Last 3 months headlines – Page 1199

  • News

    Intellectual property

    2012-07-26T00:00:00Z

    Copyright - Infringement - Disclosure and inspection of documents - Claimants holding licences in copyrighted works Golden Eye (International) Ltd and others v Telefonica UK Ltd: ChD (Mr Justice Arnold): 26 March 2012 ...

  • News

    Divorce

    2012-07-26T00:00:00Z

    Decree nisi - Rescission - Court granting unopposed decree nisi on wife’s petition based on husband’s adultery Kim v Morris: Fam Div (Mrs Justice Parker DBE): 2 May 2012 ...

  • News

    Vicarious liability

    2012-07-26T00:00:00Z

    Roman Catholic Church - Liability for tortious acts of priest - Claimant alleging sexual abuse and rape by Roman Catholic priest JGE v Trustees of the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan: CA (Civ) (Lord Justices Ward, Tomlinson, Davis): 12 July ...

  • News

    Panel identifies consumer trust shortfall

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    Legal services consumers are becoming less confident about protection of their rights as the market liberalises, research has found. The second consumer ‘healthcheck’ released by the Legal Services Consumer Panel today identified declining public trust in lawyers, though it pointed out that this is true of ...

  • News

    'Commonsense' regulation

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    I was moved to contribute some observations on regulation following a discussion with a solicitor client pulling their hair out at the delays in the Solicitors Regulation Authority investigation process; and having read Gregory Treverton-Jones QC’s article on the dangers of entity regulation.

  • News

    Consolidation - should we all be doing it?

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    Merger activity within the UK legal profession is significant. Every week the legal press brings new stories of mergers, team defection and acquisition and firms being rescued as the cashflow requirements of the business prove to be overwhelming.

  • News

    Forensic science vandalism

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    He is almost 70 years old and still manning the barricades nearly 24 years after his most high-profile triumph as a solicitor - the freeing of four victims of a miscarriage of justice who had spent 15 years in prison for a crime they did not commit.

  • News

    Employment lawyers slam ‘out-of-the-blue’ reform plans

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    A group representing 6,000 employment lawyers has savaged government plans to cut red tape for businesses, claiming that they will prolong rather than settle disputes and stretch resources ‘beyond breaking point’. The Employment Lawyers Association (ELA) says that the proposals, in the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform ...

  • News

    Insurance fund deal for mesothelioma victims

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    Insurers will pay £300m over the next 10 years into a scheme to support newly diagnosed victims of mesothelioma, the government confirmed today. The money will go into a new fund for the 3,000 victims across the UK who are unable to claim compensation because ...

  • News

    Supreme Court backs ‘unbeliever’ asylum right

    2012-07-25T00:00:00Z

    The Supreme Court today unanimously upheld the right of asylum seekers not to be forced to hold, seem to hold or express a political opinion in order to protect themselves from persecution in their own countries. The judgment, for the first time, makes the law clear ...

  • News

    Lessons from the low-value RTA process

    2012-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Last week the Ministry of Justice finally revealed Professor Fenn’s independent report on the operation of the low-value road traffic accident process. And it was rather disappointing. Fenn found that costs under the process, which uses an electronic portal, appeared to be 3-4% lower than previously, ...

  • News

    ‘New litigation industry’ will deter investors, CBI warns

    2012-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Government proposals for ‘opt-out’ class actions for consumers could spark a new ‘litigation industry’ around competition law and deter inward investment and growth, business lobby group the Confederation of British Industry warned today. Businesses need incentives such as reduced fines to participate in alternative dispute ...

  • News

    Medical report cost recovery in last-minute Jackson change

    2012-07-24T00:00:00Z

    Concerns about impact on disabled claimants have forced a last-ditch change to the government’s civil litigation reforms. An equality impact assessment of the Jackson proposals revealed fears that claimants could be prevented from bringing a serious injury claim because of the cost of expert reports. Part ...

  • News

    Shoosmiths lets 86 go

    2012-07-24T00:00:00Z

    National firm Shoosmiths has responded to a difficult financial year by announcing a total of 86 redundancies. The top 40 firm, where turnover dropped by 3% in 2011/12 to £84m, today confirmed 71 voluntary and 15 compulsory redundancies following a two-month consultation. ...

  • News

    Money laundering - at last, the evidence?

    2012-07-23T00:00:00Z

    As the old saying goes, be careful what you wish for. Something is about to happen that some have requested for a long time. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the inter-governmental body which takes the lead in the global fight against money laundering, and which is the inspiration behind ...

  • News

    Are you deaf-aware?

    2012-07-23T00:00:00Z

    My cousin committed suicide, aged 35. He took an overdose and left two children and a wife, but no note. My uncle’s theory was that he killed himself because he was going deaf. ‘Deafness isolates you,’ said my uncle, who himself wore a hearing aid. ‘It’s easy to become lonely ...

  • News

    Making Libor claims stick

    2012-07-23T00:00:00Z

    Libor abuse is the latest of many sticks available to critics with which to flog the banking piñata, but as the Treasury Select Committee circled around former Barclays chief executive Bob Diamond on 5 July to take turns waving it his way, it became clear that the full details of ...

  • News

    Solicitor shot in Devizes has died

    2012-07-23T00:00:00Z

    Police have confirmed that Wiltshire solicitor James Ward (pictured) has died following a shooting in his office earlier this month. The 58-year-old, principal solicitor at Morris Goddard & Ward, was shot at his desk in the firm’s Devizes office on 2 July. Wiltshire Police today confirmed ...

  • News

    Solicitors demanding referral fees could be ‘named and shamed’ by bar

    2012-07-23T00:00:00Z

    Naming and shaming solicitors who seek referral fees for passing work onto barristers has been mooted by the Bar Standards Board in a bid stamp out the practice. The Bar Council has already taken advice on whether referral fees amount to bribes, though that advice has ...

  • News

    ABS offers barristers at £75 an hour

    2012-07-23T00:00:00Z

    A new law firm which promises clients fixed fees and immediate face-to-face meetings with barristers has become the latest alternative business structure (ABS). Red Bar Law was formed in September last year and applied to the Solicitors Regulation Authority for ABS status in January. Today the ...