Litigation/Dispute Resolution


Completion of court modernisation programme pushed back again

24 March 2023

Completion of the court modernisation programme has been pushed back again, this time to March 2024, it has emerged – in a blog, rather than a Ministry of Justice annoucement.


Reserved activities set to stay as they are for now

21 March 2023

A full review of the reserved legal activities is not justified at the moment without a “fundamental” reappraisal of the Legal Services Act too, the Legal Services Board has concluded.


Negligence claim over law firm’s ground rent advice dismissed

17 March 2023

A circuit judge has dismissed a negligence claim over a London law firm’s alleged failure to give a client proper advice on a how much the ground rent would increase under a lease.


CA: Barrister’s conduct of own litigation “not a private matter”

17 March 2023

A High Court judge was right to hold that a barrister’s conduct of litigation in her own right was not a private matter beyond the Bar Standards Board’s reach, the Court of Appeal has ruled.


Soaring insolvencies boost litigation funder to record year

15 March 2023

Listed insolvency litigation funder Manolete Partners has enjoyed a record year so far as the number of insolvencies in the UK soars, with more new cases than ever before.


Law Society calls in leading figures to support ’21st century justice’ project

14 March 2023

The Law Society has pulled together figures from law firms, technology, NGOs and business to support a project looking at how the justice system can be made “fit for the future”.


Unregulated paralegal firm “conducted litigation” in possession claim

10 March 2023

A CILEX member running an unregulated business conducted litigation in breach of the Legal Services Act 2007 when she acted on a possession claim, the High Court has ruled.


Government decides to sign Singapore mediation convention

6 March 2023

The government has decided that the UK should join the Singapore Convention, which provides a framework for international recognition and enforcement of commercial mediation agreements.


Bellamy declines opportunity to back fixed costs uprating

3 March 2023

Justice minister Lord Bellamy has refused to commit to regularly uprating the new or existing fixed recoverable costs by inflation.


Solicitor validly served with claim at address on SRA website

1 March 2023

A sole practitioner was validly served with a negligence claim at an address listed for him on the Solicitors Regulation Authority’s website, the High Court has ruled.


IP law firm fails in bid to strike out ‘secret commissions’ claim

27 February 2023

A leading intellectual property law firm has failed in its bid to strike out a representative action brought over ten of millions of pounds in alleged secret commissions it earned on IP renewals.


Negligence claim against law firm to go ahead after limitation ruling

27 February 2023

A negligence claim over inheritance tax advice provided by City law firm Charles Russell Speechlys is to go ahead after the High Court held that it is not time-barred.


Solicitors “went too far” after client was given vulnerability order

24 February 2023

Solicitors were wrong to allow a client to see cross-examination questions that had been drafted by the other side under a vulnerable witness order, a High Court judge has held.


Pilot suggests mediation in possession cases unpopular

24 February 2023

The government’s tenancy mediation service pilot, which hoped to have 3,000 successful resolutions, ended up with just four, a review published this week has shown.


City firm’s advice to AA boss was negligent but did not cause loss

20 February 2023

City law firm Rosenblatt was in breach of duty and negligent in advice it gave to the sacked chairman of the AA but this did not cause him any loss, the High Court has ruled.

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Blog


Is clients’ use of AI destroying legal privilege?

Much has been written about the risks of lawyers misusing AI. However, in my view, the greater challenge lies elsewhere: the routine use of AI by clients themselves.


Does the Lloyd review mark the end of the Legal Services Act?

The Legal Services Board often generates eye-rolls and irritation from the leaders of the frontline regulators it oversees and of the representative bodies attached to them.


A familiar story?

There is no doubt that the rising cost of clinical negligence claims deserves attention. However, the system’s true cost driver is often not the claim itself.