Tag Archives: #London

ADVICE ON MARITAL AGREEMENTS

We were recently lucky enough to have Lucy Greenwood, a partner with the International Family Law Group, in the studio to share her knowledge and expertise of marital agreements (http://www.iflg.uk.com/portfolio/lucy-greenwood).  Lucy is also a member of our Legal Expert Panel for the Family channel, and we are delighted to have her on board, feeding in ideas for future Family channel topics for continuing professional development (http://www.lawcolmedia.com/%5Cfamily.aspx).  Lucy actually suggested we make this programme!

Here is a sneak peak of the on-camera interview we conducted with Lucy, ahead of the programme’s release on 25th January:

Interviewer: How best can a marital agreement address the issues of needs and fairness?

Lucy Greenwood: Well, this is the very difficult question that we face with every pre-marriage agreement.  For example, it’s commonplace to treat the marital home a little bit differently from any other assets, even if there has been some pre-acquired money going into that property. You’ve basically got to consider – at each stage of the marriage – is the person that’s leaving the marriage without as much money going to be able to meet their needs?  So obviously they’re going to have to have somewhere to live.  What is deemed reasonable for their needs – and when we hear the phrase ‘real needs’ which is another phrase about a discretionary test for needs – it’s very hard to assess.  So you look at the standard of living to some extent and you consider what a court would do if it were looking at the scenario without a pre-marriage agreement, and because it’s a compromise you would look to see what the lower end of that bracket that the court award would comprise.  And it’s those sorts of weighing up kind of decisions that you have to make, and there is no right or wrong answer. But if you don’t meet needs it’s pretty clear from the case law that there’s a great risk that the court will still intervene either partially or totally in the agreement.  But it mustn’t be forgotten that even if it does intervene, because you’ve got this agreement, it’s likely to calibrate the award that is made.  And so they are still very useful tools even today.

Interviewer: What common misconceptions do you find clients have in relation to foreign marital agreements or the enforceability and other jurisdictions of agreements entered into here?

Lucy Greenwood: Well, this is a very common myth.  For a start, many people think that they could only divorce in the country they married, which is obviously not true.  And similarly, they forget that it’s not actually where you enter into the marital agreement that counts, it’s where you are if and when the marriage breaks down.  And so what we tend to do is we will address which country somebody is most likely to live in and get advice from those countries as to what their rights would be. We have very many situations where clients will come into the office and say ‘it’s alright, we’ve got a community of property or we’ve got a separation of assets, property categorisation, property regime in a European country, so they can’t touch my assets on…’.  And we say unfortunately it doesn’t work like that in England, it’s nothing but a factor.  It’s just one of the many section 25 factors that we have to look at. And, of course, depending on the weight and the understanding and the disclosure and all of the fairness aspects around the creation of that agreement the court may or may not abide by that agreement, but many have a real shock when they come in and find that it didn’t really mean as much as they thought it did.  There’s also the issue of Brussels II legislation, and first in time to issue, which can’t be usurped by a marital agreement.  So this can have a very significant effect.  So even if you’ve got a marital agreement in a particular country if you don’t get first in time when it comes to issuing a divorce procedure there’s still a risk that another country, like England, might be looking at your French marriage agreement.  And, of course, there’s the maintenance regulation, and if you’ve got maintenance aspects in the pre-marital agreement, spousal maintenance I’m talking about, not child maintenance, but if you’ve got a spousal maintenance agreement there that’s a prior agreement and therefore you could find that different parts of the case are being dealt with in different parts of the world.

Interviewer: So what specific clauses should practitioners ensure that they draft into marital agreements where there’s a possibility that the couple may move abroad?

Lucy Greenwood: There are certainly no hard and fast rules in relation to this particular question.  You really have to look at the scenario that you’re faced with.  You need to consider whether you’re going to put in a sort of catch-all phrase to say that this agreement should be recognised around the world.  That’s not going to be enough, but it gives an indication.  You look at choice of law clauses and in relation to EU countries you can actually sometimes, if you’ve got a strong enough connection, actually choose the country’s laws which will apply to the pre-marriage agreement but, again, Brussels II can usurp that.  So there is nothing easy about looking at jurisdictional aspects in marital agreements.  And many people think that you can do one and it’s definitely going to be binding all round the world, it is not.  You really have to tailor it to the countries that are most likely to be the countries in which the parties are living and consider the factors and the pros and the cons of choosing a jurisdiction, if that’s what you’re trying to do, over being silent on that issue.

Interviewer: And what particularly public policy or religious issues might need to be taken into account?

