Are you up-to-date with the latest developments in the legal
Transcription
Are you up-to-date with the latest developments in the legal
r fe al ci l y of pe n n S K o io U ipt cr bs su Are you up-to-date with the latest developments in the legal profession? The Law Society Gazette is the leading weekly magazine of the Law Society delivering quality editorial, unrivalled for its breadth of coverage of the legal profession, every week. Written by a team of expert and highly experienced journalists, including solicitors and barristers, the Gazette prides itself on breaking news stories before any other legal weekly. Every week the Gazette offers you up-to-the minute national and international news, opinion, features/in-depth articles together with a jobs and appointments section and much more. Each issue of the Gazette includes: • Up-to-the-minute news, analysis and commentary • • • • • • • • • Essential practice advice In Business management section Human interest stories and personality interviews Fortnightly column by Joshua Rozenburg In-depth specialist features Weekly city news page Feedback and reviews from industry events Letters section The latest legal jobs Join the 85% of practising solicitors who read the Gazette every week* and ensure that you receive this essential and comprehensive coverage of the legal profession. Subscribe today for £139.00 for one year, £208.00 two years** and £270.00 for three years** www.lawgazette.co.uk 27 June 2016 galloway libel foe hits out at lawyers PA PhoToS By John Hyde » A former teacher Aisha Ali-Khan: ‘I want to begin a campaign’ and aspiring lawyer who says she was forced to fight a lone libel battle with George Galloway has pleaded with the legal profession to change its approach to litigants in person. Aisha Ali-Khan last week secured undisclosed damages – reported to be a five-figure sum – and an apology from the former MP after he posted a series of claims in a blogpost in 2012. The claims were then repeated to a national newspaper by Galloway’s spokesperson. Ali-Khan was dropped by her original lawyers in 2014 and was encouraged by family members and Galloway’s lawyers to drop her case. But the Bradford woman was undeterred. She spent months researching case law and studying libel law before contesting the matter in the High Court, where she successfully defeated a strike-out application. Reflecting on the outcome, AliKhan described the experience as ‘horrendous’ and claimed it was made worse by lawyers and the courts. ‘I want to begin a campaign to encourage lawyers to abide by the guidance issued on how to treat LiPs,’ she said. ‘That means not using legal jargon, not imposing 24-hour limits for responses to letters and not making massive bundles. ‘I feel LiPs are badly treated and exploited for the fact they cannot access a lawyer.’ Ali-Khan said she would regularly be sent important emails from opposing lawyers at 6pm on a Friday, making it difficult to offer any immediate reply without researching what to say. She also felt ‘bombarded’ by paperwork during the course of the case, and struggled with the processes and surroundings of the courtroom. ‘There was so much technical language being used. I am an English teacher and have a fairly good grasp of language, but before the judge it was just gobbledygook for me.’ Matters came to a head earlier this year when Ali-Khan won a strikeout hearing, after which she secured representation from media lawyer Mark Lewis to handle the settlement negotiations. Ali-Khan has now decided to take a law degree and will begin her course in Leicester this September. She also wants to offer advice to LiPs: ‘I hope I can be in a position to help other people,’ she added. ‘Those without lawyers to explain [things] don’t have access to the same fair justice they should be entitled to.’ Ali-Khan also urged regulation of websites purporting to offer legal advice for a few hundred pounds, which she said were designed to attract people unable to afford a lawyer. ABC 109,754 10 Somme anniversary: No other single day in history can have taken such a toll on the solicitors’ profession 14 Roundtable: Residential conveyancers discuss the economics of a volatile sector The level of reduction in this case sets a worrying precedent p13 12 Comment 20 In-house 22 Update 26 In Person 27 Jobs 36 Obiter Shiner fights for anonymity at SDT hearing By John Hyde » The high-profile solicitor facing allegations of misconduct in relation to claims made against British soldiers in Iraq was fighting to have charges against him kept secret as the Gazette went to press. Lawyers for Phil Shiner, of Birmingham firm Public Interest Lawyers, made the argument last week at a preliminary hearing of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal held in camera. After a challenge by lawyers representing the Mail and Sun newspapers, the tribunal ruled that the fact that Shiner has been charged could be made public. The case management hearing was listed for 2pm on Wednesday, with the cause list identifying two respondents as L1 and L2. Arguments about Shiner’s anonymity during proceedings lasted the entire afternoon and ended only when the tribunal office closed at 6pm. Public Interest