Families win landmark ruling on £600m asbestos compensation – The Independent

Posted March 26th, 2012 in asbestos, compensation, families, health & safety, insurance, news, victims by sally

“Thousands of families whose relatives were killed by asbestos cancers will win a landmark compensation victory this week, sources have told The Independent on Sunday. The Supreme Court will rule on Wednesday that insurers who offered cover at the time victims inhaled the deadly fibres will have to pay compensation.”

Full story

The Independent, 25th March 2012

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Musical Youth lose legal battle over Pass The Dutchie – The Guardian

Posted March 26th, 2012 in copyright, legal representation, news by sally

“Ex-members of a child reggae band that hit the heights with a song about a stewing pot 30 years ago have lost a legal battle with their former lawyers.”

Full story

The Guardian, 23rd March 2012

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

MPs’ expenses receipts to stay secret, IPSA rules – Daily Telegraph

Posted March 26th, 2012 in disclosure, expenses, freedom of information, news, parliament by sally

“MPs’ expenses receipts should not be shown to the public, Westminster’s new standards watchdog has ruled.”

Full story

Daily Telegraph, 24th March 2012

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Financial adviser fraudsters told to pay back £1 each – BBC News

Posted March 26th, 2012 in assets recovery, financial advice, fraud, mortgages, news by sally

“Two financial advisers who conned investors out of £3m in a property scam which they lost gambling have been ordered to pay back just £1 each.”

Full story

BBC News, 24th March 2012

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Injured student protester faces trial for violent disorder – The Guardian

“A philosophy student who claimed he suffered head injuries from a police baton during the anti-fees protest in London faces trial on Monday for violent disorder at the demonstration.”

Full story

The Guardian, 25th March 2012

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Art of court stenographer faces the final sentence – The Independent

Posted March 26th, 2012 in courts, news, reports, standards by sally

“Charlie Cooper discovers what we’ll lose when the law enters the digital age.”

Full story

The Independent, 24th March 2012

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Oxford law graduate cleared of role in London riot – The Guardian

Posted March 26th, 2012 in evidence, news, trials, violent disorder, witnesses by sally

“An Oxford law graduate accused of throwing bricks at police during last summer’s riots walked free from court on Friday after a jury took just half an hour to find him not guilty.”

Full story

The Guardian, 25th March 2012

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Lawyer jailed for £51,000 OAP fraud – The Independent

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in news, powers of attorney, sentencing, solicitors, theft by tracey

“A solicitor was today jailed for 26 months after stealing more than £51,000 from an elderly dementia sufferer who treated him like a son.”

Full story

The Independent, 23rd March 2012

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Merseyside pair jailed for handling stolen LS Lowry art – BBC News

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in handling stolen goods, sentencing by tracey

“Two men from Merseyside have been jailed for handling stolen paintings by the artist LS Lowry worth £1.7m.”

Full story

BBC News, 22nd March 2012

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Prostitution ring head Thomas Carroll to hand over £1.9m – BBC News

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in news, proceeds of crime, prostitution by tracey

“A man who ran an international prostitution ring will have to hand over £1.9m of his criminal profits after losing a court appeal.”

Full story

BBC News, 23rd March 2012

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Australia deports rapist Leslie Cunliffe back to UK – The Independent

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in deportation, news, rape by tracey

“A British rapist who carried out a horrific sex attack likened to The Silence of the Lambs has been deported from Australia to the UK.”

Full story

The Independent, 23rd March 2012

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Lawyers give mixed response to Woodcock age discrimination ruling – The Lawyer

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in age discrimination, dismissal, news, pensions, redundancy by tracey

“Employment lawyers have given a mixed response to an eagerly anticipated Court of Appeal (CoA) ruling on whether discrimination can be justified by saving costs.”

