did we get here, and what might this sea change mean for solicitors and their clients?

  • News

    Insurers accused of ‘abusing’ RTA scheme

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Insurers are ‘abusing’ the scheme designed to speed up low-value road traffic accident (RTA) personal injury cases, solicitors said this week. The claims cast doubt on Lord Young’s assertion in his recent report on the ‘compensation culture’ that the RTA process ‘provides a model of how ...

  • News

    EC in class action plan

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    The European Commission (EC) will launch a Europe-wide consultation on collective actions next month, as it attempts once again to harmonise laws and improve access to compensation for individuals and small businesses. Announcing the forthcoming consultation in a speech at the University of Valladolid in Spain ...

  • News

    Contempt laws needed despite web, says A-G

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    The increasing power of the internet has not diminished the importance of the contempt of court laws, the Attorney General said last week. Delivering the Criminal Bar Association’s annual Kalisher Lecture, Dominic Grieve QC dismissed calls to scrap the laws that prohibit the publication of evidence ...

  • News

    Price competition 'very possible' in criminal legal aid tendering

    2010-10-21T00:00:00Z

    The chairman of the Legal Services Commission has indicated that it is ‘very possible’ that the Ministry of Justice will introduce price competition in the tendering process for criminal legal aid contracts, and predicted greater competition for criminal contracts when barristers bid for work through ProcureCos. ...