Last 3 months headlines – Page 1026
-
News
Lords call for delay to LLP tax changes
Tax avoidance measures need further consultation, finance bill sub-committee says.
-
News
G4S and Serco reveal profit hit over electronic tagging
G4S reports £170m pre-tax loss after being stripped of contract.
-
News
Government plans ADR scheme for consumer rights
An alternative dispute resolution scheme is intended to give consumers greater redress without going to court.
-
News
Mitchell regime savaged as firm describes ‘climate of fear’
PI giant and City representative line up to criticise aftermath of Jackson reforms.
-
News
Grayling rules out privatised courts
Privatisation not an absolute dogma, says justice secretary.
-
News
Compensation hope for clients of ‘dishonesty’ firm
In July last year the SRA closed Deidre Newell-Austin’s firm Austin Law citing ‘reason to suspect dishonesty’.
-
News
Society criticises Land Registry land-charge grab
No pressing need for registry to extend powers and take over local land charge service, Society says.
-
News
High Court backs Legal Ombudsman over barrister complaint
Judge rules response was too late and offensive.
-
News
Lawyers warned over capital allowances changes
From 1 April capital allowances must be identified at the point of sale or purchase of commercial properties.
-
News
Entries invited for Excellence Awards
Awards celebrate the best work of individual solicitors as well as the successes and innovations of practices and firms.
-
News
‘Brain drain’ fear as legal diversity stagnates
Fewer women aspire to partnership than men, says a new study, while efforts to get more solicitors on the bench have stalled.
-
News
Conveyancing case is a ‘clarion call’ for lawyers
The Court of Appeal ruled that a conveyancer’s failure to follow best practice contributed to a mortgage fraud.
-
News
Land Registry extension plans widely condemned
The Law Society said that it is ‘keen to ensure a change of status does not undermine confidence in the register’.
-
News
Spain eases law after China pressure
Cases such as the indictment of former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet by a Spanish magistrate would no longer be made.
-
News
Do not read this email
The SRA’s new big cheese was probably hoping for a smooth first few weeks in the job.
-
News
Civil service’s techno time warp
The Attorney General’s Office still uses pagers – spending £1,861 on them since December 2010.
-
News
Playing the blame game
TV drama Silk was mocked for inaccuracies – but maybe it was right on one thing.