Latest news
Solicitor on hook for £4.65m losses caused by fraudulent partner fails in bid to have insurer pay
A solicitor whose law firm partner has gone to jail for four years for mortgage fraud has lost her bid to have the £4.65m losses being sought from her covered by the firm’s professional indemnity insurer, even though she was not alleged to have had any personal involvement in the frauds.
Notarial firm in ABS first
A notarial firm based in Norwich has become the first to be regulated as an alternative business structure by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. The move was triggered by the decision to appoint its first non-notary employees earlier this year.
Cold calling, whiplash reform and IPT – Autumn Statement angers claimant lawyers
Claimant personal injury lawyers have been left questioning why the government was prepared to announced in yesterday’s Autumn Statement that it is to ban cold-calling in relation to pensions, but not to stop it in personal injury – and whether Chancellor Philip Hammond let slip that the whiplash reforms are already a done deal.
Divorce app pioneers replace solicitors with ‘divorce coaches’
Divorce pioneers Amicable Apps have launched a ground-breaking advice service to complement the launch of the final version of their app. Clients who want more help in handling their divorce than the app can provide are directed to ‘divorce coaches’, who could be non-practising lawyers but may have no legal training at all.
Tribunal forces solicitor and SRA to agree stronger sanction to end proceedings
The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has forced a solicitor and the regulator to increase the sanction they had agreed he should receive, after concluding that it was too lenient. He was in the dock for failing, as his firm’s COFA, to report serious accounts rules breaches to the SRA.
BSB: parental leave change “could stop women barristers having to choose between career and family”
Making a shared parental leave policy a professional conduct issue for chambers will help break down the stereotype that women have to choose between a career at the self-employed Bar and having a family, the Bar Standards Board has argued.
LCJ: Put judges on boards of legal regulators to ensure high standards
The Lord Chief Justice has called for judges to be appointed to the boards of the main legal regulators to ensure “tough standards of ethical behaviour and competence” in litigation. Lord Thomas said it seemed “very odd” that the judiciary was not represented on the boards of the SRA, BSB and CILEx Regulation.
Ashfords becomes ABS to bring spin-offs back into the fold and targets investment in clothing retailer
South-west law firm Ashfords has become an alternative business structure to integrate its clutch of spin-off businesses more closely with the legal practice. The firm will also shortly be announcing its second external investment after legal recruitment app Route1 – this time in a clothing retailer.
AI app that replaces lawyers “could be used in divorce cases”
The technology behind an artificial intelligence app created to help businesspeople draft confidentiality agreements will be extended to other commercial and consumer products such as wills, and may in time be suitable for in family law cases, according to its creator.
CBA chairman on solicitor-advocates: “The label matters less than the content of the bottle”
The chairman of the Criminal Bar Association (CBA) yesterday tried to cool emotions after former Lord Chancellor Michael Gove’s criticism of solicitor-advocates, saying that “the label matters less than the content of the bottle”.












