Archive

Follow the instructions
Solicitors Journal

Follow the instructions

The ruling that solicitors can stop acting for clients whose instructions are unrealistic should reassure practitioners concerned about unreasonable requests, says Mike Willis
Hidden threats
Solicitors Journal

Hidden threats

The recent decision that costs do not necessarily follow the event in cash forfeiture cases could operate like a Trojan horse against defendants in such cases, say Andrew Mitchell QC and Penelope Small
Bridging the gap
Solicitors Journal

Bridging the gap

Further harmonisation of the laws across different jurisdictions is needed to keep up with an increasingly globalised and mobile population, says Grant Howell
Update: planning
Solicitors Journal

Update: planning

Jim Ryan and Craig Whelton review the new Community Infrastructure Levy Regulations, the Conservatives' proposals for the planning system, the Infrastructure Planning Commission, acting promptly in judicial review claims, the new PPS5 and an important sewerage connection case
Wood for the trees
Solicitors Journal

Wood for the trees

The number of merely descriptive revisions brought in by the 51st CPR update masks the presence of a few more significant ones, says DJ Julie Exton
Fashion victim
Solicitors Journal

Fashion victim

Russell Conway ponders the pitfalls of legal fashion
Fishy business
Solicitors Journal

Fishy business

As I write this, it is now six hours since the general election was announced and I am already bored with the already overblown news items featuring every conceivable aspect of the forthcoming election. By the time you read this, another week will have passed and election fatigue will have set in for most readers of Solicitors Journal, so I expect that you will now be lying with your head on the last page of the journal, obscuring the latest brilliant offering from David Haldane. But wake up, because not all of this article is about the election.