Opinion – Page 180

  • Trotter book
    Opinion

    BOOK REVIEW: Why professor Susskind is wrong

    30 October 2017

    What’s To Become  of the Legal Profession? - Michael H. Trotter

  • Courtinside
    Opinion

    BOOK REVIEW: Standing in your own two feet

    30 October 2017

    A Straightforward Guide to How to Be a Litigant in Person in the New Legal World – representing yourself in the civil courts, Michael Langford

  • Letters
    Opinion

    ​People power – the new normal

    30 October 2017

    Law firms that put intellectual capital before personal gain should be applauded. Accepting a lower return is a price worth paying

  • Letters
    Opinion

    Chain reaction

    30 October 2017

    ‘Blockchain deal bodes ill for conveyancers’, the Gazette reported on 16 October. At their own risk, parties can always bypass solicitors and, for example, prepare their own transfer deed, so it is surprising the Gazette devotes space to this. Neil Singer seems not to understand the purpose of land ...

  • Letters
    Opinion

    Heavy price of 'efficiency'

    30 October 2017

    One of the reasons why the defence solicitor son of your recent correspondent is ‘paid a pittance’ (letters, 16 October) may be the profession’s lemming-like acceptance of so-called ‘franchising’ and the time-limited criminal contracts in the late 1990s. Such unthinking acceptance eliminated local independence and competition. It ceded effective control ...

  • Letters
    Opinion

    The force is against you

    30 October 2017

    I read with sympathy the letter headed ‘Why is my son paid a pittance?’. The answer, however, is very simple: market forces. I am told that when I qualified in 1969 there were about 26,500 practising solicitors in England and Wales. There are now over 140,000 (news, 23 October). Michael ...

  • Letters
    Opinion

    It all adds up

    30 October 2017

    With regard to VAT on online property searches, surely any solicitor acquiring such a search will spend time on assessing the search, charge for that time and add VAT on that charge. Perhaps I am over simplifying, but does that not answer all the tribunal judge’s (and HMRC’s) arguments? ...

  • Jonathan Goldsmith
    Opinion

    Knowing our place

    30 October 2017

    The status of your professional body post-Brexit will take a long time to settle.

  • Opinion

    Courtroom class chasm

    30 October 2017

    Everyday justice is clapped out.

  • Ryan Mowat
    Opinion

    No place at the table for an honest cheat

    2017-10-26T13:20:00Z

    Judgment in the £7.8m baccarat winnings case has wide implications for criminal law. 

  • John Hyde byline
    Opinion

    Lidington is polished but no different to the rest

    2017-10-25T16:07:00Z

    This week's legal aid announcement points to a lord chancellor in the same mould as his predecessors. 

  • Jonathan Goldsmith
    Opinion

    Shielded from data protection fallout

    2017-10-23T10:52:00Z

    An equivalent of the EU-US Privacy Shield needs to be shaped before Brexit.

  • Will
    Opinion

    BOOK REVIEW: ​Parker’s Will Precedents

    23 October 2017

    Richard Dew, Leon Pickering

  • Reading old book
  • Reading old book
  • Letters
    Opinion

    System failure

    23 October 2017

    The government should acknowledge that court fees are a hidden tax – its deceit is made worse by deteriorating service levels.

  • Letters
    Opinion

    ​Flat fee is disproportionate

    23 October 2017

    We are a small firm with two partners and no staff, and a turnover of less than £200,000. We are currently carrying out our renewal of Solicitors Regulation Authority registration and have come to the fees. We understand that a periodical fee has to be paid. However, we take great ...

  • Letters
    Opinion

    Prison shame

    23 October 2017

    It is a source of immense pride to me and I am sure to many other Law Society members that solicitors such as the redoubtable Laura Janes continue to play a pivotal role in the endeavours of the Howard League for Penal Reform on behalf of the rights of offenders. ...

  • Letters
    Opinion

    ​Proof point

    23 October 2017

    I wanted to clarify one point in relation to your article about the standard of proof. You said that the ‘discussion paper… does not explicitly back requiring prosecutions to be proved “beyond reasonable doubt”’. This is not quite accurate. The Law Society is keen to hear members’ views. However, I ...

  • Letters
    Opinion

    Too few judges

    23 October 2017

    It is a strange little world, that of the deputy district judge, particularly those retired who come back and sit a few times a month. Every month a list is sent out of perhaps a hundred unfilled court sittings around the country. It is first come, first served for venues. ...