Full story

The Lawyer, 23rd March 2012

Source: www.thelawyer.com

BAILII: Recent Decisions

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in law reports by tracey

Court of Appeal (Civil Division)

Woodcock v Cumbria Primary Care Trust [2012] EWCA Civ 330 (22 March 2012)

High Court (Chancery Division)

Loveluck-Edwards & Anor v Ideal Developments Ltd. & Anor [2012] EWHC 716 (Ch) (22 March 2012)

Rohl v Bickland Ltd [2012] EWHC 706 (Ch) (22 March 2012)

High Court (Patents Court)

Teva UK Ltd & Ors v Astrazeneca AB [2012] EWHC 655 (Pat) (22 March 2012)

Regeneron Pharmacueticals Inc v Genentech Inc [2012] EWHC 657 (Pat) (22 March 2012)

Source: www.bailii.org

Recent Statutory Instruments – legislation.gov.uk

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in legislation by tracey

The Qualifications for Appointment of Members to the First-tier Tribunal and Upper Tribunal (Amendment) Order 2012

The Social Security (Lone Parents and Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 2012

The Policing of Aerodromes (Belfast International Airport) Order 2012

Source: www.legislation.gov.uk

Regina (FDA and others) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and another – WLR Daily

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in indexation, law reports, pensions, social security by tracey

Regina (FDA and others) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and another: [2012] EWCA Civ 332;  [2012] WLR (D)  95

“The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions was entitled to use the Consumer Price Index, rather than the Retail Price Index, as the measure of consumer price inflation for the purpose of annually uprating public service pensions under section 150 of the Social Security Administration Act 1992.”

WLR Daily, 20th March 2012

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Regina (Newhaven Port & Properties Ltd) v East Sussex County Council – WLR Daily

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in commons, law reports by tracey

Regina (Newhaven Port & Properties Ltd) v East Sussex County Council: [2012] EWHC 647 (Admin);  [2012] WLR (D)  94

“The words used by Parliament to define ‘town and village green’ in section 15 of the Commons Act 2006 were sufficiently broad to permit the registration of a tidal beach, comprising part of operational port land owned by a landowner, as a town or village green provided that the nature, quality and duration of the recreational user satisfied the statutory test: there was no requirement that land in respect of which registration was sought had to be either ‘grassy’ or consistent with traditional notions of what constituted a village green. That was so even if the land in issue was wholly covered in water for part of the day.”

WLR Daily, 21st March 2012

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Command Papers – official-documents.gov.uk

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in parliamentary papers by tracey

Economic and fiscal outlook March 2012, Cm 8303 (pdf)

Source: www.official-documents.gov.uk

Justice is Too Often Sacrificied for Price Competition: Bar Chairman Addresses Cayman Islands on Ethics and Rule of Law – The Bar Council

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in lectures, press releases, rule of law by tracey

“Michael Todd QC, the Chairman of the Bar Council, which represents barristers in England and Wales, will today address an invited audience in Grand Court Number One of the Cayman Islands on ‘Ethics and the Rule of Law.’ ”

Full press release

The Bar Council, 22nd March 2012

Source: www.barcouncil.org.uk

Appeals in the Court of Appeal Criminal Division: details of sentence – The Bar Council

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in appeals, drafting, press releases, sentencing by tracey

“The Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) will in future strongly recommend any legal representative drafting grounds of appeal against sentence to incorporate within those grounds a pro forma table setting out the details of the sentence passed.”

Full press release

The Bar Council, 21st March 2012

Source: www.barcouncil.org.uk

Compelling reasons but no need for truly drastic circumstances: second stage immigration appeals revisited – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted March 23rd, 2012 in appeals, immigration, news, tribunals by tracey

“The Court of Appeal has considered the test for the second stage of appeal in immigration cases, when someone wishes to appeal from the Upper Tribunal to the Court of Appeal. The test requires showing that: ‘(a) the proposed appeal would raise some important point of principle or practice; or (b) there is some other compelling reason for the [Court of Appeal] to hear the appeal.’ ”

Full story

UK Human Rights Blog, 23rd March 2012

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com