Lucy Greenwood: Well, this is quite interesting.  Generally with pre-marriage agreements the consensus is that child maintenance should not be dealt with in a pre-marriage agreement or if it is it’s definitely something a court could review because it would be against public policy to bar the courts from doing that.  But there are other more perhaps less obvious ones when you’re dealing with certain countries.  So in countries, for example, like Singapore and Dubai where same sex marriages or even homosexual relations are not actually recognised or accepted or legal then you’re not going to be wanting to do an agreement or seek to uphold it in that country if it’s for a same sex couple.  But there are others that are not so obvious.  And, for example, adultery clauses are becoming something that’s been debated recently and some people are advocating where clients want to make a point that somebody should not benefit as much if they commit adultery, that should go into the agreement.  But, again, be cautious with places like Dubai where adultery, again, is illegal and the implications for your potential client of even having that word or the court learning that they’re getting less because of it could have very major implications for that client.  So it’s those sorts of factors, cultural factors, religious factors.  You might want to cover, for example, dealing with the Get in the Jewish pre-marriage agreement so that it’s clear as to how that process is going to be undertaken. Just those sorts of things.

Until next time…

http://www.lawcolmedia.com

MARKETING YOUR FIRM

We were recently lucky enough to have Sue Stapley, a solicitor and founder of reputation management firm Sue Stapley Consulting (http://www.suestapely.com/) in our studios to discuss how best to market your law firm. Here is a brief extract from that interview, which will be released in full as part of our programme ‘Marketing your Firm’ in the Practice Management & Compliance channel:

Interviewer: Now we all have occasions when we need to make a good impression in a short space of time. What exactly is a mini-pitch or an elevator speech as it’s sometimes known?

Sue Stapley: I think they are sort of interchangeable. My understanding – and I’m not an expert on succinctness – is that it is being able to explain – in one or two sentences at the most – precisely who you are or who the organisation you are representing is or what it does. The phrase ‘elevator pitch’ came from the Americans, of course, who said you should be able to describe your business in the time it takes to travel between floors in a lift or elevator. And the opportunities probably arise most often nowadays at receptions where, I don’t know about you, but I seem to spend probably far too much time standing with an empty glass in my hand in a crowded room talking about my business to other people. And one obviously wants them to remember what it was that one said in case, at some point in the future, they might find your services of use and need to be able to contact you. It is a very succinct statement of who you are and what you do, such that they can remember enough to come back to you if they want to.

Interviewer: So what do you think it should include?

Sue Stapley: The name, and if there’s anything that makes the name more memorable, use that. I’ve been criticised several times for being nothing like serious enough, but my own name is mis-spelt regularly and sometimes mispronounced, and I simply say if you think of shapely, Stapely will probably come to mind. It’s very arrogant but it works, they remember. And one sentence which you will probably need to actually physically write down and work on to get right until it trips off the tongue without your hesitating over it and without you being feeling embarrassed about it, but if you are a small niche practice that specialises in insurance claims then that’s how you want to be seen, and you would say ‘I’m with Seek, Grabbit and Run I’m in a small niche practice that specialises in insurance claims, we’re based in Norwich’. And that’s probably all that you want people to know. That’s enough for them to remember the name, you can make a joke of it if it’s a name that has some joke potential – to make it more memorable – they need to know where you’re placed and they need to know the sector of the business that you’re in.

Interviewer: Have you got any other tips for lawyers that might be thinking about putting together a pitch?

Sue Stapley: Just a few. I think the first and most important is make yourself impossible to dislike. Remember that the client or the potential client is making a choice about a person, a human being or a team of people. Secondly, never forget the support staff, even when you have to do the walk from the lift, which may be with the PA of the person who’s interviewing you, talk to them, be friendly, be nice, they may actually have a voice in the decision-making process so it’s worth being friendly to them as well. And the PA may be the one that’s making the appointments every time you go back into the building, and if she likes you and put in a good word for you it could be helpful. Another quick one is never forget to rehearse your presentation. Just because you’re skilful lawyers and expert in your field – and I would hope you all are – don’t assume that you can do a pitch without rehearsing. Actually put yourselves in the room, get some colleagues to role play the potential client and grill you, and make sure that you go through it clearly so that you know who’s going to say what at what point in the presentation and how. And then finally, follow up: after you’ve done your presentation, hopefully well and successfully, there’ll probably be several weeks delay while they’re seeing other people or considering, you may not hear at once, but the very same day that you’ve done the presentation I would recommend either sending an e-mail or making a phone call – whichever is appropriate – thanking them for their time, saying how much you enjoyed meeting them, maybe seeing their business if you had an opportunity to do that, and how much you’d enjoyed working with them. If there were any questions that you weren’t able to answer at the pitch let them have that information, whether it’s the name of a referee or two who will talk about you positively, or whether it’s a problem that came up that you couldn’t actually offer a solution in the meeting but you’ve had a chance to think about. That demonstrates, again, your enthusiasm for working with them, and that’s always very seductive.

