Regulation


High Court hears how squabbling barristers turned family hearing into “shouting match”

27 March 2018

There is a “concerning tendency on the part of the advocates simply to interrupt each other in an effort to advance their competing submissions”, a High Court judge has said as he reviewed a hearing that turned into a “shouting match”.


Conveyancer banned for covering up mistakes with her own money

27 March 2018

A conveyancing fee-earner who covered up her mistakes by paying two lenders what they were owed out of her own pocket has been banned from working in the profession. The Solicitors Regulation Authority said it was “undesirable for her to be involved in a legal practice”.


Solicitor suspended for assaulting “coercive and manipulative” mother

26 March 2018

A solicitor who assaulted his “coercive and manipulative” mother after they had both been drinking has been suspended by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal for four months. He played the tribunal an audio recording in which his mother “repeatedly used foul language about his sister”, stating that she hated her.


Pass the salt – BSB to maintain role of inns and ‘qualifying dinners’ in barrister training

26 March 2018

Dinners at the Inns of Court will remain part of the world of prospective barristers after the Bar Standards Board decided to maintain the role of the inns in their training. But in the light of cases where barristers and students have been found to have lied about their qualifications, the regulator is introducing greater checks on students’ backgrounds.


SRA unveils sweeping reforms to indemnity insurance and compensation fund

23 March 2018

The Solicitors Regulation Authority has today unveiled its second attempt to reduce the compulsory level of professional indemnity insurance to £500,000 – although conveyancers would have to secure £1m in cover. It also wants to turn the Compensation Fund explicitly into a ‘hardship’ fund and ban relatively wealthy people from claiming on it.


Advertising watchdog censures SDLT firm that implied SRA endorsement

23 March 2018

A company promoting stamp duty land tax avoidance schemes has been censured for making it look as though the Solicitors Regulation Authority endorsed its activities. Both HM Revenue & Customs and a tax lawyer complained to the Advertising Standards Authority about the website of Fiducia Wealth & Tax.


National law firm fined £20,000 for using client account as banking facility

22 March 2018

National law firm Laytons has been fined £20,000 by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal for using its client account as a banking facility for a European network of law firms, a foreign client and a tax practitioners’ group. Three of the firm’s longest serving partners were also fined.


Law firm accused by travel company over failed holiday sickness claim hits backs

22 March 2018

A Preston law firm has hit back strongly at suggestions by leading holiday company TUI that it may have acted unethically and even illegally in acting on a holiday sickness case that was found to be ‘fundamentally dishonest’.


Judicial bullying – and how to complain about it – under the microscope again as more barristers speak out

21 March 2018

The issue of judicial bullying has come up again, with more barristers outlining the behaviour they have faced in court and the Bar Council chairman condemning “bullying or inappropriate treatment” by judges. The leader of the Northern Circuit has advised using informal lines of communication through heads of chambers to handle bullying that is not “egregious”.


Pressure mounts on Legal Services Board to delay or reject SQE

20 March 2018

The Legal Services Board has come under unprecedented pressure to reject plans by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to introduce a centralised Solicitors Qualifying Examination. City lawyers, law lecturers and Welsh speakers have called on the LSB not to approve the application, while MPs asked for the decision to be postponed for six months.

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Blog


The SRA needs to admit it got it wrong about SLAPPs

The High Court judgment in Ashley Hurst v SRA in January raises serious questions about the regulator’s approach to allegations of SLAPP-like behaviour.


Why menopause support belongs on every law firm’s agenda

Progression in the law slows significantly as women approach senior leadership. Most will be at the height of their careers around the average age menopause symptoms begin.


Law firms need to go beyond document checks

At the root of every failed compliance review is a familiar phrase: a calm assertion of “but we did a document check”.


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