Hospitals are inevitably the scene of tragic events but, if patients suffer as a result of clinical negligence, it is only right that they should be compensated. In one case, a teenager who was two old days when he was accidentally smothered by his comatose mother received millions of pounds…
Competition Between Trade Unions and Collective Bargaining Rights
Healthy competition between trade unions gives their members a choice and guards against complacency – but to what extent should such rivalries be reflected in the collective bargaining regime? The Court of Appeal addressed that issue in an important test case. The case concerned a relatively small union (the insurgent…
Supreme Court Rules on Shipping Collision Test Case
The importance to world trade of regulations designed to prevent collisions between sea-going vessels can hardly be over-emphasised. The Supreme Court made that point in a test case concerning a collision between a large container vessel and an even larger crude oil carrier close to a Middle Eastern port. The…
Big Money Divorce – Court of Appeal Identifies ‘Double-Counting’ Error
Where a couple’s wealth is more than sufficient to meet their reasonable needs, one might have thought that there would be greater scope for compromise when it comes to dividing up assets in the event of divorce. As a Court of Appeal decision showed, however, that is sadly by no…
Plagued by Former Employees Turned Competitors? See a Lawyer Today!
Many business owners lie awake at night worrying that senior employees may leave to set up rival operations, taking clients and confidential information with them. Such conduct is, however, highly likely to be unlawful and, as one case showed, specialist lawyers can very swiftly take steps to nip it in…
Lone Objector Succeeds in Challenge to Huge Offshore Wind Farm
When individuals challenge planning decisions of national importance, they may feel that they are playing the part of David to the government’s Goliath. As a High Court ruling showed, however, ordinary members of the public can, with the backing of specialist lawyers, succeed on a positively biblical scale. The case…
COVID-19 May Be ‘A Plague’ but It’s not ‘Plague’ – Insurance Policy Ruling
Few would quarrel with the COVID-19 pandemic being described as ‘a plague’ in the Biblical sense – but it is not ‘plague’ in the narrower medical sense of the word. That fine distinction proved decisive in defeating a business interruption insurance claim brought by a hotel and golf resort hit…
Property Investment Company Pays for ‘Deliberate’ VAT Return Default
Almost every business owner understands that feeling of desperation arising from cash-flow problems. As a case concerning VAT due on a commercial property sale showed, however, treating tax liabilities as a can to be kicked down the road is never a sensible way out of such difficulties. On its sale…
Chancellor Announces £65 Billion COVID-19 Recovery Plan
UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak has announced a £65 billion plan aimed at providing support for jobs and businesses as the UK emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic. In his Spring 2021 Budget, the Chancellor unveiled extensions to the furlough scheme, along with continuing self-employed support, business grants, loans and VAT cuts.…
Casino Made No Commitment to Incentivise ‘High-Roller’ Roulette Player
The main trouble with oral contracts is that, in the absence of a professionally drafted document, it can be very hard to tell what, if anything, has in fact been agreed. The High Court faced exactly that difficulty in the case of a gambler who claimed that he was offered…
