Articles
The Law Society has issued controversial guidance to solicitors which may mean they are able to write “Sharia compliant” Islamic wills that deny women an equal share of inheritances and exclude unbelievers altogether...
Employees who are working illegally, e.g. without a necessary work permit or without paying tax, cannot bring unfair dismissal claims if their employment is terminated. However, a recent case shows that the position is different in relation to discrimination claims...
Figures released recently show that battles in Court where an executor of a Will is accused of mishandling an estate have multiplied threefold in the past 12 months...
Shadow Business Secretary Chuka Umunna has said that the next Labour Government will scrap the Government’s employment tribunal system and replace it with a fairer one that doesn’t deter employees who have been treated unfairly at work from making a claim...
Alison Sharland, who claims her former husband cheated her out of millions in their divorce settlement, has now been given permission to appeal against the Court of Appeal’s decision to uphold the original sum...
An employment tribunal has ruled that a deputy head teacher who was sacked after giving former pupils a tour of her school building was unfairly dismissed...
As property lawyers there’s nothing better than acting for a seller or buyer whose property does not bring up any ‘issues.’ These ‘issues’ can arise from search results e.g. the environmental report carried out by a buyer comes back as adverse, the local authority search reveals the passageway to the rear of the property is private, or from a check of the deeds...
A high court judge has rejected an attempt by hedge fund tycoon Sir Christopher Hohn to impose a blanket ban on reporting his multi-million pound divorce case...
Business Secretary Vince Cable has today announced plans to ban exclusivity clauses which prevent people on zero hours’ contracts from working for more than one employer...
A recent TV series has highlighted the importance of ensuring residential landlords have a watertight tenancy agreement in place...
Eirian Davies, a farmer's daughter who was nicknamed 'the Cowshed Cinderella', has now won the right to a larger share of her parents' farm following a decision by the Court of Appeal...
A survey just published claims that a third of people struggle to cope at work because of depression, stress or burn out...
The new Child Maintenance Service has now begun to replace the Child Support Agency, which is being phased out by the government over the next three years...
Lawson- West has been successfully reaccredited as a member of the Law Society's Conveyancing Quality Scheme – dubbed ‘the mark of excellence for the home buying process’...
Trade unions and employment law experts together are calling for a review of tribunal fees as new figures show a 70% drop in the number of cases taken to employment tribunal since they were introduced last year...
A study by charity Relate demonstrates that those couples worst affected by the recession are eight times more likely to have seen the breakdown of their relationship than those who were least affected...
A man who swindled his brother out of a share of a £1.5 million inheritance has been found guilty of five counts of fraud...
A ruling at the Employment Appeal Tribunal yesterday means that some five million workers could get extra holiday pay in future...
The parental involvement provision in section 11 of the Children and Families Act 2014 came into force recently, and applies to cases started on or after 22nd October, but not those that were already in progress on that date. Family Justice Minister Simon Hughes says the new law will reinforce the importance of children maintaining a relationship with both their parents following divorce or separation.
Figures released by Rightmove see prices falling as sellers compete to find a buyer during the winter, which is traditionally quieter for the housing market. Prices have fallen by 1.7% this month, taking the average house price to £267,127 following growth of more than 8% over the rest of the year...
Following complaints from clients across the country, the Legal Ombudsman has called on the government to consider making will writing a reserved legal activity. Currently, there is no regulatory body covering will writing and the Ombudsman faced over 1000 wills and probate related claims in 2013...
Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has announced that all Civil Service employees will be entitled to full parental pay from April 2015, when they choose to share parental leave. Currently, only mothers are entitled to full pay in this situation...
In yesterday’s Autumn Statement Chancellor George Osborne announced a significant overhaul of the rules governing Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT), which will save money for 98 per cent of house buyers from today...
Our client, who is an accountant, was sacked from his job with just one week’s notice. As he had no formal employment contract in place, the terms of his employment were therefore ‘implied’. We are now pursuing a wrongful dismissal claim for insufficient notice on behalf of our client in a civil court...
Under new Government plans, separated parents who refuse to pay child maintenance could be declined credit as a result...