A huge thank you to Sue for making the time to come and be filmed answering our questions, we know the finished programme will be a great one and useful to all those that watch it.
Until next time…

http://www.lawcolmedia.com

BREAKING NEWS – LEGAL AID BOYCOTT SUSPENDED

This morning, Friday 21st August, on the 52nd day of the legal aid strike, lawyers decided to suspend their boycott following meetings with the Ministry of Justice ‘as a gesture of goodwill and recognising the importance of this engagement’.  Confusion surrounds the decision, as no offer has been made by the government to settle the dispute, or certainly no offer has been communicated, and many took to Twitter to register their anger.

Here’s the Law Society Gazette’s reporting of the boycott this week, leading to this morning’s announcement:

Firms notified of failed legal aid contract bids: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/firms-notified-of-failed-legal-aid-contract-bids/5050594.article

Firms sounded out over withdrawal of legal aid bids: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/firms-sounded-out-over-withdrawal-of-legal-aid-bids/5050619.article

Action day 51: PDS silks cover junior-level trials: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/practice/action-day-51-pds-silks-cover-junior-level-trials/5050625.article

Lawyers suspend legal aid action: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/practice/lawyers-suspend-legal-aid-action/5050643.article

Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association: http://www.clsa.co.uk/

London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association: https://www.lccsa.org.uk/

The Criminal Bar Association: https://www.criminalbar.com/

LEGAL AID, AND THE LONDON LEGAL WALK 2015

We all know how important legal aid is for those who desperately need legal assistance but cannot afford to pay for it.  As the legal profession’s boycott of legal aid continues, which comes in response to a further cut to legal aid and a reduction in the number of number of contracts for solicitors who provide 24-hour cover in police stations, we take a look back at a short video we made when staff from LNTV HQ and students and staff from The University of Law took part in the London Legal Walk 2015 to raise vital funds to continue legal aid services throughout the City, together with this week’s Law Society Gazette reporting of the strike:

LNTV HQ and The University of Law does the London legal Walk 2015:

The Law Society Gazette reports on this week’s continuance of the legal aid boycott:

Action day 42: London firms propose withdrawing bids: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-42-london-firms-propose-withdrawing-bids/5050520.article

Action date 43: Gove to be briefed on savings ideas: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-43-gove-to-be-briefed-on-savings-ideas/5050537.article

CBA chair tells solicitors: ‘Time to show your solidarity’: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/cba-chair-tells-solicitors-time-to-show-your-solidarity/5050557.article

Action day 44: ‘alternative savings’ options revealed: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-44-alternative-savings-options-revealed/5050565.article

Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association: http://www.clsa.co.uk/

London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association: https://www.lccsa.org.uk/

The Criminal Bar Association: https://www.criminalbar.com/

THE BATTLE FOR LEGAL AID RUMBLES ON INTO ITS FIFTH WEEK

Five weeks on, and our friends and fellow legal professionals continue to keep up the pressure against the further cuts to legal aid with their boycott.  Here’s this week’s Law Society Gazette reporting of the strike:

Action day 34: MoJ dialogue ‘still ongoing’: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-34-moj-dialogue-still-ongoing/5050424.article

Action day 35: SRA issues second warning: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-35-sra-issues-second-warning/5050460.article

Action day 36: Legal Aid Agency gathering data: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-36-legal-aid-agency-gathering-data/5050480.article

Action day 38: LAA opens client hotline: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-38-laa-opens-client-hotline/5050498.article

Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association: http://www.clsa.co.uk/

London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association: https://www.lccsa.org.uk/

The Criminal Bar Association: https://www.criminalbar.com/

THE BATTLE FOR LEGAL AID CONTINUES…

Here at LNTV HQ we continue to watch the developments as our friends and fellow legal professionals keep up the pressure against the further cuts to legal aid with their boycott.  Here’s how the Law Society Gazette continued its reporting of it this week:

Action day 27: barristers officially join legal aid boycott: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-27-barristers-officially-join-legal-aid-boycott/5050288.article

Action day 28: SRA issues warning over legal aid action: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-28-sra-issues-warning-over-legal-aid-action/5050292.article

