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No conditional fees without country approval (Jamaica) Jamaican domestic law did not allow conditional fees or for the recovery of an after the event insurance premium for costs. When the case was appealed to the Board, his English solicitors represented him under a conditional fee agreement with a success fee and under such insurance. The … Continue reading Seaga v Harper (No 2): PC 29 Jun 2009
Documents had been prepared by the respondent to support a request for legal advice in anticipation of the Bingham enquiry into the collapse of BCCI. Held: Legal advice privilege attached to the communications between a client and the solicitor where proceedings were not contemplated, but did not attach to supporting documents. Privilege stemmed from the … Continue reading Three Rivers District Council and others v The Governor and Co of the Bank of England (No 5): CA 3 Apr 2003
(Grenada) The petitioner sought to appeal to the Board from Grenada. The powers conferred on the Board by the Acts of 1833 and 1844, and other later instruments, have superceded the old prerogative power formerly exercised by the King in Council. The 1967 Order was made under powers conferred by the Judicial Committee Act 1844 … Continue reading Mitchell v Director of Public Prosecutions of Grenada: PC 1986
A hotel had been requisitioned during the war for defence purposes. The owner claimed compensation. The AG argued that the liability to pay compensation had been displaced by statute giving the Crown the necessary powers. Held: There is an established general principle, of high constitutional importance, that there is no common law power to take … Continue reading Attorney General v De Keyser’s Royal Hotel Ltd: HL 10 May 1920
The appellant challenged a confiscation order made on his conviction of VAT fraud. It was argued that one could not be made unless a proper notice had been given, and none of the offences occurred before 1995. On the assumption that section 1 of the . .