The European Court of Justice, the highest court of the EU, has ruled that obesity can constitute a disability – in some circumstances, where it could hinder ‘full and effective participation’ at work.
The trade union Unison has again been unsuccessful in its bid to overturn employment tribunal fees, but has been granted permission to appeal. The union’s first application to overturn employment tribunal fees was also rejected in February.
The Law Society has warned that over a million unmarried couples face the threat of inheriting nothing should their partner die without making a Will if they have dependent children. This applies equally to same sex couples who have not married or entered into a civil partnership...
A report launched by the Confederation of British Industry at their recent conference has called on the government to improve living standards by increasing the national insurance threshold and also by extending free childcare to working parents of one and two year olds...
UK lender the Halifax has said the number of first-time buyers rose to its highest level in seven years in 2014 to some 326,500. This is a leap of 22% over the previous year, and is being attributed to cheap mortgage rates and government schemes such as Help to Buy which only requires a small deposit compared to a traditional first-time buyer mortgage.
Relationship support charity OnePlusOne has released research showing that some 26% of British parents who live with their partner and children have contemplated divorce or separation in secret...
In a recent announcement, the Government is increasing the amount of compensation payable for employment law claims...
An employment tribunal has ruled that a heart specialist was unfairly dismissed after he raised concerns about a hospital’s failings which led to a patient’s death, including staffing shortages, workplace bullying and ‘appalling’ equipment...
The use of social media in our day to day lives can no longer be ignored. Unfortunately these accounts still need to be monitored after someone passes away...
The Supreme Court made a decision on 11th March 2015, which emphasised the importance of obtaining a clean break consent order, at the same time as parties get divorced...
A lawyer from the Midlands has helped a man to uphold his right to inherit under the will of his partner, the ecologist Elizabeth Walker, following a legal challenge by her daughters...
A study by ACAS (Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service) has found that agency workers are unaware of their employment rights, or and afraid of asserting them...
A new campaign has been launched for women who have been discriminated against at work while pregnant or due to having had a baby...
Good legal advice is increasingly crucial if working mothers are to avoid discrimination as they return from maternity leave, claims a Leicestershire employment lawyer...
Bankruptcy is a confusing and complex area which can have adverse legal consequences. When they elect to make themselves bankrupt, many individuals fall into pitfalls that they did not foresee...
Families with holiday homes in Europe have been advised to update their Wills following a change to EU succession laws, which now make it easier for British families to bypass prescriptive inheritance laws in countries such as France and Spain...
What are Terms and Conditions? I suspect there are a few of you scratching your heads and thinking of the screen you have to accept whenever you update your Apple Phone. Strictly speaking, they are and you’re right to think so. But what you really want to know is what they mean and what legal effect they have...
Leicestershire law firm Lawson-West has received dozens of calls from HSBC customers who are worried about their Wills following the bank’s decision to pull out of probate services...
The Chancellor announced yesterday that shared parental leave and pay will be extended to working grandparents, in order to increase flexibility for working parents and help them with the costs of childcare during the first year after their baby is born...
The worry of what will happen to your children when you pass away is something that concerns most parents. Unfortunately there is no guarantee that your children will be looked after by someone they are close to or indeed who you can trust when you pass away...
The Supreme Court has this morning ruled in favour of two ex-wives who want their divorce settlements re-analysed on the basis that their husbands misled them about how much they were worth...
We were asked recently to help a client challenge their neighbour’s planning application for a back garden development. The neighbour’s plan was to build a large ‘bungalow’ – we use the term ‘bungalow’ with some caution as in reality this was a two storey property utilising a mezzanine floor for bedrooms and bathrooms...
In a recent case heard at York Crown Court, a woman stole her sister's £50,000 inheritance by moving money out of their mother's bank account over a period of six years before she died. She is currently waiting to be sentenced for theft, and has been ordered to repay the money within six months...
In a ruling hailed as game-changing, an ex-wife has been told by a judge that she cannot sue her former husband for another two years, following an “obsessive and unjustified” legal campaign she had conducted against him...