Article Default Image

To Cap it All

Justin Rushbrooke argues that the manner in which the last government sought to reduce success fees in defamation cases was ill conceived. The irony is, he says, had a more moderate approach been adopted, meaningful reform would have been possible 

The Conditional Fee Agreements (Amendment) Order 2010, which sought to reduce the maximum “uplift” in defamation and privacy cases from 100 per cent to 10 per cent, had a short and inglorious life. It was ill-considered, rushed through with unseemly haste by the former Justice Secretary, Jack Straw, and his colleagues; and, in the end, counter-productive. As with much of the debate that surrounds media law issues, it was bedevilled by ignorance, exaggeration and muddled thinking. The irony is that had Mr Straw adopted a more moderate approach to what was, on his own account, only supposed to be an interim measure, he would have been able to achieve meaningful reform of a kind that nearly everyone agreed was warranted. But the manner in which it was handled cannot help but give rise to a suspicion that, with a general election looming and a government in need of friends in the media, appearance always mattered more than substance. 

31 May 2010
Article Default Image

Mediation education

Lord Neuberger, the Master of the Rolls, has called for mediation and alternative dispute resolution (“ADR”) to be made a part of every lawyer’s education.

31 May 2010
Article Default Image

Fee-sharing favours solicitor-advocates over barristers

Solicitor-advocates may be appointed for cases beyond their competency because of a desire to keep costs low, a report commissioned by the Legal Services Board (“LSB”) has found. 

31 May 2010
Article Default Image

Mediation on the rise

Commercial and civil mediation has grown by 30 per cent in the last three years. 

31 May 2010
Article Default Image

Twelfth Supreme Justice

Lord Justice Dyson has been appointed the 12th Justice of the Supreme Court. He was presiding judge of the Technology and Construction Court from 1998 to 2001, when he was appointed to the Court of Appeal. He was deputy head of civil justice between 2003 and 2006. 

30 April 2010
Article Default Image

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: EXTENSION OF COPYRIGHT TERM

The July 2008 proposal to extend copyright protection from 50 to 95 years, for performers and phonogram producers, should have been adopted by the EP by the end of March.
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/file.jsp?id=5667672&language=en&mailer=true 

26 April 2010
Article Default Image

Duncan and Neill on Defamation

Sir Brian Neill, Richard Rampton QC, Heather Rogers QC,
Timothy Atkinson, Aidan Eardley
LexisNexis, 3rd edition (Aug 2009), £195.00, ISBN 978-0406178312
 

Since the first edition of Duncan and Neill in 1978 the libel landscape has changed dramatically and looks set to continue doing so. Juries are no longer “in the position of sheep loosed on an unfenced common, with no shepherd” as Lord Bingham famously described them. More detailed directions are now commonplace and jury awards correspondingly smaller than in their zenith in the 1980’s; to the considerable relief of the popular press.  

31 March 2010
Article Default Image

BRUSSELS I REGULATION REVIEW

In 2009 the Commission launched its 5-year review of the operation of the Brussels I Regulation, 44/2001 on “jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters”. The Commission is analysing the responses to last year’s consultation, including on the controversial issue of its application to arbitrations, on which it may seek further expert input. Given the complexities of the file, and the volume of competing work, the Commission is unlikely to issue a proposal this year, but should do in 2011.

31 March 2010
Article Default Image

Success fees in libel cases reduced

The Justice Secretary, Jack Straw, has reduced the maximum success fee that lawyers can charge in defamation cases from 100 per cent to 10 per cent.

31 March 2010
Article Default Image

Is libel chilling?

A working group of media professionals and lawyers has been set up by the Ministry of Justice to consider whether libel laws are having a chilling effect on freedom of expression. It will examine all aspects of substantive libel law but will exclude issues relating to costs in defamation proceedings. It is due to report back with recommendations by mid-March.  

28 February 2010
Show
10
Results
Results
10
Results
virtual magazine View virtual issue

Chair’s Column

Feature image

Hope and expectation for the new legal year

The beginning of the legal year offers the opportunity for a renewed commitment to justice and the rule of law both at home and abroad

Job of the Week

Sponsored

Most Viewed

Partner Logo

Latest Cases