Action day 29: SRA warning prompts revised protocol: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-29-sra-warning-prompts-revised-protocol/5050322.article

Action day 30: More talks with MoJ on Monday: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-30-more-talks-with-moj-on-monday/5050353.article

Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association: http://www.clsa.co.uk/

London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association: https://www.lccsa.org.uk/

The Criminal Bar Association: https://www.criminalbar.com/

THE BATTLE FOR LEGAL AID

Here at LNTV HQ we have watched with interest, and it has to be said a certain amount of pride, as our fellow solicitors, and now barristers, took a stand and started a direct action duty boycott against the second cut to legal aid and the reduction in the number of contracts for solicitors who provide 24-hour cover in police stations.  This is the timeline of action so far:

  • 10th June – Legal aid minister Shailesh Vara confirms a further 8.75% cut to legal aid from 1st July 2015, and a reduction in the number of contracts for solicitors providing 24-hour representation at police stations, down from 1,600 to 527
  • 13th June – The Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association and the London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association open a ballot on refusing work under the 1st July rates
  • 30th June – the Ministry of Justice offers practitioner groups a meeting to discuss ‘broader ideas’ to improve the criminal justice system
  • 1st July – The national protest against legal aid fee cuts begins
  • 14th July – Solicitors vote overwhelmingly in favour of refusing new work with a representation order dated from 1st July onwards.  In practical terms this means solicitors withdrawing completely from duty solicitor work
  • The Criminal Bar Association announce the results of their ballot – members voted in favour of no new work by 982 votes to 795.  The Lord Chancellor told MPs he was disappointed at the poll results
  • The Criminal Bar Association executive recommends action begin on 27th July

The Law Society Gazette has provided extensive coverage of the boycott:

Action day 7: MoJ ‘offers talks’ – but not about fee cuts: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-7-moj-offers-talks-but-not-about-fee-cuts/5049861.fullarticle

Action day 8: Gove meets big legal aid firms: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-8-gove-meets-big-legal-aid-firms/5049891.fullarticle

Action day 10: MoJ denies manipulating legal aid figures: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-10-moj-denies-manipulating-legal-aid-figures/5049956.fullarticle

Action day 13: firms consider duty boycott: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-13-firms-consider-duty-boycott/5049984.fullarticle

Action day 14: judges query absence of solicitors: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/news/force-lawyers-into-pro-bono-think-tank/law/action-day-14-manchester-legal-aid-lawyers-stand-united/5049985.article

89-call hunt for solicitor as protest bites: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/practice/89-call-hunt-for-solicitor-as-protest-bites/5049942.fullarticle

Action day 15: bar backs direct action: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/practice/action-day-15-bar-backs-direct-action/5050007.fullarticle

Criminal bar announces date for legal aid action: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/criminal-bar-announces-date-for-legal-aid-action/5050062.fullarticle

Practitioner groups meet Gove as legal aid boycott continues: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/practitioner-groups-to-meet-gove-as-legal-aid-boycott-continues/5050149.fullarticle

Action day 22: legal aid practitioners rally in London: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-day-22-legal-aid-practitioners-rally-in-london/5050172.fullarticle

Gove meeting ‘potentially constructive’: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/gove-meeting-potentially-constructive/5050209.fullarticle

New protocol marks change of tactics in legal aid action: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/new-protocol-marks-change-of-tactics-in-legal-aid-action/5050238.article

Action was on brink of ‘collapse’, practitioner groups reveal: http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/action-was-on-brink-of-collapse-practitioner-group-reveals/5050262.article

We continue to watch with interest, and are proud of the lengths our fellow legal professionals are going to in order to protect the most vulnerable in society, so that justice is not just for those who can afford it.

Criminal Law Solicitors’ Association: http://www.clsa.co.uk/

London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association: https://www.lccsa.org.uk/

The Criminal Bar Association: https://www.criminalbar.com/

Trade Union Bill

On the back of the latest London Underground tube strike, in which all at LNTV HQ showed utter determination in getting here, whether it be on foot, train, bike, boat, and even scooter, the government published the Trade Union Bill 2015-2016 (http://services.parliament.uk/bills/2015-16/tradeunion.html).

The Bill went through its first reading on 15th July, and a date for its second reading is currently still awaited.  The interesting aspect of the Bill is that, depending which side of the fence you fall on, it’s either an all-out attack on the hard working people of Great Britain who are simply looking to protect their rights, or it is a welcome piece of new legislation designed to stop the country being held to ransom by workers who refuse suggested changes to their employment and pay.

