Last 3 months headlines – Page 1342
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Conflict of laws
Jurisdiction – Challenge to jurisdiction – Contract between parties AES Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant LLC v Ust-Kamenogorsk Hydropower Plant JSC: CA (Civ Div) Lord Justices Rix, Wilson and Stanley Burnton: 27 May 2011 ...
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Justice served cold
On 3 April 1759 Eugene Aram (pictured), a schoolmaster from Knaresborough in Yorkshire, was convicted of the murder of local shoemaker Daniel Clark, which had taken place 14 years previously. Three days after that conviction he was hanged and his remains suspended in chains near the scene of the crime ...
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Food glorious food
Thirty-five years ago, not long after the Gazette became a weekly, I wrote the editorials, writes James Morton. Not all of them of course – since I didn’t know a thing about anything except criminal law (and not much about that) but a fair number. For some reason, the then ...
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Arbitration
Award – Appeal – Defendant employed by claimant Wilson & Partners Ltd v Emmott: QBD (Comm) Mr Justice Andrew Smith: 8 June 2011 The claimant company was incorporated in the ...
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Not cricket
England’s professionals may be riding high in the cricket world, but the same can’t be said for its solicitors. The Lawyers Cricket World Cup is set to go ahead later this year without the England solicitors team, which is apparently suffering from a shortage of numbers, Obiter hears. Quite what ...
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Pedal power
Forget London’s Boris Bikes, one Tottenham firm has taken matters into its own hands to get its staff cycling to work. Conscious of the need to promote green awareness and reduce its carbon footprint, legal aid firm Wilsons has pedalled aboard the government’s cycle to work scheme.
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New laws on the use of cookies
With accusations of ignorance and fear-mongering coming from both the privacy and the tech-freedom camps, recent new laws surrounding the use of ‘cookies’ have not been without their problems.
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New laws on the use of cookies
With accusations of ignorance and fear-mongering coming from both the privacy and the tech-freedom camps, recent new laws surrounding the use of ‘cookies’ have not been without their problems.
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The increasing world of regulation and compliance
In a secret location in the UK, there is a warehouse the size of a football pitch that climbs five storeys into the sky. Under its gargantuan roof are more than three million boxes and, in these boxes, are thousands and thousands of files and innumerable documents.
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Part 36 offers and recent judgments
One of the most successful innovations introduced by the Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) has been part 36 offers. In 2007, part 36 offers replaced payments into court as the sole mechanism under the CPR for making offers to settle, which, in the words of Lord Justice Moore-Bick, have ‘far-reaching consequences ...
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Animal instinct and the law
I read the letters page weekly and normally find the tone of the correspondence quite depressing. I was therefore delighted to read the item ‘Become a vet’ which made me laugh out loud in my office. Not that I wish to seem joyful at ...
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Clients want to see something tangible
I was interested to read Bob Haworth’s comments on bringing back Land Certificates. My experience also indicates that clients want something tangible. Indeed, some years ago I was applying to the Land Registry to make a small adjustment to a client’s Title and she handed ...
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Defective claims
I read with interest the variousletters pointing out that a claim form is a ‘statement of case’ and must be verified by a statement of truth. The standard claim form, N1, has the following statement of truth at the bottom of the second page: ‘(I believe) ...
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Colombia concerns
While the Colombia Caravana UK Lawyers Group welcomes the commitment to the protection of human rights in Colombia expressed in ambassador Mauricio Rodriguez Munera’s letter, we continue to have grave concerns about the safety of Colombian human rights lawyers.
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It makes sense to restrict arrests for crimes of universal jurisdiction
Government reforms designed to restrict arrests for crimes of universal jurisdiction survived new challenges in the House of Lords last week. If the proposals emerge unscathed after a further debate this month, there will be less risk that politicians visiting Britain from countries such as the US, China and Israel ...
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How mucking in pays dividends
I read with great interest Tony Roe’s article on starting a firm from scratch. It brought a smile to my face as it brought back memories of when I set up Millan Solicitors in 2004. As a small private general practice, we have had to ...
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How mucking in pays dividends
I read with great interest Tony Roe’s article on starting a firm from scratch. It brought a smile to my face as it brought back memories of when I set up Millan Solicitors in 2004. As a small private general practice, we have had to ...
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News
Fees for independent social work experts must be fair
by Richard J Jack, director of CISWA-UK The Confederation of Independent Social Work Agencies (CISWA-UK) read with concern a recent posting on the children’s panel group website. This indicates that some solicitors are inclined to avoid using experts who charge above the prescribed rates,even where such ...
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Whitehall turns a blind eye to fallout from legal aid cuts
It is a common cry, when a decision goes against someone, that there was a flaw in consultation. But the objections to what is proposed for the withdrawal of legal aid in the Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Bill are more substantive than the lamentations of sore losers.
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‘Big is not beautiful’ says LSB in report on smaller regulators
An independent report commissioned by the Legal Services Board into the future of the smaller regulators has stressed that they must not be forced into radical changes in response to the Legal Services Act. The report, by former Ministry of Justice official Nick Smedley, predicted there ...