News

“Trial by internet” – Judges turn to Wikipedia to aid reasoning

Judges are using Wikipedia to research legal issues and allowing it to influence their reasoning, ground-breaking research has discovered.

Read More

Union’s head of legal receives apology over picket line arrest

A barrister working as a trade union’s in-house lawyer has received a formal apology and damages of £3,000 from the Metropolitan Police after he was arrested on a picket line.

Read More

Barrister awarded £22k over chambers’ response to gender-critical tweets

Garden Court Chambers has been ordered to pay member Allison Bailey damages of £22,000 for injury to feelings over the way it handled complaints about her gender critical views.

Read More

MoJ aims to extend compulsory mediation to “all county court users”

The Ministry of Justice’s “future ambition” is to extend compulsory mediation from small claims to all county court users and so it has begun considering its role in overseeing the mediation sector.

Read More

Law firms generate £1.4bn in fees from clinical negligence cases

Clinical negligence law firms earned around £1.4bn in fees during 2021/22, an 8% increase on the year before, according to new research that also predicted Covid could lead to more claims.

Read More

“Unjustifiably antagonised” lord justice should have recused himself

A lord justice of appeal who became “unjustifiably antagonised” by a defendant’s “persistence” in challenging his decisions should have recused himself, the Court of Appeal has ruled.

Read More

LSB backs huge cut in time limit for complaining to Legal Ombudsman

The Legal Services Board has, after “very extensive debate”, backed a cut in the time limit for complaining to the Legal Ombudsman from six years to only one year.

Read More

MoJ proposes compulsory mediation for claims worth up to £10k

Mediation will be made compulsory for all small claims worth up to £10,000, potentially settling 20,000 cases that would otherwise end up in court, the Ministry of Justice proposed today.

Read More

Ban for PI fee-earner who used Covid as excuse for missing deadlines

A fee-earner at Slater & Gordon who falsely claimed he had missed litigation deadlines because of scanning errors and not being in the office due to the pandemic has been banned from working in law firms.

Read More

Lawyers “will walk” if hybrid working demands not met

Lawyers working in large law firms are committed to working remotely from home post-pandemic, with almost half willing to walk away if told they have to attend the office full-time.

Read More

← Page 267 Page 268 of 909 Page 269 →