The Bill does not in any way stop the ability to strike, but it does change the administrative elements around a suggested strike action, meaning that a higher hurdle will need to be jumped to have the ability to strike in the first place.  For example, the Bill:

  • Creates a 50% threshold for ballot turn-outs
  • Requires an additional higher threshold of 40% of support to take industrial action from all members eligible to vote in the key areas of transport, health, education, border security, fire, and nuclear decommissioning
  • Requires a clear description of the dispute and the planned industrial action on the ballot paper, so that all union members are clear what they are voting for
  • Increases the 7 days notice of strike action to 14 days notice
  • Sets a time limit of 4 months from the date of the ballot for the industrial action to take place, failing which a fresh ballot will be required (currently action can be taken indefinitely as long as the dispute remains live)
  • Gives employers the right to hire agency staff to cover the duties of striking employees
  • Puts in place new safeguards for non-striking members of staff
  • Makes unlawful or intimidatory picketing a criminal, as opposed to a civil, offence
  • Requires pickets to be supervised by a named official, possibly enforceable by injunction
  • Requires opting in to the political fund (the current system requires opt out)

The Bill is accompanied by three consultations which ask for opinions on:

These consultations are open until 9th September 2015.

Until next time…

SUPREME COURT HAND DOWN KEY DECISION ON INTENTIONALLY HOMELESS

In Halle v London Borough of Waltham Forest [2015] UKSC 34 (https://www.supremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uksc-2014-0185-judgment.pdf), the Supreme Court got to grips with whether a person had made themselves intentionally homeless.

In this case the claimant, (H), had given up her tenancy of a bedsit in 2011, due to not being happy about smells there.  She moved in to temporary accommodation until she was asked to leave due to overcrowding.  She therefore applied to London Borough of Waltham Forest Council for accommodation as a homeless person.  The Council decided that H was homeless, she was eligible for assistance, and she did have a priority need, but she had become homeless intentionally.  A reviewing officer subsequently came to this same decision, due to the fact that she had given up her room in the bedsit, and so had stopped occupying accommodation available to her.  H’s argument that she could not continue to stay in the bedsit due to the smell was rejected.

H had given birth to a daughter after leaving the bedsit.  She submitted that, because the bedsit was for single people only, she would have had to have left the bedsit in any event on the birth of her daughter.  She argued that the birth of her baby broke the chain of causation between her intentionally leaving the bedsit, and her homelessness when the Council considered her application for accommodation.

After agreements with the reviewing officer’s decision from both the County Court and the Court of Appeal, the matter went before the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court had to consider whether the reviewing officer was entitled to come to the conclusion that H had become intentionally homeless when she left the bedsit, considering that should would have been homeless anyway by the time her application was considered, due to her having given birth to a baby who would not be allowed in the bedsit.

The Supreme upheld H’s appeal.  They agreed that the birth of H’s baby severed the casual connection between her choosing to leave the bedsit and therefore making herself homeless, and the homelessness she was subject to when the reviewing officer made his enquiries.  It could not be said that if she had chosen not to leave the bedsit she would not have become homeless.

As a result of this important decision, local authorities will have to carefully consider the actual cause of an applicant’s homelessness, both when making an initial decision, and on review of such applications.

Until next time…

THE LONDON LEGAL WALK 2015

On Monday 18th May, staff from LNTV HQ together with staff and students from the University of Law will be taking part in the London Legal Walk 2015, the largest annual gathering of lawyers and the judiciary in the world: http://www.londonlegalsupporttrust.org.uk/our-events/london-legal-walk-2015/

This 10K walk through London raises important funds for numerous agencies in London and the South East, such as the Access to Justice Foundation, Brixton Advice Centre, the Disability Law Service, RAD Deaf Law Centre, Rights of Women, Shelter, and the Royal Courts of Justice Citizens Advice Bureau, who give free legal advice to members of the public on a wide range of different legal issues such as debt, employment, modern day slavery, homelessness, disability, and the removal of care facilities.

Last year over 8,200 people took part in the London Legal Walk to support this important fundraising event, and this year we hope even more people will join us and take up this crucial cause.  Take a look here at the numerous firms, chambers and other legal organisations who have already signed up to take part: http://www.londonlegalsupporttrust.org.uk/our-events/london-legal-walk-2015/teams-in-london-legal-walk-2015/

So sign up and join us, the more the merrier, there’s even a party at the end, which is reason alone to get involved!

We’d also love you to tweet us on the day: @LegalNetworkTV

Until next time…