Latest news
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”.
Breathing space for PI lawyers? Reforms unlikely to have impact until 2018
The government has indicated that its plans for personal injury reform will not become law for well over a year. It potentially gives some breathing space to smaller PI firms in particular, whose viability is threatened – as recognised by the Ministry of Justice.
Lawtech start-up attempts to automate small claims
In the first of a new series of features profiling lawtech start-ups, we investigate Weclaim.com, a business working to use technology to automate small claims on a ‘no win, no fee’ basis, and eventually expects claims to be resolved without human involvement.
Pilot online convictions with TV licence evasion, says Law Society
The government should pilot its plans to digitise low-level summary convictions with TV licence evasion, rather than train and tram fare evasion, the Law Society has said. It also opposed piloting the online system on statutory fixed fines for low-level anti-social and nuisance offending.
MoJ: Insurers could make £200m profit from PI reforms, while some law firms will exit
Motor insurers may make a £200m profit from the personal injury reforms as they will not pass on all of the £1.3bn costs savings they will generate, the Ministry of Justice has suggested. It said some new work may come solicitors’ way but acknowledged that small firms would not be able to cope financially.