Lawyers is one of two firms facing allegations of misconduct following the collapse of the Al-Sweady inquiry into alleged atrocities carried out by British forces following the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Earlier in the week, the tribunal listed a 30-day substantive hearing against a second firm, London human rights specialist Leigh Day, to begin from 6 March next year. The Shiner case is also expected to Continued on page 2 1 cover.indd 1 www.lawgazette.co.uk 23/06/2016 18:15 4 July 2016 ABC 109,754 law firms given all clear on lobbying By John Hyde » The government’s lobbying tsar has given the legal sector a clean bill of health after raising concerns over why so few firms signed up to a mandatory register. Alison White says firms are taking their compliance duties ‘very seriously’. All organisations involved in the business of consultant lobbying, as defined by legislation passed in 2014, have to sign up to the register or risk facing criminal proceedings. So far six law firms have joined the register to cover them in the event of their having direct contact with government ministers. Magic circle firm Clifford Chance and alternative business structure PwC Legal were the first law organisations to register. Anthony Gold Solicitors, Cooley UK, Preiskel & Co and Stikeman Elliott (London) LLP have joined the list since the turn of the year. But with law firms making no effort to hide their public affairs work – indeed, some have dedicated teams – questions have arisen over why so many slipped through the net. White, registrar of consultant lobbyists, raised concerns in talks with the Solicitors Regulation Authority. ‘Having identified probably 15 or 20 organisations doing this I am in the process of working my way through them and having telephone meetings with them all,’ White told the Gazette. ‘I wanted to establish what arrangements they have with clients and what compliance processes they’ve got. ‘I have been pleased to see all the organisations I’ve spoken to have taken the area of compliance very seriously and have issued advice to their partners.’ White said the defined terms of the legislation – describing consultant lobbying as contact with ministers or permanent secretaries – mean law firms can justify not joining the register. ‘Lots of public affairs work is not about this – they work with MPs or less senior civil servants but don’t interact at the top level,’ she added. Chancery Pii’s Mark Carver: ‘Reducing the minimum cover will create a two-tier market and put more pressure on small firms’ PII Special, p12 27 Streamlined SRA codes of conduct and accounts rules have much to commend them to solicitors Rozenberg p8 Cheer up on Brexit: we are well equipped to adapt Many litigants in person are able to fund access to a judge p11 10 Comment 26 In Practice 33 Jobs 32 My legal life – success in the bespoke field of industrial disease can change someone’s life, says Lorna McGlone EU vote casts doubt on Unified Patent Court By Michael Cross » An early casualty of UK withdrawal from the EU could be Europe’s long-drawn-out scheme to create a unified patent regime. The Unified Patent Court, due to open next year, will have two sections in London: a local division and the UK’s share of the central division. They will be housed in Aldgate Tower, 1 Cover.indd 1 a new 18-storey block on the edge of the City, with four courtrooms capable of hearing around 16 cases a week. Its offices are due to open for preparatory work this month. However the referendum result has cast doubt over the future of not just the UK’s participation – which depends on EU membership – but of the whole court and the new unitary patent system it is set up to regulate. Rebecca Halford-Harrison, IP disputes partner at London boutique firm Kemp Little, pointed out that the treaty creating the court requires formal ratification by 13 countries, among them the UK. In the UK’s absence, the treaty which was agreed through the EU’s enhanced cooperation procedure, would need to be amended. With Milan the most likely alternative to London, this could prompt objections by other member states. Halford-Harrison said the UK had provided ‘a significant proportion’ of the effort to create the court and without its involvement the enterprise could founder. 30/06/2016 18:28 To start your annual subscription to the Gazette, simply complete the order form overleaf, or email [email protected] - we will start your subscription with the next available issue. * Source: Fusion Communications, January 2011 ** UK ONLY SPECIAL OFFER SUBSCRIBE today and take advantage of our discounted 2 and 3 year UK subscription rates** To start your subscription to the Law Society Gazette at the UK special offer prices** please complete this form and return to the address below: Delivery address: Name:Position: Organisation/Firm name: Address: Postcode: DX:Telephone: Email:Fax: Please tick as appropriate £139.00 for one year £208.00 for two years** £270.00 for three years** Please add the following annual charge for overseas delivery: £100.00 Method of payment: I enclose a cheque made payable to “The Law Society” for £ Credit card payments. 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